Her Ex-GI P.I.
By Peg Herring
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About this ebook
Carrie Walsh is a 1960s girl with a job she hates and a tendency to think of herself as unimportant. When she witnesses a murder in Flint, Michigan, Carrie's life takes a new direction. Following the instructions the victim whispered as he lay dying, she goes to meet Jack Porter, a handsome, brooding Vietnam veteran mistreated by life and disabled by war. The two join forces to find out why his best friend and army buddy was stabbed in an alley. As she works with Jack over time, Carrie begins to feel less like the hopeless ugly duckling her mother believes her to be.
Suspense builds as Jack and Carrie investigate the cases of other men who survived Vietnam only to die soon after they came back to "the world." Just when they start to trust each other, Carrie discovers Jack brought secrets home from the war, secrets that create disappointment, uncertainty, and the very real possibility she's the target for the next murder.
Peg Herring
Peg Herring is the author of several series and standalones. She lives in northern Michigan with her husband and ancient but feisty cat. Peg also writes as Maggie Pill, who is younger and much cooler.
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Her Ex-GI P.I. - Peg Herring
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-One
Chapter Thirty-Two
Chapter Thirty-Three
Chapter Thirty-Four
Chapter Thirty-Five
Chapter Thirty-Six
Chapter Thirty-Seven
Chapter One
Carrie stood at the third-floor window, squinting as she watched Peter Callender in the parking lot below. The day was cool but bright, and the dumpy little man whose motives she knew so well moved busily in and out of her range of vision, disappearing several times down the alley and returning with a can of garbage each time. The overfilled receptacles were a lot for a man with spaghetti arms to carry, and she heard an occasional scrape as the can’s metal bottom brushed the concrete. Determination provided strength for the task, and Peter dumped the contents of each can beside the last, forming a disgusting, noxious wall of garbage around the sides and rear of a cream-colored Cadillac parked in his designated parking space.
The Caddy belonged to Peter’s brother and business partner, Jim Callender. Jim had usurped Peter’s space so an attractive female client could leave her new, 1968 Mustang convertible in Jim’s space. The car sat two spaces down, its chrome wheels sparkling in the October sunlight. Carrie could admire its sleek lines without losing track of Peter’s progress.
Jim and the lady in question had gone off together for a consultation,
a term that caused Peter and the other partner, a cousin named Brad Callender, to roll their eyes each time Jim used it. Bluntly speaking, they had gone to a nearby hotel for a quickie, leaving both cars at the office for the sake of appearances. That left no parking space for Peter when he returned from lunch. While his Thunderbird sat in a One Hour Parking Only space on the street, Peter took his revenge, one gooey pile of trash at a time.
As she turned away from the window, Carrie sighed. Her work was almost finished for the day, but she wouldn’t be leaving soon. When Peter had finished his juvenile prank and gone home, she’d trek down to the Caddy and un-barricade it before Jim returned. It was sure to be a nasty job, but office peace would be maintained—at least for a while.
Carrie had worked for the law firm of Callender, Callender, and Callender for almost two years, longer than any other secretary had tolerated the antics of the three adult delinquents. Decent lawyers, successful men, and responsible citizens in many ways, they hated each other passionately and aired their feelings at peak volume when the mood struck one, two, and sometimes all three of them.
Past secretaries had quit in tears, in anger, and in disgust, but Carrie stayed on, braving the shouting and the lunacy. Maybe she’d become used to their ways, or, as her mother said over and over, maybe she had no common sense. Mostly she couldn’t face the prospect of looking for another job, since she didn’t exactly inspire confidence in prospective employers. The Callenders liked her, though they didn’t like each other. The coping mechanism Carrie had developed over time was to foresee and forestall trouble whenever possible.
Brad, the cheap one, had billed his own uncle at a ridiculous rate for preparing his will. (Why not? The old geezer’s rolling in money.
) Carrie treated it as if it were her own clerical error and got Peter to fix it. When Peter dithered with useless detail until papers were late getting filed, she suggested a revolving system for proofing documents and left Peter out of the rotation when a deadline was close. She even managed sometimes to keep Jim’s escapades with female clients a secret from the other two, though what they did know was scandalous enough.
Difficult as it was, Carrie made the office work, and for that the Callenders were grateful in their way. Still, it was awful when they went at each other, screaming, swearing, and shouting for hours on end, followed by a day, sometimes two or three, where Carrie was the only one any of them would speak to. Peter and Jim were the worst, but Brad egged them on, siding with Jim sometimes and Peter others. Occasionally the brothers united against him too. She never knew how it would play out.
That was why today she’d remove the trash from around Jim’s car and hope neither man mentioned it in the morning. Peter would think Jim too proud to say anything, and Jim would never know he’d been the target of Peter’s vendetta.
As Carrie started down the hallway to the stairs, broom in hand, she heard feet shuffling on the landing above and a voice called, Where you goin’, Miss Walsh?
She turned to see Bea, the building’s cleaning lady, coming down the stairs. Bea, twice Carrie’s size and age and suffering from bad feet, still did the work of three men. A static-y transistor radio broadcast Motown music from her belt, since Bea claimed she cleaned better with accompaniment. She was especially fond of the Temptations, but now she dialed down the volume to barely audible.
When Carrie shrugged, Bea answered her own question. You’re gonna clean up his mess, ain’t you?
No doubt all the tenants were snickering about Jim’s stunt by now. Carrie shrugged a second time. It won’t take long, and tomorrow will be a lot easier.
It ain’t your job.
Bea set the mop down with a thump, and folds of skin under her chin wobbled as she shook her head. That copper-colored hair of yours don’t give them the right to treat you like a red-headed step-child.
They don’t do it to me. They do it to each other,
Carrie reasoned. It makes things easier when I fix the things that are fixable.
Like when you cleaned the spaghetti off the wall after Peter missed Jim with it, or when you bought a new lamp with your own money so Brad wouldn’t know Jim busted his?
Bea shook her mop and the smell of pine wafted toward Carrie. It ain’t right, you babying them men. Lotsa better lawyers would hire a secretary good as you.
Carrie’s laugh was mirthless. I don’t know any. They all want girls with an associate degree.
She added somewhat wistfully, And girls with—I don’t know—class.
Bea opened her mouth to say something, but Carrie pointed to herself. I know what kind of impression I make with my frizzy hair and Twiggy body. I’m terrible with clothes. I blush when a stranger looks at me.
She touched the black frames that hid much of her face. And what lawyer wants a girl with Coke-bottle glasses and a squint to be the first one clients see?
Bea put up a finger as if to argue, but Carrie went on in a burst of self-deprecation. I’m lucky the Callenders are so hard to work for. It meant they had to give me a chance.
She shoved her glasses into place with a quick jab, a habit of necessity since the heavy lenses caused them to slide down her nose constantly. I’m stuck with this job, so I’ll clean up Jim’s little prank and go on.
Bea sighed as if to say she disagreed but wouldn’t argue. Instead, she set her mop in a corner and pulled yellow cotton gloves from her left back pocket. It ain’t my mess either, but the two of us will get done twice as fast.
They went to work, Bea shoveling the trash back into the metal cans with a large dustpan and Carrie dragging them into the alley from whence they came. Bea insisted on taking the dirtier job, since she was dressed for it, though Carrie’s brown skirt and sweater wouldn’t have shown the dirt much.
It was five-twenty when Carrie, hauling the last empty can within Bea’s reach, looked at her watch, I have to call the courthouse before five-thirty. Let’s go back inside, and I’ll finish this later.
This should be the last one,
Bea said, surveying their work. I’ll fill it, and you can haul it into the alley on your way to the bus stop.
She checked her watch. It’s Tuesday, so the boss-man will be stopping by to see if he can catch me goofing off.
With a grin she added, He always show up when the TNT Bar down the street has two-for-one-drinks.
You’re an angel.
Giving the older woman a quick hug, Carrie headed upstairs.
She left work fifteen minutes later, having made her call and finished the office chores. The early autumn darkness had descended, and everyone else in the building was gone. Jim’s car and the Mustang were still there, so it appeared the matinee
was turning into an evening performance. At least he’d never know about Peter’s nasty trick.
Hitching her purse strap higher on her shoulder, Carrie picked up the last trash can by its handles, feeling the cold metal through her gloves. The can smelled of mimeograph ink and something fruity, maybe peaches. It was full, and she concentrated on keeping it upright so as not to spill the contents as she entered the alley. Along the wall were the six cans she’d lugged back earlier, and she headed for the end of the line, waddling clumsily under the weight she carried.
Movement to her right caught her eye, and Carrie peered toward the opposite end of the alley. Two men stood over a third figure, all silhouetted against a lighter building across the street. Though Carrie saw only shapes, one man appeared to be searching the fallen one’s clothing while the other stood back, separating himself from the action. Surprise caused Carrie to tip the can she carried, and its lid dropped to the pavement with a clatter. The two standing men looked toward her, startled. An instant later they reacted, disappearing around the building.
Carrie stood for a moment in shock, struggling to take in what she’d seen. When she recovered her wits, she hurried to where the fallen man lay flat on his back, very still. Are you all right?
He moaned softly in response. After checking the street to be sure his attackers were gone, she knelt beside him on the cold bricks.
He was about her age, with even features that were pinched with pain. In the shadowy light Carrie saw his corduroy jacket and tight-ribbed sweater were stained with blood that bubbled from a wound in his chest. Instinctively she put her hand over it, trying to stop the flow. Could he live through the loss of so much blood?
The man seemed aware of her presence. His mouth moved, and he tried to form words. She leaned close, still applying pressure to the wound. Lie still. I’ll get help, and we’ll get you to a hospital.
Surprisingly strong fingers gripped her hand, and the man tried again to speak, a whisper coming with each ragged breath. Carrie listened intently. Whatever he had to say was important to him.
Tell Jack—Namwise, Kali—Shurenz. Please—Jack.
Feeling the fingers begin to lose their grip, Carrie looked into the dying man’s eyes and said, I’ll tell Jack exactly what you said. Now lie still.
A strangled sigh told her no doctor could save the man. Instead, she stayed with him, holding his hand until the grip relaxed. Then, with tears in her own eyes, she closed his sightless ones and went to find a different kind of help.
Chapter Two
Sergeant Bill Stevenson stood outside the small room where Carrie Walsh sat looking at mug books. As he waited, Bill looked out the second-story window at the street below. At the Genesee County Courthouse people moved in and out, either searching for justice or hoping to avoid it. Farther down the street, the Flint Cinema advertised Bullitt, Steve McQueen’s new movie.
Too bad real life wasn’t like the movies. Stevenson had a murder to solve, but no expectation it would happen. The girl in the next room had paged through books for an hour, ignoring the station’s terrible coffee after a single sip, though she thanked him politely for it.
There wasn’t much chance of success, but she was anxious to help, and she was a nice girl. From the thick glasses she wore, Stevenson figured Carrie Walsh wasn’t a great witness. She’d seen only shapes in the alley, two men, one slight the other of better than average size.
Stevenson had already concluded it was one of the senseless deaths that made his job so frustrating. The victim was an average guy with no enemies, at least according to his business partner, Jack Porter. He hadn’t been robbed, and it didn’t seem like any kind of a sex thing. Two unknown men had dragged him into an alley, knocked him around a bit, and then stabbed him. Todd Sachs had died as a result.
It was even possible the two men Carrie had seen were just opportunists who happened along as Sachs lay dying. They’d been searching him, she said, but what they’d been looking for other than a few bucks, no one could say. Sachs hadn’t even had a real job, though he and Porter had been working on it.
Private detectives—the thought made Stevenson snort softly in disgust. Just what Flint needed, two amateurs trying to sort out the mess that was Michigan’s murder capital. At least these guys had the background for it: army training and combat experience. Not a bad idea if you were going to open an office on Dort Highway.
A chair scraped against the tile floor, and the sergeant turned his attention again to Carrie Walsh. She’d finished the last book, and she removed her glasses and leaned back to rub her eyes. Without the clunky black frames, the lenses that distorted her eyes, and the squint that appeared when she focused on something, she wasn’t bad looking. Her long, reddish-brown hair had a lot of curl to it, even if the ends kind of frizzed out. Her green eyes were nice. Her pale, freckled complexion, which he bet she hated, was smooth, like fine china. Her clothes were about as attractive as his Aunt Mildred’s, but she had long legs, a nice build, and—Stevenson stopped, reminding himself to be the businesslike, married cop he was.
Anything?
No. I’m sorry.
He smiled, a quick bend of his lips. I doubt the men you saw are in those books.
She gave him the already-familiar squint. Really? I hoped we’d catch them.
Noting the we, Stevenson smiled to himself, though he kept his expression serious. He rose, moved to her side, took the book she’d closed, and slid it atop the others with a soft clunk. This crime was probably random, someone looking for cash. They didn’t get it because you showed up and stopped them.
She nodded, accepting that at least she’d interrupted the criminals’ plans somewhat. They could be drifters who came in on a train and left town the same way. Lots of times criminals can avoid arrest just by staying on the move.
Miss Walsh nodded, putting her ugly glasses back on. I’ve never seen anyone die before, and to die only because you were on a certain street at a certain moment—that’s awful.
He could have told her it happened all the time, but something in her innocent face made him want to shield her from the knowledge. She frowned at the mug books then turned to him. Did Mr. Sachs have family?
No,
Stevenson answered. His parents are dead, he’d never married, and he had only one sibling, a brother killed in Vietnam a few years ago. His partner, Jack Porter, will be taking care of—matters.
That’s the Jack I was supposed to give the message to?
Probably, but the message means nothing to Porter.
It meant something to Mr. Sachs. He insisted I had to tell Jack.
Stevenson shifted his weight. His knees hurt, which wasn’t unusual. People close to death sometimes seem to have something very important to say. They struggle to get it out, and others agonize over what it is. In the end it might turn out to be something like, ‘The sky is blue.’ It’s death they feel coming over them, and all they want is to communicate with the living one more time.
Miss Walsh frowned. Maybe I didn’t get it right.
It was probably nothing,
he repeated. You shouldn’t worry about it.
I’m sure you’re right.
The girl’s smile was pretty, but if they’d passed on the street, he’d have looked right past her. What made her so—what was the word—frumpy?
Stevenson sincerely thanked Miss Walsh for being a concerned citizen. People had been known to ignore the dead and the dying on American streets, like a recent incident when a young woman had screamed repeatedly for help as she was chased, stabbed, and eventually murdered. That woman had died alone, but Carrie Walsh would have waded in, with her poor eyesight and her one-hundred-twenty pounds, and made a difference. Maybe not in the crime itself, but in the perceptions that cops like Stevenson had of the citizenry of the nation.
CARRIE MISSED WORK Wednesday because of the police investigation into the death of Todd Sachs, but on Thursday she returned to the office, pale but composed. All morning the Callenders were quiet as she caught up on the most pressing items. With only the sound of her typewriter and the occasional phone call, the office functioned as an office should. By lunchtime, the Callenders were bursting with curiosity, and they began picking at Carrie to get her to tell the details of the murder she’d witnessed.
She told the story, neglecting to mention why she’d been in the building’s alley so late. Sadly, their reaction didn’t surprise Carrie at all.
Drug dealers,
Peter proclaimed. It’s just as well when they kill each other off.
But the police don’t think Mr. Sachs was dealing in drugs,
she objected.
Of course he was.
For once Jim agreed with his brother. Those guys come back from Vietnam addicts, most of ’em, anyway. The only way they can feed their habit is to sell the stuff.
It’s too bad you had to see it, Miss Walsh,
Brad consoled, but that’s how the world is these days. We need to stay out of the affairs of little countries no one’s ever heard of. Those people over there don’t value human life, and our guys come back infected with their ideas.
The refrain was familiar, but she wasn’t in the mood for it today. Carrie busied herself with work, and the Callenders moved back to their insular mini worlds.
Later in the day, her employers’ interest turned to local affairs, at least to Jim’s. Brad began it with an apparently innocent question.
Jim, did you have time to talk with Mrs. Meyers about her divorce?
I’ve decided to handle her case,
Jim replied, which set Peter off.
That’s what we call it now—handling her case?
Brad tittered, and Carrie sighed at his phrasing. Jim thought if he simply refused to admit what he did, no one could censure him for it.
I cannot believe you—
Peter began, and they were screaming at each other in no time. Brad took Peter’s side this time. Even dumpier and more mealy-mouthed than Peter, he couldn’t resist commenting on the length of Jim’s conference
with Mrs. Meyers and the lady’s assets.
Jim, the only one of the three with any outward charm, had none within. His handsome face turned red and tightened to an ugly glare. Caught in his own lies and misdemeanors, Jim’s usual response was, None of your business.
That was what he said—shouted—in this instance too.
Peter, usually the most composed of the three, lost both control and dignity when a battle began in earnest. He threw things, stomped around the office, and repeated himself to the point of idiocy. Today it was, I can’t accept this. I just can’t.
The Callender fights were legendary and eerily similar in structure. When something happened that made one of the three unhappy, he commented on it persistently until he got a rise out of one of the other two. It sometimes took an hour or so for open war to break out. There were days when one or another even tried to avoid it, but eventually one of them would take a louder tone and a more aggressive style. Escalation was then quick and terrible.
Can’t accept what?
Jim sneered at his brother.
Your behavior is a reflection on the firm and on the family. Dalliance with clients is unconscionable, and I won’t have it anymore.
It had been said a dozen times, but Jim reacted as if stunned. You won’t have it? Who are you to tell me what to do with my life, Mr. Perfect? If we all operated the way you do, we’d have no clients at all.
Peter rose from his desk. I work on business principles: fair profit for fair work.
Brad, whom Carrie’s father would have called Pencil-neck,
stepped in. We can’t have your relationships with women dictating our practices, Jim. Why, last week you didn’t even charge Miss Chaplain for preparing her will.
Sometimes we give up something to get something,
Jim retorted. Miss Chaplain will return with her million-dollar holdings when she needs further legal help.
Peter snorted derisively. And we’ll lose the rest of the family if they learn how you carried on with a girl twenty years your junior.
Fifteen,
Jim amended huffily. And age has nothing to do with physical attraction. Miss Chaplain is a legal adult.
Chronologically,
Brad corrected. I’d put her mental age at fifteen.
Shut up! You’re so jealous your teeth are green.
Jim’s shout signaled the end of what might possibly be called discussion.
Don’t tell him to shut up,
Peter growled. It’s your fly that should be shut up.