![]() He deals with what blood stains he's acquired has a bit of a nap and then arranges to discover the body. ![]() So he grabs the murder weapon and its match (it's one of a pair of shell casings) and heads home. So, Wilcox picked up a handy little WWII souvenir and bashed the man over the head.Īt first he just assumes the police will catch him, but then he realizes that he just might get away with it. He told Wilcox he thought he was dying and had something he just had to say to him before he died. And then Burke called him and asked him to come visit. He'd always stayed out of the man's company as much as possible and kept the irritation to a minimum. ![]() I'm a pretty good planner.īut he didn't plan it. just think how much harder it would have been-MIGHT have been-if I'd planned it-if I'd planned the whole thing. If he had, well, as he says in a posthumous letter to Alberg Wilcox didn't go to Burke's house that day with murder in mind. But it will take the entire book to get all the details. Oh, we have a vague sense of the trouble between the two men-something about Wilcox's sister and some dark secret about Wilcox that Burke was about to blurt out. What we don't know is exactly why and whether or not Canadian Mountie, Staff Sergeant Kurt Alberg will discover the evidence to prove he did it. We know from the outset that eighty-year-old George Wilcox has bashed his not-so-very-near neighbor Carlyle Burke over the head.
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