“Left no more than thirty minutes ago,” Johnson said.
Outwardly Quinn forced himself to smile. “I hate to make you go over this stuff again, but would you mind?”
The chief shook his head. “No problem. But like I said to Agent Driscoll, there’s really not much to tell. It was an accident. That’s it.”
“I heard that. But Andersen — that’s the guy back in D.C. — he wasn’t satisfied. I guess when all your information is coming from what you read in the paper, you just want to make sure you’re not missing something.”
“If he’s getting his information from the paper, how did he know Taggert was the one killed?”
“That’s a great question,” Quinn said honestly. “I have no idea.”
The chief seemed to give it some thought. “Maybe it was the sister.”
“The sister?” Quinn asked.
“Taggert’s sister,” the chief said. “She’s the only one we told.”
Quinn nodded. “That makes sense. Is there anything else you can tell me?”
The chief shrugged, then said, “It’s not much.”
“Anything will help.”
Johnson pulled a thin file off the top of a stack on the right side of his desk. He perused its contents for a moment, then gave Quinn a halfhearted smile. “As I said, it’s not much. The fire was apparently electrical. We think it started in the living room. A space heater that caught fire or something similar. Taggert was in the upstairs bedroom. He was probably overcome by smoke before he could get out. By the time the fire department got there, it was too late. Once the flames were finally out, there wasn’t really much left of anything.”
“How’d you identify the body?”
“We checked with the agency that handled the Farnham place, Goose Valley Vacation Rentals. When he signed the rental agreement, he left an emergency number. That’s how we were able to contact his sister. She forwarded his dental records to us. We got ’em the next day. They were a match.”
“I’m curious. Why was his name never released to the press?” Quinn asked.
“The sister requested we keep it quiet. Since he wasn’t a local, I didn’t see that it was much of a problem.”
“Could I get her number from you?” Quinn asked.
“The sister? Shouldn’t your friend have that? I mean, if they’re related?”
“Probably. You’d think he’d have given it to me, wouldn’t you?”
Johnson pondered for a moment. Then he glanced down at the file again and leafed through a couple of pages until he found what he was looking for. He jotted a number down on a piece of paper and handed it to Quinn.
“Not much else I can tell you,” Johnson said. “It was an accident. These things happen.”
“Has there been an autopsy?”
The chief nodded. “That’s standard.”
“Who handled that?” Quinn asked.
“Dr. Horner. At Valley Central Hospital.”
“Would you mind if I talked to him?”
“Not at all,” the chief said. “Though I don’t think he’ll be much more help than I am.”
“You’re probably right. But I just need to cover my bases.”
The chief pulled out another piece of paper and wrote something on it. He handed it to Quinn. It was the address of the hospital. “Thanks,” Quinn said.
“Anything else?” the chief asked.
“Not that I can think of.” Quinn stood up, and Johnson did likewise. “I’d like to get a look at the accident scene, if that’s okay? Since I’m here and all.”
“Be my guest. Do you know where it is?”
“I do.”
“Just be careful when you’re out there. Officially, it’s still a potential crime scene, though we’re really just wrapping things up.”
Quinn held out his hand and the two men shook again. “Thanks, Chief,” he said. “You’ve been a big help.”
A storm front had moved into the area while Quinn had been talking to Chief Johnson. The clouds were dark and low, and heavy with moisture. It wouldn’t be long before snow started to fall, Quinn realized. He needed to get a move on so that he could survey the fire scene before any snow disturbed what evidence might be left.
As he drove through town he used his cell phone to call the number the chief had given him for Taggert’s sister. After four rings, an answering machine picked up.
“Hello. After the beep, please leave us a message, and we’ll call you back.”
The voice was female, but flat and unmemorable. The message itself was laughably generic. Quinn didn’t recognize the speaker, but he was willing to bet whoever she was, she was not related to Taggert.
He found the Farnham place with little trouble. There was a sign posted at the end of the driveway warning unauthorized individuals to stay off the property. A rope that had probably been strung across the entrance lay off to the side, out of the way.
Quinn turned off Yancy Lane and drove up the snow-packed driveway. A white Jeep Cherokee was already parked in front of what was left of the Farnhams’ vacation home. Quinn parked his Explorer several feet away from it, then took a look around.
It had been a large house before the fire, at least two stories tall. Now the only things still standing were a blackened fireplace, a stone chimney pointing up at the sky, and a few scorched walls. Otherwise, it was an uneven pile of charred junk.
It was clear there had been little the fire department could do once they’d arrived on the scene. Their efforts had undoubtedly been directed more at containing rather than extinguishing the blaze. Though, with several feet of snow on the ground and an air temperature probably hovering at no more than twenty-five degrees, the likelihood of the fire spreading was pretty much nil.
More of a marshmallow roast than a rescue operation, Quinn thought.
He zipped up the Gore-Tex jacket he’d bought the night before, then climbed out of the Explorer. If it was possible, the clouds seemed darker and heavier now, the storm threatening to break at any moment.
What struck Quinn first was the silence. There was no hum of cars on the distant highway. No crack of wood being split by one of the neighbors in anticipation of a cold night. No yelling of children at play or hints of distant conversations. There wasn’t even a breeze blowing through the trees. Even the snow crushing under his feet and the whisper of his own breath seemed muffled and far away.
Everywhere a silence, a stillness. The only movement other than his own was the blanket of clouds rolling and dipping in an eerily soundless dance above his head.
But where his sense of hearing provided him little, his other senses more than made up for the deficit. The odor of burnt wood, melted plastic, and death hung in the air as if refusing to leave, claiming the site for its own. And on Quinn’s tongue, a tangy, acrid taste coating its tip and the roof of his mouth.
His first stop was the Cherokee. He pulled his hand out of his pocket and put it on the hood of the vehicle. It was still warm. He returned his hand to his pocket and walked over to the house.
Chief Johnson had said the fire department believed the blaze started somewhere in the living room. Quinn located where he thought the front door used to be, and quickly spotted a path just beyond it through the debris.
He followed the trail into the remains of the house. At various points along the path were fresh scrapings of wood and cleared spots where the fire investigators had examined possible points of ignition. Quinn knew what he was looking for, but so far he hadn’t seen it.
Near the center of the house he found an area that had been cleared of extraneous debris, exposing a spot on the floor near the remains of a wall. He leaned down for a closer look. There was a melted mound of plastic that had congealed into a lumpy, blackened mass on the floor. It could have been anything from a pile of CD cases to a lamp, or possibly even the space heater Chief Johnson had mentioned. Without cutting it apart, there was no way to tell.