the receiver and turned off the flame.
âWell, you certainly took your sweet time getting back to me.â
âSeth, I just walked in. Youâve barely given me time to hang up my coat and look at my mail.â I poured the boiling water over a bag of decaf English breakfast tea and took my mug to the table. âTim, Elsie, Barnaby, and I worked all afternoon sorting the books, and I think Iâm finally beginning to see good progress, althoughâcan you believe it?âthereâs another set of bookcases in the basement to deal with. By the way, I met Eveâs handyman, too, a disheveled sort who retreated into Cliffâs barn without waiting to be introduced to the others.â
âI hope heâs not planning to take off with all Cliffâs carpentry equipment.â
âThatâs doubtful since he said he came by motorcycle.â
I heard Seth grunt. âWho
is
this guy? Did Eve ever work with him before?â
âGood questions. Iâll have to ask her. She must have trusted him with the key since he made himself at home. He was using the back door and had left his lunch in the refrigerator.â
âMaybe he can explain all this haunted house nonsense.â
I laughed. âYou have to admit that it adds a certain drama to the old Spencer Percy House.â
âIf anybody believes in ghosts,â he said. âI donât.â
âBy the way, Iâm a little concerned about Lucy Conrad,â I told him. âShe seems so withdrawn these days.â
âDeath is a difficult ordeal to get through. You of all people should know that.â
âI do, but Iâm afraid itâs more than that. Lettie hinted that sheâs not as sharp as she used to be.â
âHappens to the best of us.â
I changed the subject. âSorry that I didnât get back to you sooner,â I said. âThe cell phone is charging as we speak. I assume you called me for the same reason I tried to reach you. Did the autopsy take place?â
âIt did and it was no easy task. The medical examiner was mighty piqued at me for waiting so long, but the funeral home finally sent back the body and we did the postmortem together.â
âAnd did it set your mind at ease?â
âNot exactly, although I was right in my analysis of how Cliff Cooper died. He did not die of ârespiratory failureâ due to pneumonia. His diagnosis was chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, COPD. It was right there on his chart. He had chronic bronchitis, typical for such patients. Sometimes it becomes pneumonia, but in this case, it didnât.â
âHe did have a terrible cough.â
âAyuh, that he did, and the damn fool kept resisting the medicine that would ease his symptoms. Even so, he showed no signs of being in the end stage of life. He was alert, read your book in one night. No mental confusion. He made sense when he talked to you, didnât he?â
âVery much so. He was insistent about what he wanted when he dictated his will to me.â
âExactly. He had a good appetite, enough that he complained about the hospital food the day before he died. It just didnât add up.â
âSo what does that mean? What was his cause of death?â
âHe died of asphyxiation. He died of no oxygen. He couldnât breathe.â
âIsnât that respiratory failure? Did his lungs fill up with fluid?â
âI suppose you can call it that in a generic sense. But no! His airway was completely closed off.â
âHow?â
âPossibly with a pillow.â
âGood heavens, Seth! Are you saying that someone
killed
Cliff Cooper?â
âThatâs what it looks like to me.â
âAre you certain?â
âThere were hemorrhages in his eyes that could have been the result of the coughing. Iâll give you that. But there was a cut inside his lip, made by his own teeth. And we detected a little
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