登陆注册
10818400000007

第7章

She did have one more legitimate task to carry out before she tormented herself with further thoughts of her mother. She looked into the case files and pulled up the information on her father's autopsy. She found the name of the coroner who had written the original report and set about finding him.

It was fairly easy. While the coroner in question had retired two years ago, Morrill County was the type of place that felt like a black hole. It was impossible to escape it. That's why there were so many familiar faces she saw on the streets. No one had thought to leave, to go elsewhere into the world to see what life had for them.

She'd placed a call to Agent Harrison back in DC to get the address of Jack Waggoner, the coroner who had worked on her father. She had the address within just a few minutes and found herself driving to another small town called Denbrough. Denbrough sat forty miles south of Belton, two little blips on the map that was Morrill County.

Jack Waggoner lived in a house that sat next door to a large meadow. Old ruined fence posts and barbed wire indicated there had once been horses or cattle there. When she parked her car in the driveway of a beautiful two-story Colonial-style house, she saw a woman pulling weeds out of a flower garden that traced the entire porch.

The woman eyed her from the moment Mackenzie turned the car in until she had parked it and got out.

"Hello," Mackenzie said, wanting to interact with the woman as soon as possible before the staring started to irritate her.

"Hey yourself," the woman said. "Who might you be?"

Mackenzie took out her badge and introduced herself as pleasantly as she could. Right away, the woman's eyes lit up, and she no longer looked at her suspiciously.

"And what brings the FBI out to Denbrough?" the woman asked.

"I was hoping to speak with Mr. Waggoner," she said. "Jack Waggoner. Is he home?"

"He is," the woman said. "I'm Bernice, by the way. His wife of thirty-one years. He gets calls from the government sometimes, always about dead folks he's seen in the past."

"Yeah, that's why I've come by. Could you get him for me?"

"I'll take you to him," Bernice said. "He's in the middle of a project."

Bernice led Mackenzie into the house. It was clean and sparsely decorated, making it seem much larger than it actually was. The makeup of the place again made her think that the huge field outside had once held cattle-cattle that had helped pay for such a house.

Bernice led her down into a finished basement. When they came to the bottom of the stairs, the first thing Mackenzie saw was a deer head on the wall. Then, as they turned the corner, she saw a small stuffed dog-a real dog that had been stuffed after death. It was perched in the corner on a strange sort of platform.

In the far corner of the basement, a man sat hunched over a worktable. A desk lamp was shining on something that he was working on, the something hidden by the man's hunched back and shoulders.

"Jack?" Bernice said. "You've got a visitor."

Jack Waggoner turned around and took in Mackenzie with a pair of thick glasses on. He removed them, blinked his eyes almost comically, and slowly got out of his chair. When he moved, Mackenzie could see what he was working on. She saw the body of what looked to be a small bobcat.

Taxidermy, she thought. He just couldn't get away from dead bodies after retirement, it seems.

"I don't believe we've met," Jack said.

"We haven't," she said. "I'm Mackenzie White with the FBI. I was hoping to speak with you about a body you profiled and assisted with about seventeen years ago."

Jack whistled and shrugged. "Hell, I can barely remember the bodies I saw during my last year-and that was just two years ago. Seventeen years might be pushing it."

"It was a pretty high-profile case," she said. A policeman…a detective, actually. A man named Benjamin White. He was my father. He was shot point-"

"Point-blank in the back of the head," Jack said. "With a Beretta 92, if memory serves correct."

"It does."

"Yeah, that one I do remember. And…well, I suppose it's nice to meet you. Sorry about your father, of course."

Bernice sighed and started toward the stairs. She gave an apologetic little smile and wave to Mackenzie as she excused herself.

Jack smiled at his wife as she headed up the stairs. When her footfalls had faded, Jack looked back to the work table. "I'd shake your hand but…well, I don't know if you want to."

"Taxidermy seems like a fitting hobby for a man with your work history," Mackenzie said.

"It passes the time. And the supplemental income doesn't hurt, either. Anyway…I digress. What can I answer for you about Ben White's case?"

"Honestly, I'm just looking for anything out of the ordinary. I've read the case reports more than fifty times, I'm sure. I know it front and back. But I'm also well aware that there are often tiny details only noticed by one or two people-details that don't seem like they are worth including at the time-that don't go in the official report. I'm looking for things like that."

Jack took a moment to think about it but Mackenzie could tell by the disappointed look in his eyes that he wasn't coming up with anything. After a few moments, he shook his head. "Sorry. But in terms of the body itself, there was nothing out of the ordinary. Obviously, the means of death was clear. Other than that, though, his body had been in good shape."

"So then why do you remember it so well?"

"Because of the nature of the case itself. It always struck me as fishy as hell. Your father was a well-respected cop. Someone came into your house, shot him in the back of the head, and managed to get out without anyone seeing who did it. A Beretta 92 isn't incredibly loud, but it's loud enough to wake up a household."

"It woke me up," Mackenzie said. "My room was directly next to his. I heard it but wasn't sure what it was. Then I heard footsteps as someone walked by my room. My bedroom door was closed, something I never did as a kid. I always left a crack. But someone had closed it. The same someone, I assume, that shot my father."

"That's right. You found him, didn't you?"

She nodded. "And it couldn't have been any more than two or three minutes after the gunshot. It took me that long to figure out that something was wrong. That's when I got out of bed and went to my parents' room to check."

"I tell you…I wish I had more for you. And please forgive me for saying so, but something about the official story just doesn't add up. Have you spoken to your mother about any of it?"

"No. Not at length. We aren't exactly the best of friends."

"She was a wreck in the days leading up to the funeral. No one could say a word to her. She went from inconsolable weeping to fits of rage in the blink of an eye."

Mackenzie nodded but said nothing. She could intimately remember her mother's fits of rage. It was one of the key factors in having her admitted to a psych ward later on.

"Was there any sort of secrecy involved when the body arrived at the morgue?" she asked.

"Not that I can remember. No shady business as far as I know. It was just another routine body being delivered. But you know…I do remember one policeman that was always around. He was with them when the body was delivered and he stayed around the medical office for a while, like he was waiting on something. Pretty sure I spied him at the funeral, too. I mean, Benjamin White was a well-respected guy…especially by other officers on the force. But this officer…he was there all of the time. If memory serves correct, he sort of hung back at the funeral, like he needed time alone to process or something. But this was forever ago, mind you. Seventeen years is a long time. Memories sort of start to slip away when you get to be my age."

"Would you happen to know this cop's name?" she asked.

"I don't. But I'm pretty sure he signed some paperwork at some point. Maybe if you can get your hands on the original case files?"

"Maybe," Mackenzie said.

He's telling the truth and he feels sorry for me, Mackenzie thought. Nothing else to be had here…except maybe learning some taxidermy skills.

"Thank you for your time, Mr. Waggoner," she said.

"Of course," he said, escorting her back upstairs. "I truly do hope you can wrap this one up. I always thought there was something off about the case. And even though I didn't know your father all that well, I always heard nothing but good things."

"I appreciate that," Mackenzie said.

With a final thanks, Mackenzie headed back outside with Jack at her side. She gave a wave to Bernice, back to the weeds in the flower garden, and got into her car. It was three in the afternoon but she felt like it was much later. She guessed the flight from DC to Nebraska, followed almost right away by a six-hour drive, was catching up to her.

It was too early to call it a day, though. She figured she could end her day by visiting the one place she figured she'd always end up, yet had never stepped foot in before: the Belton police station.

同类推荐
  • The Magic of Tiny Business

    The Magic of Tiny Business

    Too many of us feel trapped by work that keeps us from living our purpose. We fantasize about starting our own business, yet we're warned against falling into debt, working eighty hours a week, and coping with the pressure to grow.
  • Dombey and Son(I)董贝父子(英文版 下册)

    Dombey and Son(I)董贝父子(英文版 下册)

    Dickens started writing the book in Lausanne, Switzerland, before returning to England, via Paris, to complete it. The story follows a powerful man's callous neglect of his family triggers his professional and personal downfall, showcases the author's gift for vivid characterization and unfailingly realistic description. As Jonathan Lethem contends in his Introduction, Dickens's "genius … is at one with the genius of the form of the novel itself: Dickens willed into existence the most capacious and elastic and versatile kind of novel that could be, one big enough for his vast sentimental yearnings and for every impulse and fear and hesitation in him that countervailed those yearnings too. Never parsimonious and frequently contradictory, he always gives us everything he can, everything he's planned to give, and then more."
  • Building Resilience with Appreciative Inquiry

    Building Resilience with Appreciative Inquiry

    Journey through hope, despair, and forgiveness Leaders cannot predict the complex challenges they are called on to face. Veteran consultants Joan McArthur-Blair and Jeanie Cockell show that Appreciative Inquiry (AI) is an invaluable tool to build resilience.
  • Sh*tty Mom
  • Cuckoo Song

    Cuckoo Song

    Read this thought-provoking, critically acclaimed novel from Frances Hardinge, winner of the Costa Book of the Year and Costa Children's Book Awards for The Lie Tree. When Triss wakes up after an accident, she knows something is very wrong. She is insatiably hungry, her sister seems scared of her, and her parents whisper behind closed doors. She looks through her diary to try to remember, but the pages have been ripped out. Soon Triss discovers that what happened to her is more strange and terrible than she could ever have imagined, and that she is quite literally not herself. In a quest to find the truth she must travel into the terrifying underbelly of the city to meet a twisted architect who has dark designs on her family—before it's too late … Set in England after World War I, this is a brilliantly creepy but ultimately loving story of the relationship between two sisters who have to band together against a world where nothing is as it seems.
热门推荐
  • 陆先生余生请多指教

    陆先生余生请多指教

    【高冷傲娇男主VS腹黑睿智女主】【小虐怡情,后甜宠文】他,陆瑾言、是陆城不可一世的王,不近女色是整个陆城都知道的事、却因为某些说不清道不明的原因,迎娶一个自认为素未谋面的人…她,夏柠汐,是个孤儿,在孤儿院被人收养、十八岁那年,养父母因意外去世,从那开始,命运之轮开始转动,冥冥之中似命中注定与陆瑾言纠缠不清…“这辈子、不管有谁阻碍我们、我都不会放手,你只能是我一个人的私有宝贝,你逃不掉了…”陆瑾言邪笑。“好,这辈子、我们能相遇,是你的幸运、也是我的幸运。”夏柠汐满目傲娇。“嗯、言之有理…”陆瑾言深情款款。“此生,遇见则是幸运,余生,请多指教。”夏柠汐清澈的眼眸带着繁星、轻笑。“此生,不负遇见,余生,我只要你。”陆瑾言目光如炬,满目深情。10,25…墨清颜执笔。还望支持一下[可放心食用][绝不弃坑]
  • 妖荒

    妖荒

    小伙子看你骨骼精奇,是个练武奇才,我这有一本《荒界之力》,只有998元,就能带你走上人生巅峰,迎娶白富美。
  • The Trumpet-Major

    The Trumpet-Major

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 散文(2016年第10期)

    散文(2016年第10期)

    《散文》创刊于1980年1月,是我国第一家专发散文作品的纯文学刊物。创刊之初,便确立了思想上追求高格调,艺术上追求高水准的办刊宗旨,二十年如一日的坚持,使得《散文》成为一份高雅纯净,独具品位的刊物,推出了包括贾平凹、赵丽宏、詹克明、李汉荣等在内的大批优秀散文作家及作品,得到了广大读者和社会的认可。从创刊至今,《散文》一直以它独特的魅力力证着自己的存在,坚持呈现当代中国巅峰笔意,鼓励作者表达发现,呈现了一种罕见的沉思的品质和悲悯情怀,是当代文学界尤其是散文界极具分量的文学读本,在读者、作者、文学评论者心中地位崇高,影响遍及海内外华人世界。
  • 竹马哥哥要爬墙

    竹马哥哥要爬墙

    “英杰,你确定?”沈连赢看着眼前这个软萌可爱,只有两岁多的小女孩,有些疑问的抬头问他。……
  • 杨家府世代忠勇通俗演义

    杨家府世代忠勇通俗演义

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 异凌九霄

    异凌九霄

    性格使然,她仿佛就是特工的命,冰心冷血却又带着仗义之风。这样的她死了,却又“活了”。不一样的时空,不一样的人和物,不变的她,不变的性格。转世轮回,她活出了属于自己的精彩,但是她冰封的心,又是否会为人敞开……
  • 都市超级高手

    都市超级高手

    最正统保镖上线:他是一代传奇兵王,为一句承诺而受伤,本想低调回归都市照顾妹妹,却被竞相争抢!为兄弟,他赴汤蹈火;为心爱之人,他硬汉柔情;为家庭,他铁拳捍卫:且看他谱写一段都市铁血柔情,不一样的兵王传奇!
  • 挖掘地球

    挖掘地球

    地球,人类的家园。地球有很多末解之谜,比如,海底金字塔是谁建造的。南极冰盖下的大陆,地心世界,远古传说的金页,美洲印第安人古老传说的13个水晶头骨,水晶头骨能说话,会唱歌,这些水晶头骨里隐藏了有关人类起源和死亡的资料,能帮助人类解开宇宙生命之谜。……主角周运的足迹到达地球上人类从未踏足的角落,探秘地球。地球上有很多失落的宝藏,……等待着周运去寻找。当人类仰望星空,看着满天星空,想像着星空中某一颗星辰是否存在智慧生命。那么,在星空的另一头,是否也有一双眼睛,凝视着地球。——
  • 新知录摘抄

    新知录摘抄

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。