Voice Mail Murder

Chapter Four





Luckily, the topic of the football coach’s murder had not consumed Pamela’s thoughts because she had taught two more classes and dealt with a line—yes, an actual line—of students outside of her door during her office hours who were trying to get in or out of various courses at the last minute. She mused that she had sat at her desk during her office hours for several days before the first day of class and had seen very few students. Now, that classes had finally started, students were all frantic to solve their registration problems and, of course, they all assumed that they were the only ones experiencing any problems. She sighed, knowing that it was par for the course, and that schedules would eventually iron themselves out and classes would eventually get down to the business of learning. But for the next day or two, it would be chaos.

As she glanced up at her wall clock, she realized that it was almost five o’clock. The line of students had dwindled away to nothing and she grabbed the opportunity to make her exit. Gathering her purse, clipboard and papers she knew she would need for tonight’s lesson prep, she locked up and headed down the side stairs. The old building echoed forlornly suddenly empty of most of the earlier mass of pushing and shoving bodies.

At the main office, she slipped in quietly and peeked inside her cubby. Jane Marie was typing on her computer.

“Dr. Barnes,” signaled the perky secretary, as she noticed Pamela by the wall of mailboxes. “What a day, right?”

“More than usually hectic for the first day of class,” responded Pamela, edging over to Jane Marie’s desk that contained a neat arrangement of family photos, flowers, and cups of wrapped candies. “The football coach?”

“Right,” whispered the secretary, leaning in to Pamela over her computer monitor, “Can you believe it?”

“Students are saying he was murdered. Is that what you heard?”

“That’s the story,” replied Jane Marie. “Supposedly, they found his body yesterday morning in a motel. The police were called.” She bent closer, grabbing Pamela’s sleeve. “Stabbed in the back, seven times.”

“My God!”

“Yes,” continued the young woman, “He was on the floor and there was blood everywhere.” She clenched her teeth when she said everywhere.

“Who would do such a thing?” asked Pamela.

“Good question,” answered Jane Marie. “He hadn’t lost a game in years.”

“I wouldn’t know,” replied Pamela, “I don’t really follow football.”

“Dr. Barnes,” said Jane Marie, “surely you know how successful our football team is! I mean, they’re amazing. The team idolized Coach Croft.”

“Somebody didn’t idolize him. How did you find out all this, Jane Marie?” asked Pamela, although she wasn’t surprised at Jane Marie’s intimate knowledge of any campus news. The departmental secretary was typically a fount of information about college scandals.

“The police have been questioning everyone in the Athletic Department. I talked with Rosemary Ellis, the Coach’s secretary, this morning.”

“Do the police suspect someone in the Athletic Department?”

“I don’t know, but they are probably going to question everyone who knew the Coach or worked with him.”

Mitchell Marks, Head of the Psychology Department, opened the adjoining door to his office, which attached directly from Jane Marie’s small connecting area to the main office. Marks, a tall, blond, somber-looking man, looked around cautiously before entering the little alcove.

“Pamela,” he greeted her, and ambled over to Jane Marie’s desk where he sat on the edge. “Heard you talking out here. I suppose you have the coach’s murder solved already, don’t you?”

“Mitchell,” said Pamela, scowling and sitting on the edge of a chair in front of the secretary’s small desk. “All I know is what I hear from Jane Marie.” She clutched her belongings and beamed at the secretary who in turn glanced up at her boss with a shrug.

“Right,” he declared, “Scandal Central, here. Just figured that the police had probably contacted you and asked you who ‘dun it?”

“No, sorry,” replied Pamela. “All I know about it is what Jane Marie has informed me. She says the police found his body in a motel and that he’d been stabbed seven times.”

“That’s more than I’d heard,” said Marks, his head tipped to Jane Marie quizzically. “Do they have any suspects?”

“Not that I know of,” Jane Marie said.

“Boy,” continued Marks, his jowls shaking, “What a mess. Sad. Really sad.”

“Yes,” agreed Pamela. “I didn’t know him, but, of course, the students are all very upset.”

“I’d met him a few times,” offered Marks, tapping a pencil on the desk. “Seemed like a nice fellow. And, of course, his wife. In that wheel chair. Very sympathetic.”

“Yes,” agreed Jane Marie. “I think she has multiple sclerosis or something similar.”

“Oh no,” said Pamela, “I hadn’t heard that. I guess I just never paid any attention.”

“I believe I met them at one of the Dean’s functions a few years back—when he first came here. It was a few years ago, wasn’t it, JM?” asked Marks.

“Yes, sir,” replied Jane Marie, “He’s only been here three years, but the team started its winning streak almost as soon as he got here. I mean it’s been amazing what he did over there.”

“You met him?” asked Pamela.

“I did,” nodded Marks. “Very friendly. Very solicitous of the wife. She was charming—and energetic, despite being in the chair. Didn’t seem to affect her personality at all. A nice couple.”

“How horrible for her,” offered Pamela.

“Yes,” said Jane Marie. “And their daughters.”

“They have children?” asked Pamela.

“I believe so. Two daughters. One is still in high school, but the other one is enrolled here—I think she’s a junior,” said Jane Marie.

“What could possibly be the motive to kill such a man?” wondered Pamela, shaking her head.

“Right,” nodded Marks. “Doesn’t seem a likely victim for murder. No one could be upset with him for his coaching. I mean, with the team on this long-term winning streak. If there’s any problem in the family, I don’t see it.”

“Must be something else,” said Pamela.

“Must be,” agreed Jane Marie. “They did find him in a motel.” She gave an audible sigh.

“What did you get from the secretary?” asked Marks, looking over his shoulder at Jane Marie.

“She was upset, as you can imagine,” she explained. “She was trying to keep things going over there—get the team members enrolled in courses they needed to be in—and had forgotten to register for. You know, the typical thing. But, I could tell she was really upset. “

“Of course, she’d be upset,” Pamela noted, “I’d be upset if you were murdered Mitchell.”

Marks chuckled and smiled. “Thanks, Pamela. I guess.”

“You know what I mean,” Pamela added, flustered and blushing.

“Yes, yes. I know. You say that the police are questioning everyone in the Athletic Department?” he pressed the secretary.

“That’s what Rosemary said,” repeated Jane Marie. “I didn’t get the impression that they had any specific suspicions though, only that they were trying to figure out who might have had a motive or if anyone knew why Coach Croft was in the motel in the first place.”

“I can venture a guess as to why he was in the motel,” said Marks, glancing from one woman to the other.

“You can?” replied Pamela, meeting his challenge.

“Come on, you two,” said Marks, eyeballs rolling. “What’s the main reason someone goes to a motel when they have a perfectly good home to go to?”

“Privacy,” suggested Jane Marie, sweetly.

“An afternoon nap,” offered Pamela, equally innocent.

“Oh, come off it!” snorted Marks. “He may be Mr. All-American Coach of the Year, but a motel room in the middle of the day suggests one thing to me—and I’m sure it suggests one thing to the two of you innocent ladies too.”

“What?” both women asked at once.

“The guy was having an affair,” said Marks in a loud stage whisper. Pamela appreciated his discretion as you never knew when some student might be listening around a corner to faculty speculation.

“Even if he was,” suggested Pamela, “that doesn’t explain the murder. I’m sure a number of people manage to have affairs without getting murdered.” She wished she could retrieve this statement as soon as she said it. There had been a minor scandal several years ago when Mitchell had had a brief affair. His marriage to Velma had been derailed but was now apparently back on track.

“Maybe so,” agreed Marks, running his hand through his thick mane of graying blond hair and seemingly oblivious to her comment, “but it might provide a motive—particularly if someone found out about said affair—someone he didn’t want to know.” A tuft of his blond hair fell over his forehead and he shook it quickly out of his face.

“Surely not his wife,” whispered Jane Marie. “You said she’s in a wheel chair.”

“What about the daughters?” asked Pamela. “Maybe they didn’t approve of their father cheating on their mother.”

“Wait a minute,” said Marks, hands in traffic cop position to the two women.

“Or maybe it was an irate student,” declared Pamela, “who got a bad grade!”

Dr. Barnes,” said Jane Marie, arms folded. “You don’t kill a professor for a bad grade!”

“I don’t know,” mused Marks, “Some of them get pretty angry when things don’t go their way.” At that point several students poked their heads around the corner of the secretary’s alcove.

“We need to get Dr. Swinton’s signature,” said one, “on a drop and add form.”

“He isn’t in his office,” said the other, glaring at Jane Marie expectantly.

Of course, thought Pamela, students expected each faculty member to remain in their office twenty-four hours a day and be on call whenever they needed something signed or approved. She knew that Willard Swinton was one of the few professors who probably would do just that if he were allowed. Totally devoted to his students and his research, Willard was probably grabbing a quick supper. She noted her watch and seeing that it was a little after five o’clock now, she was quite certain that he would probably return to his office shortly.

“Why don’t you wait by his office door?” she suggested to the pair. “I believe Dr. Swinton is out getting some supper, but I’m sure he’ll be returning to his office soon.” The pair looked at each other quizzically and, without a word, headed out the door.

“They don’t seem too worried about the Coach,” said the secretary.

“Oblivious,” agreed Pamela, following the students’ departure with her eyes.

“Probably for the best,” agreed Marks. “Life and classes must go on. It’s late, ladies.” He turned and headed back into his inner sanctum and shut the door, leaving the two women alone in the small room.

“So, really, Dr. Barnes,” said Jane Marie, conspiratorially, “who do you think might have killed Coach Croft?”

“I have no idea, Jane Marie,” answered Pamela, “but, truth be told, I am interested. And you seem to have an inside track on classified information.”

“Maybe.”

“I’d really like to hear what you find out—if anything.”

“I can’t promise, but I do speak to Rosemary fairly often. We see each other from time to time at those college secretaries’ luncheons. Dr. Marks bends over backwards for the athletes too, more so than many heads of some departments, Dr. Barnes,” she added secretively, “and I know Rosemary appreciates our help when their athletes need special treatment, if you know what I mean.”

“I do, Jane Marie,” Pamela replied, “but this time, the Coach got some special treatment from someone—and not just help with some football players who needed to get into a course late or help with struggling athletes who couldn’t make passing grades. This time, he got more special treatment than he bargained for.”





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