LEE CHILD. KILLING FLOOR

`I was at his funeral,’ she said. `We were all there. Chief Morrison made a speech on the lawn outside the church. So did Mayor Teale. They said he was a fine officer. They said he was Margrave’s finest. But they killed him.’

She said it with a lot of feeling. She’d liked Margrave. Her family had toiled there for generations. She was rooted. She’d liked her job. Enjoyed the sense of contribution. But the community she’d served was rotten. It was dirty and corrupted. It wasn’t a community. It was a swamp, wallowing in dirty money and blood. I sat and watched her world crumble.

We drove north on the road between Macon and Margrave. Halfway home Roscoe hung a right and we headed for Yellow Springs down a back road.

Over toward the hospital. I was hungry. We hadn’t eaten breakfast. Not the best state for revisiting the morgue. We swung into the hospital lot. Took the speed bumps slowly and nosed around to the back. Parked up a little way from the big metal roller door.

We got out of the car. Stretched our legs on a roundabout route to the office door. The sun was warming the day up. It would have been pleasant to stay outside. But we ducked in and went looking for the doctor. We found him in his shabby office. He was at his chipped desk. Still looking tired. Still in a white coat. He looked up and nodded us in.

`Morning, folks,’ he said. `What can I do for you?’

We sat down on the same stools as Tuesday. I stayed away from the fax machine. I let Roscoe do the talking. Better that way. I had no official standing.

`February this year,’ she said. `My chief of detectives up at the Margrave PD killed himself. Do you remember?’

`Was that some guy called Gray?’ the doctor said. Roscoe nodded and the doctor got up and

walked around to a file cabinet. Pulled open a

drawer. It was tight and made a screeching sound.

The doctor ran his fingers backwards over the files. `February,’ he said. `Gray.’

He pulled a file and carried it back to his desk. Dropped it on his blotter. Sat back down heavily and opened it up. It was a thin file. Not much in it.

`Gray,’ he said again. `Yes, I remember this guy. Hung himself, right? First time we had a Margrave case in thirty years. I was called up to his house. In the garage, wasn’t it? From a rafter?’

`That’s right,’ Roscoe said. She went quiet.

`So how can I help you?’ the doctor said.

‘Anything wrong with it?’ she asked.

The doctor looked at the file. Turned a page.

`Guy hangs himself, there’s always something wrong with it,’ he said.

Anything specially wrong with it?’ I said.

The doctor swung his tired gaze over from Roscoe to me.

`Suspicious?’ he said.

He was nearly smiling the same little smile he’d used on Tuesday.

,Was there anything suspicious about it?’ I asked him.

He shook his head.

`No,’ he said. `Suicide by hanging. Open and shut. He was on a kitchen stool in his garage. Made himself a noose, jumped off the stool. Everything was consistent. We got the background story from the local people up there. I couldn’t see a problem.’

`What was the background story?’ Roscoe asked him.

He swung his gaze back to her. Glanced through the file.

`He was depressed,’ he said. `Had been for a while. The night it happened he was out drinking with his chief, who was the Morrison guy we just had in here, and the town mayor up there, some guy called Teale. The three of them were drowning their sorrows over some case Gray had screwed up on. He got falling down drunk and they had to help him home. They got him in to his house and left him there. He must have felt bad. He made it to the garage and hung himself.’

`That was the story?’ Roscoe said.

`Morrison signed a statement,’ the doctor said. `He was real upset. Felt he should have done

more, you know, stayed with him or something.’

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