The Chill

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Authors: Ross MacDonald
her sad face. She was already turning cold. It was nine-seventeen by my watch.
    Between the door and the pool of blood I found a faint brown hand-print still sticky to the touch. It was about the size of Dolly’s hand. She could have fallen accidentally, but the thought twisted through my head that she was doing her best to be tried for murder. Which didn’t necessarily mean that she was innocent.
    Bradshaw leaned like a convalescent in the doorway. “Poor Helen. This is a heinous thing. Do you suppose the fellow who attacked us—?”
    “I’d say she’s been dead for at least two hours. Of coursehe may have come back to wipe out his traces or retrieve his gun. He acted guilty.”
    “He certainly did.”
    “Did Helen Haggerty ever mention Nevada?”
    He looked surprised. “I don’t believe so. Why?”
    “The car our friend drove away in had a Nevada license.”
    “I see. Well, I suppose we must call the police.”
    “They’ll resent it if we don’t.”
    “Will you? I’m afraid I’m feeling rather shaken.”
    “It’s better if you do, Bradshaw. She worked for the college, and you can keep the scandal to a minimum.”
    “Scandal? I hadn’t even thought of that.”
    He forced himself to walk past her to the telephone on the far side of the room. I went through the other rooms quickly. One bedroom was completely bare except for a kitchen chair and a plain table which she had been using as a working desk. A sheaf of test papers conjugating French irregular verbs lay on top of the table. Piles of books, French and German dictionaries and grammars and collections of poetry and prose, stood around it. I opened one at the flyleaf. It was rubber-stamped in purple ink: Professor Helen Haggerty, Maple Park College, Maple Park, Illinois.
    The other bedroom was furnished in rather fussy elegance with new French Provincial pieces, lambswool rugs on the polished tile floor, soft heavy handwoven drapes at the enormous window. The wardrobe contained a row of dresses and skirts with Magnin and Bullocks labels, and under them a row of new shoes to match. The chest of drawers was stuffed with sweaters and more intimate garments, but nothing really intimate. No letters, no snapshots.
    The bathroom had wall-to-wall carpeting and a triangular sunken tub. The medicine chest was well supplied with beauty cream and cosmetics and sleeping pills. The latter had been prescribed by a Dr. Otto Schrenk and dispensed by Thompson’s Drug Store in Bridgeton, Illinois, on June 17 of this year.
    I turned out the bathroom wastebasket on the carpet. Under crumpled wads of used tissue I found a letter in an airmail envelope postmarked in Bridgeton, Illinois, a week ago and addressed to Mrs. Helen Haggerty. The single sheet inside was signed simply “Mother,” and gave no return address.
    Dear Helen
    It was thoughtful of you to send me a card from sunny Cal my favorite state of the union even though it is years since I was out there. Your father keeps promising to make the trip with me on his vacation but something always comes up to put it off. Anyway his blood pressure is some better and that is a blessing. I’m glad you’re well. I wish you would reconsider about the divorce but I suppose that’s all over and done with. It’s a pity you and Bert couldn’t stay together. He is a good man in his way. But I suppose distant pastures look greenest.
    Your father is still furious of course. He won’t let me mention your name. He hasn’t really forgiven you for when you left home in the first place, or forgiven himself either I guess, it takes two to make a quarrel. Still you are his daughter and you shouldn’t have talked to him the way you did. I don’t mean to recriminate. I keep hoping for a reconcilement between you two before he dies. He is not getting any younger, you know, and I’m not either, Helen. You’re a smart girl with a good education and if you wanted to you could write him a letter that would make him feel different

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