right there.â She snapped off the phone and looked at me with the same grim expression sheâd used all during the interrogation. âDrop something did you?â
âNot really,â I said. âJust snoopy. Was that something about Vinnie?â
âYou might say that,â she said. âThey just found the kid who plays Fairchild, wearing nothing but undershorts, bound and gagged in a tool shed. He said somebody hit him from behind and tied him up and stole his costume while he was out.â
âSo the Fairchild who delivered the poisoned square meal was a phony?â I said.
âA phony with a mission,â Barnes said. âWhoever was wearing Fairchildâs costume is our killer.â
âOkay if we follow you to the fairgrounds?â
âItâs a free country.â She actually smiled when she added, âJust stay one car length back for every ten miles per hour or Iâll tag you for following too close.â
Â
Chapter 3: Not So Fair
T he teenager who played Fairchild looked too frail for the job. He also looked too tired and too scared to talk about being sapped, stripped and strapped. I could picture Lorrie Gardner smothering him with hugs and worse. Apparently he could, too, because he sat with the back of his chair against a wooden wall with only his face, from the nose up, showing above a gray army blanket held at port arms. Al got a great photo, which we used big on page one.
Detective Barnes asked his name and he said, âTommy.â She inquired as to a last name and he said, âGrayson.â She asked his age and he said âeighteen.â He didnât look that old to me but she didnât press the issue.
Slowly and painfully Barnes dragged out the details. Tommy was whacked on the head from behind by an unseen and unheard assailant. He awoke in the tool shed with a headache and a lump. His hands and feet were bound and his mouth was stuffed with a bandanna wrapped around a stick. A killer with a dark sense of humor no less.
âWhat time would you say you were attacked?â Barnes asked.
âIâd just got into my costume, except for putting on my head piece, when I stepped out the door,â he said. âMust have been a few minutes after eight.â
âIs eight oâclock your starting time?â
âYes, maâam. I work from eight to four. Derek Sloane takes over then and works till closing time. Heâs older and can deal with the drunks . . .â
âThank you, Tommy,â Barnes said. âDid you see your attacker at all?â
âNo. He snuck up behind me and hit me before I could move.â
âYouâre sure it was a he?â
âWell, I . . . I guess so. He had to be pretty strong to hit me that hard.â
âBut you didnât see the person or hear the person speak?â
âNo. I suppose it could have been a girl . . . a woman. Like I said, sheâd have to be pretty strong.â
âDo you think I look strong enough to knock you out and drag you away?â
âYou look pretty strong, maâam,â Tommy said.
âIs that a yes?â Barnes asked.
âUh, I guess so.â She glared at him and got an instantaneous, rapid-fire response. âYes, maâam. Thatâs definitely a yes.â
âThank you, Tommy. And I take it you saw no one until someone came to the shed looking for equipment this afternoon.â
âThatâs right. I was really glad to see Tiger.â
âWho?â
âTiger. Tiger Wyberelli. From the maintenance crew. We call him Tiger becauseâ
âThank you, Tommy. I take it Tiger was the person who opened the door at . . . what time?â she asked.
âMust have been almost four. Thatâs when Tiger starts, four.â
âAnd he always starts by opening the tool shed?â
âOh, no, maâam,â said Tommy. âHe just happened to need some cutters. Normally he