Moonlight Gardener
Robert L. Fish
RosettaBooks
0-7953-0786-1
Copyright © 2002 by RosettaBooks, LLC
What is Charley
Crompton hiding? The police in a small town aren’t sure, but when
he is reported digging in his garden in the middle of the night soon
after his wife disappears, it seems like something is up. This is the
intriguing premise for Robert L. Fish’s enigmatic,
Edgar-award-winning short story “Moonlight Gardener.”
When we meet him, Charley seems
both crazy and evasive. Why does he answer the door holding a
bloodstained hatchet? And do we believe him when he claims that he was
only digging up his peach trees “to let the roots breathe”?
The police investigation is both an inquiry into Mrs. Crompton’s
disappearance and a look behind closed doors into the private life of
the main suspect and his missing wife. Is Charley acting so strange
because he is guilty, or did the severe and judgmental Mrs. Crompton
decide she finally had enough of her strange husband? Or is something
even stranger going on?
Police investigations routinely
work by paying close attention to the norms of life, and finding cause
for suspicion when those norms are violated. But what happens when a
criminal inquiry meets genuine eccentricity? Do the police have
sufficient imaginative resources to untangle the mystery of the
moonlight gardener?
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Moonlight Gardener
Robert L. Fish
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“And the
fights! Oh, the fights! Ah, the fights!” Mrs. Williams said
piously, leaning forward, her ungainly flowered hat almost toppling,
her small china-blue eyes intent upon the young sergeant’s
unrevealing face. “Awful! Awful!” She paused
significantly. “Especially the terrible one they had the night
before last—Wednesday, it was,” she said, and paused again,
almost breathlessly. “The night she disappeared,” she added
meaningfully.
“Disappeared.” The
sergeant started to write the word down on his lined pad and then
stopped halfway to end it in a wiggly squiggle, culminated in an almost
vicious dot. He wished, not for the first time, that he had chosen a
different line of endeavor for his life’s work; he had a strong
feeling he knew what was coming.
“Disappeared. That’s
what I said,” Mrs. Williams said sharply. “She hasn’t
been seen since—and that’s disappearance, isn’t
it?” The edge of poorly concealed disdain tinged her voice.
“And then that man trying to tell me, when I went over to borrow a cup of sugar—”
“You were out of
sugar,” the sergeant murmured politely, and carefully printed the
word SUGAR on his pad. He hated busybodies of all types, but
particularly those like the woman facing him, and not merely because
they caused the police a great deal of work that almost inevitably was
pointless. He wondered how life must have been in those delightful days
before neighbors-within-earshot. Beautiful, without a doubt.
Mrs. Williams’s
little chin hardened. Her eyes defied him to attempt avoiding the
responsibilities of his office with such flimsy tactics. Her
well-tended hands clasped themselves more tightly about her purse, as
if it might not be safe in this world of predators, even here in the
local police station.
“That man was
trying to tell me,” she went on inexorably, a juggernaut not to
be stopped, “that she was out shopping. Before eight in the
morning, when the stores in town don’t open until nine!”
The sergeant made a series of little 9’s to border the mutilated DISAPPEARED and the intact SUGAR.
“And she
wasn’t home all day,” Mrs. Williams declared flatly,
“because I was watching. And then, this morning, I went over
again, because I was worried about her, and he comes up with
an entirely new story this time, about how she suddenly decided late
last night to visit her sister. Which is a bit strange, since she
doesn’t have a sister and I know that for a gospel fact!”
The sergeant carefully
printed NO SISTER on the paper before him, boxed the words neatly with
his pencil, and began shading the enclosed parallelogram. He kept his
eyes from the rather pretty face of the woman across from him. At the
moment, she wasn’t all that pretty.
“And how could she
possibly have gone away in the middle of the night the way he
said—without my hearing, I mean?” Mrs. Williams demanded.
“My house is the only one nearby and I’m sure, if Mr.
Jenkins had come for her in his taxi—or even if he drove her to
either the train or the bus station—I would have heard.”
“I’m
sure,” the sergeant said, and added under his breath, “at
any hour, day or night,” and he made a series of tiny loops to
border the shaded box on his pad. They intertwined with the curved
9’s very nicely.
Her blue eyes studied the
expressionless face across from her and then dropped to the artistic
caligraphy on the pad. Her jaw tightened dangerously, but she kept her
voice under control as she brought up her heaviest artillery.
“And then last
night,” she said, her tone almost vicious, “after two in
the morning, he digs up one of the small peach trees in the garden, and
then, fifteen minutes later—or maybe a half-hour, no more—I
can hear him out there replanting it. And her
gone—disappeared—more than twenty-four hours! Now,”
she said, her tone, her angle of incidence, her entire bearing daring
him to downgrade her testimony, “what is your smart-aleck answer
to that, young man? Does it make sense for a man to dig up a tree in
the middle of the night, and then replant it a half-hour later? Does
it? Well?”
The sergeant laid aside
the pencil with a certain sense of reluctance and for the first time
really studied the woman facing him. The spiteful expression spoiled
what he knew might have been beauty under different circumstances; the
faint sneer disgusted him. But he couldn’t deny the substance of
her arguments.
“No,” he admitted in his drawl. “No, it doesn’t.”
“Well! I’m
glad you finally realize it, young man. And the money was all hers,
too,” Mrs. Williams added, almost as an afterthought. She was
quite aware that the statement was anti-climactic, but she definitely
wanted it included in the record of evidence.
“Money?”
“In the safe-deposit
box with her jewels. The money that bought the house, even though
everything is in both their names. You wait and see,” she added,
leaning forward again. “He’ll be having it up for sale
within a week. He never did a day’s work since they
married—if he ever did one before, which I seriously doubt!”
There were several
moments’ silence. The sergeant made the first move, bringing his
considerable bulk to his feet, indicating the interview was over. He
waited as she came to her five-feet-two-inches of height, looking up at
him defiantly.
“I’ll take the matter up with the sheriff, ma’am,” he said.
“I should certainly
hope so, young man,” she retorted coldly, studying him once again
with eyes that were quite unimpressed. Then she marched from the
station house, the fur piece about her neck seeming to hurry to catch
up with her.
“I suppose
we’ll have to check it out,” the sheriff said wearily.
“I don’t know too many people in this town—most of my
time is spent over in Bellerville at the county seat—but I do
happen to know Charley Crompton. The idea of him doing away with that
battle-axe he married is simply ridiculous. If he has a temper,
I’ve never seen it. He’s a mouse. If it was the other way
around, I might believe it. But Charley! Impossible. At any rate,
it’s just a rumor from that nosy woman at this stage.”
He glanced up at the husky
young sergeant. “I don’t suppose you’ve had time to
do anything about it yet?”
“Well,” the
sergeant said, considering, “old Sol Jenkins—he’s our
taxi here—he didn’t pick her up, last night or any other
time. He laughed and said he didn’t believe she ever took a taxi
in her life. They cost money. And if Charley drove her, or if she
walked across the fields to the station, nobody caught either the eight
o’clock or the midnight train, and that’s the last one. And
the ticket men at both the train and the bus station don’t
remember her on any train or bus in the last two days, afternoon or
night.”
“What about this
Mrs. Williams’s husband?” the sheriff asked. “Mr.
Williams? Does he confirm or deny it?”
“There is no
Mr. Williams,” the sergeant said. His tone commended the shade of
Mr. Williams for his wisdom in being the nonexistent spouse of the
meddling Mrs. Williams. “She’s been a widow over four
years.” He shook his head. “She’s only forty, but I
think she’s been forty all her life. Doesn’t have anything
to do all day except sit on the telephone or write letters to the
editor of the Bugle. She’s a feminist. I gather she even had Mrs. Crompton all worked up on the stuff.”
The sheriff smiled. “But not your wife?” he said.
“Not yet, at any rate,” the sergeant said, and grinned back.
The sheriff’s smile faded. “Any other neighbors?”
“About a half-mile
away, the nearest. Those two houses stand all alone at the end of the
road. Around a curve from the others, as a matter of fact.
They’re pretty isolated.”
“I see.” The
sheriff drummed his fingers and then looked up. “What about that
statement regarding money?”
“Well,” the sergeant said slowly, frowning, “the money was Mrs. Crompton’s—is hers,
I mean. Everybody in town knew that, but if every man who marries a
dollar or two killed his wife for it, we’d be in real trouble.
And as far as Charley Crompton telling that busybody neighbor of his
that his wife was out shopping, or visiting a sister that doesn’t
exist, I don’t see where he had a duty to tell her anything. If
it had been me, I’d have told her my wife was off to Timbuktu,
and let her make something of it.”
“That’s just
what she’s been doing,” the sheriff pointed out.
“Still, a man replanting a tree in the middle of the
night—well, it seems rather—”
“I know,” the
sergeant said unhappily, and sighed. “We’ll have to look
into it a lot deeper, I know.”
The man who opened the
door of the large old-fashioned house was a nondescript person with
thin brown hair pasted against his head and large brown eyes swimming
behind thick lenses. He was dressed in slacks and a sweater, neither
impressive, and carried a hatchet in a hand one finger of which was
heavily bandaged. A honing stone had been tucked under his arm to allow
him a free hand with the latch. He took the honing stone from the pit
of his arm and allowed the two implements to dangle; they seemed to
weigh down his thin arms.
“Hello, Sergeant. What can I do for you?”
“Hello, Charley. Actually, it was your wife I’d hoped to see.”
“Well, you can’t,” Crompton said apologetically. “She isn’t here. She’s gone away.”
“Oh? To visit her sister?”
The smaller man turned his
head to stare reproachfully at the house across the road, and down a
bit from his. His eyes came back to the patient face of the sergeant.
“Her brother. She has no sister.”
“And his name and address?” The sergeant produced a pad and pencil.
“Brown. John
Brown.” No muscle moved in Crompton’s thin face, nor did
his hesitant voice reveal anything. He sounded as if he were repeating
something by rote. “I don’t have his street address or
telephone. Chicago is all I know.”
“John Brown,
Chicago,” the sergeant repeated genially, and wrote it down, not
at all perturbed. He looked up from his pad. “I say, Charley,
would you mind a lot if we went inside to talk. I mean, standing here
in the doorway …”
“Do you have a warrant to enter these premises?”
The young sergeant was
surprised. He managed to turn his expression into one of slight hurt.
“A warrant? To visit an old friend for a few moments?
Although,” he added, considering it, “I suppose one could
be arranged, but it seems a bit foolish.”
Crompton’s thin lips
compressed. He hesitated a moment and then, with a shrug, led the way
inside, laying the hatchet and hone on a shelf in the entranceway and
continuing into the living room. The sergeant picked the hatchet from
its resting place and followed. He lowered his bulk into a chair and
studied the instrument in his hand, touching the edge gingerly.
“Quite sharp,” he observed.
“I like my tools in order,” Crompton said evenly, and continued to watch the other man through his thick glasses.
“Oh? It’s a
shame it’s so stained, then. Other than the honed edge, of
course.” The sergeant peered more closely. “These brown
blotches, for example …”
“They’re
blood, if you want to know,” Crompton said abruptly. “I cut
my finger yesterday while I was honing it.”
“Fingers do bleed
like the devil,” the sergeant admitted, and placed the hatchet on
the floor beside his chair. He looked about the sunlit room and nodded.
“A nice place you have here, Charley. I envy you. My wife was
saying just the other day how small our house was getting, with two
kids here and another on the way. But it’s so hard to find a
house near enough to the station house not to spend a week’s pay
on gas, or one that’s a decent size any more. A house for sale,
that is.” A sudden thought struck him. “I don’t
suppose—well, I don’t suppose you have any idea of selling,
do you?”
There were several moments
of silence as Charley Crompton appeared to gauge the man seated across
from him. A mantel clock above the fireplace filled the quiet with a
loud and steady ticking.
“I might,” Charley Crompton said at last.
“You’re sure your wife wouldn’t object?”
“No.” It was a
flat statement, expressionless. Crompton seemed to feel that the
discussion had taken enough of his time. He came to his feet.
“Well, sergeant, I’m rather occupied, and if that’s
all the business you had in mind …”
The sergeant rose dutifully and smiled.
“If there’s
any possibility of the house being up for sale in the near
future,” he said, “I don’t imagine you’d mind
greatly if I looked it over? We’re really interested, you
know.” He turned and walked into the kitchen with Crompton on his
heels. “Say! This is a nice-sized kitchen. My wife puts a good
deal of store by the kitchen. Me, I’m more fussy about the cellar
and the yard, the places I spend most of my free time.” He opened
a door, saw brooms, and closed it. He opened another door.
“Stairs to the basement, eh? Do you mind?” He flicked a
light switch without awaiting permission, and descended with the
smaller man right behind him. He stood and shook his head forlornly.
“What a damned shame! What happened to your nice concrete
floor?”
“Line under it
burst,” Crompton said in a rather constricted voice. He cleared
his throat. “Line from the sinks over to the septic tank. Had to
dig it all up and replace an elbow.”
“Tough luck,”
the sergeant said sympathetically. “Guess contractors
weren’t much better in those days than they are today. But, other
than that, it’s a nice dry cellar. Gas heat, too, I see. Well,
let’s take a look at the back yard, while I’m here.
I’m sure you won’t mind.”
They climbed the steps and
walked through the kitchen to the back porch and the enclosed yard. One
of the peach trees did, indeed, list slightly, and the fresh earth
packed about its base was cleared of grass, reddish-brown in color,
like a bad bruise. But the sergeant had been expecting that. What he
had not been expecting was to see a second peach tree lying on its side
beside a deep excavation, its root ball wrapped in canvas, or a third
with a hole begun at its edge and a shovel thrust into the soil there.
He glanced at his host.
“Trouble with your peach trees?”
“Tree roots need
air,” Crompton said. His voice was unnatural, as if he, too,
needed air. “My own idea, but it’s a valid one. I dig up
trees and replant them quite frequently. I—” He paused a
moment, eyeing the sergeant as if pleading for belief, and then
continued, “It’s the truth! They really do, you know. Need
fresh air, I mean. They’re living creatures; they can’t
stand not having air. The branches and the leaves get their share, but
that’s not enough.” He shook his head, and behind his thick
glasses, his eyes were impossible to interpret. “It’s the
roots, you see. That’s the important part! They need air.
It’s the truth.”
He leaned back, balancing
himself on his heels, a trifle breathless, staring at the excavated
peach tree and the dark hole it had left behind in the earth.
“A few more hours,” he said as if to himself, “and the roots will be fine. Ready to bury again.”
The large young sergeant sighed and turned toward the gate leading to the street and his parked patrol car.
“I’ll probably
be back again,” he said conversationally. “I’m sure
you won’t mind. I’m really quite interested in this
house.”
“Are you trying to
tell me Charley Crompton is a nut?” the sheriff asked. “The
last thing from a nut! He’s pulling our leg. A policeman shows up
at his house and asks where his wife is, and he doesn’t even ask
why! And that mound in the basement, and that hatchet bit! Cut himself
honing the thing the day; before, and he’s still walking around
with the hone the day after!”
“It really was blood, I suppose? Not ketchup, or paint?”
“It was blood, all
right. The same type as his. We don’t know his wife’s type;
she never gave anything away, not even blood.”
The sergeant turned and
paced the room, his large hands locked behind his back, his face grim.
He paused and faced the sheriff. “And he did have a bad
gash under that bandage. I think. I’d have preferred to believe
him if he didn’t.” He shook his head, frowning. “More
than ten days, and we’re where we were when we started. Even
further behind, in fact. He’s having fun with us, I tell
you!”
The sheriff bit at an
outcropping of fingernail. “You got your warrant, though,
didn’t you? I spoke to Judge—”
“Oh, we got the
warrant, right enough,” the sergeant said darkly, and dropped
into his chair, putting a knee against the edge of the desk. “And
we dug up the cellar floor. And all we found was an elbow.”
“An elbow?” The sheriff sat more erect.
“A plumber’s
elbow,” the sergeant said grimly. “Exactly as he told us.
New. We dug another three feet down, too, down to solid rock—just
in case. She certainly isn’t buried there, I can tell you
that.”
“Could she have been buried there?”
“That I don’t
know,” the sergeant said bitterly. “There was more than
enough room, but we didn’t find any signs. All I know is that she
isn’t buried there now.”
“Nor under the peach trees, either, I gather.”
“Nor under anything
in the whole damned back yard, and we gave his tree roots all the air
they could handle! Ten days and nothing at all!” He shook his
head broodingly and then looked up. “Oh, yes. He put the house up
for sale this morning. I spoke to Jimmy Glass at the bank; Crompton and
his wife exchanged powers of attorney the day they got married, so
that’s that.”
The sheriff frowned. “So what’s his explanation as to his wife’s disappearance?”
“He finally broke
down and confessed,” the sergeant said bitterly. “According
to Charley, they had this big quarrel he was ashamed to admit, and she
just up and walked out on him —and of course his pride would
never allow him to tell perfect strangers like us about it. They fought
and she just upped and away, like that.”
“And disappeared into thin air?”
“His idea, or what he says is his idea—is that
she probably got to the highway and some kindly soul in a car or a
truck picked her up and gave her a lift. That was his second idea. His
first was that she caught a Greyhound bus, until I told him we’d
checked all the buses. He says he has no idea where she’d head
for, but he doesn’t expect her back because she’s stubborn.
He says maybe she went to her brother’s, but he honestly
doesn’t know the address. Just John Brown, in Chicago.” He
snorted. “And all we got from the cops there, when we asked, were
a couple of wisecracks. For which I don’t blame them.”
The sheriff drummed his fingers. “So what’s your idea?”
“My idea,” the
sergeant began slowly, and then stopped as the telephone at his elbow
rang. He picked it up. “Hello?” He cupped the receiver and
shook his head dolefully at the sheriff. “Our man on the
scene.” He uncupped the receiver. “No, Mrs. Williams. No,
Mrs. Williams. Yes, Mrs. Williams. Yes, we are, Mrs. Williams. As much
as we can, ma’am. Yes, Mrs. Williams. Yes, we will, Mrs.
Williams.” He put the receiver back in its cradle and sighed.
“Mrs.
Williams,” he said, and raised his eyes to the ceiling.
“What a woman! She called the other day, all excited. It seems
Charley Crompton thought she wasn’t home, because he came over
and rang her bell and tried to look in the windows. She kept out of
sight and then he went back to his house and came out with something
bulky and big and put it in the trunk of his car and drove off, and she
called us at once. And when we got there, Charley was back, and he had
mud all over his tires, red clay like we have down at Wiley Creek, and
we searched his trunk, but we never came up with a thing.”
“So what’s your idea?”
“My idea,” the
sergeant said, staring at the girly calendar on the wall without seeing
it, “is that Charley Crompton has gotten away with murder. My
idea is that his wife is buried somewhere in the woods and that, if we
ever find her, it will be sheer luck. And that without her body
we’re in trouble. We don’t have a case and we don’t
have a chance of holding him. My idea is that he went through that
rigamarole of digging up trees and ruining a perfect concrete floor
because he wanted to rub our noses in a perfect crime.”
“Or because it gave
him a chance to misdirect your attention while he had her body stored
away somewhere else.” The sheriff shook his head. “I still
can’t believe a mouse like Charley Crompton would have the nerve,
though, to do a thing like that.”
“Believe it,” the sergeant said shortly.
“So what do we do?”
The young sergeant swiveled his chair, staring through the window at the deserted square before the old courthouse.
“We wait,” he
said heavily. “We wait until some Boy Scouts on a hike, or some
gang out on a picnic, or some kids necking, or some curious dog, makes
what the newspapers call ‘a gruesome discovery.’ Because
one thing is certain: whether she was buried in that house or in that
yard at one time or another, she isn’t buried there now.
That’s about the only thing that is certain.”
The sheriff sighed and swung around and back in his swivel chair.
The mean, petulant,
whining voice carried through the still night, threading its way from
the garage through the back yard to the house, out-cricketing the
crickets. There was an air of continuity about it, as if it had been
going on for some time and would continue to go on indefinitely, or
until a stop were put to it.
“… certainly
pure nonsense to pick me up in Joliet three stations down the line when
the train stops here just as well, same as it was silly to put me on
the train there, as if gasoline grew on trees, but of course that
wouldn’t bother you none—none of it comes out of your
pockets and why you insisted on my visiting your mother in the first
place heaven only knows, there isn’t a thing wrong with her
except she’s spoiled the way old women are spoiled and she dotes
on her darling Charley—darling Charley this darling Charley
that—and how her darling Charley could have had any girl he ever
wanted, which simply goes to show she doesn’t know her darling
Charley as well as I do and three weeks with her in that horrible house
was no pleasure, locked in that mausoleum with no newspapers, no radio,
no television, I don’t know how she stands it but you never care
what I go through just as long as you get your way—well, that was
the last time and if I find you’ve been up to your usual tricks
with girls while I was gone, you’ll regret it and you’ll
regret it where it hurts the most, in the pocketbook.”
The gate from the garage to the back yard was opened and closed again.
“… and for
heaven’s sake what on earth has happened to that peach tree
excavated out of the ground and that lantern alongside? I hope you
realize that Chaber’s Hardware doesn’t give kerosene free
and if you want to transplant a tree, the least you can do is do it
during the daylight though why you should want to do it at all I
can’t imagine, the peach trees have been fine ever since I
remember—in any event, I want it replanted immediately tomorrow,
do you hear? I don’t want it lying around and I don’t want
all that dirt to be tracked into my clean house—”
The kitchen door was swung back; the voice continued, an acid eating through Charley’s eardrums.
“… and
leaving the lamp on in the house while you were coming to pick me up
all the way to Joliet electricity costs money but you don’t
care—why should you, you don’t pay the bills, and leaving
that ugly hatchet on the kitchen counter, I’ve told you a
thousand times the place for your dirty tools is in the
cellar—well, at least I see you had the decency to set out two
cups of coffee, I only hope you didn’t use the electric
percolator and leave it on while you were out, electricity isn’t
free, but you wouldn’t think of that, and—”
A sudden pause, and
then—“Charles! These cups are dirty—they’ve
been used. If you’ve been entertaining people in this house while
I’ve been away, that Mrs. Williams from across the street,
don’t think I’m blind, I see the way you two look at each
other. Charles, wait, wait! Charles, who’s that in the shadow
there? Charles, do you hear me? Charles …”
“Hello, dear,”
said Mrs. Williams quietly, and reached for the kitchen counter and the
hatchet there. “Welcome home.”
Title:
Moonlight Gardener
Creator:
Robert L. Fish
Publisher:
RosettaBooks
Identifier:
0-7953-0786-1
Rights:
Copyright © 2002 by RosettaBooks, LLC