Dead Cold Mysteries Box Set #3: Books 9-12 (A Dead Cold Box Set) by Blake Banner (read with me .TXT) ๐
Read free book ยซDead Cold Mysteries Box Set #3: Books 9-12 (A Dead Cold Box Set) by Blake Banner (read with me .TXT) ๐ยป - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
- Author: Blake Banner
Read book online ยซDead Cold Mysteries Box Set #3: Books 9-12 (A Dead Cold Box Set) by Blake Banner (read with me .TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Blake Banner
I raised an eyebrow and smiled. โMore?โ
โYes, because Charles Gordon Sr. fell in love.โ
โLet me guess,โ I said. โHe fell in love with a girl who was of the wrong social class.โ
The major looked a little startled.
I smiled. โI may be an American, major, but I lived here long enough to learn to distinguish the accents. I know a non-U accent when I hear one. Even if itโs been disguised.โ
โOh!โ He stammered a moment. โWell, yes, that was precisely it. She was the daughter of the local publican. Very attractive young woman with a very lively personality. Had a sort of saucy wit, if you follow me. And young Charles was quite captivated by her. Absolutely head over heals.โ
Dehan was watching him with narrowed eyes. โThis isโฆโ She pointed vaguely in the direction of the dining room.
He nodded, โPam, yes.โ He nodded again. โWell, as you can imagine, Old Man Gordon disapproved violently of the match. He might be sponsoring Robert Armstrong, whom many would consider inappropriate, but at least he was related to the Gordons. But this girl, however delightful she might be, was neither a Gordon nor an appropriate spouse for a Gordon!โ
Dehan both frowned and smiled at the same time. โI think I know where this is going.โ
The major chuckled. โDonโt be too quick, Detective. It isnโt as simple as it seems. Nobody knows exactly what happened because Charles Sr. wonโt discuss it, but one version of the story goes something like this:
โThings came to a head when Old Man Gordon told Charles that if he persisted in his plans to marry Pamela, he would disinherit him and leave his entire fortune to Robert Armstrong. Charles agonized for a full week. He told Pamela he could not see her and he spent seven days either walking the grounds or locked in his room, brooding. Finally, on the seventh day he went and spoke to his father. They spent over an hour discussing the issue, and when Charles came out he was a different man. He was elated. He ran to the kitchen and embraced the cook and the butler and the maidsโremember he was an Americanโand then he dashed off to tell Pam his father had had a change of heart! It was as though a cloud had been lifted from his mind and he had come down to Earth to realize the error of his ways. He gave Charles his blessing to marry whomever he pleased, and he told Charles he would kill the project and contact his brokers immediately to start reinvesting in solid stocks and shares, as he had done for most of his adult life.โ
โThatโs quite a turn around.โ
The major nodded. โIt is. Itโs not unheard of, but it was dramatic. And I need hardly say, a huge relief for the entire household.โ
I nodded. โI can imagine. So, what happened?โ
โWell.โ He sat forward. โThatโs where it began to get very strange indeed. Refill?โ
He went away and came back with the decanter. He refilled our glasses and settled back in his chair.
โAs I said, Charles had gone straight away to see Pam and tell her the good news. When heโd returned a couple of hours later, he went to see his father, planning to tell him that he and Pam had set a date. He knocked on the doorโฆโ
Dehan interrupted. โWhat door?โ
โOf his study, across the hall, in the tower. He knocked, but there was no reply. When he tried to open the door, he found it locked. This in itself was not unusual, he tended to lock himself in his study when he was working. But he failed to answer when Charles knocked and called to him, despite the fact that, through the window, as he had arrived back home, he had seen his father sitting at his desk.
โConcerned that he might be ill, he kicked at the lock several times until he broke itโฆโ He paused and shook his head, gazing at the flames in the fire. โIt defied belief. Old Man Gordon was sitting at his desk with a bullet wound in his right temple, and his .38 service revolver lying on the floor beside him. All the windows were locked on the inside, as had been the door.โ
I frowned. โHe committed suicide.โ
The major nodded several times. โThat would be the logical conclusion, and it was what the coroner concluded in the end. But the detective who conducted the initial inquiry was never satisfied. Chap from Scotland Yard, came up because of the high profile of the deceased, and because Charles was convinced from the beginning that something was wrong, and frankly, we havenโt got the forensic know how up here to deal with a complex case.โ
Dehan asked, โWhat was it that didnโt satisfy them?โ
โWell, you must remember that in the 1980s, forensic science was still in its infancy, but this chap, Inspector Henry Green, he thought that the angle of the shot was all wrong. If you shoot yourself in the head, the entry wound should be horizontal, and there should be a great deal of scorching because the muzzle is actually touching the head. But in this case, though his prints were all over the gun, the entry wound was at a slight, forty-five degree angle, and there was no scorching, as though he had held the gun at a distance, and at the height of his hip, which would clearly be impossible. There was also the issue of gunshot residue.โ
โWhat about it?โ
โThere was none on
Comments (0)