porch. On the far side of the garage, a broken walk disappeared between overgrown cedar branches where it ran alongside the garage. A single knot of crime scene tape was still tied to the garage, left by whoever pulled down the tape.
Poitras squinted up at the house like it was the last place on earth he wanted to go.
âStarkey can lay out the scene for you, but we donât have any of the forensics or case files. Downtown has everything.â
âOkay. Whatever you have.â
âItâs going to be hotter than hell up there. The ACâs off.â
âI appreciate this, Lou. Thanks. You, too, Starkey.â
Poitras stripped off his jacket, and we followed him up.
Stepping into the house was like walking into a furnace. A ratty overstuffed chair had been pushed against a threadbare couch and a coffee table. Swatches of cloth had been cut from the arms and the back of the chair, leaving straw-colored batting bright against stained fabric. The stains were probably blood. Light switches, door jambs and the inside front doorknob were spotted with black smudges from fingerprint kits. More black was smudged on the telephone and coffee table. Starkey immediately took off her jacket, and Poitras rolled up his sleeves.
Starkey said, âBleh. This smell.â
âTell him what you found.â
Starkey glanced at me as if she wasnât sure how to start.
âYou knew this guy, huh?â
âI didnât know him. I worked for his lawyer.â
Just being asked if I knew him seemed to imply we were friends, and left me feeling resentful.
Poitras said, âDescribe the scene, for Christâs sake. I want to get out of here.â
Starkey moved to the center of the room, indicating an empty spot on the floor.
âThe chair was here, not over by the couch. Once the body was out, the SID guys moved things around. He was here in the chair, slumped back, gun in his right handââ
She held out her right hand with the palm up, showing me.
ââa Taurus .32 revolver.â
âThe chair was in the middle of the floor?â
âYeah. Facing the television. A bottle of Seagramâs was on the floor by the chair, so he had probably been hitting it. As soon as Bobby saw the guy he said that stiffâs been here a week. It was a mess, man.â
âHow many shots fired?â
Poitras laughed, and moved closer to the door.
âYou think he had to reload?â
Starkey said, âOne spent, up through the bottom of his chin. Wasnât much blood. A little on the floor here and up on the ceilingââ
She indicated an irregular stain on the floor, then a spot the size of a quarter on the ceiling. It looked like a roach.
Poitras spoke from the doorway. Sweat had beaded on his forehead and was running down his cheeks.
âThe coroner investigator said everything about the body, the gun, and the splatter patterns was consistent with a self-inflicted wound. We havenât seen the final report, but thatâs what he told them here at the scene.â
Starkey nodded along with him, but said nothing. I tried to imagine Lionel Byrd slumped in the chair, but his image was formless and grey. I couldnât remember what Byrd looked like. The only time I had seen him was on a videotape of his confession to the police.
I considered the neighboring houses. From the front door, I saw the roof of the black-and-white and the houses across the way. A woman was standing in a window across the street, looking down at the police car. Safe in her air-conditioning.
âAnyone hear the shot?â
Starkey said, âRemember, the guy had been dead for a week before we found him. No calls were made to 911, and none of these people remembered hearing anything on or around the day of death. Everyone was probably buttoned up from the heat.â
Poitras said, âTell him about the pictures.â
Starkey had been watching me, but now she glanced at the floor.