A bad feeling, sure, but I had to know where it was going to
lead. I went into full detective mode. I called the Irondquoit police, who told
me that he had last been seen checking out of a Binghamton hotel on the morning
of Oct. 23, and that the last cell phone ping came from Oneonta, not far from
where his car was located, at just before 4:30 a.m.
Meaning he checked out of his hotel at 3:30 a.m. The mystery
deepened.
*
Out of curiosity, I did a Google Maps search of the area
where the cell phone ping had been picked up. I saw a small path that lead into
the ravine, near where his car was found. My heart sank. That’s where they’ll find him, I thought. I tried to ignore the
feeling. Friends and family pleaded on Facebook for him to come home. That
night, Ian and I drove out to Binghamton to buy Halloween supplies. I wondered
if he’d gone into the nearby river or wandered into the woods. He wouldn’t be
the first one. I lamented his disappearance and hoped he was okay.
*
The next day, a loose-lipped policeman in Massachusetts told
me that a friend had picked up a ping from his cell phone in Rochester later
that evening, meaning he got nearly 200 miles away from where his car was
found, back towards where he had been. The police had searched his apartment
and all they found in his room was a pile of blankets where a bed should be.
His roommate was out of town, but someone was feeding the cat.
We went to press that night with no sign of him. I went to
bed that night hoping that he would turn up in a hospital or rehab center, a
man who just needed to get away from it all for a few days. But I’ve been at
this business long enough to know that it’s so rarely the case.
*
My boss jokes, darkly, about my uncanny ability to read
between the lines of press releases, an understanding of crime and human
behavior honed from an adulthood of reading and writing mysteries. On Wednesday, as I was getting ready for the
Halloween parade, I got a call from Aga that his body had been located in “heavy
brush” down the hill behind where he had parked.
Just as I had suspected.
But how did he get there? And why? I’ve written here before
that being a journalist has all the questions of a private detective, with none
of the release that come with the solving of a case. I can make the calls, but
in the end, I have to just wait for the phone to ring and write down what is
said on the other end of the line.
The autopsy proved inconclusive, but that the death was not
being ruled “suspicious.” That means they don’t think he was murdered and there
were no indications of suicide. Toxicology reports and additional testing take time.
Maybe I’ll have an answer for you next month.
Or maybe another case.
Maybe I’ll have an answer for you next month.
Or maybe another case.
It's hard waiting through mysteries. All the detectives / police / amateur sleuths running around, looking for clues, at least acting useful, while everyone else gets to sit and wait for the results. And that's very hard to do.
ReplyDeleteYou're a good detective and reporter, Libby. I wait to hear what happens next.
ReplyDelete