Red Dragon - Thomas Harris [19]
The Birmingham medical examiner said the cat was strangled. He had shaved it and found no puncture wound.
Springfield tapped the earpiece of his glasses against his teeth.
They had found soft ground and dug it up with a shovel. Didn't need any damned methane probe. Still, Graham had been right.
The chief of detectives licked his thumb and started through the rest of the stack of flimsies. Most were reports of suspicious vehicles in the neighborhood during the past week, vague descriptions giving only vehicle type or color. Four anonymous telephone callers had told Atlanta residents: “I'm gonna do you like the Leedses.”
Hoyt Lewis' report was in the middle of the pile.
Springfield called the overnight watch commander.“What about the meter reader's report on this Parsons? Number fortyeight.”
“We tried to check with the utilities last night, Chief, to see if they had anybody in that alley,” the watch commander said. “'They'll have to get back to us this morning.”
“You have somebody get back to them now,” Springfield said. “Check sanitation, the city engineer, check for construction permits along the alley and catch me in my car.”
He dialed Will Graham's number. “Will? Meet me in front of your hotel in ten minutes and let's take a little ride.”
At 7:45 A.M. Springfield parked near the end of the alley. He and Graham walked abreast in wheel tracks pressed in the gravel. Even this early the sun was hot.
“You need to get you a hat,” Springfield said. His own snappy straw was tilted down over his eyes.
The chainlink fence at the rear of the Leeds property was covered with vines. They paused by the light meter on the pole.
“If he came down this way, he could see the whole back end of the house,” Springfield said.
In only five days the Leeds property had begun to look neg?lected. The lawn was uneven, and wild onions sprouted above the grass. Small branches had fallen in the yard. Graham wanted to pick them up. The house seemed asleep, the latticed porch striped and dappled with the long morning shadows of the trees. Standing with Springfield in the alley, Graham could see himself looking in the back window, opening the porch door. Oddly, his reconstruction of the entry by the killer seemed to elude him now, in the sunlight. He watched a child's swing move gently in the breeze.
“That looks like Parsons,” Springfield said.
H. G. Parsons was out early, grubbing in a flowerbed in his backyard, two houses down. Springfield and Graham went to Parsons' back gate and stood beside his garbage cans. The lids were chained to the fence.
Springfield measured the height of the light meter with a tape.
He had notes on all the Leedses' neighbors. His notes said Parsons had taken early retirement from the post office at his supervisor's request. The supervisor had reported Parsons to be “increasingly absentminded.”
Springfield's notes contained gossip, too. The neighbors said Par?sons' wife stayed with her sister in Macon as much as she could, and that his son never called him anymore.
“Mr. Parsons. Mr. Parsons,” Springfield called.
Parsons leaned his tilling fork against the house and came to the fence. He wore sandals and white socks. Dirt and grass had stained the toes of his socks. His face was shiny pink.
Arteriosclerosis, Graham thought. He's taken his pill.
“Yes?”
“Mr. Parsons, could we talk to you for a minute? We were hoping you could help us,” Springfield said.
“Are you from the power company?”
“No, I'm Buddy Springfield from the police department.”
“It's about the murder, then. My wife and I were in Macon, as I told the officer-”
“I know, Mr. Parsons. We wanted to ask about your light meter. Did-”
“If that . . . - meter reader said I did anything improper, he's just-”
“No, no. Mr. Parsons, did you see a stranger reading your meter last week?”
“No.”
“Are you sure? I believe you told Hoyt Lewis that someone else read your meter ahead of him.”
“I did. And it's about time. I'm keeping up with this, and the Public Service Commission will get a full report from me.