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- This file is copyright of Jens Schriver (c)
- It originates from the Evil House of Cheat
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- --------------------------------------------------------------
- Essay Name : 880.txt
- Uploader : Greg
- Email Address : diggity@ii-okinawa.or.jp
- Language : pretty damn filthy (English)
- Subject : Fictional Stories
- Title : Ridley P. Poe
- Grade : 100%
- School System :
- Country : U.S.
- Author Comments :
- Teacher Comments :
- Date : August 96
- Site found at : Typed "cheat and term paper" at Yahoo
- --------------------------------------------------------------
- ôWell, we got a call from a frightened Ms. Leimbach who lived on the forth floor
- of the Pleasant Valley Apartment building,ö Lieutenant Henderson said.
- ôSo......? WhatÆd she say?ö I asked.
- ôShe said there was a body lying in a safety net that some construction crew had
- left outside her back window,ö Lieutenant Henderson said.
- ôSo whatÆd you do then, LT?ö I asked.
- ôHey Miller why donÆt you stuff a doughnut in this kidÆs mouth so I can tell my
- tale.ö and turning to me, he added ôPatience young man, patience.ö
- Flicking an ash from the end of his Dunhill toward the aluminum foil ashtray in
- front of him and missing, he continued, ôAnyway, Sergeant Richards took the call, and the
- info that he got outta Ms. Leimbach was sorta vague. She said that she couldnÆt tell who it
- was because the face was covered in blood, but she estimated that it had happened within
- fifteen minutes before calling us. She said that she had finished the dishes at her sink in
- front of that window just before The Tonight Show started at 11:00, and the body wasnÆt
- there then. When she called us at 11:15, she said she had just gotten up to make herself a
- cup of tea when she noticed the body.
- ôAt first, me and Richards wondered if that old coot hadnÆt been seeing things
- again. After all, this was the same Ms. Leimbach who had called us about four months
- before this, screaming something about her Hoover attacking her.ö
- ôWhat ya do about that?ö Detective Miller asked.
- ôWell, first I called her doctor and had him meet me there with some sedatives. I
- decided to bring a starter pistol loaded with blanks. When I got there, she was locked in
- her bathroom, and the Hoover was lying upended in the middle of the living room floor. I
- coaxed her out of the bathroom to watch me shoot six blanks into that poor old Hoover.
- Then the doctor did his business, and I left with a new Hoover for the office. The next day
- she called the Captain and asked that I be commended for taking care of that quote
- æwretched beastÆö.
- Lt. Henderson crushed out his Dunhill and grabbed a glazed one from the DunkinÆ
- Doughnuts box in the middle of the table. He shoved half of it into his mouth and
- continued talking while he chewed, ôAnyway, we had to check this one out regardless of
- how many times she cried wolf, or beast, or whatever. When we got there, we found
- exactly what Ms. Leimbach had described.ö He pronounced it ôdeffcrivedö with help from
- the doughnut.
- ôThere was indeed a body lying in a safety net four stories above the apartment
- building parking lot. Since we had no way to get to the body, we called the fire department
- and had them bring in a step truck to take us up.ö He swallowed down the half chewed
- lump in his mouth and stuffed in the other half.
- ôRichards and I went up with one of the firemen and what I saw was probably the
- most disgusting sight I have ever had the privilege of witnessing. He was very dead. I
- mean this guy didnÆt even have a face left. We assumed he had lost it somewhere between
- the top of the twelve story apartment building and the safety net.ö
- ôSo it was a jumper?ö Detective Miller asked. I remained silent.
- ôYeah, thatÆs what we thought. But this is where the whole thing started getting
- really bizarre. You see, we assumed it was a suicide, and figured that the guy just jumped
- and left his face on a ledge or something on the way down.
- ôWhen we got the body down, we checked him for a wallet, a suicide note,
- anything that would tell us who the hell this guy was and what brought him there. We
- checked the roof and the entire front of the building with nothinÆ more than the manÆs shoe
- prints on the roof. Most of his teeth were knocked out, so we couldnÆt ID him by his
- dental records. So the only thing we had to go on were his fingerprints, which we sent off
- to the FBI for analysis, hoping that they would have them on file.
- ôSince it was already late, we decided to send the body to the coroner and wait until
- the next morning to question the residents of the building so we could find out if anyone
- had heard or seen anything. We knew that it wouldnÆt be until then that we got the results
- of the fingerprints back from the FBI anyway. Once we got the ID of this guy, all we
- figured that we would have to do was to notify the next of kin, fill out the proper
- paperwork, and that would be that. Case closed. And then this John Doe would soon be a
- distant memory.ö
- ôDoesnÆt sound too bizarre yet,ö I said.
- ô æYetÆ is the key word here -- listen on,ö Lt. Henderson responded, lighting up
- another Dunhill. ôThe next morning we received three rather important bits of
- information. The first two were expected; the other was.....well, quite the opposite. A fax
- from the FBI came first with the results of the fingerprint analysis. Our John Doe was
- positively identified as one Ridley P. Poe, of 61 East Sprague Street. I decided to go
- myself and look for the suicide note, if Mr. Poe had bothered to leave one. And of course
- he did.ö
- ôLike any good jumper would,ö added Miller sarcastically.
- ôYes, like any good jumper would. But unlike most good jumpers, Mr. Poe left us
- with the beginnings of a mystery that would take more twists than an Agatha Christie
- novel.ö The Lieutenant paused to ruminate. ôYou know, come to think of it, I believe we
- still have that case on file. If you gentlemen would give me a minute, I could let Mr. Poe
- tell you of his demise in his own words.ö
- With that, Lt. Henderson slid his chair back, got up, and retreated to the records
- room behind his office. He returned two short minutes later shuffling through an
- overstuffed file folder. He sat back down, pulled several yellowing pieces of paper from
- the folder, and lit another Dunhill.
- He began talking with the cigarette wiggling in the corner of his mouth. ôMr. Poe
- starts out with the normal æIÆm so depressed, and the world hates meÆ bullshit, and then
- letÆs see.....da de da dadaaaa......Ah! Here we go..... æSix weeks ago, my mother told me
- that I was not living up to her expectations as a son, and because of this she said that she
- was taking me out of her will and removing me as the beneficiary of her life insurance
- policy......
-
- (Excerpt from the suicide note of Ridley P. Poe)
-
- .....so I concocted what I thought was a foolproof
- plan to get the money before she actually took
- care of ending me. Since my mother typically
- procrastinates with everything she does, I
- figured that I would have at least two or three
- weeks to kill her. My plan was pretty simple
- actually. You see, since my father started
- drinking heavily again five years ago, he has
- been in the habit of threatening my mother with
- an unloaded shotgun in an effort to ôtrainö her,
- as he was fond of saying. All I would need to
- do would be to put a single shell into that
- shotgun and wait until my father got wasted
- again. If anything in this cold, fucked up
- world had gone my way, I would be a rich man
- right now, my mother would be dead and my
- father would be in jail for the murder of that
- deserving cunt.
- So it has been six weeks since I put that
- single shell in my fatherÆs twelve gauge. I have
- been over to their plush little ôPleasant Valleyö
- apartment every single day since that one to
- make sure that the shell was still there.
- Although she hasnÆt told me, I figure that
- by now, my mother has already changed the
- will and the insurance policy. And I know
- sheÆs a fairly lazy bitch, but I donÆt think sheÆs
- waited this long. So I will go over there when I
- finish this letter, and if my mother is still alive,
- I will jump off the top of that pleasant building.
- I can only hope that my parents are looking out
- their window when I fall by, so they can see the
- anguish that they have spent twenty-eight
- years putting on my face. Fuck you
- both!!!!!!!!!!!
-
- ôAnd then itÆs signed æRidley P. Poe,Æö Lt. said.
- ôSounds like he got his just reward,ö I said.
- ôYeah, he sure did, but certainly not like he or anyone else expected. I told you
- before that we found out something quite unexpected that morning. Well.....it came by
- way of a phone call from the coroner. After I finished reading the suicide note at the dead
- guyÆs house, Sgt. Richards called me on the radio and told me to meet him at the Pleasant
- Valley Apartments. He said that he had found something out that he was sure I would find
- very interesting.
- ôI met him there about fifteen minutes later, and he told me that we needed to start
- questioning the residents of the building in reference to the murder of Ridley P. Poe. I
- corrected him, saying that it was an obvious suicide, and to emphasize my point, I showed
- him the note that Mr. Poe had left us. He then told me that the coroner had told him that
- Mr. Poe had not lost his face in an impact but rather from the blast of a shotgun. He also
- told Richards that the man died instantly from the blast. Richards said that no evidence of
- gunpowder was found on his hands, indicating that the blast probably came at the hands of
- someone else.
- ôWith the possibility of foul play thrown into the mix, we decided to find out what
- happened inside the elder PoeÆs apartment during the previous night.
- ôWhen we called by, Margaret Poe invited us into the eighth story apartment, and
- what we found surprised us. A twelve gauge shotgun was resting in a corner next to the
- front door minus one shell. Shotgun pellets had pocked the frame of the screen door
- leading out to the balcony, and there was a gaping hole in the screen door next to that.
- Shotgun chaff lay in the living room carpet forming a æVÆ pattern beginning ten feet in
- front of the screen door. But curiously there was no evidence of blood anywhere in the
- apartment or on the balcony.ö
- ôWhere was Mr. Poe while you were doing all this?ö Miller asked.
- ôMargaret went to wake the old man up while we took our little tour, and when
- Warren Poe came out, it was apparent to us that he had spent the previous night imbibing.
- He stumbled over his own feet and nearly knocked Sgt. Richards over. When we asked
- him what had happened there the night before, he just looked dazed and said that he
- couldnÆt recall. So we asked his wife, and she told us that the damage was there when she
- came home from shopping or something at 4:00 in the afternoon. But we knew that she
- was lying because her voice began trembling as she spoke. ThatÆs when I told them that
- we had found their son dead the night before.ö
- ôSo what were their reactions?ö I asked.
- ôI wasnÆt really interested in their reactions. With what I already knew of the
- relationship that they had with their son, they could have shown indifference and that
- would have only meant that they didnÆt give a shit one way or the other if their son was
- alive or dead. But for what itÆs worth, both displayed shock, but no grief.
- ôI decided then that we had enough evidence to arrest them on suspicion of
- murder. Of course, they strenuously objected saying that they were not murderers and that
- they loved their son and blah, blah, blah. I think you have both heard some form of that
- line once or twice before.
- ôSo we brought them here to the station and began questioning them once their
- lawyer arrived. We first questioned Mr. Poe, and he maintained that he couldnÆt recall
- anything from the entire day before. We actually believed that because the old man was
- still drunk and by then it was already 10:00 in the morning. So we began questioning
- Margaret, and at first she stuck to her original story, adding that nothing pertinent
- happened after she got home from shopping. That was when I told her about the suicide
- note. I told her that I knew about her husbandÆs habit of threatening her with the shotgun.
- ThatÆs when she broke, and what she told us then is what we now know as the truth.
- ôShe told us that Ridley had come over just before 11:00. When he walked in, he
- saw that his father was wasted. He told his father that he hoped he died inside that bottle.
- Then he flipped his mother the bird and walked back out. After he left, Margaret told her
- husband that the reason his son was a failure was because Warren was a failure. That
- comment precipitated in an angry argument. She said the argument ended when Warren
- grabbed the shotgun and pointed it at her. She said the gun exploded causing the damage
- that we witnessed that morning. She said that her husband was so shocked and upset by
- the blast that he began crying and wound up crying himself into a drunken sleep. She said
- that is all she could tell us and it was the truth, so help her God.
- ôAnd I believed her,ö said the Lt.
- ôI know youÆre not about to tell me that Ridley P. Poe left that apartment, went up
- to the roof, jumped off and then was accidentally shot dead by his drunken father on the
- way past their eighth story balcony,ö Miller said.
- ôThatÆs exactly what IÆm going to tell you,ö said the Lt.
- ôImpossible!ö Miller and I said in unison.
- ôI can understand your reactions because I felt the same way for awhile. So we
- decided to have the forensics lab check the evidence to back up Mrs. PoeÆs claim. And
- this is what we found out:
- ôShotguns are designed to kill flying foul. Everyone knows this. But what most
- people donÆt know is that when the bird shot exits the barrel of the gun, it comes out in a
- very tight pattern. As the pellets get farther out, the pattern takes the shape of a sideways
- elongated figure eight.ö Lt. Henderson gestured this pattern in the air with his finger.
- ôAnd the farther out the pellets go, the less concentrated this pattern becomes. So it is
- possible to accurately judge the distance between the gun and the object hit by measuring
- the distance between each pellet mark. When forensics measured the pellet wounds on the
- face of the deceased, the wounds were exactly one quarter inch apart, putting the distance
- of the body eighteen feet away from the point where the shot left the barrel of that
- shotgun. It was easy to find where Warren Poe was standing when the gun went off, just
- by looking at the chaff lying on the living room carpet. This was exactly ten feet from the
- screen door. The rail of the balcony is thirteen feet from the point of the blast. Eighteen
- feet gentlemen is mid-air. And unless Ridley P. Poe knew how to slip the surly bonds of
- earth, he was free falling when he was hit by that birdshot.ö
- The Lieutenant leaned back, locked his hands together and stretched his arms high
- above his head as we ruminated over what we had just heard. He lit up another cigarette
- before continuing.
- ôSo which one of you is going to be the first to ask me who got charged with
- what?ö the Lieutenant asked.
- ôIÆm sure you had to charge the old man with something, he killed someone,
- accident or no,ö I said.
- ôTrue enough, but you have to consider that there was never any intent by the old
- Mr. Poe to commit a crime. Technically, the only intent involved was that of the dead guy.
- He intended to kill someone, and fortunately or unfortunately for him, depending on which
- way you look at it, that someone happened to be himself. He was the victim of the crime
- that he had planned for his mother.
- ôWow, this guy just had no luck at all,ö said Detective Miller.
- ôWell, thatÆs not even the worst of his luck either,ö said the Lieutenant. ôDonÆt
- forget, we found his body in a construction crewÆs safety net. If he hadnÆt been shot, he
- would have landed harmlessly in the net to reconsider his fate. And if that wasnÆt enough
- insult to his fatal injury, if he hadnÆt died that day, he would have found himself to be a
- very rich man just three days later.ö
- ôHuh?ö I said, confused.
- ôMr. and Mrs. Poe died in an automobile accident three days after Ridley did. And
- although Margaret did, in fact, change the will and the insurance policy out of her sonÆs
- name, she changed it to her husband. And her husbandÆs will and insurance policy was
- still made out to one Ridley P. Poe.ö
- ôLife sure does suck, doesnÆt it Lieutenant?ö I asked.
- ôYes my good man, life certainly does suck,ö answered Lieutenant
- Henderson. ôIt certainly does.ö
- --------------------------------------------------------------
-