Give Up the Body

Read Give Up the Body Online

Authors: Louis Trimble

GIVE UP THE BODY
by
LOUIS TRIMBLE

a division of F+W Media, Inc.

The Characters …

ADELINE O’HARA,
ex-WAC and reporter for the Teneskium (Oregon) Pioneer, also country correspondent for the Portland Press, who tells the story. She is young, red-headed, and Irish. She meets

TITUS WILLOW,
the pudgy passionate professional philanthropist, who is a badly frightened man. He is visiting

CARSON DELHART,
the Portland millionaire, who dislikes giving interviews, and who wants to marry Titus Willow’s daughter

DAISY WILLOW,
small and babyish, with a penchant for suicide. She is engaged to

ARTHUR FREW,
Titus Willow’s assistant, a very sullen young man who dislikes everyone and everything. He causes Adeline a lot of trouble. Also involved is

GLORY MARTIN,
beautiful ice-blonde ward of Carson Delhart. She is rumored to be his mistress, and has definite tendencies toward dipsomania and nymphomania. Watching out for her is

POTTER HILTON,
Delhart’s extremely efficient secretary, who is cold and precise and at times very frightening. He introduces Adeline to

MRS. EDNA WILLOW,
Titus’ wife, who has a very bad disposition. She is concerned with making a good marriage for Daisy until murder intervenes. Suspected by police is

TIM LARSON,
a high school friend of Adeline’s and now Delhart’s chauffeur. He is in love with Glory Martin. He lives with

MRS. LARSON,
his Irish mother, and

MR. LARSON,
called Big Swede, although he is half a head shorter than his son, Tim. Along with everyone else, they dislike

GODFREY TIFFIN,
the assistant county prosecutor, who was Adeline’s first suitor, whom she rejected. He has never forgiven her and causes her a great deal of trouble even though

JOCKO BEDFORD,
the sheriff, is on her side most of the time. Then there is

JEFF COOK,
the star reporter for the Portland Press, who is sent to Teneskium to help Adeline cover the murder, and is involved while helping her try to prove Tim Larson’s innocence. He becomes a good friend of

JUD ARGYLE,
Adeline’s boss, owner of the Weekly Teneskium Pioneer, who smells his liquor instead of drinking it,

and

BOSCO,
the cat who saves Adeline’s honor, and who has a tremendous appetite for newsprint, string, and shoelaces,

and

NELLIE,
Adeline’s ancient jalopy, whose death causes Titus Willow a lot of grief later on. She is one of Adeline’s problems, along with the missing felt hat, the body in the river, and Jeff Cook.

Adeline becomes more and more involved with Godfrey Tiffin, who wants to put her in jail (especially after he finds Jeff Cook’s pajamas in her dresser) until her midnight swim in her lingerie and an attempted suicide help point out the solution.

Contents

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XVIII

XIX

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XXI

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Also Available

Copyright

I

Y
OU WOULDN’T THINK
that anything as beautiful as Mt. Hood could look down on violent, agonizing murder and yet continue to smile so serenely. Nor that the firs along the lovely Teneskium River could keep their soft, sweet murmur with blood flowing darkly red into the ground by their roots.

The Oregon countryside lay under the balm of a soft summer sun, and the river sparkled through a land of peace. It was one of those rare, perfect periods when even the forest is gentle and friendly. And suddenly it was gone. Suddenly terror stalked that Teneskium forest, and stayed, brooding and menacing, until the river and Carson Delhart’s fish ponds yielded their secrets.

I had no way of knowing then how important the battered felt hat and the cast off suit of clothes would become, any more than I could know I was inviting myself to murder when I maneuvered Carson Delhart into promising me an interview.

At first, I didn’t give myself a chance of an interview with Delhart. I simply got into my car and drove toward his estate, hoping I might see him, but with the excuse that I wanted to get a story from one of his guests, Mr. Titus Willow.

I had no real problem when I pushed my gas thieving jalopy through the cool forest. I cursed the pitted gravel road in a ladylike fashion, but all the time I was gratefully absorbing the dapples of sunshine that slipped through the canopy of trees. We had just completed six weeks of almost steady drizzle and that sun was a true friend now.

I was enjoying myself, singing “Darling Nellie Grey” in honor of the jalopy when that absurd little man stepped through a gap in the flowering scotch broom lining the road and forced me to stab for the brake.

“Whoa, Nellie!” I said.

The car obligingly bucked, skidded, slowed, and stopped. Her motor panted twice at me and expired.

“Damn!” I wanted to cry.

The man bounced up at me. He looked something like a rubber ball with a beard and smile attached. He was short and round and actually wore plus fours! They were a hideous henna color and not at all attractive against the glorious yellow of the scotch broom.

“Ah,” he said. “Could you direct me to Mr. Delhart’s estate?”

“I could,” I admitted. “I’m going there.” I waved toward the car door. “If you want a lift …” I really wanted to push him into the river with a prayer that he would hit one of the numerous potholes. But the motto of our country is to help the stranger. I knew he was a stranger; I was acquainted with everyone in and around Teneskium and had been for my total of twenty-four years. I felt I really should recognize him but it was one of those things that stayed just out of reach. I motioned to the door again.

He reached for it, pulled it open and started to get in. “Don’t sit on Bosco!” I warned.

He jumped back, alarm on his pink face. “Bosco?” He looked where I pointed. “Oh,” he said.

Bosco sat up, stretched, and yawned. She looked the short gentleman over thoroughly and stuck out her tongue. Then she curled into a grey-brown ball and slept again.

“She’s a well behaved kitten,” I said, “but she hates to be sat on.”

“Naturally,” he agreed.

I pulled Bosco against me. She replied by testing the tightest part of my green skirt with her claws. “Before you get in,” I said chummily, “I may as well admit that Nellie died.”

“Nellie?” The stranger’s pinkish face suddenly went quite white. “Nellie?” He nearly screeched it. He put his hands on the door and held on until his knuckles were as white as his face.

“The car,” I explained hastily. “It has to be cranked.” I put on what I hoped was a helpless-female look. “It’s a terrible bother.”

“Oh,” he said. “The car.” The pinkish color came back into his face and he let loose of the door. “I’m afraid I …” He smiled again, weakly, and his lips showed surprisingly red through his brown and grey beard.

I had met with this hesitancy on the part of men before. “The crank,” I said, and handed it to him. “You just put it through the hole in front and twist. Hard,” I added firmly.

“Just twist,” I repeated as he held back. I changed the helpless look to the winning smile. “I’m so stupid mechanically,” I murmured.

Fortunately, I was sitting and he couldn’t see that I’m hardly the helpless type. Not that I’m big and buxom, but I stand five feet six and am what is known as athletically built. Trim enough, fore and aft, as a Wave pal of mine once remarked. But hardly the willowy female.

He stepped gingerly around to Nellie’s front and poked at her with the crank. “Give it a spin.” I called encouragingly.

He jerked. Luckily, Nellie bleated, coughed, and then, as I manipulated the foot feed and choke wildly, she settled to a steady clatter. The man came back looking masculinely triumphant. He slid cautiously into the seat and laid the crank on the floor. I started Nellie forward.

I felt a little guilty when I saw him looking in dismay at his greasy hands, so pink and pudgy. After all, I could take Nellie apart blindfolded. But I detested cranking.

“There’s a rag in back of the seat,” I yelled.

He turned and got it. When his hands were wiped he seemed to feel better. “Is it far?”

“About a mile,” I said over Nellie’s chortlings. “We have to cross the bridge first. Have you an appointment? Mr. Delhart is fussy that way.”

I kept my eyes on the road but I knew he was ogling my legs. It’s impossible for a woman to drive and keep her skirt down, but for some reason men always seem perturbed by it. I find no fault with my legs unless there is too much of them up and down but I didn’t care to have him stare at them.

He finally answered me. “An appointment? I’m staying there, you know.” He raised his eye level a few feet. “Are you a guest, Miss …”

“O’Hara,” I said. “Adeline O’Hara. No, I’m going on business.” I was trying to place this man as a guest of Delhart’s. And suddenly his true identity came to me and I felt very foolish indeed. I wanted to crawl into the river and hide.

“You’re Mr. Willow,” I said. “Mr. Titus Willow.”

I glanced from the corner of my eye and saw that he was expanding. “I admit it,” he said coyly.

“Gee!”

Titus Willow blossomed. I said, “Are you in a hurry, Mr. Willow?”

He was looking at my legs again. “No, Miss O’Hara. Certainly not.”

I smiled sweetly and drove on until we reached the turn in the road. I took it, crossing the lovely, mossy old covered bridge that spans the Teneskium. The car rattled over the planking and dipped downward on the other side. There was a cleared space along the road here and I pulled Nellie into it, her nose downgrade for easy starting. I set the brake and cut the engine. The silence was like weight in my ears. Nellie is not one of your noiseless automobiles.

Trees and brush and steep banks hid the river except where it broke from the forest just before it went under the bridge. With Nellie quiet I could hear the sounds of the water going over rocks and around the pilings of the bridge. It was a lovely place and one I did not particularly care to share with Mr. Willow. It held memories for me—swimming, as a kid, when I was foolish enough to dare the treacherous potholes and undercurrents of the river.

But as much as I disliked stopping here I could do nothing else. There was no other turnout short of Mr. Delhart’s estate. I was afraid to take Mr. Willow all the way there for fear I would be requested to leave before I could get an interview. Mr. Delhart was notoriously unkind to reporters, even the small town variety.

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