Gone to Ground (7 page)

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Authors: Brandilyn Collins

Tags: #Christian Suspense

BOOK: Gone to Ground
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"They're always locked."

"You check em twice. Windows too."

Was he trying to convince me he didn't kill Erika?

"You hear?"

"Yes."

"And I don't want you goin to bed till I get home."

"But I get so sleepy, you know that."

"You don't have to get up in the mornin now and go to work. You can sleep late as you want. So sit up on the couch. And once it gets dark, take my gun from the nightstand and keep it beside you."

Mike had taught me to shoot soon after we were married. He had some kind of pistol—I didn't even know what it was. But I knew how to load it and pull the trigger. These days there likely wasn't a home in Amaryllis that didn't have a gun.

"Tully, I'm
talkin
to you."

"I hear you. Okay."

He put his hands on his hips. I could smell his last cigarette still lingering on his body. Who was I kidding—cigarette smell was everywhere in our house. I hated the smell of it. Why had I ever stood for that? Why hadn't I insisted he quit if he wanted to marry me?

He fixed me with a steely gaze. "You think I killed her, Tully?" It was more of a challenge than a question.

"Did you?"

"No."

We eyed each other.

"Then why'd you come home late?"

He shrugged. "Just extra work at the factory."

Something at the factory—same excuse as when Carla Brewster was murdered. If he'd really worked overtime, it would show up on his paycheck. Not that he ever let me see it.

"And your uniform?"
Give me something, Michael. Something I can stake the rest of my life on.

"I spilled stuff on it and had to change."

If he'd just spilled something, where was the uniform? It would be his responsibility to wash it. And
why
did he nearly choke me to death?

Mike ran his tongue below his upper lip. "As for that picture of me with Erika—ever hear of Photoshop? I wasn't with her. If she was pregnant—which I wouldn't doubt, knowin her—I didn't know anything about it. Sure wasn't
my
baby."

Could that be true? I hadn't seen the picture for that long. Maybe it
had
been changed.

Surely Michael saw the wild hope in my eyes. He nodded. "See. Told you."

But the blood, Tully. The blood.

"Okay."

"That's it?" He scowled. "Just 'okay'? How bout 'I'm sorry I doubted you, Mike.'"

I swallowed. "I'm sorry I doubted you."

"Say it like you mean it."

"I'm
sorry
I doubted you."

Mike nodded, his lips twisting. "That's better." He turned to go. "See you tonight."

I lay like a stone until the front door closed behind him.

Not till the truck backed out of the driveway did I struggle to my feet. I headed into our kitchen and picked up a pair of plastic gloves from underneath the sink. Put them on. Then into our bedroom and to my dresser. I leaned over to slide out the bottom drawer, full of regular-sized clothing. One day I'd be able to fit into them again. I lifted the pile on the right, feeling to the bottom. My plastic-coated fingers brushed the small paper bag I'd hidden yesterday. I pulled it out, sat on the bed, and dumped out its contents.

Out rolled a swath of toilet paper.

Biting the inside of my lip, I unwrapped the paper, layer after layer, my fingers clumsy in the gloves. Finally the objects I'd so carefully protected lay before me.

Two cotton swabs, both stained red. The blood on the doorknob had been long dried by the time I found it. The only way I could swab it was to dampen the cotton.

Would a tiny bit of water make a difference in DNA testing?

Crazy, saving this evidence, then cleaning the rest of it off the doorknob.

I stared at the blood. Was it Erika's?

My nerves tingled. What was I going to do with this? If I took it to the police and DNA matched, they'd arrest my husband.

I closed my eyes, picturing the cops at our door, Mike's hands cuffed behind his back. Neighbors watching, word spreading across town. The look Mike would give me, his betrayer, as they pushed him into the squad car.

If they let him go, he'd kill me.

I stared at the swabs. I could take them down to the police right now. Show them the bruises on my neck. Mike wouldn't know—until they came to arrest him. Would they do that right away? If not I'd have to tiptoe around the house. Do nothing to set him off.

But what if he found out?

When I made these swabs, I wore plastic gloves, careful not to leave my own prints on the package. Just in case I sent it anonymously to police.

Now I couldn't even bring myself to do that.

The red cotton cried out to me, demanding justice. I couldn't stand to look at it anymore.

Carefully I rewound the two swabs in the toilet paper, then placed them in the bag. Returned the package to the bottom of my drawer.

I closed the drawer with a firm push, then turned around to face my empty bedroom.

And the rest of my life.

http://www.pulitzer.org/works/2010-Feature-Writing

2010 Pulitzer Prize

Feature Writing

The Jackson Bugle

Gone to Ground

What happens to a small, quiet Southern town when evil invades in the form of a serial killer?

By: Trent Williams

October 29, 2010

(Excerpt)

Legend of the Amaryllis cemetery ghost dates back to the early years of the town. In 1871 Winifred Prathers, wife of the town's first banker, was mourning their young son's death from diphtheria. As she knelt at the grave in the gloaming, she felt a rush of cold air at her back. Turning, she beheld a figure in dark clothing, whose face she could not discern. Man or woman? The figure clenched both hands to its chest and bowed its head, as if grieving for her loss. "Who are you?" Mrs. Prathers managed—and the form fizzled into pieces that melted into the gathering darkness.

Sightings continued after that, the reports handed down from one generation to the next. Always the figure remained androgynous yet graceful, chilling yet empathetic, as if it mourned its own unrelinquishing form tethered between worlds, belonging to neither.

As Amaryllis grew, its cemetery spread to include land on the other side of Turtle Creek, which once formed its rear boundary. While the front of the burial place sits at street level, the back drops down a hill and into a small field that borders some of the finest homes in town. In the 1930s grand stone steps were built into that hill, affording easy access for the elite to pay respects to their deceased. Apparently the ghost applauded the stone steps as well. The specter was seen ascending and descending, as well as dipping its feet into Turtle Creek, known for its unusually frigid water. Perhaps the ghost found comfort in the creek, the one entity colder than itself. That is, until the Closet Killer appeared.

Chapter 9
Cherrie Mae

The phone rang a dozen times before I could eat
my supper. Married friends checkin up to see how I was. Pastor Ray makin sure I was all right. I knew he'd be callin ever widow and single woman in his church. My son and daughter both called. "Mama, I just can't stand this worryin about you every night." Donelle's voice was tight-throated. "It's time you moved here to live with us. Memphis isn't that far away from Amaryllis. You could still visit your friends."

Sometimes the thought a movin in with Donelle sounded good. Specially when I drug home from cleanin houses, feelin so beat. But what would I do in my daughter's house all day while she at work, her husband too? And they kids in school? I didn't know nobody in Memphis. All my friends is in Amaryllis. I was raised here, my parents was raised here. I don't want to go nowhere. Besides it's not fair I should change my whole life cause a some blood-thirsty murderer.
He
deserves to pay for his crimes, not me.

That thought made me all the more determined to follow through on my plan. If Cherrie Mae Devine could help catch this killer and save Amaryllis, so be it. I had to walk in the shoes God done stitched for me.

I just managed to hang up from talkin to Donelle when the phone rang again. I answered on automatic.

"Good evening, Mrs. Devine. This is Trent Williams."

Oh, mercy, the reporter. Why hadn't I checked the ID before I picked up the phone? "Hello, Trent. I heard you was in town."

"Yes, ma'am." He spoke friendly enough but fast, like he was pressed for time. "Unfortunately I'm looking into this latest murder. I heard you visited Erika Hollinger the evening before her death. What did you two talk about?"

"Who tol you that?" Couldn't be the
po
lice. They didn't talk to Trent Williams. His prize-winning article on the Closet Killings last year hadn't made them look so good.

Maybe Erika's mama told him.

"It
is
true, isn't it?"

"Maybe. Maybe not."

"Can you at least verify that you were with Erika?"

"Nope."

He sighed. "Come on, Mrs. Devine, can you give me something? You're bound to have some important insights, as the last known person to see her alive."

My heart went a little softer. Trent was callin in favors as the local boy, and why shouldn't he? He'd made Amaryllis proud. "Trent, it's not that I don't want to help you. It's just that I done tol everthing I need to the
po
lice. And I don't want my name in the paper."

I sure didn't need any eyes on me if I was gon carry out my plan.

"Well, did Erika say anything to you that would indicate why someone would want to kill her?"

Did serial killers need a motive—other than they just plain crazy? "No. Was there a reason to kill the rest a those women?"

"I don't know, it's just . . . I've asked that question about every victim, hoping it'll trigger a thought in someone's mind. Some
reason
for all this." Frustration filled Trent's tone. "The worst thing about these murders is the randomness. If we could just make some sense of it all."

The
why
question. Trent's article had talked bout that. The whole town wondered why.

I shook my head. "Crime is common; logic is rare."

"What?"

"Sherlock Holmes."

Silence. Trent must be thinkin that one over.

"So, Mrs. Devine, do you have anything for me?" It was almost a plea.

What I had was my own question: did Trent know where Mayor B was during all six murders?

"Sorry, Trent. I need to go now."

"If you change your mind, please call me on this number. It's my cell phone."

"All right, young man. And I thank you for what you doin. Maybe one day you
will
find somethin to help crack this case." Goodness know the
po
lice weren't havin much luck.

"Oh, Mrs. Devine, one last thing. When you were with Erika, did she eat any brownies?"

My head drew back. "Why you want to know that?"

"I imagine if she did, that's something you told the police?"

"They tell you that?"

He sighed. "No. They're not talking to me."

I licked my lips. Smart as I knew Trent was, I done underestimated him. If he hadn't talked to the
po
lice, where'd he learn bout the brownies? Just went to show I couldn't possibly think through everthing regardin these murders.

"Please, Mrs. Devine."

I was in over my head. Who was I to try to fix this case?

"Just say yes or no."

"Tell you what. I answer this one question, you got to answer mine."

"Deal."

"Okay then. Yes."

A pause. "What time?"

"What
time
?"

"When did she eat her last brownie?"

"That's two questions."

"Come on, Mrs. Devine, it's important."

My mind spun back. Hadn't Chief Cotter wondered the same thing? As I remembered, Erika stuffed a brownie in her mouth bout the time I got up to go. "I guess around 10:00."

"Great. Thank you very much."

"Uh-huh." I blinked myself back to the present. "Trent, don't you go puttin my name in your article, you hear?"

"I'll let you remain anonymous, I promise."

"All right. Now my question." How to say it without givin anything away? "In all your talkin to people, you notice anybody not able to account for where they was durin the murders?"

"I wish. Maybe that'd get us somewhere. You thinking about someone in particular?"

I knew I shouldn't a said anything. Now I had to lie.
Lord, forgive me.
"No."

"You sure?"

"Can't a body just wonder somethin?"

"Sure. Okay." Trent didn't sound convinced.

"I really got to go now."

"Please call me if you think of anything else? If you have some thought, maybe I can help run it down for you."

If he only knew. "Okay, Trent. Bye now." I hung up the phone before he could say another word.

For a long time I sat at the kitchen table lookin out the back window. Why did Trent want to know bout them brownies?

Wish I hadn't answered his question. Somehow—didn't quite know how yet—that was gon get me in trouble.

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