Practice to Deceive

Practice to Deceive by Ann Rule Read Free Book Online

Book: Practice to Deceive by Ann Rule Read Free Book Online
Authors: Ann Rule
Tags: General, True Crime, Non-Fiction, Murder, Hoaxes & Deceptions
when he was down, he sometimes threatened suicide.
    “Russel was a loner,” Jim said. “He never seemed to have a lot of friends.”
    “Did he like his job? How about his marriage?” Birchfield asked.
    “Yeah, I think he did like his job. He was really excited about getting his master’s degree in business.”
    As for Russel and Brenna’s marriage, his father acknowledged that they were having trouble, but he didn’t know the specifics beyond arguments over money.
    “You know of any physical abuse?”
    “No—I wasn’t aware of anything like that.”
    Jim Douglas knew that Russ and Brenna had split up for a while, but he had never heard anything about Russel having a girlfriend. He hadn’t known anything about a divorce—but his ex-wife, Gail, said that Brenna told her they were going to start divorce filing as soon as she could get health insurance.
    “Brenna told my ex-wife they were trying to stay friends, but that they were getting a divorce as soon as they could.”
    “Did he ever talk to you about someone being mad at him, or who he might be having trouble with?”
    Douglas shook his head.
    He had sent his son a hundred-dollar check for Christmas, and his bank said that it had been cashed at the Bank of America in Renton on December 23.
    Matthew Douglas, Russel’s brother, was a U.S. Army captain stationed at Fort Bliss in El Paso, Texas. He and his fiancée, Tracy Harvey, had been in Washington State during the Christmas holidays. On the weekend his brother was killed, Matthew and Tracy were in British Columbia, Canada. Now, they, too, were at Brenna’s house to talk to Mike Birchfield.
    Captain Douglas told the detective that he and Russel weren’t close, mostly because Russel kept to himself, especially while they were growing up in Coupeville on Whidbey Island. He agreed that sometimes his brother and his mother, Gail, didn’t get along very well.
    “He resented what he considered very strict rules in our house.”
    Matthew recalled Russel as a good student, a man who had strived to get a superior education. He was also into physical fitness and worked out three or four days a week.
    When Russ was born, he had severely crossed eyes, and it took several operations to fix the problem. As an adult, his eyes could still seem off kilter when he was tired. That may have had something to do with his overweening desire to succeed.
    “He could be eccentric in his lifestyle and the way he dressed,” Matthew said. “When he began a hobby, he would immediately go to extremes. Like learning to play the guitar or surfing. He wasn’t very good at either, but he spent a lot of his time and money trying.”
    Captain Douglas said he’d never known his brother to have a drug or drinking problem, allowing that if he had, he would be more likely to go to their dad to talk about it.
    “I don’t think Russel liked being married,” Matthew said. “But he was a good father. He and Brenna argued a lot, and she kicked him out of the house last May sometime.”
    “Was he ever abusive to her—or the kids?”
    “No, not that I ever heard of. I knew he had a girlfriend who was a lot older than he was.”
    “He into anything weird—or could he have been gay?”
    Matthew shook his head. “I’d have a hard time believing any of that.”
    * * *
    W HILE BRENNA TOLD DETECTIVES about all of Russ’s faults, she said the opposite to her friends and acquaintances. “Russ was my best friend. How am I going to go on without him?”
    Which was it? Brenna was all over the emotional map.
    Neither Mike Birchfield nor Mark Plumberg had located another witness who had disparaged Russel Douglas the way his estranged wife had. Russel’s brother, who would keep in close touch with Birchfield for months as he hoped to hear that the person who shot Russel had been arrested, would be back and forth about whether Brenna was sincere in her protestations of grief.
    “After staying with Brenna,” Matthew wrote, “and watching her

Similar Books

Heaven Is High

Kate Wilhelm

What Price Love?

Stephanie Laurens

Acorna’s Search

Anne McCaffrey

Die Geschlechterluege

Cordelia Fine

Lies That Bind

Maggie Barbieri

Children of the Dawn

Patricia Rowe

The Diamond Moon

Paul Preuss