Loading...
Village Squire, 1980-06, Page 13marriage Harold had always entered the main part of the home by the front or back door. A dart of suspicion struck him in the pit of the stomach and began festering like an ulcer. Long after he'd put young Harold to bed, he sat in the library thinking. Surely his own brother and business partner wouldn't cuckold him. It was unthinkable, even accepting Harold's rather wild ways. Always cautious, Frank decided to lie low. Fortunately the library of the big home was his favourite retreat. so it was simple to test the lock each day without Dolly wondering about his affinity for that room. The following week Frank found it securely locked when he returned from a church meeting. He knew now his wife was unfaithful, but this still wasn't positive proof of the paternity of the boy. If anything, the situation was worse, for if he changed the lock on the door the other two would be .ayvare that they'd been discovered. He had to admit candidly to himself that he had a low sex drive. Was it possible this could be linked with impotence? The thought had never occurred to him, for at all times he'd enjoyed the best of health. It was something he could check discreetly on his next business trip to the city. The following week was the annual hardware dealers' convention. It was Frank's turn to attend and he made an immediate appointment at a medical clinic. Much to his chagrin the doctor informed him that hehad a zero sperm count. "Could this be a temporary thing?" Blackstone asked. The doctor was sympathetic. "I don't like to discourage you, but from my findings, my judg .ment would be that in your case it has been congenital." The evidence was all in, but the last thing Frank wanted to face was public exposure. Financially he was in a position to buy his brother's share in the business. He gritted his teeth. He could see the smile on Harold's face as he pocketed the money. His son's face and Harold's sudden exit would set tongues wagging. Also second only to his son Frank was devoted to Dolly's parents. He was certain of only one thing—he'd destroy his cheating brother. Just how he'd go about it he didn't know. Frank lacked the killer's instinct, but he was consumed by hate. From that day on "the older brother" began his quiet search. He read every book on murder that he could get his hands on, as well as scores of "whodunnit" novels. He studied books on poisons. Each plot real and supposed was carefully examined, and each set aside as he detected a possible flaw. It would be the ultimate ignominy to be caught in his own net. Frank even thought of hiring the services of a paid killer, he a man with no more contact with the underworld than a field- mouse. Frank lost cotint of the times ht. almost summoned up the courage to act. The thirst for revenge never slackened due to that wretched door leading to Harold's wing of the Blackstone house. By now it was the height of the local baseball season and young Dale, their senior clerk in charge of produce and frozen foods was eager to leave early Saturday for practice before the visiting team arrived. Harold, always good-natured and willing tc co-operate with the staff, chased Dale off to the baseball diamond with the promise that at 6 o'clock he'd move the frozen foods back into the big locker. When the staff trooped out at closing time, Frank cleared the tills and made the final entries for the week in his ledger. As he shut the book and started to return it to the safe, he heard a pounding, followed by a muffled shout, from the back of the big store. Frank dropped the book and went to investigate. Again he heard a muffled shout. "Frank! Frank!" Then he remembered hearing Harold's promise to shift unsold meat from the display case to the big walk-in locker. Heedless as usual, his brother must have failed to set the catch on the massive door. That door, eight inches thick and metal sheethed, had closed, trapping Harold in the locker's sub -zero bowels. A thin smile crossed Frank's handsome face. He stepped forward and touched the light switch. "Freeze in the dark, you bastard," he whispered softly. Next he set the thermostat to its minimum reading before leaving the store. "All that reading and study for nothing," he mused. "All one needs is the help of fate." Young Dale found the frozen body Monday morning, beside a frozen quarter of beef. There were great dints on the inner surface of the door where Harold had made a final attempt to batter it open before the frost crept into his veins. Both before and during the large funeral, Frank watched Dolly narrowly. She betrayed nothing, playing the role of the bereaved sister-in-law with more skill than she had ever displayed on the town hall stage. A few weeks after the funeral, Frank became aware that Dolly's trips to the city had almost doubled. It was simple to put a detective on her trail. As he suspected, she'd found a new lover elsewhere. Unhappily, divorce was still out of the question. Frank's position in the community and in the church would suffer. The Givens were in frail health. Frank couldn't dream of having young Harold grow up to the knowledge of a wayward mother. Always a patient and methodical man, Frank would bide his time confident that the same Fate that had delivered his brother into his hands would in due time provide a pit into which he could tumble his unfaithful wife. i -al{ -fiutwibs Is now `'- opevx i 1' Exeter. 1 bio, —ea_„)\ l'rn vto't- ione reSSeCk bu0 id's a beou.fifu1 Shop, fKU1 of +1,Q,/ best wotrk of SOwt a o4' 4 -he 'Mlles-+ Otr4isf s t vt Otnt av' i o • . ' keep tal kIrki) ,, re's IAtlee--turted OOo1 , 5o4+ tx)k.is , wecJUiKois , foorteirti, orivvts grtd 10110+03ropk- 6.111 1. vrcl eoLk 5 S+kff bce}er Hp Th wka4 Are we_ wait -i ►1° -fp✓' ? FINALLY, WE'RE O►°CtV cy°1• aII thumb un artists' co-operative 397 main st. s., exeter, ont. NOM 1SO VILLAGE SQUIRE/JUNE 1980 PG 11