in the news,â said Bigelow. âHas the body been identified?â
âThere isnât enough left to identify readily. The state forensics team is working on his ID as we speak.â
âHis?â snapped Bigelow.
âA belt buckle, size twelve shoes.â
âAt least itâs not another member of BIGâ¦â Dedie stopped. âOf IGCOC,â she finished.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
The four regulars gathered on Alleyâs porch after work that same afternoon. Donald Schwartz, the boat builder, was sitting next to Sarah on the bench.
âWhoâs the seedy character working for Mrs. Trumbull?â asked Donald.
âNo idea,â said Joe. âDidnât think she hired anyone to help her.â As usual, Joe was leaning against the post near the step where he could spit his tobacco juice off into a tuft of dried grass.
âYouâre killing that grass,â said Sarah.
âShouldnât be growing there,â said Joe.
Lincoln stood in the doorway, scratching his back on the door frame. âIf itâs who I think it is, he delivers the morning papers. Picks them up from the paper boat.â
âOkay, I know who he is,â said Donald. âNameâs Robert. Has a drinking problem.â
âI hear they found another corpse up to the college.â Joe cut off a fresh chunk of Red Man and stuffed it into his mouth. âNumber three.â
âThatâs old news,â said Sarah. âAlmost a week ago.â
âMrs. Trumbull find the body?â asked Lincoln.
âCaretakerâs mutt dug it up,â said Joe. âMustâve thought it was a bone he buried.â
Donald laughed.
âItâs not funny, you guys,â said Sarah. âThree dead people?â
âYou heard of corpse-sniffing dogs?â said Lincoln. âLike drug-sniffing dogs at airports, only different.â
âI heard they use gerbils to sniff drugs these days,â said Donald. âLess threatening.â
âStop it!â said Sarah, putting her hands over her ears. âThis is awful. Do they know who it is?â
âWas,â said Joe. âNothing but bones.â
âThey IDâd the second corpse yet?â asked Lincoln.
âYup. Another college professor. Somebody hates college professors,â said Joe.
âKillerâs probably a college professor himself who didnât get tenure,â said Donald.
âWhat do you know about tenure?â said Joe.
âNever did get tenure,â said Donald.
âFigures,â said Joe.
Â
C HAPTER 11
âIâm sure itâs not personal, Thackery,â said Victoria.
The IGCOC group had walked to the ferry without a word of thanks to him. He was obviously still smarting from Victoriaâs having attended the first part of the meeting from which heâd been excluded.
âThey didnât even have the decency to say good bye.â Thackery was standing by the cracked window, his back to Victoria, hands clasped behind him.
âI suspect each of them was thinking about his own self interest,â said Victoria. âI donât know why they bothered to come over to the Island. They could have nominated a new member on the mainland.â
Thackery still said nothing.
Victoria said, âThey may have felt that Reverend Bob White, the new member, needed to see the campus.â
âThey might have asked me to show him around,â said Thackery without turning. âOnly common courtesy. It is my campus, after all. I put the whole thing together with no help from anyone.â
âWhat youâve achieved is remarkable, Thackery. No one else could have done what you have.â Victoria was seated in the chair next to Thackeryâs desk, still speaking to his back. âThe committee members seem to be letting some form of personal animosity get in the way of helping the college.â
Thackery said, âAfter the
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