Death and White Diamonds

Death and White Diamonds

by Jeff Markowitz
Death and White Diamonds

Death and White Diamonds

by Jeff Markowitz

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Overview

Richie's girlfriend suggests a romantic getaway, promising him a weekend he will never forget. So why can't he remember what happened when he finds her lifeless body on the beach? Richie is fairly certain he didn't kill his girlfriend, but his memory is hazy. One thing, however, is clear. When Lorraine's body is found, he's going to be the prime suspect in a murder investigation . . . if her body is found. Disposing of the body turns out to be harder than Richie could have imagined. Losing it was easy. Ritchie's day is about to get much worse.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781940758121
Publisher: Intrigue Publishing LLC
Publication date: 12/15/2014
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 254
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Jeff Markowitz is the founder and executive director for a network of programs and services for adults with autism. He is the author of A Minor Case of Murder, It's Beginning to Look a Lot Like Murder, and Who is Killing Doah's Deer?. He lives in Monmouth, New Jersey.

Read an Excerpt

Death and White Diamonds


By Jeffrey Markowitz

Intrigue Publishing, LLC

Copyright © 2014 Jeffrey Markowitz
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-940758-12-1


CHAPTER 1

Richie


The weather was changing, clouds blocking out the stars, wind whipping the surf into a frenzy. As high tide approached, the beach was nearly gone, just a narrow strip of sand between water's edge and dune grass, the rhythm of the waves pounding at the shore, washing away the evidence. My attention was drawn to the distant lights of a lonely freighter. There was a chill in the air. I hardly noticed. The knife was still warm in my hand.

I looked down the beach. Not ten feet away lay Lorraine, her blouse ripped, an ugly gash just above her left breast, a delicate thread of blood making its way between her breasts and running down along her abdomen. I couldn't take my eyes off the blood. Something in me stirred. Was it wrong that I saw her, at that moment, perhaps for the first time, achingly lovely?

I forced my eyes away from her chest and peered at my wristwatch, the hands luminous. Three a.m. We had walked down to the beach together shortly after midnight, through the dune grass, giggling. I'd been carrying two wine glasses and a bottle of merlot. Lorraine had been carrying a blanket. I remember thinking, at the time, the surf sounds angry. And then? I can't remember. I'm fairly certain I wasn't responsible for the death of Lorraine van Nessen. But it took no great powers of deduction to realize that I was going to be the prime suspect when Lorraine's body was discovered. If Lorraine's body was discovered.

I pictured Lorraine's body floating out to the middle of Castleton Bay. I wondered how long it would take for her body to sink. And once it was submerged, I wondered whether it would stay underwater. I'd watched enough detective shows to realize that at least on television, bodies had a way of popping to the surface at the most inopportune moment, usually just before the first commercial break. I couldn't take that chance.

Disposing of the body safely would be a gruesome bit of business. Still, I didn't think Lorraine would mind.

Port Salmon was a ghost town in February, especially on the bay side of town, along Ocean Avenue, at three in the morning. The homes were seasonal, rentals mostly, just a few hundred yards from the beach, but all of them empty during the off-season. Lorraine's grandfather had built most of these homes and even in retirement, he looked after "his" houses. He remained one of the few year-round residents right up until the end. Lorraine was the only one left who made use of the house. And now that too was coming to an end.

I would have plenty of time to dispose of Lorraine's body. I walked toward Ocean Avenue, turning back briefly to make sure that Lorraine wasn't moving before hurrying back to the beach house. I didn't have a plan, not at that point anyway. But I did have a glimmer of an idea.

I rooted through the cellar, searching for a proper tool. Fifteen minutes later I was back on the beach. As I made my way through the dune grass, I sensed a presence on the beach. I was not alone. Someone was crouching low over Lorraine. I held my breath, trying to get close enough to see without being seen. I looked again. Not someone, I realized. Something. A dog was sniffing at the body. I scanned the beach, praying the dog was a stray. Suddenly I felt bad for Lorraine.

"Scat," I hissed, waving the hacksaw in the dog's general direction. The dog snarled, but backed away. I threw a piece of driftwood down the beach and the dog took chase. I stared at Lorraine's body, a woman's body, plump and inviting, even in death, especially in death, her full hips, her perfect round breasts, the four inch gash just above her left breast. I'm sorry Lorraine, I whispered, for what I'm about to do.

It was slow work, with the hacksaw. Before long, I was breathing hard. My shirt was soaked with sweat, the sweat drying cold against my skin. I had to face a hard truth. I was out of shape, twenty pounds overweight, unused to physical labor. The hacksaw had not been designed to cut through sinew and bone. At least not by me. My arm grew numb, but I had little to show for my effort, her body scarred by the hacksaw blade, but still intact. I was making more mess than progress. The tide was coming in quickly now. I needed more time. Lorraine needed more time.

It's funny, don't you think? Whenever Lorraine wanted to talk about our relationship, about our future, I always put her off. We've got plenty of time for that later, I told her. All the time in the world. Now we needed more time.

Wrapping her scarred body in the blanket, I dragged Lorraine back through the dune grass. The path through the dunes was narrow and long. My feet sank in the soft sand. As I made my way through the dunes, the footing gradually grew firmer. When I reached the road that bordered the beach, I slung her over my shoulder and carried her across the street and down the deserted road until we arrived at the house. Pulling open the cellar door, I carried her body inside and collapsed in exhaustion at her side.

I imagine that most men would find it difficult to fall asleep next to a corpse, even if the corpse wasn't your girlfriend, even if you weren't about to be the prime suspect in her murder, even if you weren't just a little bit turned on by the intimacy. I dipped my finger in the blood between her breasts. I drew my finger up to my lips. I wanted a taste. But that would be wrong. I kissed Lorraine lightly on the lips and said good-night.

I slept till mid-morning, on the floor in the cellar, Lorraine at my side, lying in a pool of dried blood and semen. I shook the stiffness from my shoulders and breathed in the day. The day, apparently, smelled of death and White Diamonds. Lorraine had a thing for Liz Taylor. Something about that made me happy.

I'm not a power tool kind of guy. When my friends talk about their home improvement projects, I fade into the background, silent, letting the do-it-yourselfers trade their tales of sheetrock and spackle, talking a language I don't understand. I examined a large saw in the cellar, wondering what it was called – a table saw maybe – it didn't really matter. Anything was better than making a second attempt with the hacksaw. I stared at the blade for several minutes before plugging in the saw.

Lorraine was obsessed with her weight, but she was not, in truth, a large woman. I had, on more than one occasion, picked her up and tossed her on the bed during intimate moments. But now that she was dead weight, moving her was more difficult. Lifting her, I stumbled and we both hit the floor hard. I got up slowly and rubbed my shoulder. Moving slowly now, I dragged her body up onto the table, pushing it toward the spinning blade. The machine hummed. I hummed along with it.

Making the first cut was hard, but the left hand came off easily enough. I tossed the hand in a trash bag at the foot of the saw and worked my way up her arm. I was encouraged by the results. I paused to admire the saw, the housing metallic red, the blade a beautiful steel gray, tipped in blood red. I was beginning to understand my friends' fascination with power tools. I'd have one helluva story to tell, the next time we talked home improvement over a pitcher of pale ale.


Somehow I managed to block out the notion that it was Lorraine on the table, that it was Lorraine I was feeding to the whirring blade. Then I got to her head. Her blue eyes and blond hair. Her high cheekbones and full lips. I sat down on the cellar floor and gave myself permission to cry. I didn't want to finish the job, but I knew there was no other way. It was time for me to man up. I cut through her neck, doing my best to avoid those baby blues staring at me, asking why. I put the head in its own trash bag, sealed it right away, and double bagged it. Once the head was removed, the job got easier. It wasn't Lorraine anymore on the table. I found a rhythm to the job, systematically cutting and bagging and cleaning the detritus. I began to sing as I worked, without regard, at first for the song, one of my favorites, suddenly taking on a whole new meaning – The Right Tool for the Job. I smiled. It's amazing how a little thing like that can brighten your whole day.

I tossed the final body part, Lorraine's left foot and leg below the knee, into a trash bag and smiled at a job well-done. I looked at my watch. Two in the afternoon. It had taken nearly four hours to cut her up into disposable parts. I'd have to wait until dark before attempting to dispose of those parts. Until then, I needed a place to leave the trash bags. There was an enormous freezer in the cellar, large enough to feed a house full of guests in season. Out of season, it was easily large enough to handle Lorraine's trash bags.

I was jazzed. I stood in front of the freezer, talking to the trash bags. I wished Lorraine were alive, so I could tell her what I had done. I had never felt quite as vibrant as I felt when I was cutting her up into little pieces. And I needed to tell her all about it. But isn't that just like a woman? When they want to talk, they expect you to drop everything and listen. But now, when I really needed to talk to someone, Lorraine was ignoring me.


I'm not a handsome man. I'm just a little too short, a little too soft, my features a little too feminine. But covered in blood and dirt, I realized appearance was only a matter of perspective. Suddenly I felt taller, trimmer, and more manly. I studied my features carefully. My face was rugged in a way I had never noticed before. I imagined myself dressed in tight blue jeans and white T-shirt, work boots and hard hat, endorsing a certain line of power tools.

I did a quick google search. You can find anything on the internet. Even so, it amazed me that they advertised so openly. There were hundreds of hits, the closest one just up the road a few miles. I'd never been to a massage parlor before. I consider myself a man of high moral standards. Under normal circumstances, I would never go to a place like that, never treat a woman that way. But these were not normal circumstances. Someone had murdered my girlfriend. I needed a woman to help me relax and Lorraine was no longer available.

I drove north on Route 9, looking for the Asian Paradise. I didn't know what to expect and nearly turned back twice before spotting the small office building. It might have been an accountant's office, or a dentist's, but for the discreet sign in the window. I pulled my car into a space behind the office and parked, pleased to see a private entrance around back.

I tried the door, but it was locked. Perhaps it was closed for the winter. As I turned to leave, the door cracked open. An Asian woman of indefinable heritage and indeterminate age checked me out carefully. "Forty dollars," she said, and smiled, pulling me inside the office.

For the next hour, it was all she said. I was relieved that she didn't speak English. I didn't want to know who she was, didn't want to know what was on her mind. I wasn't sure what I was supposed to do first. When she began to unbutton my shirt, I figured that I was supposed to get undressed. I stripped down to my boxer shorts and socks and waited. The Asian woman pointed and giggled. I knew what she meant, and slowly stripped off my boxer shorts. For reasons I didn't entirely understand, I chose not to remove my socks. I lay face down on the massage table and waited.

As she worked on the knots in my shoulders, I found myself talking about Lorraine. We were not exactly lovers. What was the term the kids used? I tried to remember. Friends with benefits. That wasn't quite right either. I wanted to explain, not for the Asian woman who was walking on my back. She had shown no evidence of knowing any English beyond her initial two-word greeting. No, I was talking to explain it to myself. Co-workers with benefits? That was closer to the truth. A matter of convenience for two lonely adults. Part of the company's defined benefit package. Lorraine was an Assistant to the Vice President of Finance, five years older, two levels, at least, above me in the organizational chart. I was an entry-level quality assurance analyst, tracking performance by department. My job was to crunch numbers, and to display those numbers in fancy three-color pie charts, charts that were supposed to make the company look good, even when it wasn't. I had a knack for making the numbers fit the company's desired storyline. A generation past, I would have had a bright future at the company. But I knew it was only a matter of time before my job was outsourced to India. It was useful to have relations with an Assistant to the VP of Finance. I was going to miss her. "I'm going to miss Lorraine."

The Asian masseuse climbed down off my back. I stopped talking while she finished the massage.

I dressed quickly and prepared to leave. The masseuse unlocked the door. "So sorry hear about Miss Lurlene. You come back, okay?"


I told myself it didn't count as cheating. After all, Lorraine was dead. You can't cheat on a corpse. A dismembered corpse at that. So why did I feel guilty? As I drove back to the house, I considered my options. I had come to Port Salmon at Lorraine's urging, to spend a long week-end, off-season. I'm not one to understand the appeal of a deserted beach in the cold of February, but Lorraine had insisted, using words like trust, and commitment, and bonding. She promised me a week-end I would never forget. So why was it that I couldn't remember what happened out there on the beach? Now Lorraine was dead, in pieces, in the freezer.

Some people might interpret my decision to chop her up as evidence of guilt. But they would be wrong. Chopping her into pieces had been a difficult, but necessary step to protect my own innocence. In my favor, no one knew I had come to Port Salmon with Lorraine. And no one knew that she was dead.

I couldn't just carry the body parts down to the water's edge and set them adrift like little toy boats, the S.S. Lorraine, a fleet of S.S. Lorraines, set them adrift in the current, and watch them sail off until, one by one, they sank to the bottom of the bay. Because, by morning, the currents would wash those body parts back up to shore. By morning, along with the seaweed and the hermit crabs, the driftwood, oyster shells and egg casings, the beach would be littered with Lorraine.

CHAPTER 2

I needed to come up with a way to dump Lorraine's body parts further out to sea. A quick look around the deserted harbor and it was clear that the party boat business was shut down for the winter. It was probably for the best. Even if I could charter a boat, the captain would surely become suspicious when I started tossing arms and legs overboard. Or would he? Obviously I wasn't the first man who needed to discreetly dispose of a body. Perhaps deep sea fishing was a front for a certain type of waste disposal business. Everyone knows who runs the waste disposal business. Perhaps one of the fishing captains was connected. But which one? I stared at the line of fishing boats docked in the harbor. Which one?

I had no experience with fishing. Well, that's not entirely accurate. When I was a kid, we'd "fish" in a man-made pond in the town square, a piece of kite string with a wad of white bread, dangling from a pole cut from a tree branch, cherry, I think, or possibly birch. Some of the kids had real fishing poles. One year, I asked for a fishing pole for my birthday. My father snorted. You don't want to be one of those kids, he told me. Perhaps, if I had become one of those kids, I might be better prepared for the task at hand.

I examined the signs along the dock – Port Salmon rips, deep sea fishing, back bay, salt water fly fishing. I could find no hints among the signage, no suggestion as to which of the many fishing boats might be available for some illegal activity. In any event, it looked like they had all been shut down for the winter.

I wish I knew more about fishing. What about bait? Perhaps there was a way to avoid arousing the Captain's suspicions. How small would I have to chop up Lorraine to pass her off as bait?

"Hey buddy, you lookin' for a charter?"

"Huh?" I jumped and nearly fell off the dock.

"I'm sorry. I didn't mean to startle you." The crone chuckled. I could hear a lifetime of cigarettes in her laugh. Her skin was dry and yellow. Her dress was long and black. "You ever been fishin' before?"


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Death and White Diamonds by Jeffrey Markowitz. Copyright © 2014 Jeffrey Markowitz. Excerpted by permission of Intrigue Publishing, LLC.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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