The Case of Pure Blue Murder
All Rights Reserved © 2021, Rick Haydn Horst
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events, locales, and incidents are either the products of the author's imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.
IMPORTANT:
Be sure to read my the first novel in this series: Hanging the Chimney Hook listed as
Millstone Novel 01
before you read this one!
CHAPTER SEVEN
Millstone's Sources
Closed or not, the Gerhardt Last case was a mystery, and I'm not good at leaving things unfinished; it nags me until I act on my curiosity and my need for intellectual closure. It seems that I just gotta know.
Edgerton called Max and me to the precinct; the forensic techs had information to share, and Tucker contacted us about his attending Bartholomew Beausoleil's memorial that evening at Edgerton's request.
"So, you have a bone to pick with me," said Edgerton.
On the 3rd floor of the precinct, I had invited him into an interview room away from the ears of anyone else.
"Not a bone," I said, "I just need to set some professional boundaries; I'm not angry with you. I agreed to consult for the police on a trial basis, and I signed the contract on behalf of the agency. Tucker may be your boyfriend, but he is my employee. If you had asked him to go in your stead to the memorial service of your Aunt Marjorie that would be one thing, but it's for an active case. If you need him for something, talk to me first."
"You're right," he said, "but as it's just a fact-finding mission, I figured it wasn't a big deal, and since we had teamed up-"
"We
have
teamed up, and I trust you, especially because I know you care about him, but I want to be kept in the loop by the police detective we're working with, not by Tucker. He doesn't have the experience, and for work-related tasks, I'm responsible for him."
"I see what you're getting at. I overstepped, and I apologize. That won't happen again. So, have you a problem with him going?"
"I agree that someone needs to go. I know of no one else who could do it, and apparently, neither do you. But I hope you realize that once he gets down there, apart from whatever hardline phones they may have, he's cut off from the outside."
"That's my biggest concern," he said. "He knows he's not going there to catch a killer, just to be our eyes and ears at a memorial service, that's all."
"I know you wouldn't want to put him in harm's way, but what if someone there did kill Barty?"
"Let's see what the pathologist has to say about that. So, has he your approval to go?"
"Reluctantly, yes."
In the lab just down the hall, both Max and Albert awaited us, and we met the lead forensic specialists on the case, a man named Stefon Hankston who preferred everyone to call him Hank. Another tech was there, a young man named Leo. He sat on a stool off to the side. On two tables lay all the evidence, and the moment we had our introductions, Hank got right to it.
"On the table to your left, we have the evidence from the Beausoleil crime scene. When it comes to fingerprints, nearly all the print evidence is useless due to the volume found at the scene, especially on the cabinet that contained the kits for vampire slaying. The problem is, we have no way to know how old they are. And since the cabinet doors use spring and magnet catches, someone could easily open them without a finger. However, while the surface of the wine case itself is textured and useless for prints, we found one set of prints on a wine bottle inside, and it had a match in the system. They belong to Javier Acuña, locally known as Iota. He was arrested for a minor drug offense a few years ago, but surprisingly, nothing since."
"We have a BOLO out on Iota now," said Albert.
"When it comes to DNA evidence, we found some on the wet towel, it also matches that of Acuña. The towel being damp helps to place him within the timeframe. We found no other corroborating DNA evidence, but I have heard that the pathologist has taken semen samples from the body, so hopefully, that has produced a result.
"The shoe prints Mr. Millstone found on the floor are critical to your investigation," said Hank. "They came from the rubber sole found on a pair of Gucci Ace sneakers with the Gucci knight on the bottom. Those are probably about $700 a pair; a dealer could certainly afford them. The importance of those prints has to do with their location and that they indicate timing. I've looked at the evidence myself at the scene, and I concur with Mr. Millstone's assessment. The chemical profile matches the minerals found in their tap water and contains traces of an expensive tea tree shower gel used by the deceased. I agree that—given the evidence—it appears that whoever stood at the case at that moment, most likely had nothing to do with the stake through the victim's heart. Acuña's fingerprint evidence on the bottle is compelling, but like with the other fingerprints throughout the room, it only says the person touched it, not when. If you can find that Acuña owns the shoes that left the prints when the floor was wet, it would place him at the time of the victim's fall, especially if they contain any traces that match the water on the floor.
"Apart from the victim's blood on both the stake and mallet used at the scene, it contains no other traces or any usable prints. UV light shows us where the hand held the hammer and stake by the absence of blood particles in those locations, but not the person's sex based on hand size; that part is inconclusive. However, if Acuña's hands are bigger it could help to rule him out."
"How easily could someone hammer a stake into a body?" asked Edgerton. "Could a woman do it?"
"The stake is made of hawthorn, a small grain wood that's harder than most oaks, and it's sharpened to a fine point like a pencil, so penetrating the body wouldn't be too difficult, and the mallet is interesting in that the maker weighted it with bronze, so it's heavy enough for its intended purpose, but not so heavy a woman couldn't effectively use it.
"The Marsh crime scene turned up nothing that wasn't the victim's, not even a hair. Even the victim's suitcase, messenger bag, and clipboard had only the victim's prints on them. The interior doorknob was wiped, and the outside had only some unrecognizable smudges. The body of both victims are a different matter, you'll need to speak to the pathologist for that. When it comes to Marsh personally, I'm going to let Mr. Hill, our newest addition to our team, fill you in on that. He's been pouring over his personal effects."
When he stood from his seat, his fidgety body language told me he'd either had too much caffeine or felt extremely uncomfortable talking to our group. "I'm Leon Hill, but you can call me Leo, everyone does. I have a bachelor's in forensic science and one in psychology, and I've recently decided to begin working toward becoming a forensic psychologist. I've studied Marsh, and while there's plenty more to know about him, at first blush, I would say that he was a narcissist, a manipulator, and an opportunist. It's like he lived two or three different lives. His phone has two phone numbers to help keep two sets of people separate from one another. In one life, he likes to give people the impression of being an excessively devout and virulently anti-gay right-wing Christian. If you play it right, people will hand you money to be that. All the contacts from that life, he connected to one of the phone numbers, and most have a Christian cross emoji next to their names. In texts with one contact, named Mary Halpert, which carries both a cross and a heart, he told of how his boss was making him take a shipment to Franklin, which he referred to as a den of vipers, and how he hadn't wanted to leave her but chose to view it as god testing his faith, and that if Daniel could endure the lion's den, and if the three young men from Judah could make it through Nebuchadnezzar's fiery furnace by the grace of god, then he could make it overnight in Sodom. Mary must have found that pretty inspiring by her reply. And she ended the conversation with 'trust in God and everything will be fine' and signed off with 'I love you' which included two exclamation points.
"However, he lived another life in wild contrast—which uses the other phone number and wink emojis next to the associated contacts. In this one, he's a hedonistic gay man who texted one friend named Patrick—within a few minutes of texting Mary—that he was excited about a last-minute trip. His boss was sending him to Franklin where he absolutely intended to, and I quote, 'suck some big cock and get his booty fucked all night.' Patrick recommended The Three Cocks cruise bar to him, but instead, he set up some time with a popular male escort here, known to all of Franklin PD by the name Billy Club."
"Billy Club!" said Albert who started to laugh. "Oh man, fuckin' Gary Inman."
"Who's Gary Inman?" asked Max.
"Gary Inman," said Edgerton who began to mimic a slow and leisurely southern drawl with a tendency to drop his R's, "is a former beat cop and former member of the Minotaur who's a handsome, charmin', smooth-talkin' young man from Charleston, South Carolina. Well, once he got here, he realized he could make a lot-a money off what his mama and daddy gave him."
"Don't tell me," I said, "his nickname at the Minotaur was Billy Club."
"Bingo!" he said in his usual voice. "He's was cop who carried a Billy club at work, but also, at about 8 inches soft, his cock's fatter on the end but thinner at the base. It hangs off him like a club, and Billy's just a southern-sounding name. We tend to make fun of Gary because he left the department to become a male escort, but he's actually done really well for himself off tourist dollars and guys just here for the weekend."—he turned to Leo—"Did Marsh meet up with Billy?"
"It doesn't say," said Leo, "but he was supposed to come to his room at 2 o'clock last night, apparently, Billy had only that slot available."