Chapter 81

CHAPTER

Ryan davis, harold beech’s public defender, was fresh out of law school.

He was likely in his late twenties but looked fourteen.

He had a wild shock of black hair and wore a disheveled suit and a semi-dazed expression that said he knew he was in way over his head.

But when the three of us entered the second interrogation room he did his best to sound authoritative.

“My client’s done nothing wrong, Detectives,” Davis declared, pushing his glasses farther up the bridge of his nose. “He has no idea why he’s here. Charge him or let him walk.”

“He’ll be sticking around for a while yet, Counselor,” French said, taking a seat across from Beech, who was wringing his hands, lips twisted like he’d just tasted something rancid.

Beech had been wearing archery gloves when we encountered him in the woods. Now I noticed his palms. I reached over and pointed to the livid lines around a quarter of an inch wide that ran across both of them.

“Where did those come from, Mr. Beech?”

Beech looked at his attorney, who shrugged.

“Rope burns,” Beech said. “Own fault. Wasn’t wearing my gloves like I should have been last week when we took down Eamon’s deer from the game pole.”

“So your blood’s on that rope?”

“Who knows? That’s what happened.”

I decided not to ask him about Brenda Miles yet. “You and Eamon Diggs good friends?”

“About the only one I got. We keep each other on the narrow, you know?”

French said, “Knew Eamon in prison, did you?”

“Of course,” Beech said. “We met in an after-release program and got hired together at the quarry. One of the few places that will hire people like us. Fresh out, I mean.”

John said, “What about his grandmother’s farm, the one he inherited. Ever been there?”

He nodded. “We’ve shot our bows long-distance-like down there a couple of times, maybe three? I told him to sell the place, buy something where he could live nice, ’stead of renting.”

“Why didn’t he?” I asked.

Beech shrugged. “Can’t let go, I guess. He said it was the only place where he was happy as a kid. With his grandparents.”

“You see the white van at that farm?” French asked. “The one in the shed?”

He nodded. “Got inside and under the hood to see if there were salvageable parts.”

“Were there any?” I asked.

“Engine, radiator, transmission weren’t bad, and the quarter panels and doors weren’t rusted at all ’cause of the van’s being under the shed roof, but Eamon wouldn’t let me scavenge it. Said it had sentimental value too.”

“You see him drive it? The van?” French asked.

Beech snorted. “I didn’t even think there was a key to it.”

“There was one, and it does run,” I said.

“News to me. What’s the big deal?”

“The van was seen in the vicinity of several recent murders in the greater Washington, DC, area.”

The sour look on Beech’s face deepened, but he did not reply.

“Three were shot point-blank in their cars,” Sampson said. “One was strangled with a rope exactly like the rope you say you burned your hands on, Harry.”

I said, “And the strangled woman was found with a wooden spoon rammed in her vagina, Harry.”

Beech licked his lips nervously but still said nothing.

French leaned across the table. “That was one of your favorite moves, wasn’t it, Harry? Putting things like wooden spoons in the girls you drugged and assaulted?”

All the blood drained out of Beech’s face. He said in a shaking, gasping voice, “I don’t do that kind of thing no more. I was sick in the mind back then. I paid my debt to society and have my head on straight now. I been through behavior-modification therapy. I have!”

“I’ll bet you have,” French said. “Except it modified you from a deviant to a killer.”

“No!”

“Mr. Beech,” his young attorney finally said, “I think we should stop now.”

“I didn’t do nothing, man,” he snarled at him. “Nothing.”

Sampson asked Beech where he’d been on the evenings of the Bulldog murders. Beech said probably where he always was, in his dump of an apartment or at Diggs’s double-wide.

“I don’t go out. I don’t do nothing ’cept work and bow-hunt in the fall, fish for bass in the summer. Stay away from all women. Especially young ones.”

“What about Diggs?” I asked.

Beech shook his head, struggling with something. “I don’t know. I mean, I’m not paid to be the dude’s keeper, am I? But I’ll tell you what, and this is no lie: Eamon’s been known to disappear now and then. And when I asked him where he’d got to, he told me I didn’t want to know.”

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