Dead Man's Image

by Edna Curry
Now also available in paperback from:
http://www.diskuspublishing.com/ednacurry.html
or ebooks
available in many formats from:
http://www.fictionwise.com/ebooks/eBook16482.htm

In DEAD MAN'S IMAGE the hero is shocked
to see a police artist's sketch of a murder suspect which looks like
himself. When he calls to ask who the victim is, he's given his own
name. So, he can't tell them he's alive, because he'll be accused of
murdering the man who looks like him. Therefore, he hires Lacey, an
attractive PI, to help him out of this jam. But he didn't count on
falling in love with her.
Reviews:
from
Romantic Times Magazine:
|
There's nothing better than a good murder mystery, especially one
where you don't know whodunit until the end. Edna Curry pens a
winner in DEAD MAN'S IMAGE. Murder, mistaken identity, and a
secondary plot tie together a completely enjoyable read. ($7.50 dk,
$4.50 dl) |
|
—Judith Rippelmeyer |
Read an Excerpt:
Electronically published
in arrangement with the author
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
1-58495-838-3
No portion of this book
may be reprinted in whole or in part, by printing, faxing, E-mail,
copying electronically or by any other means without permission of the
publisher. For more information contact DiskUs Publishing
http://www.diskuspublishing.com
E-mail sales@diskuspublishing.com
DiskUs Publishing
PO Box 43
Albany, IN 47320
*
This is a work of fiction. All names in this publication are fictitious
and any resemblance to any person living or dead is coincidental.
* * *
Chapter One
Paul Menns entered the crowded truck
stop for a bite to eat and coffee. A delicious mixture of food aromas
met his nose, and the warmth of the cafe felt wonderful after working
outdoors in the chilly spring air. He sat down at the counter, wrapped
his long legs around the base of the stool and placed his order.
Picking up the Minneapolis
Star-Tribune from the end of the counter, he scanned the headlines, then
turned to the Metro section. For a long, confused moment, Paul thought
he was looking at his reflection. That looks like me. What is my picture
doing in the paper? Then he read the caption through bleary eyes and
realized it was a computer image, not a photo. It was someone the police
were looking for --a sketch made from an eyewitness's description of a
murder suspect. What the hell?
Reading further, Paul discovered a
body had been found upriver. The unidentified dead man was white, about
thirty-five, six feet tall, a hundred and ninety pounds, brown eyes and
hair, and had no ID, scars or tattoos. The hairs on the back of his neck
stood up, and he reached up to rub them. Jeez, the description of the
dead guy sounds even more like me. This is weird.
A creepy feeling slid up his back
and he wondered if others in the room would notice how much he looked
like the guy in the paper. He didn't like this at all. The waitress set
his plate of toast in front of him and refilled his coffee cup. Now he
imagined she was looking at him strangely. Or was he the one who was
acting strange?
He pulled his cap down farther over
his eyes and stared at the picture as he downed the toast without
tasting it. The more he looked at the paper, the more sure he became
that the sketch was a picture of him. The cops thought he was a
murderer! Who in the hell was he supposed to have killed? And who was
this woman who had described him? Did he know her? He gulped the rest of
his coffee and pushed his cup away.
His first instinct was to go to the
sheriff's office and tell the sheriff he was nuts, that he hadn't killed
anyone, so there couldn't be any evidence against him.
On the other hand, the sheriff had
this eyewitness. If she stuck to her story, he'd end up in jail for a
while. He couldn't be off the road very long or his trucking business
would be ruined.
He wondered how he could find out
who the dead guy was. Getting an idea, he paid his bill and went out to
the pay phone in the café entrance. After finding the police
department's number, he dialed it, then looked in the newspaper again
for the name in the article's byline.
When a woman answered, he said,
"This is Johnson, again, from the Tribune. Have you identified
yesterday's murder victim yet?"
"Yes, sir, we have. It's Paul Menns,
of Canton, Minnesota."
Paul almost dropped the phone. He
swallowed, and tried to keep his voice even. He couldn't have heard her
correctly. "Can you spell that name for me, please?"
She did, and he closed his eyes
against the welling shock and disbelief. Good Grief, I'm supposed to be
dead! He brought himself back to attention when the woman said
impatiently, "Will there be anything else, sir?"
He thought fast, then stammered,
"Uh, yes. Was that a positive ID? I mean, uh, who identified the body?"
"A Mrs. Anderson called first thing
this morning. She's the manager of the apartment house where Mr. Menns
lived in Canton. She claims to have known him well."
"Thanks." Paul hung up with
trembling fingers. His own landlady had identified that body as his. How
could that be? He hardly ever saw Mrs. Anderson, of course, but surely
she knew him well enough to know this other guy wasn't him. She must
have seen the sketch in the paper and come forward. Hadn't she seen him
in her building just a couple hours ago? Or heard his truck when he
drove away? This is so mixed up. How can I be the murderer and the dead
guy, too?
Paul felt a headache coming on as he
tried to sort it all out. He needed help with this. And he certainly
couldn't go to the cops. He didn't trust those guys at all. They'd
probably believe the damn birdwatcher lady instead of him.
He picked up the phone book again
and looked up private investigators. Not much choice. The yellow pages
covered several small towns in the area, but listed only one private
investigator.
***
Standing at the window of her home
office, sipping hot coffee, Lacey stared out over the Minnesota lake
surrounded by tall evergreens. Sunshine sparkled off the blue water and
a breeze stirred up enough waves to slap the shore. They made her little
fishing boat bounce where she'd tied it at her dock. Living here in the
woods a few miles from town isolated her, but she loved it.
The phone rang and she went quickly
back to her desk. She steeled herself not to pick it up on the first
ring, not wanting to appear too anxious. "Summers' Investigations."
"Let me talk to the investigator."
"Speaking." Why did people always
assume she was only the receptionist?
"You are? A woman investigator?" The
deep voice at the other end of the line registered surprise and dismay.
Great, she finally got a possible
client and he was a male chauvinist! She reminded herself that she
hadn't had any cases except snooping on a couple of cheating husbands
for weeks. She was broke and needed the business. That was the trouble
with working in a small town like Landers. They were great to live in,
but the money wasn't always so hot.
Trying her best to keep the
irritation out of her voice, she said, "That's right. I'm Lacey Summers,
a licensed private investigator. How can I help you?"
"I'm Paul Menns. I want to hire you
to investigate something for me."
"What kind of something?"
He was silent a moment, then said,
"The sheriff had my picture in the paper this morning. Maybe you saw it?
The guy that woman saw dumping the body by the St. Croix?"
"The Trib?" Lacey glanced at the
morning paper still lying on her desk where she'd been reading it.
Everybody had been talking about the murder at the Flame when she'd
stopped for coffee yesterday and again this morning when the computer
image of the suspect had been printed.
"Yeah, that's it."
Over the telephone, Lacey could hear
the noise of people talking in the background, as in a restaurant or
bar. Maybe the guy was drunk. He wasn't making much sense.
Yesterday an eyewitness had claimed
to have seen the guy who dumped the body by the river and described him
for the police artist. A nice looking guy too, if the image of the
suspect was accurate. In Lacey's experience, it usually came pretty
close.
Then this morning, the scuttlebutt
at the Flame claimed the woman had seen the victim, not the murderer.
She'd described the dead guy for the artist. What a hoot. They didn't
need the artist, they could have just gone down to the morgue and taken
a picture of him. 'Course that wasn't in the paper, they'd figured that
out after the article in the paper had been written. So, how could he be
talking to her on the phone?
She swallowed. "The artist's image?
I thought that picture was of the dead guy?" Had the Flame's gossip been
wrong? Wouldn't be the first time if it was, of course.
"Yeah. Well, as some guy said, the
reports of my death have been exaggerated."
"Samuel Clemens," Lacey said
automatically, trying to take in what he'd said.
"Really? I thought it was Mark
Twain."
"Same guy. You mean the Sheriff
misidentified the body? Then who's the dead guy? Does he really look
like you?"
"How would I know? That's what I
want you to find out." His voice sounded doubtful that she could do it.
"I don't dare go home 'til I know it's safe."
"Why not, for Pete's sake? All you
have to do is show them you're not dead. That they ID'd the body wrong."
His laugh rang harshly over the
wire. "Yeah, right!"
Something didn't add up here and her
heartbeat sped up in excitement. She really loved puzzles and this
sounded like an interesting one. She asked cautiously, "What makes you
think Sheriff Ben has identified the body as you?"
"I just called the sheriff's office,
and asked if they'd identified it yet. They gave me my own name. If I go
to him, he'll slap me in a cell for murder."
"Why would he do that?"
"You aren't listening, lady. That
woman gave him a description of the guy she says dumped the body. Just
'cause the dead guy looks like me isn't going to stop him from arresting
me. He'll still think I killed the guy, whoever he is."
Caution lowered her voice. "Could
this dead guy be anyone you know? Do you have any idea of what's going
on here?"
He barked, "Hell, no! I just got in.
I never heard of the guy 'til I saw the sketch in the paper a while
ago."
Lacey jerked the phone away from her
ear. Why would the sheriff think he killed a guy he didn't know? Must be
more to it than that. "Got in?"
"I'm an over-the-road trucker. I
just got back from a run to the East Coast." He lowered his voice. "The
weird thing is, I really do look like that sketch. So the dead guy must
look like me, too."
Lacey's thoughts whirled. "Oh."
"So, will you take my case?"
"I'd like to talk to you in person
before I decide. Where are you?"
"At a truck stop, but I'm leaving
here. Everyone's reading the paper and someone might have recognized me
as the guy in it. I'll meet you at a fast-food place just over the
Wisconsin border." He gave her directions. "I'll be at the last booth,
back by the rest rooms."
"I know the place. Okay, fine. I'll
be there in about thirty minutes," she said, and hung up.
She went to the little half-bath off
her office, then glanced in the mirror to see if she looked at least
presentable. Picking up her hairbrush, she ran it through her short
hair, brushing it back. It fell neatly into place, thanks to a good cut
that was her one concession to fashion. Touching up her lips with a
natural lipstick, she sighed and let her primping go at that.
A guy accused of murder wasn't going
to be too fussy about her looks anyway. He'd be thinking about saving
his own neck. The blue slacks and sweatshirt she wore were enough for
the warm May day.
She grabbed her navy leather purse.
Then on impulse, she picked up the paper, tore out the story of the
murder, folded it and tucked it into her purse. Dashing out to her
little red Chevy, she drove the three miles into Landers in record time.
***
Paul tucked the newspaper under his
arm and left the truck stop. He glanced toward his freshly washed silver
box semi sitting in a long row of semis out in back as he walked quickly
across the parking lot.
If the police had his name, they
would soon be checking out his apartment and vehicles, investigating his
"death." When they didn't find his truck, they'd probably think the
murderer took it. Then the sheriff would probably put out an APB on it.
Damn! He wouldn't be able to go back out on the road. Or even go back to
his apartment house and claim his car.
He didn't want to be asked why he
looked like the dead man or questioned as a suspect for murder. Neither
sounded like a good option, especially with this migraine headache. He
certainly couldn't run his business from a jail cell. The fast food
place where he'd told the PI he'd meet her was just a couple of blocks
down the highway. Far enough so that if they found his truck, they
wouldn't immediately find him.
The bright, sunny day seemed
incongruous against the black cloud of fear and tension that filled him.
With long strides, he covered the distance to the meeting place quickly.
He bought a cola, then sat in the back booth as he'd said he would and
waited for her to arrive.
Why did the only PI available have
to be a woman? Was she any good? Not that he had any prejudice against
women, of course, but he'd feel a lot better if he had a burly man by
his side against the sheriff right now.
Damn, would that PI ever show up?
Maybe she'd chickened out when she'd thought more about his weird story.
He wouldn't blame her if she did. He could hardly believe it himself.
***
Lacey respected Sheriff Ben's
opinions and she definitely wanted his version of this story before she
stuck her neck out by taking on this odd case. Paul would have to wait a
bit.
Ben's office was right on the way to
the burger place where Paul Menns had asked her to meet him.
She and Sheriff Ben were old
friends, though he'd gotten huffy when she'd accused him of being
involved in her Uncle Henry's death a couple of years ago. After all,
Uncle Henry had been Ben's card-playing buddy for years, and she
couldn't expect him to be happy about her suspicions. She'd made up with
him after they'd found the real murderer, but a certain coolness and
wariness remained between them.
But most of the time they got along
okay. Ben even sent her a client now and then. Of course, the fact that
she was the only PI for miles around might have something to do with his
generosity.
Ben wouldn't always talk, but
occasionally she could trade on their long-time friendship for
information she needed. She'd read the Trib's version of this story,
heard the coffee shop version, and now the supposedly dead guy's
version. Where was the truth?
It was mid-morning on a weekday, so
there were only a few cars on Landers' main street. The old brick
courthouse sat in the center of the main square, and various small
retail businesses and offices sat in a square around it, sort of like
secret service guys ringing the president.
A block off that square, Lacey
pulled up at the white frame building that served as the sheriff's
office and the county jail. Landers didn't get much crime. Anyone
sentenced for more than a few months was sent to one of the state
prisons.
The building's interior was plain,
but furnished in natural-finish oak. They hadn't been stingy with the
taxpayer's money. She waved at the dispatcher who was on the phone and
walked on back to Ben's office.
Sheriff Ben was sitting back in his
swivel chair with his feet up on his desk. He had a jelly doughnut in
one hand and a newspaper in the other, folded open to the same story
Lacey had been reading earlier. Ben was in his late forties, a tall,
thin man with a long hawk-like nose. He was usually good-humored, and
always fair. He glanced up and greeted her with a wide grin.
She perched on the corner of his
desk and met his gray eyes. "Morning, Ben. I hear that article you're
reading is now outdated. What's up?"
He frowned. "Lacey, you know better
than to pump me."
She gave him her most disarming
smile. "It's all over town already, Ben."
"I suppose that's true."
"I hear you got two phone tips as
soon as the paper came out with this sketch this morning."
"Yeah." Ben looked away ruefully.
"First was from the coroner. He said both this woman and I were nuts.
The guy in the computer image is the dead guy, not the perp."
Lacey grinned. "That was the
scuttlebutt at the Flame this morning. Hadn't you seen the body
yourself?"
"Sure. But I just had a general
description of the perp from the birdwatcher. I didn't realize that she
saw the dead guy instead from that."
Lacey nodded. "And the second tip
identified him as Paul Menns?"
Ben grunted. "So you heard that
already, too. Is nothing secret around here?"
"You know how it is in a small town,
Ben."
"Yeah, I guess." He sighed and drank
his coffee. "Second was the woman over in Canton who owns the Anderson
Apartments on the south side. She was sure the guy in the paper was a
man renting one of her apartments there, Paul Menns. I went over and
picked her up. She wasn't too happy about the idea of going to the
morgue, but she ID'd the guy there all right."
Lacey's eyes narrowed. "She had no
doubt it was him?"
Ben laughed and finished off his
doughnut. "No. She claimed she knew him well enough. He's lived there a
couple of years now."
"You've released that information
already? Don't you have to wait to notify his next of kin?"
Ben shrugged. "His landlady says he
told her that he doesn't have any relatives. She keeps that info on her
renters in case they skip without paying. I checked it out and couldn't
find any either."
Lacey chewed her lip and stared out
the window. Something didn't add up here. She couldn't tell the sheriff
she'd just talked to a guy who said he was Paul Menns. Either he was
lying about who he was, or someone else who looked a lot like him was in
the morgue.
The guy on the phone had sounded
sincere enough. Not evasive like she'd expect if he were lying. This
case was so weird, like nothing she'd come across in the several years
that she'd been an investigator. Before opening her own office, she'd
worked for a firm in Minneapolis for a couple of years. If this Paul
Menns had killed a guy, wouldn't he have worked out an alibi of some
kind? "Is this guy anybody we know?"
"Was, Lacey. Past tense. As in 'he's
dead'. In the morgue with a couple of slugs in him."
"So you said," she said, glancing
back at him in disbelief. "Go on."
"What's your interest in this case?"
Ben eyed her suspiciously. He got up to refill his Styrofoam cup with
coffee.
Oh, oh, he's going to get suspicious
and clam up on me. "Just curious, Ben. Sounds interesting, and I
wondered what was fact and what was just gossip," she hedged.
"Don't want to tell me, eh? Want a
cup?" At Lacey's nod, he filled another cup and handed it to her.
Lacey took the coffee and shrugged.
"Nothing to tell, Ben." Ben rubbed one long bony finger along the side
of his nose. That seemed to be his favorite gesture, and Lacey wondered
if he'd broken his nose at one time, making it itch. He hadn't answered
her question, so she repeated it. "You know this Paul Menns?"
"Nope, he's nobody I've run into
before. No priors. An over-the-road trucker, his landlady says. Had his
own rig and was an independent. Got jobs where he could, nothing
regular. Did pretty much as he pleased for a schedule, I gather. Out on
the road most of the time." Ben lounged his long frame into the chair
again and sipped the hot coffee.
"Have you identified the body any
other way, yet? Fingerprints, maybe? Dental records?" The Trib had said
they hadn't when it went to press. But that was probably written last
night, hours ago. How could she find out without tipping off Ben to who
her client claimed to be?
"Nope. There was no ID on the body.
Nobody missing who fits the description, either."
"So, you only have the landlady's
word for who he is, so far?"
"Well, yeah, I guess so."
"Make sure who the dead guy really
is, will you, Ben? Just to avoid any complications, okay?"
Ben stared at her quizzically, then
shrugged. "Sure, Lacey. Can't hurt to do that, I guess. Give us time.
We're getting an autopsy and we've sent in his fingerprints."
Lacey drank the coffee, thinking.
"This eye-witness who described the man for the police artist, she's
reliable?"
"She sure seems to be."
"I hear she's from Minneapolis?"
"Yeah." Ben stared stoically into
his cup, then took another long swallow.
Honestly, getting information out of
him was like pulling taffy, Lacey thought. She watched Ben's face as she
went on, "The gossip at the Flame was that she claims she was
bird-watching on the Wisconsin side of the river around six Monday
morning when she saw movement across the river, in the trees along the
shore. She turned her binoculars on him long enough to get a good look
at his face. The guy dropped the body, then disappeared back into the
trees. That about right?"
Ben shrugged. "Why don't you ask
her?"
"Maybe I will, Ben, just to spite
you. They say she came back into town right away and reported it. You
went out and found the body in the woods on this side of the river, in
the upper Lion's Park, right where she said it would be."
"That's about it, Lacey. Satisfied?"
Lacey's coffee was getting cold and
she needed to see the man who'd called her. Maybe then she could figure
this out. She eased herself off the corner of his desk. "Sure Ben. I can
tell you want me to get lost. So this bird-watcher's testimony won't be
much use now?"
Ben shrugged and said, "Sounds like
it. She obviously saw the victim's face before the guy dumped him. Maybe
they were both there talking before the guy shot him."
Lacey raised an eyebrow. "You don't
sound too sure."
Ben crushed his empty Styrofoam
coffee cup and aimed it at the brown plastic wastebasket against the
wall. He missed and his dark bushy brows dipped. "Well, some of it
doesn't add up. She's sure she saw him carrying the guy, then drop him
there. But obviously, that couldn't have been the way it happened."
Lacey chewed her bottom lip. It
could have been if Paul Menns is still alive and really did dump that
guy's body. This doesn't sound good for Paul's case. "She didn't hear
any shots?"
"No. Nothing."
Lacey frowned. "You know sound
carries pretty good over the water. Anyone close enough to identify him
should have heard the shots."
"Sure, if the guy was shot out
there."
Meeting the sheriff's gaze, Lacey
said, "You doubt it."
He rubbed the crook in his nose
distractedly. "Well, we didn't find any evidence of it. Not yet anyway."
"No blood, no shell casings, no
gun?"
Ben shook his head. "We're still
looking."
"The river was a pretty handy place
to get rid of the gun."
He nodded morosely. "Exactly. And
the bottom's muddy. Going to be hard to find."
Lacey swallowed the last of her
coffee, saying, "You've got that right."
She crushed her cup and tossed it
into the wastebasket. She didn't miss.
Smiling triumphantly, she took her
leave.
She knew her hints that he might be
wrong about the body's identity would spur him to do more than he
normally would to double-check the identity. That was exactly what she
wanted him to do, because it would be easier for him than for her. He
had official channels to get the autopsy, dental records and
fingerprints. If this guy claiming to be Paul was lying, the sheriff
would prove it soon enough.
In the meantime, she needed to see
what the guy looked like for herself.
