Writers Tricks of the Trade Issue 3, Volume 8 | Page 12

L IFE S TORIES BY K EITH B ETTINGER M ERRY C HRISTMAS D EAR , Y OU ’ RE D EAD It was Christmas morning, 1987. Our three sons had opened their presents and were busy trying out all their new toys leaving their new clothes scat- tered around the living room. My wife, Lynn and I had our traditional Christmas morning breakfast, a New York bagel and a cup of coffee. A fter breakfast, I settled in to read the morning paper and get ready to go to work at 5:00 o’clock that evening. I lived within the confines of the precinct, so I volunteered to man the Crime Control Unit’s office for the 5:00 pm to 1:00 am tour. The boss had told me, come to work and make sure nothing is going on. Switch the office phones over to the pre- cinct desk and leave the desk officers a phone number where I could be reached and don’t forget to take a hand-held radio. As I opened the newspaper, I read that a newlywed, Lisa Solomon, disappeared from her apartment late Christmas Eve night. It seems she and her husband, Matthew, had settled in for their first married Christmas Eve dinner of lobster tails and champagne. Somewhere in the course of dinner the husband reported that they she went for a walk and never returned. He said he had checked the neighborhood and called fami- ly members, but to no avail. He finally called 911 to report his wife missing. I looked at Lynn and told her I was go- ing to be busy on my shift. With skeleton W RITERS ’ T RICKS OF THE T RADE crews working, I would be teamed with the investigators handling the case. While I was looking at the paper, Lynn asked what I thought happened. I told her I thought the young lady was dead. When I got to work, all the investigators assigned to the precinct that evening met in the detective squad’s office. Officers and detectives were teamed up and plans were made to canvas the neighborhood, asking everyone if they had seen or heard any- thing unusual that Christmas Eve. The can- vas produced nothing but a feeling that foul play had been committed and it happened very close to home. The search for Lisa Solomon continued day and night to no avail. Finally, on New Year’s Eve, her husband, Matthew suggest- ed searchers concentrate on a large vacant field, filled with briars and thorns, along an unlit dark road. The searchers worked their way a short distance into the field and came across large black garbage bags. When detectives opened the bags they found the body of Li- sa, the Christmas Eve newlywed, dead. The P AGE 7 F ALL 2018