At 7:15 AM, Chief Grady’s cell phone
vibrated violently inside his coat pocket. In honor of his well-deserved morning
off, the ringer had been placed on silent mode and his coat left on the rack
near the front door. Seconds after the
caller was sent to voicemail, the Grady’s household phone rang sharply.
Startled, Sharon tried to snatch the receiver up quickly to avoid waking her
husband. She scurried out into the hall
and gently pulled the bedroom door closed before whispering “hello” into the
phone.
“Marsha? Wait, slow down, I can’t….Just catch your breath
and tell me what’s… No, he’s sleeping. This is his first morning off in ages,
Marsha; I am not waking him up! Wait, WHAT? Hold on!”
The color had drained from
Sharon’s face, resembling a ghost, as she gently shook her husband awake. Chief Grady’s bleary, bloodshot eyes fought
to stay open as he rubbed the sleep-sand away.
“Baby? What’s wrong?” He muttered hoarsely while
struggling to haul himself to an upright position.
He blinked until the glowing
red numbers on the alarm clock came into focus. So much for sleeping in, his inner voice groaned. This is going to be the start of a wonderful
day. Sharon handed him the phone but on the other end all he could hear was
hysterical sobbing.
“Who
is this”, Chief Grady mouthed silently to his wife while pointing to the
receiver.
She whispered, “Marsha” then
grabbed a note pad and wrote “Mayor Farmington’s secretary” followed by “ask
her about the email”.
“Marsha? Can you hear me? Okay, good. I need you to take
a deep breath and hold it in. Good girl,
now exhale. Good. Now, can you tell me
about the email?” Grady asked, speaking calmly and clearly.
“I came into the office a little early this morning. To
tell you the truth, I wanted to fax out a resume and I didn’t want Mayor
Farmington to see it, you know.” Marsha explained; her voice wavered as if she
would burst into tears again any second.
“I opened my email and there was one sent late last night… from the
Mayor. It was a letter of res- res-”. The sobbing started again then she
howled, “He’s dead!”
“Whoa, calm down, Marsha. What makes you think he’s dead?
What did his letter say?”
“Please, Chief, you have to go to his house. Please!”
The sobs reverted back to
wailing and eventually Grady had no choice but to promise he would drive over
to Mayor Farmington’s house and check on him.
To make matters worse, Marsha insisted it had to be him because the matter
needed to be handled delicately.
“You do realize I’m not one of the Mayor’s favorite
people, Marsha. He’s going to be really angry that you sent me to his house.”
“No, it has to be you,” she whimpered. “I know you’ll
protect his…his…”
“Okay, okay, please, don’t start crying again. I’m sure
this all a misunderstanding but I’ll go to Mayor Farmington’s house right now.”
“But he’s not the mayor anymore!”
A fresh torrent of tears and
wails followed so Chief Grady said his goodbyes. It didn’t take long to get showered, dressed,
and out the door. The Farmington mansion
was only a few blocks away so he decided to walk. The cool air was invigorating but when the
breeze blew in from the beach it carried a rank odor of death, rotting, and
decay. It made him glad he had decided
to skip breakfast. Picking up the pace,
he managed to arrive at Dale and Sylvia’s posh home. This is
stupid, Grady thought as he pressed the doorbell. I wish I had turned the ringer off on the landline. Dale is going to blow a gasket when he sees
me. As his mind played out the impending scenarios, he knocked and rang the
bell again but there was no answer. Icy fingers of panic tickled his spine as
he pounded louder on the door.
“Can I help you?” A voice called from the driveway.
Startled, Chief Grady
whipped around and spotted a woman with a basket full of cleaning supplies. Her
hair was tied neatly in a bun and she was wearing a stereotypical housekeeper
uniform that vaguely reminded him of Alice from The Brady Bunch. Of course Dale would want people to know he
had a cleaning lady. I’ll bet it was his idea that she wears that stupid outfit.
“Hi, I’m looking for Mayor Farmington,” Grady called out.
In his mind, Marsha’s voice corrected
him. He’s not the mayor anymore.
“I doubt he’s here,” the Alice look-alike answered. “But
you’re welcome to come in and use the phone.”
“Thank you; that would be great.”
She unlocked the front door
and welcomed Grady inside with a sweeping hand gesture.
“Follow me; you can use the phone in the kitchen.”
A peculiar stench permeated
the air, reminiscent of a backed up toilet, and the chief hoped the cleaning
lady would be able to air that out before Dale returned. Ex-Mayor Farmington
seemed like the type who would chew someone out if he was able to detect
something stinky-even if he’d been the one who had fouled the place.
“The phone is right over-”
Her sentence was cut off by
a high-pitched, horrified screech. There
on the floor, with blood pooling into the crisp, white, grout between the imported
tiles, was Dale Farmington.
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