worried parents were isolated in a hospital room down the hallway with a uniformed cop standing guard outside the door.
I wish I could say those kinds of mistakes never happen. I can't. I've made a few of them myself. In the heat of a new investigation, when a cop is working under incredible pressure, one piece of a puzzle unaccountably gets shifted to the wrong side of the board. With any kind of luck, the detective realizes where he went wrong and corrects his mistake, straightening out both his mind and his paper before any harm is done.
As an impartial observer of events in Ashland, I found it easy to see what was happening. I wondered how long it would take for Gordon Fraymore to wise up. It sure as hell wasn't my job to point out the error of his ways. Cop or not, Fraymore struck me as a heavy-handed jerk. The longer the mix-up was allowed to continue, the more harm it would do to Derek Chambers and the more embarrassing it would be for Detective Fraymore. In fact, if it hadn't been for what Fraymore's stupidity was doing to Derek and his anguished parents, I could have cared less.
'Let me ask you this,' Fraymore was saying. 'Did you have any idea Martin Shore was going to be in Ashland this weekend?'
'None whatsoever. As a matter of fact, I didn't know I would be until just yesterday morning.'
Fraymore frowned. 'I thought you said your daughter was getting married, that you came here for a wedding.'
'I didn't know about the wedding until yesterday, either,' I snapped. Gordon Fraymore could go ahead and draw his own conclusions on that score. 'I may have been late getting my invitation,' I added, 'but the wedding is scheduled for two-thirty Monday afternoon, if you want to check it out.'
'Oh, I'll do that,' Gordon Fraymore assured me. 'Most definitely. I'll be checking everything. Twice if necessary. Tell me again what you were doing just prior to your being found at the crime scene?'
I took a deep breath and told him again. 'I left the donor party in the Bowmer. I told Alex I wanted to get some air.'
'I take it Alex is Alexis Downey, the lady waiting for you out in the lobby?'
I nodded.
'She your wife?'
'We're just good friends,' I answered.
'I see. Where exactly did you go when you went out to get some air?'
'Out into that little brick courtyard between the theaters and the ticket office. I was standing near the telephone booths looking up at the stars when I first heard the crash. As soon as I heard it, I knew what it was. I ran down the stairs between the buildings to see if I could help.'
'Commendable,' Gordon Fraymore said. 'Did you see anybody else on the stairs or in the courtyard?'
'No.'
'Hear anything?'
'Other than the crash and breaking glass? No.'
'I understand you work Homicide in Seattle?'
I didn't remember telling him that. 'That's right.'
'You're sure there isn't a chance that Martin Shore screwed up one of your cases and you decided to get even?'
'There's no chance.' It was time for a little cop-to-cop courtesy. 'Look, I'm tired. My arm hurts. Can't we finish this tomorrow?'
'Where are you staying?'
'One of the B and B's. Oak something.'
'Oak Hill?'
'Probably. Sounds like it, but I don't remember for sure.'
'Both you and Miss Downey are staying there?'
'Ms. Downey,' I corrected. If I couldn't get away with calling Alexis 'Miss,' then neither could Gordon Fraymore. 'That's right. We're both staying there.'
'Why not with your daughter?' he asked pointedly. 'Didn't Marjorie Connors offer to put you up?'
I wasn't in the mood to discuss my daughter or Marjorie Connors' singular style of nonhospitality, and where Alex and I stayed was none of Gordon Fraymore's damn business.
'Live Oak Farm doesn't have enough room,' I answered. 'Can I go now?'
He studied me for a long moment. 'I suppose,' he said deliberately. 'Just don't head back for Seattle without letting me know.'
'Right.'
I got up and walked as far as the doorway, but by then Fraymore had pushed once too often. I couldn't resist a parting shot. 'What about Derek Chambers?' I asked.
Fraymore had picked up a nail clipper and was digging something out from under his fingernails. 'What about him?'
'When are you going to tell him what really happened?'
Fraymore looked up and glowered at me. 'About the knife, you mean? When I get damned good and ready. With smart-assed kids like that, it doesn't hurt to let 'em squirm awhile. That's what we do in small towns, Mr. Beaumont. We scare the shit out of kids in order to get them to straighten up and fly right.'
The Constitution notwithstanding.
I said, 'That kid deserves better than sitting out there thinking he's killed a man. So do his parents.'
'What makes you think he didn't kill him?' Fraymore countered. 'Maybe the knife wound wouldn't have been fatal if he hadn't been hit by the kid's car first.'
'You'd better check the investigating officer's paper, Detective Fraymore. Derek Chambers' car may have hit Martin Shore first, but it was landing on the hood of the Cutlass that rammed the knife through his heart. Derek was in the Duster.'
For a long, tense moment, Detective Fraymore and I stared at each other, then he shuffled through the stack of papers piled on the conference room table in front of him. Pointing with one thick finger, he scanned down one of the sheets. Eventually, his finger stopped moving, and his ears reddened. By the time he raised his eyes from the paper, his face was glowing deep purple.
I knew just from looking at him that both Fraymore and I would have been better off if he had uncovered the error himself.
'You can go now,' he said coldly.
And I did. As the door to the conference room closed behind me, I realized I was in almost as much trouble with Detective Gordon Fraymore as Monica Davenport was with Alexis Downey.
When she saw me, Alex hurried to my side and gave me a quick, anxious hug. She carried my bloodstained jacket. 'Are you all right?' she asked.
'Pretty much. Let's get out of here.'
Alex had found me at the scene of the accident, and she had driven me to the hospital in the Porsche. Now, though, as we left the hospital, she handed me the keys. I gave them right back.
'You drive,' I told her. 'I'm worn out.'
The Oak Hill Bed-and-Breakfast was a mile or so south of the theaters on Siskiyou Boulevard. Without knowing it, I had driven past it several times earlier in the afternoon while searching Ashland for Live Oak Lane. The big old two-story house was quiet and dark when we arrived, but Alexis had a key. She let us in through the front door, then led the way through the living room and up a creaking set of stairs.
'This is it,' she whispered, opening a door at the top of the stairs. 'It's a blue room, so they call it Iris.'
While I was at the hospital having my wrist sewn up, Alex had moved our luggage in from the car and had carried it upstairs. All we had to do was undress and fall into bed. My wrist hurt like hell. To keep it from throbbing, I lay with it propped up on an extra pillow next to my head. Alex snuggled up close to my left side and put her head on my chest.
'You should have seen that boy's parents when they showed up at the hospital. The mother was crying. The father didn't say much, but I could tell he was frantic. I felt terrible for all three of them.'
'Great minds think alike,' I told her.
Alex continued, 'It made me glad I don't have kids. I kept trying to put myself in their place. How do parents