Angels Burning

Read Angels Burning Online

Authors: Tawni O'Dell

BOOK: Angels Burning
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Praise for the “CRISP, INSIGHTFUL”* novels of TAWNI O'DELL

“Compelling, fast-paced . . . O'Dell's latest is character-driven fiction at its best.”

—
Library Journal
, starred review

“O'Dell returns with a captivating mystery . . . filled with surprising twists and turns.”

—
Kirkus Reviews

“This book had me on the edge of my seat. I promise—you won't be able to put it down.”

—Brenda Novak,
New York Times
bestselling author

“Without doubt,
Angels Burning
is the best mystery I've read all year. Tawni O'Dell's characters are at once brutal and tender, baffling and wise. They will hold you transfixed while this story sneaks up and breaks your heart.”

—Carla Norton,
New York Times
bestselling author

“O'Dell's language is as beautiful as her setting is bleak, and her characters live and breathe as they struggle over the defining line between victim and survivor.
Angels Burning
is a fine mystery, but O'Dell is also working on a broader canvas: the rust belt of the human heart.”

—Matthew Guinn, author of
The Scribe
and
The Resurrectionist

“A fearless exploration of the line between mental illness and true evil, a place many thriller writers visit but without the kind of fearless insights O'Dell reveals in this powerful novel.”

—
The New York Times Book Review

“A searing, tragic vision of working-class people. . . . Powerful and uncompromising, yet radiant with love, this one's pretty close to a masterpiece.”

—
Kirkus Reviews
(starred review)

“Riveting storytelling and genuine emotional punch.”

—
Publishers Weekly
(starred review)

“A masterfully unfolded, absolutely engrossing story as smart and sassy as it is wise.”

—
Booklist*
(starred review)

“O'Dell's hard-hitting, well-crafted story packs a wallop.”

—
Library Journal

“Another gem.”

—
People

“Poignant . . . achingly beautiful prose.”

—
San Diego Union

“Rich, compassionate storytelling.”

—
Entertainment Weekly

“O'Dell is the absolute master of her craft.”

—
The Denver Post

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For my beloved little sis, Molly Meghan

chapter
one

THE LAST TIME
I was this close to Rudy Mayfield he was leaning across the seat of his dad's truck trying to grope my recently ripened breasts.

I close my eyes, and for a moment I smell a teenage boy's sweaty, horny desperation barely masked by Dial soap instead of the sweetish smoky reek of charred flesh mixed with the acrid odor of sulfur always present in this
poisoned ghost town.

“Who does something like that?” Rudy asks for the tenth time in the past minute.

It's become his mantra, a numbing chant to help him cope with the impossibility of what he encountered this morning on his daily trek down this deserted road.

His dog, Buck, a shaggy, white sheepdog mix, raises his head from where he lays at Rudy's feet and gives him a sympathetic look.

“You're absolutely sure you didn't see anyone?” I ask again.

We both glance around us at the buckled driveways leading to the crumbled foundations of a dozen missing houses, and the gnarled leafless trees clawing their way out of the softly simmering earth like giant hands of the undead. The bright orange rust coating of a child's toppled bicycle fender is the only speck of color anywhere in the desolate landscape.

“My grandpa's the only one who stayed at the Run who's still
alive. Aside from me checking on him, no one comes here. You know that.”

“Well, obviously someone came here,” I point out. “That girl didn't show up on her own and light herself on fire.”

Rudy's face turns the same shade of gray as the faded blacktop beneath his feet. He swallows and stares hard at his impressive beer gut straining against an old undershirt spattered with various colored stains like countries depicted on a great white globe.

“We had a few good times back in school,” I say to him in as light a tone as I can manage under the circumstances.

The distraction works and he gives me a lopsided smile, the same one he used to give me in health class whenever our teacher said something obvious or useless, which was most of the time. He still has the same pretty green eyes half hidden in the shadow cast by the brim of his ball cap; the years haven't dulled them.

“Yeah,” he says. “I never understood why we didn't go out. I liked you.”

“Maybe you should've told me that.”

“I thought us doing it in my dad's truck told you that.”

“That just told me you liked doing it in your dad's truck.”

I still remember his surprise when I didn't stop him. He probably thought it was my first time, and it should have been; I was barely fifteen and too young to be fooling around, but my mother's robust sex life had aroused my curiosity at an early age. It had the opposite effect on my sister, Neely, who felt she knew everything she needed to know about the act from the many times we couldn't avoid hearing it and the few times we peeked. She never seemed to have a desire to explore it on her own, but I wrongly believed my mom did it because she enjoyed it, and I wanted to know what made it so great that she'd prefer rolling around with naked, grunting men instead of playing with her kids or feeding them.

I hear a car approaching. Buck raises his head.

The road through Campbell's Run has been closed for as long as I've been alive and is so shattered by potholes and overgrown with
weeds, it's impossible to see from a distance. We left the gate open for the coroner, but it's a state police cruiser and two unmarked cars that arrive first.

“I have to get back to work,” I tell Rudy as I bend down to give Buck a scratch behind his ears. “But don't go anywhere. We might have some more questions for you.”

Corporal Nolan Greely comes walking toward me. He looks like the kind of big, solid, humorless trooper that makes a motorist's heart sink when he sees him in his side-view mirror. He's actually a detective in the state police Criminal Investigations Division and no longer wears a uniform but he doesn't need to. From his iron gray crew cut and the slow, purposeful pace of his steps, there's no denying he's a cop.

He stops in front of me and looks me up and down with a face set in stone and a pair of mirrored sunglasses hiding his eyes.

“Hello, Chief,” he greets me. “You on your way to have tea with the queen?”

I'm in an iris blue skirt and blazer and a new pair of taupe patent-leather pumps I just bought at Kohl's with a 30 percent–off coupon. The blouse I'm wearing is a bright floral print in honor of the sunny summer day.

“I'm supposed to be at a Chamber of Commerce breakfast at the VFW.”

His expression doesn't alter. I can't tell if he admires, pities, or envies me.

“I have to admit I was surprised you called me right away,” he tells me. “There was a time when we would've had to pry this case away from you.”

“I've decided not to waste my time and energy fighting the inevitable,” I reply.

“You mean me specifically?” he asks. “Or the entire state police force?”

I give him a slight smile.

“You, Nolan,” I joke. “If you were a superhero, that would be your name: the Inevitable. And your superpower would be always showing up, even when you're not wanted or needed.”

“I'm always needed,” he says without smiling.

“Well, I'm not reluctant to ask for your help this time,” I explain. “I have a good bunch of guys working for me, but none of them are prepared to deal with this.”

“That bad?”

“Worst I've seen. I think she's a teenager.”

I reach down and slip off my shoes.

“I can't walk back there in heels,” I explain, “and I don't have a pair of practical shoes with me.”

Again, I can't tell if Nolan admires, pities, or envies me.

We start walking toward the site. Nolan motions at the two crime scene techs that arrived with him. They head toward the body in their duty uniforms of cargo pants and polo shirts with the state police badge embroidered over their hearts carrying their cameras and evidence kits. I motion at Colby Singer and Brock Blonski, the two officers on the scene with me. After initially examining the body and waiting as they stumbled away and threw up, I sent them off to look for bloodstains, footprints, or any other kind of evidence.

Blonski and Singer are rookies to police work and life in general. They're in their early twenties and both still live at home, although Blonski recently made the bold move to an apartment above his mom's garage. I hired them about a year ago. The only dead body Singer's ever seen prior to this girl was his grandmother who was dressed in her Sunday best lying peacefully in her white-satin-lined casket. Blonski was first on the scene at a traffic fatality a few months ago. It wasn't pretty, but it was nothing like this.

“Have you ever been here before?” I ask Nolan.

“Once on a dare when I was a kid.”

We stop next to a snarl of fallen barbed wire.

“You can't get over that in your bare feet,” he says to me.

“I did it before.”

Without saying another word, he grabs me around the waist and swings me in the air over the wire.

“That was humiliating,” I comment once I'm on the ground again.

“I would've done the same for a man,” Nolan assures me, “only I rarely run across one performing his duties without shoes.”

I ignore his dig. I've been in a male-dominated profession for my entire adult life. I've experienced every kind of alienation, sabotage, and harassment the Y chromosome has to offer. Most of it isn't sincere; it's simply expected. I save my disgust for the true misogynists.

The mine fire that destroyed the town of Campbell's Run began several miles belowground more than fifty years ago before finally making its presence known on the surface ten years later when a sinkhole opened up in a backyard, releasing a cloud of steam rife with the rotten-egg stench of sulfur. The hole turned out to be three hundred feet deep and the temperature inside it turned out to be almost twice that number. Soon afterward, a little girl's rabbit hutch was swallowed up, then a birdbath. One morning the handlebars of a prized Harley were found poking out of a ten-foot-long ragged slash in the owner's driveway.

All of the town's residents were relocated except for a few holdouts like Rudy's grandfather, who refused to go and somehow managed to remain living here while all around him his neighbors' empty houses were torn down, roads were barricaded, and warning signs went up.

The only other building left standing was the white clapboard church. The government didn't have the nerve to tear it down. From where I'm standing now, it's hidden around a bend in a road and I can glimpse only the weathered gray cross at the top of its spire, but I can picture the rest of it clearly: a simple forgotten sanctuary, the once bright red paint on the front doors almost completely worn away except for a few stubborn strips.

I was out here a dozen years ago when Rudy's grandfather called to tell us someone had stolen the church's stained glass windows. I worked that case hard while everyone around me considered it a waste of time. I was more successful than I imagined I'd be. I discovered the thieves were professional antique scavengers working out of New York, but I was never able to come close to an arrest or track down the property. Here those windows were miraculous bursts of color and faith in the midst of
bleakness. Now they're in the summer homes of the filthy rich and go underappreciated. I feel personally violated every time I think about it.

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