The Absence of Mercy (2 page)

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Authors: John Burley

BOOK: The Absence of Mercy
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Must be an accident,
Ben thought.
A bad one from the looks of this backup.
Inconvenient and frustrating, of course—and for one guilty moment he resented its presence in yet another way. An accident causing this much of a standstill could mean fatalities. And that often involved a coroner's investigation, which meant he might be making a trip to the Jefferson County Coroner's Office this evening or, by the latest, tomorrow morning to perform an autopsy.
Great. Absolutely perfect,
he thought to himself, and immediately felt another pang of guilt. Life as a small-town pathologist meant one-stop shopping when it came to coroner investigations. There was him, and then there was the Allegheny County Coroner's Office and Forensic Lab in Pittsburgh, fifty miles to the east. But he had known that, he reminded himself, when he'd signed on to the job here.

The Beatles had yielded to the Band, who were sailing off into the first stanza of “The Weight”—an ominous sign, Ben thought. He switched off the radio. Traffic had slowed to a crawl and he could now see the entrance to Indian Creek High School just ahead on the right. This seemed to be the source of at least some of the congestion. He could identify two police cruisers, an ambulance, and a news truck in the school's parking lot. On the right-hand shoulder, two cars had pulled off the road to exchange insurance information, apparently the result of a low-speed rear-end collision caused by a little rubbernecking. The drivers were involved in a heated discussion, and a sheriff's deputy approached to intervene before things escalated further.

Up ahead, the traffic dissipated, and Ben accelerated slowly toward home. There was still enough time to make Thomas's wrestling meet, although things would be a little tighter than he'd initially anticipated. He flipped back on the radio and smiled to himself. The Band was finishing the final chorus, and just like that, “The Weight” was over.

2

The first thing Ben noticed as he approached the house was that Susan had beaten him home, her gray Saab already parked in their driveway. He pulled in behind her, got out, and retrieved his briefcase from the trunk. Having heard him drive up, his wife had stepped out of the house and was walking down the front steps to greet him. Even after all these years she was still beautiful, Ben thought, with dark black shoulder-length hair and chestnut eyes he had difficulty looking away from. Her tall body had remained slim and agile, despite the two children she had carried. And although Ben himself was of similar athletic build, the years, he felt, had taken a harder toll on him, the responsibilities pulling steadily at the corners of his eyes, his brown hair now speckled generously with strands of gray. He smiled up at her, but the smile faded as she drew nearer.


Tell me you've spoken with Thomas this afternoon,
” she entreated, her hands clutching at the sides of her dress.

“Why? What's wrong?” he asked, his mind automatically flipping through a list of the most catastrophic possibilities. Something was very wrong indeed, he realized as he studied her features. Susan was afraid—but she was much more than that: She was on the brink of hysteria.

“There's been a death at the school,” she blurted out. “One of the high school kids, they think.”

Ben looked at her, dumbfounded. “
What?

“Someone was killed this afternoon,” she advised him. “Initial news reports said it was one of the high school kids, but they don't know for sure.” Susan's voice shook. “
Where in the hell is Thomas?! He should've been home an hour ago!

“He has a baseball game at Edison,” Ben reminded her. Edison High was located in the neighboring town of Richmond. A bus was scheduled to transport the team after school. But there were other, more pressing details to be considered. He was still trying to work his mind around what Susan had just told him. “What do you mean someone was killed? There was an accident?”

“An accident? Don't you listen to the radio?”

“On the ride home,” he answered. “But they didn't say anything about—”

“Honey, it wasn't a car accident.” Susan's voice continued to waver as she spoke, as if it were riding precariously along on one of those small-time roller coasters erected at carnivals. “One of the high school kids was murdered on the way home from school—in the woods along Talbott Drive. Ben, he was stabbed to death and just left there to die. They don't even know who he is yet.”

For a moment, Ben was too stunned to say anything. What his wife had just told him was so implausible that he felt the urge to argue with her, to tell her that she was being ridiculous. Wintersville was a quiet midwestern town of about five thousand inhabitants. The town's occupants were mostly middle-income conservative families who presumably preferred the sort of small-town life that could be enjoyed here. Golfing, fishing, and hunting were popular pastimes, and in early December folks came out for the annual Christmas parade. Tax evasion, shoplifting, and the occasional drag race along Kragel Road were the most hardcore criminal activities this town had seen over the past decade. After four years in Pittsburgh, it was one of the things that had initially attracted him. He had decided a long time ago that he did not wish to fall asleep to the sound of sirens. As for the murder of a high school child on his way home from school, it was simply not the type of thing that happened here.
Ever
.

“They won't release the victim's identity until after the family has been notified,” he heard himself reply numbly. “That's how it's done.”

Susan came to him then, putting her arms around him tightly. She was trembling, Ben realized, and he hugged her back. He felt sick to his stomach, and his legs were wooden and uncertain beneath him. He was thankful at that moment for someone to hold on to.

His wife looked up at him, and for a moment it seemed as if she was uncertain how to proceed, as if she was struggling with a decision that only partially involved him. Then her eyes cleared and seemed to regain their focus. “Honey,” she said, her voice just above a whisper, “we've got to find Thomas. I'll feel better once he's home. They would've canceled the game, don't you think? Or at least phoned the parents to let them know what was happening?”

Ben thought this was probably true. Whose number had they given the school as an emergency contact anyway? He separated himself enough from his wife to place his briefcase on the hood of the car, fumbling with the latch. “Where's Joel?” he asked.

“Inside,” she replied. “I picked him up from Teresa's on the way home.”

Ben swung the case open to reveal a haphazard array of documents and medical journals. He reached inside one of the interior pockets and retrieved the phone. The digital display indicated that he had two new messages. He flipped the cell open and punched the button to access voice mail. The first message turned out to be from Susan, asking if he had heard from Thomas, and imploring him to call her as soon as possible. The second message was from Phil Stanner, Thomas's baseball coach.

“Ben, this is Coach Stanner,” the recorded voice announced, and Ben felt a wave of dread rising within him. He put the phone on speaker so that Susan could hear.

“Listen,” Phil's voice floated up to them from the phone's tiny speaker. “You've probably already heard, but someone was killed this afternoon in the woods close to the school. The police have the whole area cordoned off, which is making it difficult to get into and out of the school parking lot. All after-school activities have obviously been canceled. Thomas is fine, and I've got the entire team here with me in the gymnasium. We're asking parents
not
to come up to the school to pick up their kids, but instead to wait at the designated bus stop where their child is usually dropped off after school. Buses will be bringing students home starting around six thirty
P.M.
, but kids won't be let off of the bus unless there's an adult there to meet them. Thanks for your cooperation. If you have any questions, you can contact the school, but even with four people answering phones, the lines have been pretty tied up this afternoon, so don't call unless you have to.”

The message ended and Ben closed the phone and placed it in his front pants pocket. Susan's hand was covering her mouth, and she looked up at him with a mixture of relief and sadness. Her other arm had wrapped itself protectively around her waist. It was 5:52
P.M.
Ben put an arm around his wife's shoulders, pulling her body against him. He looked up at the large bay window that marked the front of their house. It offered a limited visual portal into their family room, and he could just make out the top of Joel's head, his familiar brown cowlick arching upward like an apostrophe, as he sat on their couch watching television—
hopefully not the news,
Ben thought.

He kissed the top of Susan's head, wondering if even at this very moment there was a Sheriff's Department cruiser pulling into someone's driveway. In his mind, he could see it clearly: the car rolling slowly to a stop, two uniformed officers stepping out and making that long, awful walk to the front door. He imagined them ringing the doorbell and listening to the sound of shuffling feet approaching from the foyer just beyond, a small voice calling through the closed door: “
Who is it?

“Sheriff's Department, ma'am
.

A momentary pause, followed by the sound of the voice, already afraid, calling out to someone deeper inside of the dwelling: “
They say it's the Sheriff's Department.

A man's voice, descending down the interior stairs: “
Well, what do they want? Jesus, Martha, open the door!

The sound of the dead bolt sliding back within its metallic housing. The door slowly swinging open to reveal a man and a woman, roughly the same age as Susan and himself, standing just inside the open threshold and looking out onto the cold, gray world and the unfortunate messengers standing in front of them. In this image he has conjured, the couple suddenly appear frail beyond their given years, as if this moment itself has weakened them. In a timorous glance, they take in the grave faces of the two unwelcome men standing before them, who have arrived with news the parents do not want to hear, and whose expressions carry within them all of the information that really matters:
I'm terribly sorry. Your boy is gone. He was left dead in the woods, and he lies there still while we try to figure out who might have done this to him. He will never walk through this door again.

In that moment, standing in their own driveway with familiar gravel beneath their feet, Ben offered a silent prayer of gratitude—God forgive him—that he and his wife had not been selected at random to receive that horrible message. It was a prayer of relief and thankfulness for the safety of his family, and a prayer of compassion for the ones who waited even now for the messengers to come.

“Let's go inside,” he whispered to Susan, and the two walked up the steps together.

3

An hour later, the three of them stood on the sidewalk, impatiently awaiting the arrival of the Indian Creek High School bus. A block to the east, the sound of passing vehicles could be heard as they traveled along Canton Road on their way north toward Route 22. Beside him, Susan fidgeted restlessly. Ben shared the sentiment. A recorded message from the high school baseball coach, after all, could only go so far in placing a parent's mind at ease.

Ben glanced at his watch. It was seven o'clock.
Shouldn't the bus be here already?
he wondered. Perhaps not, considering the traffic and events of the day. Rounding everyone up and making sure that all of the kids were accounted for would take longer than expected. Some of the parents would just now be arriving home from work, and there would be no one waiting to receive the kids at certain stops. It could be another hour, he realized.

Dusk was already beginning to settle upon the neighborhood. In another forty minutes they'd be standing here in the dark. Under the circumstances, he reflected, it was probably not the best plan the school could have come up with: a bunch of families standing around outside in the dark waiting for their kids to be dropped off while somewhere out here a psychopath roamed the streets. He thought about returning home for the car, even though they lived only two blocks away. He didn't want to leave Susan and Joel standing here alone, however, and he was afraid that if they all went back together the bus would arrive during the time they were gone. Instead, they waited, watching their shadows grow long and lean as the sun continued its rapid descent toward the horizon.

Something the size of a large cicada moved against Ben's upper leg with a soft buzzing sound, startling him. He nearly cried out, but in a moment it was gone. He shuddered involuntarily, imagining its crunchy, crackling exoskeleton flitting up against him.

Suddenly, it came again, nestling up against his right thigh with a muffled burring noise. He leaped backward. “
Shit! What was that
?”

Susan looked over at him inquisitively, eyebrows raised. “What's wrong with you?”


A giant bug just hit me in the leg,
” Ben advised her. “
Twice!

No sooner had he uttered these words than he realized two things: The first was that he had just cursed in front of his highly impressionable eight-year-old son, who would now most assuredly walk around his home, his school, and the local playground for the next week yelling “
Shit!
” at the top of his lungs. The second was that the flying cicada creature that had struck him—
twice!
—in the right thigh was nothing more than his own cell phone, which he'd left on vibrate in his front pants pocket. Feeling now like a complete idiot, he reached into his pocket and brought out the phone.

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