• Complain

Jeff Sherratt - Detour to Murder

Here you can read online Jeff Sherratt - Detour to Murder full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. year: 2011, genre: Detective and thriller. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

Romance novel Science fiction Adventure Detective Science History Home and family Prose Art Politics Computer Non-fiction Religion Business Children Humor

Choose a favorite category and find really read worthwhile books. Enjoy immersion in the world of imagination, feel the emotions of the characters or learn something new for yourself, make an fascinating discovery.

No cover

Detour to Murder: summary, description and annotation

We offer to read an annotation, description, summary or preface (depends on what the author of the book "Detour to Murder" wrote himself). If you haven't found the necessary information about the book — write in the comments, we will try to find it.

Jeff Sherratt: author's other books


Who wrote Detour to Murder? Find out the surname, the name of the author of the book and a list of all author's works by series.

Detour to Murder — read online for free the complete book (whole text) full work

Below is the text of the book, divided by pages. System saving the place of the last page read, allows you to conveniently read the book "Detour to Murder" online for free, without having to search again every time where you left off. Put a bookmark, and you can go to the page where you finished reading at any time.

Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Jeff Sherratt

Detour to Murder

CHAPTER 1

1974

The California Institution for Men at Chino was forty miles from my office in Downey, almost an hour away. But today, a fenderbender on the Pomona Freeway had traffic snarled, causing me to be late. Southern California was in the midst of one of the periodic droughts that plagued the basin since the beginning of time. Less than normal winter snowfall in the High Sierras to the north meant for a parched summer and autumn in the south. Couple that with a hot Santa Ana wind that blew in from the desert and about ten million normally compliant people turned into mad demons who drove their cars on the battlefield of L.A.s freeways like raging predators seeking to devour their prey.

On days like today, dire conservation warnings flooded the airways, restaurants quit serving a glass of water with your meal, and you could be arrested for watering your lawn. Dont even think about washing your car, youd be shot on sight.

I arrived ten minutes past my scheduled appointment. Damn. I glanced at my watch; shouldve left earlier. Why hadnt Mabel, my office manager, given me the high sign while I was on the phone haggling with my car insurance guy? No use thinking about that now. And anyway my client, Alexander Roberts, wasnt going anywhere. Hed been convicted of homicide in 1945 and had been in prison for twenty-nine years now. What the hell, hes been rotting in his cell at Chino all that time and I was fairly certain my tardiness was the least of his worries. Still, I hated being late all the time. Someone said that being late is sloppy; shows one had sloppy habits, could be true.

Maybe I shouldve shined my shoes this morning.

Back in 45 Roberts had been sentenced to life with a minimum eligibility for parole set at thirty years. Inmates serving life automatically become eligible for parole hearings one year before their MEP date, and now Roberts counted on me to get him a fair shake at his hearing.

Because of the perennial manpower shortage in the Public Defenders office, Id been assigned by the Board of Parole Hearings-recommended by a friendly judge-to represent him before the panel. It wasnt my legal brilliance and razor-sharp mind that got me the job, I must admit. I heard later Judge Balford said to a board member, Jimmy OBrien is a lawyer of hopeless causes and he works cheap. It pays to be noticed.

Its true, state-appointed cases like this didnt pay well, but they added a steady stream of revenue to the uneven flow generated by my regular work: defending poor saps unlucky enough to be caught up in the criminal justice system. With no discovery requests, interrogatories, and countless forms and red tape, parole hearings didnt tie up a lot of my time. Scan the report, interview the prisoner, be on time at the hearing, and do my best for the convict-that was about it. Then Id head back to the office to sit and stare at the walls until the next call came.

This morning, before I left Downey to drive to Chino, Rita Flores, my associate, and I had shared coffee and a couple of glazed. Shed brought the donuts to the office, placed the bag of sugary delights on my desk, and sat and crossed her legs, exposing a bit of thigh. My mind drifted from the legal matters at hand and focused on her. How could she remain so lissome and appealing when she had donuts with me here in the office almost every morning? Amazing.

Rita had been with me in our two-lawyer firm for almost two years now. Shed started as my secretary at the same time that Id opened the office. Back then, shed just graduated from law school, waiting for her bar results when she happened to walk by my storefront as I was hanging out my shingle. I took one look at the raven-haired Latina and hired her on the spot. When her bar results came in, Id elevated her to associate status and prayed-with her new salary-that wed have sufficient cash flow to stay in business.

But just because Rita was single, attractive, and smart, and Id been divorced for years, didnt mean there was any kind of office hanky-panky going on. She was young, twenty-seven, and at thirty-five I felt I was way too old for her. And anyway, she looked up to me as sort of a mentor; I guess you could call it that. How would it look, a mentor romancing his associate? But, I didnt dwell on that thought, either. We had business to take care of.

We had spent almost an hour going over the Roberts case. According to the report supplied by the BPH, Al Roberts had been arrested and charged with Section 187, murder in the first. It seems that, back in 1945, hed brutally strangled a woman. Her semi-nude body was found in a two-bit Hollywood motel room draped across a bed with a telephone cord twisted tightly around her neck. Her trachea had been crushed, her eyes bulged, and her face was frozen in a grimace of horror. There were traces of semen in her vagina, but there was no sign of rape, no bruising of the genital area. The physical evidence gathered at the scene was overwhelming. And it all pointed to the man who committed the crime: Al Roberts. But the jury never saw the mountain of evidence. There was no trial. He had confessed.

More bad news: the report also stated that he killed a man in cold blood a few days before he murdered the girl. The authorities surmised that the victim gave Roberts a lift when hed been hitchhiking across the country en route from New York to Los Angeles. The mans body was found off the side of a road somewhere on the outskirts of Yuma, Arizona. There was a deep gash on the side of the victims forehead, indicating foul play. The man had been dead for a few days when an Arizona Highway patrolman spotted the partially decomposed corpse lying behind a small outcropping of brush.

A warrant for Roberts arrest had been issued in 1945 by a Yuma County judge, but the Los Angeles DA charged him with the womans murder before he could be extradited to stand trial for the murder of the man who gave him a lift.

Look at this, Jimmy. Rita pointed to a notation in the report. The police found the dead mans Lincoln convertible parked in the lot at the same motel where the woman had been strangled.

Yeah, I said. And later, when they picked Roberts up on a vagrancy charge, he had on the dead mans clothes. Christ, he even had Haskells wallet in his pocket.

A parole wouldnt do him any good, Rita said. There must be an outstanding warrant in Arizona for murdering the guy who owned the car. If California turns him loose, theyll snatch him and try him for first degree murder down there.

No statute of limitations on murder.

I know that. Rita stood and turned and gave me a wink over her shoulder. Im a woman and maybe Im not the hotshot Jimmy OBrien, but Im a lawyer too, you know. She moved smoothly to the door.

Rita adjourned to her office to meet with a client, a drunk named Geoff with a deuce hanging over his head, and I set the report aside.

No use digging further into the technical details described in the appendix, I figured. The report supported their conclusions. I couldnt use anything in it to mitigate his crimes. The guy killed two people in cold blood, and after spending almost thirty years locked up in a cage, it appeared that Roberts would still spend the rest of his days as a guest of the State. With what I had just read, the parole board would never cut him loose. Still, I was being paid to plead his case and Id do the best I could for him.

I arrived at 14901 Central Avenue, a mile or so south of Chinos downtown district, and turned onto a side road leading to the main gate. The penitentiary was huge, a few thousand acres surrounded by a double chain-link fence with three feet of coiled razor wire topping it. Through the fence, I could see row after row of buildings. Looking deeper into the complex, I saw a smokestack spewing a steady stream of white vapor. Probably steam coming from the massive boilers that would be needed to keep this small city functioning.

Next page
Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Similar books «Detour to Murder»

Look at similar books to Detour to Murder. We have selected literature similar in name and meaning in the hope of providing readers with more options to find new, interesting, not yet read works.


Reviews about «Detour to Murder»

Discussion, reviews of the book Detour to Murder and just readers' own opinions. Leave your comments, write what you think about the work, its meaning or the main characters. Specify what exactly you liked and what you didn't like, and why you think so.