‘We had a report from a motorist that he had seen the lights of a car out at Newmark’s forestry station. It wasn’t until the motorist had read of Dester’s disappearance that he thought of reporting what he had seen. Newmark’s station has been up for sale these past five weeks and the motorist happened to know no one was working there. I went up there and found Mrs. Dester. She was dead.’
I leaned forward to tap off the ash of my cigarette, partly turning my face so they couldn’t see it. I felt I was losing colour.
‘A window of one of the huts had been broken; the lock on the door had been removed. She was in one of the rooms, tied hand and foot and gagged. She had been dead about twenty-six hours. I reckon she died within an hour after the State trooper had seen her on the highway.’
Maddux asked the question I had been waiting for.
‘Was she murdered?’
‘I guess so,’ Bromwich said. ‘She had received a very violent blow on the jaw and she had taken a heavy fall, landing on the back of her head. The spinal cord at the base of the skull was fractured by the blow and the fall completed the fatal injuries. The M.O. says she must have died soon after receiving the blow.’
I was ice cold now. Only by the frantic instinct for self-preservation did I manage to keep my face expressionless.
‘Whoever hit her obviously didn’t know he had killed her,’ Bromwich went on importantly, ‘or he wouldn’t have tied her up like that.’
‘If he were smart,’ Maddux said quietly, ‘that’s just what he would do so he could plead to a manslaughter rap if he were caught.’
‘Yeah, sure,’ Bromwich said uneasily. He looked across at Madvig, who gave him a cold stare from his close-set eyes. ‘I had thought of that too.’
‘Any clues?’ Maddux asked.
‘Not a thing. No fingerprints. The gag was a scarf that belonged to her. The ropes came from a crate in the room.’ Maddux began to pace up and down before the fireplace.
‘And no sign of Dester?’
‘We’re still hunting for him. He can’t get away.’
‘What makes you think he’s in a position to get away?’
Madvig spoke for the first time.
‘We’re working on the theory that Dester murdered his wife.’
Maddux paused. He looked at Madvig, then at Bromwich, then at me. It was as much as I could do to meet the hard, staring eyes. Then he looked at Burnett.
‘Do you think Dester would murder his wife?’
‘Dester was an alcoholic. He might do anything,’ Burnett said curtly.
‘We know Mrs. Dester and he didn’t get on together,’ Madvig put in. ‘Something went wrong early in their marriage. They had ceased to live together as man and wife for some time. It’s been said that Dester took to drink because of this. He was irresponsible. He ran up big debts. I can understand why she wanted him under control. We think Dester realized that once he was in the sanatorium he wouldn’t get out for some time. We think he lost his head, tried to persuade Mrs. Dester not to take him to the sanatorium and when she insisted, he hit and killed her. Then he took her to the forestry station, tied her so it looked as if she had been handled by kidnappers and has himself gone into hiding in the hope we’ll think he is in the hands of the kidnappers. I wouldn’t be surprised if we don’t receive a ransom note from him.’
Maddux moved slowly over to me and stood in front of me. ‘And you, Mr. Nash, do you think Dester would murder his wife?’
‘I don’t know,’ I said through stiff lips. ‘He could be pretty quick tempered when he was drinking. He might certainly have hit her if she refused to do what he wanted. It could have been an accident.’
Well, at least, I had got the accident theory into the setup. But Bromwich wouldn’t stand for it.
‘It was no accident,’ he said. ‘No guy hits a woman that hard unless he meant to finish her.’
I felt suddenly sick. If they ever got me, they would never believe I hadn’t meant to kill her.
Maddux moved away.
‘Did Mrs. Dester know Dester was insured?’ he asked.
‘Not until I told her,’ Burnett said. ‘Nash will bear that out. He was with us when she asked me if he was insured.’
‘She didn’t know then?’
‘She asked me.’
‘Did you tell her the amount of coverage?’
‘I didn’t know myself until you told me.’
‘What did she say when you told her he was insured?’
‘She hoped he would borrow on the policy to pay his debts. When I reminded her that if he died after borrowing on the policy, there might be nothing left for her, she said she couldn’t possibly take the insurance money if it would help him when he was alive. I thought it did her a great deal of credit.’
Maddux looked at him, then he laughed. The hard, barking sound of his laugh shocked us. Burnett flushed angrily.
‘I can’t see there is anything to laugh at.’
‘I can,’ Maddux said. He pointed the stem of his pipe at Burnett. ‘If you think Helen Dester didn’t know her husband was insured for seven hundred and fifty thousand you have another think coming. She knew, and I’ll tell you why. She had been already involved in an insurance fraud. I make a practice to keep tabs on anyone who has been mixed up in any shady insurance racket even if that someone hasn’t had anything to do with my company. I keep a record of everyone who has made a doubtful claim because you never know if that someone will try something smart with us. I’ve kept tabs on Helen Dester for a long time. I know her background, and I know what made her tick. Fourteen months ago, she was the mistress of a guy named Van Tomlin. He insured himself in her favour for twenty thousand dollars. Not long after, when he was in her apartment, he fell out of the window. The insurance company wasn’t much, but at least they did threaten to fight her claim, but in the end they compromised and she collected seven thousand instead of twenty thousand. I don’t have to tell you if her claim had been on the level she would have taken the company to court, but she didn’t because she pushed Van Tomlin out of the window and the insurance company knew it!’
There was a short, electric silence. I was thinking: thank God we weren’t able to go ahead with the crack-brained idea of mine. I could see now it would never have worked; not when we would have been up against this guy.
‘Are you telling me that Mrs. Dester was a murderess?’ Burnett asked in a stifled voice.
Maddux showed his small white teeth in a grin.
‘That’s what I’m telling you: and I’ll tell you something else. Three years ago when she was twenty-four, she was a companion to an old lady who was stupid enough to leave Mrs. Dester five thousand dollars in her will and even more stupid to tell her what she had done. Two months later, the old lady fell downstairs and broke her neck.’
Madvig turned on Bromwich and glowered at him.
‘Why the hell didn’t you find this out?’ he snarled.
‘I’m looking for Dester,’ Bromwich said, his usual red face now purple. ‘I haven’t got around to Mrs. Dester yet.’
Madvig snorted, then turned to Maddux.
‘Well, she didn’t kill Dester, did she?’
‘How do you know? Where is Dester? How do you know he isn’t dead? How do you know she didn’t plan to kill him, fake a kidnapping, and collect the insurance money?’
‘Are you telling me she tied herself up, punched herself in the jaw and broke her goddamn neck?’
Madvig exclaimed, sitting forward, his purple face congested.
Maddux fetched out a box of matches and relit his pipe. His movements were deliberate. I felt my heart suddenly slow down. An icy chill crept up my spine. Something was coming. I could see that. I found I was clenching my fists and sitting forward as Madvig was sitting forward.