"Dan Sanders, you are under arrest. The charge is murder, first degree." The detective told me.
All I could do was sit there and stare at him. Then he walked to the door, opened it. A couple of very large men came in and led me away.
My close to perfect happy life had just came crashing down around my ears.
The cell they put me in was cold, there was a cot and a toilet, that was about it.
I sat down on the cot carefully, the bullet hole in my left shoulder hurt like hell, my bandaged arm hung useless.
Then I thought about Melody. The last image of her was of her standing there, a look of shock, horror on her face.
"If only I had locked the door when I got home?" I told the police, weeping.
"But that probably would have made no difference, one of us would have answered if the two men had simply rang the door bell." I added.
They were all looking at me, I decided to shut up.
+++
The tale I told them was that I had just hit the button to turn on the TV when the door opened.
Instantly I realized this was serious trouble as I turned and spotted the pistol.
My instinct from my military training kicked in, I went straight for them.
I didn't make it.
On TV, when the hero is shot in the shoulder he reaches up and grabs it, groans, and then continues on to kick some ass.
In real life, down you go. For a moment I was frozen in shock, then something was jammed over my face, I saw Melody for an instant, I will never forget the look on her face.
When I came to, I saw her lying on the floor. Her face was bloody, I knew she was dead.
I was trying to crawl to her when suddenly there were men around, restraining me. They handcuffed me, lord did that hurt.
+++
"Doesn't look good." The lawyer told me, shaking his head days later.
"I didn't do it, there were two men..." I started to protest.
"I believe you, but the police tied this up nice and tight so far. Your wife was shot at point blank range. They say you shot yourself, then used chloroform to put yourself out. The call to the police was from your cell phone, your DNA was all there was on it."
"Same with the gun, it has your DNA on it and they found it right by your side. Odd part is the latex gloves, they found those partly burned up in the wood stove like you tried to get rid of them but the fire went out."
"We didn't even have any latex gloves, those guys must have..."
"I know, I know. We have to do some checking, there are a few things here that don't ring true." The man waved his hand.
+++
Evidence piles up, some pro and some con. My DNA was on the little 38 caliber Smith and Wesson pistol, purchased with my credit card and my ID.
But told them I had not purchased any pistol, and that was the truth.
The bullet they took from Melody matched, as did the one they took from my shoulder.
The claim was that I had shot Melody, then myself to make it look like a home invasion. They claimed I had tossed the gloves into the fireplace, called in the anonymous report of shots being fired, then gassed myself?
But the little free standing wood stove had been acting up, I knew the metal chimney was partially blocked and I had plans to pull it down that very weekend.
A few pieces of the gloves had survived when the fire went out, which it would do if all of the drafts were not left wide open. Plus they were the kind that are powdered inside, and that kind of powder apparently did not burn well.
There were the remains of three of them and what was residue from a fourth one?
Plus DNA on the pistol, but they claimed I had been wearing the gloves?
Enough to cause doubt, my lawyer used that to get me bail. The house was up as bond and I was allowed to go home.
The prosecutor's claim that I was a clever killer fell on deaf ears, the judge didn't buy it. After all, why try to burn up the gloves, logic suggested I just leave them somewhere to be found because if the fire had not gone out, there would be no evidence of them at all.
My lawyer talked really well, I was grateful for that.
When I got home, I looked at the dark mess still on the carpet and the mess remaining in the house from when they had searched it.
I spent the night in the garage, where I had a small side room with a single bed we used for rare guests.
The next day I hired a crew to come and clean up, replace the carpets.
"I still think you did it, but we are dropping the charges." They told me several months later.
Way too many things did not quite connect, with those gloves being the big one. Had I cleaned out the stove pipe the week before like Melody had asked me to, odds are high I would still be sitting in a jail cell.
But I hadn't, deliberately.
Then there was the little firearm. Why bother with gloves when it appeared I had purchased the thing a couple of weeks before, registered to me at my address?
Wearing gloves but with my DNA all over the pistol, and never bothering to wipe it down?
Then how did I manage to shoot myself in the shoulder but leave no powder burns?
Why call in the police from my own cell phone, found in my shirt pocket?
Yes, easily enough to create reasonable doubt.
Then there was that fingerprint. The one they take when you present your ID to purchase a pistol?
It wasn't mine.
The one other thing that closed the deal was the deposit bag. I took all the cash receipts home on most Fridays and put them in the safe I kept there, to deposit Monday on the way in.
That was around $10,000 every week in over the counter sales, my boss gave discounts for cash to avoid the credit fees and he would not take a check at all.
I tried several times to convince him to make night deposits but he would not hear of it since once years before some teller had ripped him off.
All of that was a pain in the ass to deal with but Ben was the boss so I did as he asked.
For some reason he trusted me, because I knew all about his accounting methods and I was sure he had no clue. Some of that trust had to do with me changing the accounting so it could be kept track of, of course I also had total control over that, also.
That night deposit bag had vanished. They checked my own accounts, other purchases, came up with nothing. They even ran the business books much to the boss's chagrin but of course that all checked, too.
Paper trails are hard to follow when no such paper exists.
It had to be an inside job, a frame up since the pistol was purchased in my name.
Ben's poor employees all got practically strip searched, nothing.
I waited for them to come up with the fact that Ben was fucking my wife but they never did.
"Way too convoluted a deal here for a lousy 10 grand, but you are free to go." The detective growled at me.
I knew that he thought he knew, but he couldn't make it stick.
+++
They say the husband is the last to know, but that is not always true.
At least not in my case.
Melody and I met at a party, introduced by a couple who more or less set things up so we would meet.
They knew Melody and they knew me, and they thought we were a perfect match.
They were almost right.
We hit it off that night, famously. That led to dating, in less than a month we were exclusive.
Sex came along in the normal course of events, by our fourth date we were necking rather heavily and feeling everything through our clothing.
"How about I stay the night?" Melody whispered in my ear. I had my hand up the front of her blouse at the time, my fingertips poking around down the front of her bra as she stroked my rather obvious erection through my slacks.
That was a wonderful time, Melody was not shy at all and in my bedroom she did a little strip tease for me.
Then stark naked, she pushed me back onto my bed and undid my slacks, letting out a soft groan as her fingers found my erection.
My own hands found the soft blond down at her pubes, my middle fingers stroked her damp lips, sliding inside.
Such a wonderful sensation, investigating the warm soft insides of a beautiful woman.
Melody had several intense orgasms while I was doing that, and several more after I finally entered her.
She never left my house after that except to gather her things.
Marriage, four long years of happy followed.
My job paid fairly well so we were secure. I managed the warehouse, keeping track of inventory and deliveries.
The only bad part was the once each month delivery to one account that meant an overnight trip. I had wanted to just ship the product out but the boss had a truck and I was on salary so he thought it was cheaper to just send me.
"I can pay you a few bucks extra and a room, that way no pressure to get back." He told me.
I added that up and with fuel and all the rest there wasn't a hell of a lot of difference but he would not budge on that one point.
His name was Ben Harrington, a tall and good looking guy not yet 40, curly mass of blond hair himself. It seemed that regular as clockwork he had some gal in his office.
Always blond, too.
Just once Melody came by the warehouse, she met Ben that time. She looked good but then Melody always looked good.
"Yum yum!" He told her with that devil may care grin as they shook hands.
Melody's face flushed with pleasure but I didn't think anything of it.
Later after she left he poked me in the arm.
"You lucky son of a bitch!" He grinned at me.
It was just a couple of weeks later that Ben asked me to make the first delivery run, it was a Tuesday.
I whined and complained but Ben was adamant.
Finally I gave in, called Melody and told her what was up.
I explained I would stay overnight in Seattle and make the run back to the warehouse the next morning.
"It's just going to be once or twice a month and I guess I will be on the clock so it's more money too."
"OK, honey. I will be fine. Then when you get home Wednesday I will have a nice dinner ready."
"OK." I said.