Read The Virgin of Small Plains Online
Authors: Nancy Pickard
Tags: #Mystery & Detective, #Cold cases (Criminal investigation), #Crime, #Fiction, #Mystery fiction, #General
Chapter Twenty-one
“Mom,” Rex asked Verna, in his first foray into checking out the truth of Sarah’s story. “How come you guys don’t party at the Newquists’ place in the country anymore?”
His mother looked over from the counter where she was mashing potatoes for supper, with a surprised expression on her plump, pleasant face. “What in the world made you think of that, Rex?”
“I don’t know.” He shrugged, walked closer, stuck a finger down into the potatoes, dangerously close to the whirring blades, and got his hand slapped for his trouble. He still managed to emerge with a grin and a fingertip-full of potato, which he sucked off. After he swallowed, he said, “I just got to thinking about it the other day, how much fun we used to have when we’d all hang out there. You and Dad, Doc and Abby’s mom, the judge and Mrs. Newquist, and all of us kids. I thought that was almost like your favorite place to be with your friends.”
“I’m sure we’ll do it again sometime.”
“Why did you stop?”
“Stop? We didn’t stop, Rex, it’s just…you know how Nadine is, if she can’t have something perfect, then she doesn’t want to have it at all.”
“What’s not perfect?”
“According to her,” his mother said, with a comically sarcastic twist to the pronoun, a twist that made him think of her other friend, Margie Reynolds, “the house isn’t fit for company anymore. She says she’s not having anybody out there ever again until Tom lets loose with enough money to fix it up the way she wants it done. And you know what that means.”
Rex laughed, thinking of Tom the tightwad and Nadine the perfectionist. “Never gonna happen?”
“Probably not in my lifetime,” his mother said, grinning. “Maybe in yours.”
“Hey, Mrs. Newquist,” he said the next time he was in their house. “How come you guys don’t use the ranch house anymore?”
Mitch’s mother took her time answering him. Finally, she looked up from the newspaper she was reading in the den, and said, in her cool, precise way, “I’m having it redone, Rex.”
“Redone? Like, how?”
“I am having a new foundation put in, new roof, painting inside and out, new furnishings, and we’re putting a gazebo in the backyard.”
“Sweet,” he said. “So it’s all torn up right now?”
He watched her hesitate, though he wouldn’t have called it that if he hadn’t been watching for it. He would have just thought it was one of her controlling moments, when Nadine answered people when she, and only she, damn well pleased. “Yes. I don’t want anyone out there while the work is in progress.”
It almost jibed with what his mother had told him, except for one thing—from what he had seen at the ranch house, there wasn’t any work going on at all. It appeared to him that Mrs. Newquist had told his mother one story and now was telling him a slightly different one, but they both added up to the same thing: hiding the fact that the Newquists were giving shelter to a girl who didn’t want to be found.
Mitch’s mom went up in his estimation in that moment.
Not only was she a pretty damned good liar, much better than he had ever given her credit for being, but she was doing a good deed without getting any credit for it from her friends and neighbors. His mother and Abby’s mom would be amazed if they knew about it. Which they weren’t going to, because he wasn’t going to tell them.
“Hey,” he said to Mitch while they waited for Abby and his own date to come back from the bathroom at the movies. “Remember that hot chick who used to work for your mom? Sarah, I think her name was? What the hell was her last name, can you remember? And where was she from, anyway?”
“Sarah?” Mitch turned toward him, with a lascivious grin. “Ah, Sarah.”
Annoyed, Rex thwacked his friend’s sack of popcorn so kernels flew out.
“Hey!” Mitch objected. “Why’d you do that?”
“Do you remember her last name, or don’t you? I was trying to think of it the other day, and I can’t remember it, and it’s driving me crazy.”
Mitch picked popcorn off his lap and dropped it onto the floor. “Um, I dunno. Oh, wait. Yeah, I do know.” He reached over and grabbed a huge handful of Rex’s popcorn and put it in his own sack.
“Hey!” Rex objected.
“Francis,” Mitch said. “I remember it was two first names, and her last name was like the town she was from. Sarah Francis from Franklin. That’s how I remember it.”
Rex moved his feet so Abby could walk by him. His own date sat down on his right.
“Why do you want to know her name?” Mitch asked him, too loudly.
“Whose name?” Rex’s date immediately wanted to know.
“Our second-grade teacher,” Rex said.
“You’re kidding!” His date gave him a disbelieving look. “You forgot Miss Plant’s name? How could you forget Miss Plant’s name? She looked just like a rhododendron.”
All four of them started to laugh.
“I don’t even know what that means,” Mitch said, almost choking on the popcorn he had been swallowing when she said it, “but you’re right, she did.”
“Not nice,” Abby reproved them, but her giggles undercut her disapproval.
After the movie started, Mitch leaned in close and said in a lower voice, “So. You gonna look her up?”
“Who?”
“Don’t give me who. You know who. You going to look her up?”
“No way. I just couldn’t remember her last name, that’s all.”
Even in the dark he could sense his best friend’s suspicious grin. “Yeah? As I recall, Sarah Francis doesn’t look like a rhododendron.”
“No,” Rex had to admit, “she does not. Did not. Now shut up.”
“She looks like a rose, a beauteous, blossoming, ripe and luscious, fragrant—”
“Shut the
fuck
up.”
Mitch subsided, chuckling to himself, which made Abby turn her face to look at him quizzically. He answered her by darting toward her and planting a quick kiss on her lips, which made her smile over at Rex, and then subside back into her seat.
On the pretext of needing some shaving cream, Rex stopped by the Rexall Drug Store where one of his high school history teachers worked behind the counter between school sessions.
“Rex,” she said, “what are you up to this summer? Helping your dad at the ranch?”
“Mostly.” He passed the shaving cream over to her, adding a pack of chewing gum to it at the last minute. “Hey, Mrs. Aldrich, aren’t you originally from over near Franklin?”
“I am,” she said, looking surprised and pleased. “How did you ever remember that?”
He grinned at her. “Every time we played your old high school, you’d tell us about your mixed feelings.”
“Oh, dear,” she laughed. “I’ll bet that got old fast.”
“No, no, it was okay. But I wondered, did you ever know a family named Francis over there?”
“Francis?” She nearly rolled her eyes at him. “I’ll say I knew them. Everybody knows that family. I’ll tell you a secret, Rex. All by themselves, the Francis family is a good reason to teach school in this county instead of that one.”
“No kidding. They’re that bad?”
She shuddered. “Rex, I have opinions about those children that teachers aren’t supposed to have about their students.” She smiled at him again, passing over his change and his items in a sack. Then she winked at him. “Don’t tell anybody.”
He grinned back at her. “I won’t. Are they all like that?”
She squinted, in thought. “Almost. There’s an older sister who’s a nice girl, or at least she was the last I knew of her, which is some years ago. I substitute taught in their grade school the year I was pregnant, and she was in my class. Pretty child, maybe not an Einstein, but she tried hard, and she was very sweet. I never had to deal with her parents, thank goodness, because they never came to school to check on their kids, but her younger siblings were already raising hell. Even the sister was a mess. How that girl came out of that bunch, I’ll never know. I remember thinking at the time, if she’s smart, she’ll get as far away from them as she possibly can.” She leaned over the counter and said in a whisper, “I don’t say this easily about anybody, Rex, but they’re trash, nothing but trash, from their worthless parents on down to the littlest child, God help him.”
“Except that one daughter.”
Mrs. Aldrich shrugged, a little sadly. “I don’t know how she turned out.” Then it finally occurred to her ask the obvious question. “Why’d you ask me about them, Rex?”
He shrugged right back at her, and made a face as if it was no big deal. “I heard a couple of boys from that family might be looking for part-time ranch work, and—”
”Don’t even think about hiring them, Rex.”
“Thanks, Mrs. Aldrich. I won’t. I’ll tell my dad.”
“I doubt you’ll be telling your father anything he doesn’t already know,” she said, looking cynical. “I’ll bet sheriffs all over the state know the name Francis by heart.”
One last stop, and he was finished pursuing the story she’d told him.
The next Saturday, after morning football practice, and on a day when his father had released him from work at home, Rex fended off his friends who wanted him to drive around with them, and he drove alone to Franklin, twenty-five miles away.
He hadn’t had a reason to be there in years, and he was a little shocked to see how much the tiny town had declined since then. There never had been more than a handful of jobs there, and a scattering of houses. It was barely even a town. But it was in even worse condition now, with hardly a sign of life on the bedraggled-looking, two-block Main Street. Immediately, he understood why Sarah Francis had regularly driven all the way to Small Plains to find work cleaning houses, and it didn’t have anything to do with status in her hometown. It had to do with survival, from what he could see.
He hadn’t been able to find out where her family lived, not without drawing attention to the question, so he hadn’t asked. Now he realized it didn’t really matter. There wasn’t a decent house in the town. It appeared that every resident lived on the edge of poverty, or deep down in it. Add that to a bad family, and a girl wouldn’t need any other reasons to want to run away. So maybe Sarah hadn’t sounded totally convincing to him when she had explained her presence at the Newquists’ place, but then maybe that was only because she was ashamed of where she’d come from and what she was going through.