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Chat - Archer Mayor [30]

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the cardboard folder he found there containing writing paper, a cheap pen, some postcards, and a single envelope. Holding up the latter, he said, “Two postcards, two sheets of paper, one envelope.”

“But no Scotch tape,” Sam said. “He either brought it with him or just used the glue on the envelope flap to hang it on the door.”

“Suggesting some DNA transfer from tongue to envelope to door,” Joe mused.

“Yeah,” Lester agreed. “But from the victim, so who cares?”

“Right,” Joe conceded before waving his hand in a semi-circle. “So, possibly apart from the envelope, nothing’s disturbed, the dead man’s clothes were neatly tucked into place, and there wasn’t a mark on him.” He paused to address Ron’s detective. “You find anything yet?”

“No, sir,” he answered.

“And,” Joe concluded, “we found him lying across the bottom of the bed, facedown.”

“As if stretched out for a nap,” Lester said.

“Or passed out,” Sam proposed. “You take a nap, you position yourself properly; you use a pillow, take off your shoes. Plus, you don’t even go there if you’re waiting for someone. The adrenaline’s pumping. Naps don’t come into it.”

The four of them contemplated what all that might mean.

“Be a bummer if the ME said it was a heart attack,” Lester said.

Joe smiled, knowing the unlikeliness of that. His response went to the crucial point none of them had yet addressed. “The real bummer would be if both our dry-cleaned John Does turned out to be naturals. This is number two, after all.”

Sam grunted softly. “Christ. I hope they end up with something more in common than this.”

“Like the same poison?” Lester asked.

“I don’t know. Anything.”

“No local connections to the first one yet?”

“No,” she said gloomily. “We’re still asking around.”

“We might have to ask for some help there,” Gunther suggested. “Get the newspaper involved, especially if this fellow turns out not to be from around here, either. You know: ‘Have You Seen This Man?’ Run them both. And if that fails, go wider, reach across New England. There’s got to be somebody who’ll recognize at least one of them. What was the name this one used at the desk?”

“R. Frederick.”

Gunther laughed.

“What?” Ron asked.

He held his hand up. “I don’t know. It just flashed through my mind—R. Frederick, Ready Freddy. Wonder what the ‘R’ stood for.”

“You serious?”

Joe shrugged. “I don’t know. I guess not. It’s possible, though. You check into a motel for illicit purposes, maybe you’re feeling playful. Anyhow, doesn’t matter. We have to do this by the numbers, even if it turns out he used his real name. BOL, canvass, AFIS for the fingerprints, the whole smorgasbord. And we need to figure out how he got here—train, bus, cab, hitchhiking.”

He paused to address Ron. “Anything you need from us?”

Klesczewski shook his head. “No. We’re okay. We’ll do a forensic vacuuming later, maybe use the luminol. Since the Bureau’s paying, the sky’s the limit, right, even though it’s a motel room and guaranteed to give us too much and therefore nothing at all?”

Joe raised his eyebrows. “That mean you’re giving us the case?”

Ron bowed slightly. “With our compliments. We’re drowning in work right now, the budget’s hemorrhaging, the chief’s on the warpath, and Sam and Ron were telling me you might be working a related case anyhow. It makes sense.”

“Then our wallet’s your wallet,” Joe told him. “And thank you. You going to want the crime lab at all?”

The state forensic lab usually did such work, traveling to assist almost every department in Vermont. But not all of them. The bigger PDs liked to lay claim to being just as good on their own. Brattleboro had been known to go either way.

“I think we got it,” Ron said. “We’ll keep you posted.”

Joe headed toward the door. “Okay, then, I’ll leave you all to it.”

In the hallway outside, he began climbing out of his Tyvek suit, leaning against the wall for support. Sam had followed him outside.

“Thanks for coming down. I hated bothering you. How’re things up north?”

He hesitated, one foot in the air, and pursed his lips, trying to pay the question its due. “Complicated,

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