Welcome to “Tribes”

February 15th, 2007
Welcome to an online publishing event. For the first time, a novel I wrote and shelved seven years ago will be published, free, right here a chapter at a time. Enjoy. Let me know what you think if you want.
 

Chapter One

February 15th, 2007

All in all it was a great day to wait around for a psychopath.

            I made another circuit of the four-block area around the United Methodist Church that sat on the corner of Henderson and High Street. I’d been circling and crisscrossing the four blocks at random, walking different directions, veering suddenly to cut through an alley, crossing the street midway, all the while looking for my target. My partner, Jake Wilson, and I were playing a game of, well, not capture the flag, but the concept was the same.

            Outside the Methodist church, Jake sat in our panel van with the dark windows and magnetic signs on both the driver’s and passenger’s doors that said “Tiffany Florists”. Inside the church, Patricia Marquay was trying as hard as she could to become Mrs. Peter Marose and it was our assigned duty to make sure that occurred without a hitch. The mother and father of all hitches was who I was looking for, a psychopath who rejoiced in the name of – I kid you not – Bill Smith. Not William. Not Billy Bob. No middle name, just Bill Smith. I wondered if being born in a family with such a stunning lack of imagination pushed poor Bill over the edge but I didn’t wonder much. I wasn’t there to psychoanalyze him. I was here to stop him.

            I was looking for his seven year old blue Honda Civic. If he got past me, Jake was there watching the back and south side of the church from the van. If he got past both of us and arrived at the front of the church out of Jake’s line of sight, one of our part-timers, a deputy sheriff named Celia Townsend, was dressed up as one of the wedding party and lurking at the registration book with a sequined purse containing a canister of pepper spray and, should that fail, her backup issue J frame Smith and Wesson .38 Special.

            I turned the corner two blocks south of the church and walked up the middle of my grid, straight up High Street away from downtown Columbus, Ohio. The streets were nearly empty that early Saturday afternoon on a gorgeous autumn day in the capitol city. The leaves were already a riot of dozens of shades of orange, red and purple but only a few had begun falling off the maples, oaks and elms that lined the neighborhood streets in this section of the inner city. The sky was Caribbean blue, empty of clouds but specked with small planes towing banners in strict rotation over Ohio Stadium where the Ohio State Buckeyes were scheduled to thrash the Boilermakers of Purdue starting in about fifteen minutes. Between the game and the weather the city of one and a half million had pretty much shut down, and the foot and car traffic normal in this section was cut by two thirds. That made my job easier and harder at the same time.

            It was easier because I didn’t have to scan hundreds of cars coming in from Worthington or up from the Short North and Downtown, over from Arlington or in from Westerville. Traffic was a trickle as all who could get tickets to the big game did so and those who could not either escaped the city for a last shot at King’s Island amusement park, Wyandot Lake, or sat at home riding their recliners and watching the game on TV. Perhaps a few unfortunate souls had been dragged off to the mall, forced to catch glimpses of the game through the windows of Radio Shack, holding their wives purses.

            But not me.

            I was watching for any sign that Bill Smith, noted nutcase and stalker, was going to try to follow through on his threat to interrupt the Marquay-Marose nuptials. Of course, in a perfect world this would be a job for the police. The Marquays had tried that route and found it blocked — the police couldn’t do anything until Smith actually hurt somebody. So Jake was in the van, Celia was in a dress, and I was walking past the Block’s Bagel for the sixteenth time in the last four hours. That was the part of my job that the low level of traffic was making more difficult; I was getting noticed by the citizens who manned the stores in the area. It was only a matter of time before someone called the cops on me. Not that they could do anything until I did something. But I repeat myself.

            I passed the time by calling to memory all of the tunes and songs I could remember from the first section of my life. My father, himself the son of Scots who had moved to Texas, had returned to Scotland as a sailor in the United States Navy and married a local girl. Now, thirty years after I was born in a Glasgow hospital I was cutting through an alleyway, checking both directions before coming back onto Henderson, and whistling “The Wee Kirkcudbright Centipede.” It dawned on me that I was probably the only grown man in America who knew the words to it. I didn’t feel a great rushing sense of accomplishment at that realization, but it was something. After thirty minutes I had exhausted those memories and moved to the second section, the time growing from late childhood to early manhood in Central Texas. I named every song I could remember from the old Bob Wills band to Steve Ray Vaughn and Double Trouble. Halfway through their catalog and, still, Smith hadn’t shown up and I was still walking. The third section of my life was Army CID and most of the songs I could remember were inappropriate for singing out loud so I just hummed them. Then, I started on the last section of my life – so far – and hummed the songs my daughter and I sing together when I’m pushing her on the swings, making her supper, or just walking around the neighborhood.

            This isn’t what Jake and I usually do. We co-own and run Trackers, Ltd., a private intelligence firm. We usually spend our time working with corporations and law enforcement agencies, tracking down facts and information for them, finding errant employees, uncovering insurance fraud, and generally doing what they don’t have the time or staff to do on their own. We also track down people who don’t want to be found for those who want to find them; deadbeat dads, runaway kids, and lost loves. As a job it isn’t everything it could be and it often falls short of what it should be but it beats asking some CPA in a Hyundai if he wanted fries with his burger. And every now and then… sometimes… you get a chance to be a hero. How many CPAs get to say that?

            When the Marquays came to our office and asked for our help I was surprised when Jake accepted the assignment. We aren’t private security and you can’t play bodyguard with the low level of staff we have, so it didn’t make sense to take the assignment and I said so. That’s when he informed me that the Marquays were Important People in Columbus… and friends of the redoubtable and widely feared Althea Wilson, Jake’s formidable wife. That was the end of the discussion. I might be Army CID trained, Ranger qualified, possessed of combat experience and armed to the teeth but even I would not entertain the thought of crossing the mighty Althea. While she was not God, crossing her could get you an early appointment with Him.

            An act of kindness brought us to this street on this day. Patricia Marquay had made the error of being nice to Bill Smith. With people like Smith that’s the way it usually works. They rely on people being nice and polite and willing to help. Most people are, so it works for the psychos. Smith had arrived at the Registrar’s office of Ohio State University where Patricia Marquay worked, folder in hand, ready to re-enter the University after a layoff of several years. Patricia was not beautiful, but she was pleasant and kind and Smith targeted her immediately. Of course, she didn’t know that was what was going on. To her, he just seemed to be a nice man, around thirty, well groomed and quiet spoken, wearing normal clothes and looking, well, normal. He didn’t look like a raving loony but few raving loonies do. He was just over six feet tall, thin, and had a nice smile. She liked his smile.

            He returned to the office a few days later, made conversation, and asked her out. After some initial hesitation she agreed to a date. Being a smart, modern girl with more than a little common sense, she had insisted on driving her own car and meeting him at a well-frequented local restaurant. The date went well at first. Bill Smith was charming, soft spoken, attentive, full of good conversation and she found herself relaxing and enjoying his company. Then the bill came. Smith’s face changed as he called the waiter over and challenged several items on the bill, quickly becoming verbally abusive and loud. When she asked him to keep his voice down he wheeled on her with a look that struck her dumb. In a flash of insight, Pamela realized that this face, the new face, was his real one. It was a sudden shifting of the tectonic plates of his soul that revealed the real Smith, a jagged warning from below the skin. When he spun back around on the waiter, now joined by the manager, she slipped away, ran hurriedly to her car and got out of there.

            Of course, that wasn’t the end of it. It never is. He came to her workplace the next day to apologize. Didn’t know what got into him, he said. Never happened before, he said. He asked her for another chance and she refused him, politely but firmly. So, he started sending her flowers three or four times a week with little “forgive me” cards. Greeting cards arrived at her work and home every day for two weeks and the phone calls — every day, three or four times, at work, at home, at all hours. After her rejection continued the flowers stopped but the cards and calls continued. But they weren’t the same. They had changed. No longer were they sickeningly sweet and full of promises of reformation. Now they were full of anger, subtle threats, or worse. Sometimes there were no words on the cards at all, just pasted on pictures with eyes poked out or calls in the night with nothing but breathing on the line.

            That’s when she, or rather, her mother, called the police. The police politely explained that as soon as Bill Smith hurt her they would be right there. Mrs. Marquay allowed as how this was not acceptable and proposed that they should hunt down Smith and neuter him with a blunt object. The police came back with that pesky little Bill of Rights thing that precludes such behavior from Columbus’ finest and the Marquays went off in search of alternative help. She called her old school friend Althea whose husband “did something involving guns and police work” and asked for help. Just in time, as it happened, for as she called us, Bill Smith had graduated from harassment to stalking.

            He wasn’t trying to be subtle about it. He hung back where she could see him if she looked, but not so close that she could yell at him to get away or point him out as a threat. The same week she noticed him hanging around the edges of her life her mailbox was broken into twice, graffiti appeared on the sides of her townhouse in Arlington — the yuppie-orthodontist-junior-partner northwest side of Columbus — and her cat disappeared. When the cat showed up five days later, disemboweled and nailed to her front door, Jake’s wife and Ruler Of All She Surveys, Althea, told us that we had to “stop this outrage immediately using any and all means necessary.”

We said, “yes, ma’am.”

            I followed Bill Smith the next day as he followed Patricia Marquay. I have never been accused of being overburdened with tact and diplomacy so I didn’t waste any time. I watched him as he watched Pamela leave her car and enter the Administration Building at OSU to begin her workday. Smith slithered his way to her car and dropped down out of sight. I circled from the rear and found him with a folding knife poised to pop the valve or break the wall of her back left tire. His back was to me but I didn’t mind. I kicked him in the left kidney. He “oooffed” and went down, spinning, landing hard flat on his back, his head bouncing on the asphalt.

            He saw me and tried to get a breath to shout for help but I put one foot on his stomach and crouched down, pinning him, my knee under his chin. I picked up his knife and held it an inch from his eye.

            “Hi, Billie boy,” I said, smiling. My friends back in my CID days said I should never smile like that. Said something about it giving them the willies. Grown men using the word ‘willies.’ “Do you know who I am?” He started to shake his head but remembered the knife and thought better of it. I laid on my heaviest Scottish accent, the one I reserved for angry, violent times. “You need to know who I am, laddie. I’m the man who’ll kill you if you are seen within a hundred yards of young Miss Marquay. You will not see me, Billie boy. You will not hear me, not until it is too late to do anything about it. You won’t even have time to scream. Suddenly, you’ll look up and I’ll be there and I’ll take you as painfully as possible. Do we understand each other?” By this time my face was a foot from his and the pressure on his chest from my leg was turning him tomato red.

            I stood quickly, pushing off with my leg, driving the last air from him. I stomped his knee, not breaking it, just bruising it so he’d have something to remember me by, and left him. I drove the knife through the middle of his bed’s headboard an hour later, letting myself out through the door I’d kicked in sixty seconds earlier. When he got home, he’d have something other than his knee to remember me by.

            Trackers, Ltd. uses four deputy sheriffs and two Columbus Police officers as part timers, so we told them about Smith, asked them to keep an eye on him, and thought, “that’s it.”

And it was. For a bit.

Eight months later, Patricia Marquay and Peter Marose decided to announce their upcoming nuptials in the Columbus Dispatch, as required by all Very Important and Moneyed People In Columbus, and Bill Smith must have seen it for the calls, graffiti, and stalking began again. Along with the standard stuff he’d done before, he ratcheted things up, adding obscene descriptions of Patricia, Peter, and what he planned to do to them to his homemade cards. Evidently our Bill was an old movie watcher for he often pasted letters out of different papers and magazines together to make his messages just like they do on those old black and white films where somebody kidnaps the bank president’s son. He was far more careful this time, making it harder to physically connect him with the threats. He was a nut, but he wasn’t entirely stupid.

            The police interviewed Smith but weren’t able to do anything more than frown at him a lot and make some veiled threats of their own. The Marquays got an old family friend who happened to be a judge to issue a restraining order against him – which, since he was the soul and breath of innocence, he said he planned to appeal – but they also called us. They could read the paper and they knew that four women in Ohio had been killed so far that year with restraining orders in their purses.They, understandably, wanted to avoid that.

            The threats centered around Patricia’s wedding day so here we were. We were around because there was no one else to be here for her. That is the proper province of private investigators and private intelligence services. We step in when the authorities can’t or won’t for whatever reason. We tread the quasi-legal wasteland between what is demonstrably illegal and what is pristine in its legal righteousness. We are our own sub-culture with our own magazines, web pages, conventions and equipment shows, our own set of desperate clients and our own need to play the lone ranger, the cowboy, the space pilot. It is a job for the not quite sane. I think I might be overqualified.

            So once again I made the circuit and passed the doughnut shop, the sheet music store, and the Block’s Bagels restaurant wishing I could be at Ohio Stadium watching the Buckeyes thump the Boilermakers, soaking in the warm sun with my daughter and eating bad hot dogs. I was considering walking into the bagel shop for coffee when the cell phone vibrated in my pocket. Our phones don’t ring because having a phone ring when you are hiding in a closet can ruin your whole day. I pulled the phone out, flipped it open, feeling for all the world like Captain Kirk.

            “This is Teacher. Beam me up, Scottie.”

            “Hah,” said Jake, flatly. Jeesh, put some people in a van on one of the last nice days of the year and they get all cranky. “You ready to do some real work, Teacher?”

            “What’s up?”

            “Our man might have just arrived. I just spotted a blue Honda Civic with Ohio plates.”

            I swiveled my head around. “Which way and where?”

            “He just went past me on Henderson, turning right on High.”

            I jumped into the alcove of Block’s Bagels just in time to see Smith drive past, his head turning this way and that, looking for any threat and not seeing me. Not that I’m easy to see, but I tsked, tsked him silently anyway. If you’re going to be a psycho, Billie boy, and play in the big leagues, you have to do better than that.

            “I got him.” I leaned out and watched as his indicator came on. Probably somewhere inside of his head he would be able to think of a good two or three reasons not to telegraph his turns like that, but psychos are usually so compulsive they have to do things a certain way even when it might not make sense. “He’s turning left, east. Look’s like he’s going around the block.”

            “You getting back here anytime soon?” Jake growled. I didn’t take it personally. Jake always growls, except when faced with Althea.

            “There’s a good idea. I’m going to head up behind the post office and see if I can get behind him. See you momentarily, O Cloistered One.” I made it up to the savings and loan before I spied the Civic coming back to the Henderson and High Street intersection. He turned right, away from the church and me. “Jake,” I said, “it looks like he’s going to circle the northeast block.” Jake clicked his phone twice, message received. Poor guy, he was probably busting a gut being cooped up in the van. He was six foot four, two hundred ten pounds of former Army CID and, before that, infantry officer. Well, it looked like he might not be there much longer.

            I sprinted behind the post office, across Henderson, and behind the Midas Muffler franchise, moving around its north side just in time to see Smith pull up and park at the BP station across the street on the north side of the church. I checked my watch. One thirty, right in the middle of the vows.

            Smith’s window was down and I could see him staring at the church building. I was behind him and across the street but I might as well been on the other side of Ohio as far as he was concerned. He, like most of his kind, didn’t think anybody else was as sneaky, as smart, or as dangerous as himself. How sad. It was time to move. I walked across North High Street and moved onto the grounds of the BP station, taking cover behind a van being filled up by a fat guy in a tank top, red stretch shorts, and flip flops. He stared at me. I winked at him. He quickly quit staring at me.

            Smith got out of the Civic and pulled a package maybe three feet long and a foot wide and deep out of his back seat. It was wrapped like a wedding present but I didn’t think it was anything Patricia or Peter would want in their linen cupboard. Smith began a slow walk across the gas station’s court and towards the crosswalk leading to the church. He didn’t look behind him where I was matching his pace, thirty feet away. The fat guy was done with the van and was now watching me from inside the station, talking to the cashier and pointing at me. I could see the van parked behind the church but the darkened windows kept me from knowing if Jake was still in it or not. I didn’t worry. Jake would be where he should be, wherever that was.

            Smith adjusted his tie and crossed the street. I followed. If he went into the front door, problem solved. Celia would take him down before he could make a scene. But he didn’t go in the front door. He walked past the church and then suddenly cut up the side the building. I quickened my pace to close the distance between us, turning the corner just in time to see him move around the back of the church.

            Moving more slowly, I followed, easing around the corner. Smith crouched down and removed the top of the package. The warm weather had caught the church warden by surprise and the air conditioners had already been shut down. Casement windows were open all along the back and it was there that Smith directed his attention. He pulled out a dark cylinder, perhaps two feet long and eight inches around. It had a black assembly of some kind rigged to its top and he fiddled with it a few seconds before I straightened up and walked toward him.

            These are the scary times. Time compresses, skews, and twists as you walk into a confrontation. I felt the breeze more keenly, heard every bird within fifty feet, felt the vibrations of cars going past, and felt the earth beneath my feet more acutely; colors and edges leapt into sharp definition. These moments aren’t normal for most people. They are dangerous, unpredictable, full of adrenaline and oxygen, threat and promise. I said a prayer to my Celtic ancestors and moved in.

            “Nice suit. K-Mart have a sale?” I said. He bolted upright, almost dropping the cylinder. “Hey, neat!” I said, pointing at it. “Can I play with it? All I got for Christmas was a lousy sweater.” He took a quick step back and twisted the top of the cylinder. I heard a hiss. I got a feeling that it would be very, very stupid to go any closer to that thing.

I went closer, hands held loosely at my side.

            “Stay back,” he said, his voice an unsteady mixture of hiss and shout. “I remember you. Stay away from me.” I took another step forward and he backed up again. “I mean it! Stay back or I’ll…”

            “Now that’s the real problem, isn’t it, Billie boy? You’ll do something, will you? And what would that be? What do you think you can do to me, Smith?” He looked at me. Unlike Jake, I am not physically impressive. I don’t quite make it to five ten and I look like I weigh less than my one sixty five. My hair is a neutral, undetermined brown in a nonspecific style and my eyes are blue, green, brown, or a mixture of them all, reflecting whatever colors are around. Smith had me by two inches in height and reach. We had met before but I had taken him by surprise then and you could see him wondering if that was the only reason he had lost that round. I saw a decision being made behind his eyes, a slight vibration, a little injection of daring arriving at his cortex. He shot out his right arm to toss the cylinder underhanded into the casement window right as a very dangerous blur I identified as Jake came flying around the other corner of the building, grabbed the cylinder in mid-air, and continued right past me and out of sight. Smith looked dumbly at his hand as if wondering how it got empty so fast.

            “You see, Smith, it’s over. Time to shut it down. Put your hands…” I didn’t get a chance to finish my speech. He grabbed at his waistband under his jacket. I stepped in quickly, punching him in the throat. I grabbed my right hand with my left and pulled, throwing my elbow into his sternum with enough force to knock most of the air out of him and force him back two steps. His hand came free at last holding a small black automatic. I closed the distance between us, grabbed his gun hand in both of my hands, pulled it forward, swinging under it, turning my back to him, and sharply standing up, dislocating his elbow and wrenching his shoulder. He would have screamed but the blow to his throat prevented that. Always think ahead, kids. I took the gun from his limp hand and swept his legs out from under him. He hit the ground hard enough to black out which, in his current condition, was probably the nicest thing that could have happened to him.

            I took a couple of deep breaths to reorient myself to normality, drive the adrenaline down, and balance my oxygen levels. The pistol Smith had pulled was a Raven .25. “Jesus, Smith,” I said at last, looking at the dinky thing in my palm “couldn’t you even get the pistol right?”

            Jake came back around the corner with a glower that did not bode well for the future of our Mister Smith, who was making soft snorting noises in his sleep.

            “So, what was in the cylinder?” I asked.

            “It was an oxygen tank with an ignition mixture device on top. A homemade flame-thrower.” He looked into the casement window at the decorations and presents stacked on the tables below. “Could have burned the whole place down.”

            “Where is it now?” I asked. Jake pointed at the side of the building. I went around the corner and there it was, just hissing its last, in the middle of a fifteen foot blackened circle of grass. Beyond it, across the street, I could see the fat guy and the cashier staring at us, the cashier on the phone talking, swinging his free hand around furiously. I went back to Jake. Smith was awake, moaning and rocking around on the ground but not trying to get up.

            “Here you go,” I said to Jake, dropping the Raven pistol into his hand. He gave it a disgusted look. Jake didn’t like guns at all and didn’t carry one, but then again, he didn’t need to looking like he did. But if he had to carry one he wanted a real one that would actually work when you pulled the trigger and, if you shot someone, would make a hole big enough for them to notice. “We’re about to have company.”

            The words were barely out of my mouth when we heard the sound of cars being driven hard – no sirens, not in this neighborhood – and coming closer. Two patrol cars pulled into the parking lot, overlooking the blackened cylinder, and four uniforms piled out, guns drawn. We put our hands up. The church bells began ringing, declaring the vows complete.

            “Another job well done, Jake,” I said as the police officers eased their way up to us.

            “You ever notice how many times we finish a job with our hands in the air?” He asked.

            “Disconcerting, isn’t it?” I said as a twenty something patrolman shoved me up against the wall and patted me down, relieving me of my Glock 26, a subcompact 9mm.

            “You got a license to carry this?” he snarled at me. I didn’t blame him. No cop likes to find a gun on somebody who might possibly be a bad guy.

            “Sure do,” I said, and I did. I’m not exactly a private citizen. He pulled my ID out of my sport coat pocket, checked it, and cuffed me anyway.

            “Anybody want to tell me what’s going on?” another patrolman said, an older one with corporal stripes on his sleeve and bits of gray hair sticking out under his cap..

            “I am Teacher Todd and this is Jake Wilson. You got our ID. We run Trackers. Call Lieutenant Pelechik, head of Homicide. He’ll vouch for us. Inside the church is a pretty bridesmaid who is also a deputy sheriff for Franklin County. She’s with us. She has a copy of the restraining order against this guy here.” I used my almost Mid-Western accent so as not to spook the nice man with the badge. Born in Scotland, raised in Central Texas, resident in Ohio for the last several years I had an accent that wandered all over the place. This was not a time to sound unusual or out of place so I tried to strip everything out and speak in neutral tones.

            “We’ll call the Lieutenant and talk to the deputy. You just wait here while we check things out, all right?”

            “Corporal,” I said, “could you do us a big favor?” He frowned at me and crossed his arms, waiting for it. “We were hired by the family of the bride inside the church here to keep the wedding quiet and keep this man,” I gestured at Smith, still on the ground, his hands secured behind him, moaning with pain, “from carrying out a death threat against them. You can’t know that until you ask around some, but could you put us in the police cars before they come out with the rice? I’m sure the family would appreciate a minimum of distractions on their special day.”

            He thought about it for a moment. “I have no objection to holding you in the cars. You and your partner in one and this guy in the other, right?”

            I nodded. “That would be a nice thing to do, Corporal.”

            “Okay,” he said and directed two of the officers to get it done and just in time. Patricia Marquay Marose came out and stood on the front steps, just out of our sight, and received the rice and cheers traditionally given to the newly wed. The police even pulled their cars further into the lot and turned their lights off. Nice guys.

            An hour later our statements were taken, the restraining order against Bill Smith and the pistol he’d pulled on me were produced, and Smith was off to the infirmary and then to jail. Jake joined his wife and followed the wedding party to the reception at Nationwide Plaza.

I climbed in my Toyota 4Runner, put in a Leo Kottke tape, and headed southeast to Lancaster. I had a date. 

 

Chapter Two

February 16th, 2007

Rootless all of my life, not really American or Scottish, Texan or Buckeye, I decided to move to Lancaster, twenty five miles southeast of Columbus, six years ago when a drunk driver killed my wife, Kathryn, leaving me with a baby girl to raise. This was where my wife was raised, where my in-laws were well known and established, and where I was determined to stop my roving and settle down. My wife wanted us to have roots. Now we would have them, but too late for her to enjoy.

            It was for her that I’d left the Army, turning down a promised promotion. She wanted me in a job that would allow her and the baby we had just discovered she was carrying to stay put. Four and a half years of moving around, including a ten month stint in South Korea, convinced her that that kind of life wasn’t for her. Or us. I was recruited directly from the Army by the U.S. Marshals Service so, after one week at home, I was off to Glynco, Georgia for training. They liked me there. The old Marshal who ran the firing range had a quick word and suddenly I was moved over to Special Operations Group. The day before graduation the call had come, telling me that my little girl and I would have to make it without my wife. I left the Marshals before I’d really joined them and returned to Ohio to bury my wife in her hometown.

After the funeral, I was lost. If not for the foresight and generosity of her parents, my little Katie and I would have been in terrible straits. Her father, Pete Sanderson, was a top ten salesperson at Nationwide Insurance, headquartered just north of Columbus in Delaware, Ohio. He and Marge Sanderson, my wife’s mother, had given us both one million dollar insurance policies, paid up, as wedding presents just a few years earlier, never knowing that we would be cashing in one so terribly soon. Pete was a big player in the capitol scene, well connected and well liked. He arranged for me to have several job offers within weeks. I took a job as the chief investigator for the District Attorney’s office and did well for a few years until Jake Wilson, my old CO, now recently retired, moved into the area and asked me to help him set up a private intelligence service. Since I had the financial cushion to back me up and protect my daughter and was possessed of a personality that was better suited to working outside strict authoritarian channels, I took him up on his offer.

In the meantime, the Sandersons and I purchased an eccentric old home in Lancaster, where Pete’s agency had been a fixture for thirty years. The glass baron who’d built the house in the early nineteen twenties didn’t want his children to move away from him so he built a large common area with a kitchen, dining area, library, and formal room that had private living quarters on each side. Katie and I had our own bath and a half, kitchen, three bedrooms, living room, and cellar as did the Sandersons on the other side. I don’t know if it worked for the glass baron but it worked well for us. It was good for Katie to be near her grandparents and, truth be told, they were good for me, too.

            I pulled into our circular driveway and parked in front of the main door. A quick peek in the garage showed me that the Sandersons weren’t back from their long planned trip to Branson, Missouri. Better them than me. I went in and quickly changed into a plain blue polo shirt, khaki Dockers and tennis shoes, washed the day off of my hands and face and jogged back out to the 4Runner. My watch said I would make it just about on time.

            I drove the two miles through town to Maple Hill Elementary School. Katie’s school was a two story red brick rectangle with small windows that were supposed to save energy and direct the children’s attention inside but succeeded only in making it look like a prison, which, if I were a kid, would’ve made perfect sense. Because of the lack of natural light inside it always seemed too dark or awash in a nasty glare of fluorescent light that set everybody’s nerves on edge within an hour or so of arrival. Had to play hell with learning your times tables. Or did kids do that anymore?

On one side of the school was a parking lot, largely empty now, and on the other side stood the standard tarmac playground complete with a few swings, a shiny, blisteringly hot slide, a climbing frame poised over a dirt patch, and a tetherball pole that leaned distinctly to the left. A couple of adults were removing a large banner from above the entrance. It read “Maple Hill Autumn Fair – 10am to 4pm Saturday.” Some candy wrappers were dancing around the corners of the playground and a strange looking mixed breed dog was trying to bat them down with his paw to see if anything edible remained. You take what you can get, I guess.

            Inside the metal double doors Maple Hill was like every elementary school in America. There was that strange smell, a mixture of sweat, dirt, eraser dust, tennis shoes, library paste, and industrial cleanser. The walls of glazed, smooth yellow blocks were covered with artwork and book reports in almost decipherable cursive. Down the hall and to the left was the gym, or what they now called the multi-purpose room since it doubled as a lunch hall. I walked in and saw my Katie sitting at a corner table counting dollar bills and stacks of coins.

            Katie, my daughter, was a newly minted third grader. She’d volunteered to help with the money during the Autumn Fair held every year to get extra money for books, computers, and supplies for gym classes. She was my heart and my pride and joy, lovely just as her mother had been, with long brown hair that reached the middle of her back, ending in a gentle wave. She saw me, smiled widely, and then quickly looked around to see if anybody saw her smile at her father. Evidently, that was a faux pas among the third grade set.

            “So how did we do, sweetie girl?”

            She held up a finger while she added a couple of figures and wrote the total on a scrap piece of paper. “One hundred sixteen dollars and sixty five cents,” she said triumphantly. She was proud of her math prowess. Me too. “That was for the inside games. I don’t know about the cake or drinks or outside stuff.”

            “Sounds good to me. What do we do now? Who do you give the money to?”

            “Mrs. Findlay. My new teacher.”

            Just when things were getting just about as homey as a circa 1950’s era sitcom Blanchford walked in. I caught a blast of her perfume a few seconds before she actually made the corner and entered the room. Mary Blanchford was in her late thirties, never married, just over five two and weighed in at one eighty if she was a pound. Other than the fact that she had the natural grace of a stump, a braying laugh that erupted without warning or encouragement, an annoying, nasal voice, wore perfume that was sold in industrial drums with skulls on the side, and always had to make a joke about my name the only thing I didn’t like about her was that she was aggressively hunting any male who was unattached and I was one of her top targets.

            “Oh, Teacher! It is SO good to see you!” She said in a voice about three times louder than the occasion warranted. She wrapped her substantial arm around mine and laid her other paw on my wrist. “How are you doing? We just never get to see you around here.”

            “Well, I’ve been very busy, Miss Blanchford, and…”

            “Mary, Mary. How many times,” she said, “do I have to remind you to call me Mary?” She wagged her head back and forth a few times in what she probably thought was a coquettish move. Bits of makeup flaked off, floating down in the harsh overhead light, rejoicing in their new found freedom. “Remember, we’re all ‘teachers’ here so you fit right in.” And then she laughed. She should, by federal law, have to give ten minutes warning before laughing. I would have paid her money not to laugh. But she laughed and my fillings began to vibrate.

            “Okay, Mary. If you would excuse me, Katie and I need to be getting along.” As I spoke I unwrapped her arms in preparation for my great escape. She resisted it at first and it looked like it might become an all-in wrestling match there for a moment but thank God there were witnesses in the gym so she finally allowed me to break free. “It was really good to see you, Mary. Oh, look, Katie,” I said to my daughter who was standing behind Blanchford – sorry, she will always be Blanchford to me – trying to stifle a serious attack of the giggles, “there’s Mrs. Findlay.” Turning back to Blanchford I smiled an insincere smile and took Katie’s hand. We successfully delivered the paper with the total on it and the box with the day’s take and escaped the multi-purpose room with my honor still intact. In the hallway Katie let loose a whoop of laughter.

            “Daddy’s got a girlfriend, daddy’s got a girlfriend…”

            “Watch out, little lady,” I faked a mad face. “I might just call her sometime and see if she wants to baby-sit you when I am out of town.”

            “No!”

            “Yes, sure, why not. Maybe you two could have a sleepover or something, share makeup tips, or…”

            “No, no, no, no, please, please, daddy….”

            “Well…” I said.

            “Anyway, if you did I’d tell her that you were really sweet on her and you’re just too shy to say anything and she should just kiss you really hard and …”

            “Okay, all right,” I said, holding up my hands. “I give up. You win. Truce?”

            We shook hands and she said, “Truce.” Ten steps later, as we left the building, she started skipping and sang again, “Daddy’s got a girlfriend, daddy’s got a girlfriend.”

            I chased her to the car.

*   *   *   *

            One thing I’ve noticed about private detectives in fiction, they are either gourmet chefs or they live on alcohol alone. I can’t cook much of anything and don’t drink any alcohol at all, so I guess I’ll never make it to the private eye hall of fame. In fiction, I’ve also noticed, women throw themselves at private eyes all the time, sometimes sincerely and sometimes for dastardly, ulterior motives. In my life there is a stunning lack of women – other than Blanchard – throwing themselves at me. But I had my little Katie and, most days, that was more than enough to make my life light up and mean something.

            I scared together some macaroni and cheese, green beans, and sliced ham for us to eat. Pete and Marge weren’t back yet, but they’d told us it might be late so we didn’t worry. Dessert was already negotiated and planned. We were going to pop popcorn and watch “Bambi” one more time. I had seen it so many times I was beginning to root for the hunters… but this is what my Katie wanted to do and, since she is who she is, that meant that was what we were going to do.

            Not long after she tucked into the movie, sitting in a Kermit the Frog bean bag, wearing Mickey Mouse pajamas, I heard a car’s tires crunching gravel outside. I looked through the front window and saw a brown Chevy so ugly and plain it had to be a cop car. And so it was. None other than Lieutenant Pelechik of the Columbus Police Department pulled himself out of the driver’s seat. He was wearing his standard rumbled suit, spotted and stained tie, and wrinkled white shirt. He probably had ten outfits just like it at home. He cultivated the dumb, slow, pudgy Polish policeman look on purpose. Pelechik was an easy man to underestimate but those who did regretted it the rest of their incarcerated lives. He was one of the good cops, decent as they come. Imagine the love child of Einstein, Mother Teresa, but with a gun. On second thought, that’s a silly picture to be carrying around, isn’t it?

            Pelechik’s patch Columbus, up in Franklin County and this was Lancaster, down in Fairfield County. He was off the reservation and in my front yard. Hmmm.

            I opened the door as he walked up to it.

            “Greetings, fine sir. You got a locked room mystery you need me to come in and solve for you? Perhaps you need some Sherlockian advice?”

            “Good evening to you, too, Teacher. Can I come in now or does this routine have a ways to go yet?” He couldn’t fool me. He was crazy about me. I waved him in. He pulled the dented hat off his head and spoke to Katie’s back. “Good evening, Miss Todd.” Katie didn’t turn around. She just held her hand up and wiggled her fingers at him. Jesus, I loved that.

            “What’s up, Lieutenant? You’re a long way from home.”

            He pointed through the room toward the kitchen. “Can I get a cup of coffee from you, Teacher? Maybe a chair?”

            We went into the kitchen on our side of the big house and I waved him to a chair. “Will instant do? I’m afraid I don’t drink coffee and don’t own a pot.”

            Pelechik shook his head sadly. “Sometimes I think you’re a closet Mormon, Teacher, I swear. No alcohol, no coffee. You got any vices at all?”

            “Yep. But you didn’t answer my question.” I held up the jar of instant coffee.

            “I’ve been drinking squad room coffee for twenty two years. Any taste buds that can survive that can’t be all that picky. Instant’ll do.” I set a kettle on to boil and grabbed a mug from a rack by the sink.

            “It’ll be ready in just a couple of minutes.” I knew the coffee was a pretense. Nobody came visiting Katie and me to have coffee. But I also knew the way the game played out so I stood and looked out the back sliding door and he sat and looked back into the living room and we said nothing until the kettle boiled. I added a spoonful of granules to the mug, filled it with hot water and took it over to him, putting it on a coaster in front of him. “There you go,” I said. “Just like momma used to stir up.”

            He sipped it, grimaced, and set it back down. He sat back and looked at me, measuring me in some way. “How long we known each other, Teacher?”

            In my thirty some years that question has never once led to a good conversation. I sat down. “What is it, Lieutenant?”

            “I don’t know how to do this with you, Teacher. I do it with other people all the time, but you?” He shrugged. My world dipped and dived and a gnawing pain hit my stomach. Was it something to do with Pete and Marge? Had the cosmos played another dirty trick on Katie and me, ripping what remained of our foundation and family away?

            “You’d better tell me, Lieutenant. Go ahead. It’s all right.”

            He measured me a little more and nodded once. “Okay, here it goes. We, or rather the Reynoldsburg police, found John MacDonald in Blacklick Park this morning. He was murdered there sometime early this morning.”

            I felt dizzy with the snap and twist of my expectations. I was elated that Pete and Marge were all right but shocked and dumbfounded that a guy like John MacDonald could be a murder victim. Seven or eight separate emotions flowed through, kicking and screaming for attention. I swallowed hard; trying to get my mouth wet enough to speak. “Murdered? You’re sure?”

            “Oh yea. No doubt about it. By more than one person, maybe three, maybe four.”

            “Four? How, I mean, why, I…” My voice trailed off. I gave it another try. “I can’t imagine one person wanting to kill John, much less four. You have any suspects, any idea about motives?”

            “No, not yet. I knew you two were friends so I wanted to tell you personally. Also, since you and he were close you might have to answer some questions about where you were last night and this morning and what you know about him personally, that kind of stuff.”

            “I’m a suspect?”

            “No, no, no,” he waved a beefy hand in the air. “C’mon, Teacher. You know the drill. How many close friends did John MacDonald have? Very few. Who was one of them? You. In murder cases you go to the family and to close friends and, bingo, you find the murderer ninety per cent of the time. Or, at least, you find the motive. I don’t suspect you, but you can bet your Scottish…..” he looked back into the living room where Katie was absorbed in her movie, “… uh, rear end, that others will want to talk to you. You understand?”

            “Yea,” I said, leaning back, still a little dizzy from the news, feeling lost and displaced. “I understand. If I weren’t me I’d want to talk to me, too.”

            “Tomorrow morning, then,” Pelechik said. “Nine o’clock. My office.”

            “Nope,” I said. “Tomorrow’s Sunday. I take Katie to church every Sunday morning. I’ll be in after that. Say, one o’clock.”

            He looked at me, the beginning of a smile on the right side of his mouth. “You tend to push things a little, Teacher. Anybody ever tell you that?” I didn’t respond. “All right. I’ll set it up for one o’clock. Come ready to tell us anything you can about John MacDonald and his wife.”

            “Cindy?” I said as another thought hit me. “Has she been told? Is she all right?”

            “Yea, she was told. We had two officers over there around one o’clock this afternoon, after we’d identified MacDonald. We called in her doctor and he gave her something to help her rest at nights over the next week or so. A neighbor’s with her now, I think.”

            “Did she have to identify the body?” I asked, cringing at the thought.

            “No. We got his office manager, a Miss Joyce…”

            “Joyce Thompson.”

            “Yea, Thompson. She came in on behalf of the family. Not really necessary, though. He had his license on him and the photo was a good likeness for once.”

            “I’ll need to go see her. Cindy, I mean.”

            “Maybe so,” Pelechik said, “but come see us first. Besides,” he checked his watch, “she’s asleep now. The doc really wanted to knock her out. She probably won’t wake up before mid morning.”

            “Okay. I guess you’re right.” He stood and so did I. I opened the door and let him through before asking, “Lieutenant, how did they kill him?”

            He turned those sad, big, Polish eyes at me, shoved his hat on his head, and said, “They crucified him, Teacher. Nailed him to a tree and then shot him.” He turned away and walked to his car.

            On TV, Bambi was calling for his mother.

 

Chapter Three

February 16th, 2007
   

            I shuffled and scraped my way through my usual routine that night and the next morning. It wasn’t easy. I kept hearing my dead grandmother’s voice, whispering incantations in Gaelic against the demons who lay in wait to take little boys like me away to the haunted land under our feet. She’d whispered their names to me so I’d know them if I ran into them one day, maybe disguised, wearing a suit and tie. Her wonderful and terrifying stories about the old gods and angels who stood with us against the denizens of the night gave meaning to the wind and substance to the night.

We finished the movie, laid out our clothes for the next day, and I read to Katie from The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy, editing for language as I went along, trying to keep up the funny voices for each character. After an hour of that she read to me from an Amelia Bedelia book and then, finally, she was sleepy.

 In church the next morning I couldn’t keep my eyes off of the cross that hung on wires above and behind the minister. Who would nail a man to a tree? Once again, my grandmother’s whisperings came to me and I thought I saw my grandfather – who I only knew from pictures on grandmother’s dresser – sitting a few rows ahead of us in the small church. But it couldn’t have been him. He’d been a minister for the Church of Scotland, known as an exorcist and an enemy of darkness. Long before I was born, my grandmother told me, he was on his way to cast the demons from a small boy west of Drumnadrochit when the deuchainn took him and he was never seen again. She would never give any other details to the story and neither would my parents.

 I don’t remember anything of the sermon, or even the name of any of the songs, but I survived it and that was as good as I could do that morning. Katie, the Sandersons – who’d returned around eleven the night before – and I ate lunch at Applebee’s before I dropped them off and drove back to Columbus.

            The Columbus Department of Public Safety building is a new, impressive stone, concrete and glass building down on the Scioto River just a few blocks from the State Capitol building. It housed not only the city police but also the Franklin County Sheriff’s Department and most of the administrators for the city fire department. I parked the 4Runner in a nearly empty garage, locked my Glock in a gunsafe I have in the cargo area, bolted to the frame, and went inside.

            The lobby was large and airy, with security glass in front of the information counter behind which were two young women and a uniformed sergeant. The lobby had seats lined up against the walls to the left and right. Containment ropes corralled visitors, directing them through the metal detector which gave those declared safe and appropriately badged access to the elevators. I went up to the counter and spoke to the receptionist, a twenty something blonde lady, pretty in an over-accessorized way. The sergeant stood behind her and the other receptionist, wearing sunglasses, a scowl, and at least twenty five pounds of gun and equipment on his Sam Browne belt. I couldn’t see his eyes, but I could feel them.

            “I have an appointment with Lieutenant Pelechik in Homicide,” I told her.

            “Yes sir,” she said as if that was the best news she’d had all day. “And what is your name?”

            “Lamont Cranston,” I told her, straight faced. Of course, she was too young to have even come across the Shadow in re-runs. My dad had all of the old Shadow books, comics, and classic radio tapes. Sometimes I forgot other people weren’t raised by my dad. She asked me to spell it and I did before being asked to take a seat.

            I took one of the hard plastic chairs and settled in. The sergeant left his post, slowly easing around the perimeter of the lobby, feigning interest in the photographs and watercolors interrupting the tedium of industrial beige walls. He slid closer and closer to where I sat leafing through a back issue of Columbus Monthly. He was probably fifty with the beginning of a gut that looked hard as a rock. A gray flecked mustache perched on his upper lip. When he got to the painting beside me he murmured, without looking at me, “Lamont Cranston?”

            “Excuse me, sergeant,” I said, not looking up, “I don’t think you are — technically – supposed to be able to see me.”

            He cracked a grin and moved on, slowly looking at the other paintings and photographs, but never directly at me. So at least one other person in the building knew about the Shadow. That made me feel a little better, but I wasn’t sure why. The far right elevator dinged and Pelechik came out. He came to the metal detector and waved at me to come over.

            “You okay?” He asked. I shrugged. “Are you carrying?”

            “Nope.” I said. Even those of us lesser mortals who are allowed to carry firearms in the Great State of Ohio aren’t allowed to carry them into government buildings. He led me through the metal detector, into the elevator and punched the fifth floor button. We only went up a floor and a half before he reached over and punched the Stop button. The elevator jerked, lurched, and groaned to a complete stop.

            I looked at him. “What? You’re going to work me over with a rubber hose or something? Don’t you guys usually use the basement for that kind of thing?”

            Pelechik shook his head like I was the saddest thing he’d ever seen, which was always possible. “That’s exactly what I want to talk about, Teacher. I know you think you’re funny…”

            “’Think?’” I said.

            “… but I want you to tone it down for the boys upstairs. They aren’t happy about being here on a Sunday afternoon and more than one of them doesn’t care for private cops of any kind. You might buy yourself a lot less trouble if you cut out the wise cracks and one-liners. Got it?”

            “Yes. Gotcha. Sorry, Lieutenant.” I said, and meant it. I pinched the bridge of my nose and closed my eyes for a moment.

            “You really okay, Teacher?”

            “No. Let’s get this over with, Loot,” I said.

            He pulled out the Stop button and the elevator moved upward again. On the fifth floor the doors parted, revealing a large squad room with twenty five hot desks, so named because they didn’t belong to any particular officer but to any officer who might claim them that particular shift. He led me through the maze of desks and coffee makers to his enclosed office at the rear.

Three men were already there. I recognized a Homicide Detective named Perry Thomas and his partner, a new guy named Willis, sitting in the two guest chairs. Leaning against the wall with an omnipresent sneer woven into his fox face was Terence Mason. When his eyes met mine his sneer turned even uglier and my gut tightened. Mason and I had a history.

            “Everybody here know each other?,” Pelechik said as he slid into his chair, his eyes warning me not to get into it with Mason. It really wasn’t a question he wanted answered so nobody did. “Teacher Todd,” he pointed at me with a pencil he’d picked up off of a yellow pad on his desk, “runs Trackers, a information firm that serves this department and several others. He’s done us favors in the past and we appreciate it.” Mason snorted and coughed something vaguely obscene into a handkerchief. Pelechik glared at him. “You got something to say, detective?” Mason shook his head. “Then stop the adolescent crap and listen up.” Mason colored slightly but said nothing.

            Pelechik continued. “Mister Todd is one of the few individuals who really knew our murder victim from yesterday, John MacDonald. The police in Reynoldsburg have thrown this case to us because of our resources and the Chief told us to take it so that’s why we’re here.” He turned to me. “Mister Todd, what we need from you is everything you can tell us about John MacDonald, his business, his relationship with his wife, whatever. For starters, how did you meet MacDonald?”

            “I met him on a golf course. It was Valley View in Lancaster. This would have been two and a half years ago now. It was sometime in May and the starter assigned us the same tee time and put two young men who were riding a cart with us.” I remembered the day well. It was a glorious day with not a cloud in the sky, light winds, and warm temperatures. After the long, wet, gray winter it was a sign that maybe life would be worth living again. Most winters in our part of Ohio are wet and nasty without the benefit of snow. When the weather breaks and the gray shield that covers us from October through early May is rolled up by warmer air, people jump at the chance to get out of their homes and offices. I’d left work early to get a round in while Katie was still in school. John was there already, waiting for a group that would take him as the course didn’t let singles out alone. We were paired immediately and then linked to the college boys who drove up to the first tee in a cart. The look John gave the cart let me know that he felt the same as I did about those monstrosities. We both hit fine drives and the boys both found rough on the right. As we walked down the fairway the few words that passed between us were enough for me to notice his accent.

            It was a polished accent, what the Brits would call very public school, by which they mean private schools with lots of dark corridors, uniforms, cricket on the lawn, and random sodomy. I’d never met an Englishman who jumped up and down with joy upon meeting a Scotsman so I broke the news to him gently. He took it well and, by the end of the round, we were casual friends and I had an invitation to his home to have dinner with him and his wife, Cindy. Surprising even myself, I took him up on it.

I enjoyed their company, envied their love for each other, and appreciated their friendship. And that was all I knew about John MacDonald.

            “Oh, c’mon,” Mason said. He jutted a finger my direction. “He wants us to think that he and MacDonald hung out together for three years but he doesn’t know the town he was born in, who his other friends were, or anything about his business?”

            “Mason, I wouldn’t expect an inbred mouth-breather like yourself to understand,” I said. Pelechik shot me a warning look. I ignored it. “The British aren’t like Americans. We don’t do that ‘instant friendship’ thing you do. We don’t ask personal questions. We value privacy.”

            “I thought you was American.” This from Willis who was taking notes furiously.

            “Yes. And no,” I said.

            “Well, what’s that mean?” Willis asked.

            “I’ll fill you in later,” Thomas said. He had worked with me on two cases back when I worked for the district attorney. He knew the story.

            “Tell us about the relationship between John MacDonald and his wife,” Pelechik said.

            “They were in love. They married just a few years before I met them. No kids. They held hands a lot and she plainly adored him. He worked hard and it looked like they were doing all right financially. She did some club and charity stuff. I never saw a cross look or heard a harsh word between them.”

            Mason grunted and turned away, walking over the window. Mason had been married twice, divorced twice. I was betting on Mason being the cause.

            “What about business rivals?” Willis, again.

            “John ran a travel agency in Lancaster, detective,” I said. “It’s hard to get travel agents riled up enough to nail somebody to a tree in a city park.” Willis and Thomas just looked at me; expressionless, cop eyes. “Guys, I know of no one in the world who disliked John. Couldn’t this just be a random thing? A psychopath on the loose? Something like that would make more sense than looking at Cindy or John…”

            “Or you?” Mason said.

            “Or me,” I said.

            “Are you so incapable of violence, Todd?” Mason sneered.

            “No. I am not only capable of violence,” I said, looking at him steadily, controlling my breathing. “I am gifted.”

            He tried a snort but it didn’t develop right. It came out sounding a little choked.

            “All right, ladies,” Pelechik said,  “back off.” He turned toward me, pointing the pencil again. “Is that all you can think of to tell us, Mister Todd?” I nodded. “Any further questions?” he asked the three detectives. Willis and Thomas shook their heads and closed their notebooks. Mason turned away. I got up and left. The whole interview had lasted less than an hour. Nobody had offered me coffee or cookies and nobody said goodbye.

*   *   *   *

            I turned the 4Runner towards Reynoldsburg. It was my intention to go see Cindy and offer my sympathies, but I ended up on Livingston Street, heading towards Blacklick Park. I don’t know what I thought I’d find there, but I knew I had to look. I had to see the place.

            The park was full of families picnicking, playing volleyball, softball, and horseshoes. I found a place to park near where I had been told they’d found John a day and a half ago. I wandered through the patchwork of picnic tables and blankets, through a crowded playground, and into the woods that encircled the park. Following a path barely a foot wide I wove past poplars, hophornbeams, maples, and oaks until I came to a larger clearing, a circle where the underbrush had been flattened down, perhaps fifteen feet in diameter. Remnants of yellow crime scene tape fluttered in the muted sunlight. I could no longer hear the sounds of life and joy from outside the woods.

            In the middle of the clearing stood a white oak. Its trunk was a foot and a half or so thick, but the bark had been stripped from the ground to over seven feet. The evidence boys had been out and done their job. Nothing remained but a few stains around the tree and the footprints of a dozen cops. The barbed wire that had held him here was gone, as was the sock that was shoved into his mouth to stifle his screams. The bullets shot into his knees and, finally, his head, hadn’t gone through him into the tree so there were no bore-holes in the trunk. Even the leaves around the tree that had been splattered with his blood had been taken in after they had photographed, videotaped, and mapped every drop they could find. I put a hand on the tree and cried.

            It took me longer to pull it together than I would have thought. I hadn’t cried since after Kathryn had died. Even then, I didn’t cry at all at first. It was six months later when the reality that this was now permanent, that she was forever gone and Katie and I were forever alone, came down on me with a devastating thud and I’d cried for three hours. John’s murder was bringing back feelings of loss, confusion and helplessness. I didn’t have time for this, I told myself. But I cried anyway.

I shook it off, dried my face on my sleeve, and began walking in slowly widening circles around the tree. I wasn’t sure what I was looking for, but whatever it was, it wasn’t there. No matchbooks from the Kitty Kat Nite Club, no dry cleaner’s receipts, no handkerchief’s with a Chinese laundry mark. Nothing. I continued by ever widening spiral until I was back out on the edge of the woods, looking at a group of pre-teen kids who were staring at me. I suppose they’d been watching me for a while. News of the murder had hit the TV last night so maybe they figured I was connected to the investigation. They went quiet at my approach and I walked right through them, back to my Toyota, and drove away.

            I stopped at a gas station and washed my face and hands. I bought a fountain drink and took three aspirin to drive down the pounding headache that was beginning behind my left eye. A migraine. Yea, that’s what this day needed. I combed my hair with my fingers and checked my appearance in the flecked bathroom mirror. Not stunningly handsome, but my eyes weren’t too red from crying and my sport coat looked all right over my golf shirt. I was presentable enough to do what needed doing next.

            The drive to Cindy’s house took less than twenty minutes. Pickerington bordered Reynoldsburg in the same way Reynoldsburg bordered Columbus. The cities and towns had grown into each other and now fought for their own individuality and against being absorbed by the metastasizing capitol city. Pickerington was where mid level executives lived, with custom built homes that were smaller than they looked on tiny lots with taxes twice as high as neighboring communities to keep out the riffraff. John and Cindy lived in one of the older homes, built before the land rush and the parade of poseurs that invaded and took over Pickerington in the eighties and nineties. Their home was a large two story colonial, complete with four white columns rising from the large concrete floored porch to the classic pitched roof, dusty red brick, and white non-functional shutters.

            I slowed to turn into their long gravel driveway but had to slam on the brakes as a car came roaring out, tires squealing as it pulled onto the tarmac and sped away. Right behind it was its twin, a dark blue Crown Victoria with four antennae and a blue bubble light on its dash. In the front seat I saw Mason and he saw me. I didn’t like the look he gave me. Not that I ever liked his looks but this one I especially disliked. I let the dust settle, making sure no other cop cars were coming, and then pulled in, my tires popping and pinging on the gravel, rolling slowly down the sixty yard lane. Twenty yards in the world outside disappeared behind the tall screen of Lombard poplars that marked the edges of their two and a half acres of gardens and grounds.

            At the parking circle I stopped the 4Runner and killed its engine. The house’s front door, already cracked open, was flung wide and Cindy came running out towards me. Uh oh.

            “Teacher! I knew you’d come… I don’t know… you can’t…” and she collapsed into my arms, sobbing. She was small, her head only coming up to my neck, her body shuddering with tears. I pulled her in tight and held on.

            “All right, Cindy. I’m here. What’s going on? Why were the police here?”

            She pulled her head back, her oval face stained with tears, brown eyes rimmed with red. “What do you mean? You mean you didn’t know? I thought that’s why you’d come.”

            I shook my head and continued to hold her at arm’s length, a hand on each shoulder. “No, I just came to see you, Cindy. Tell me everything.”

            She started to say something, hesitated, and began silently weeping, her head dropping, her chin on her chest. I pulled her into me again and gently rocked her. “Hang on, Cindy. Whatever it is, let me take it. I want to help.” It took her a few minutes, but she found strength somewhere deep in that hidden reservoir that lies unnoticed and unknown inside of all us until the worst thing that could happen happens. She pointed to the house, the door still wide open, and said in a voice so tiny, so fragile it broke my heart, “Look.” I opened the door of the 4Runner and put her inside, assuring her I’d be back. I walked quickly across the gravel and the concrete stoop into the house.

            The house had been raped. Carpets torn up and shoved in heaps in the corners of the room. Everything that had hung on the walls, pictures, photographs, paintings, wall sconces, all smashed and in piles on the floor. Huge holes were torn at random in the drywall, outlets pulled out and left hanging by wires. The china hutch in the dining room had been pulled from the wall, surrounded by broken plates. The kitchen was a nightmare of torn cabinet doors, tossed plates, heaps of food and dry goods on the floor and in the sink. The sink’s pipes had been ripped out and taken.

            In the bedrooms it was the same story. The closets had been emptied and clothes thrown violently to the floor where muddy footprints tracked over them. The beds were torn apart, mattress stuffing poking out through ragged holes. The bathrooms would take a day of work to even be usable. I worked my way back to the living room and entryway, trying not to step on the personal effects of John and Cindy that had already been stepped on quite enough, thank you, when I saw Cindy standing in the doorway visibly shaking and looking like a lost fifteen year old girl.

            “I…I kept asking them why they were doing this,” she said, her huge eyes looking up at me. “I told them they were tearing up my life, all I have left now. They wouldn’t talk to me.”

            “The police?” I said, even though it was a dumb question.

            “Yes.”

            “Did they have a warrant, Cindy?” I asked.

            “Yes. They showed me a paper. I think it was a warrant.”

            I nodded. It would have been a warrant. It was just like Mason to do this, and I should have seen it coming. I should have done something. At that moment I wouldn’t have been able to tell you who I hated more, Mason or me.

            “Cindy, did they say anything about what they were looking for?”

            She nodded half an inch. “One of the younger policemen, one of the ones in uniform, he was in our bedroom. I kept asking him, begging him to tell me anything. He finally told me that they were looking for drugs.”

            “Drugs?” I probably sounded as shocked as I was. She came over to me and looked up at me, not seeing anything. I moved to her side, put my arm around her, steering her to a chair which I righted, guiding her down into it.

            “Teacher, isn’t it insane? It’s insane, right? John never even took aspirin. I tried to tell them, but they wouldn’t listen. The policeman with the long hair – do you know him? – the one with the mustache and little beard, he said that the way John was killed he had to be involved in something really bad. Teacher,” her eyes met mine again. I wasn’t sure how much of that I could take before my heart popped, “you know that’s crazy, don’t you? It was like he was blaming John for getting killed, like it was his fault or something.”

            “Cindy, I’m so terribly, terribly sorry. I wish I had been here earlier.” I couldn’t help but think that I would have beaten Mason here if I hadn’t been futzing around in Blacklick Park holding a private pity party. “I’ll help you take care of this.”

            “They can’t do this, can they? I mean, this can’t be legal… can it?”

            “I’m sorry, Cindy, but yes, they can. It shouldn’t be this way, but if Mason gets the right judge there isn’t anything you can do about it and you can’t hold them responsible for the damage.”

            “But that’s not right! That’s not fair!”

            “I know. But that is the way things are and we are going to have to deal with them that way.” I looked around, gauging what needed to be done, who needed to be killed, that sort of thing. “Cindy, I’m going to get you out of here for a day or so, just until we get things organized. Stay right here. I’ll be back in a minute.”

            I left her there, her head in her hands, and ran back upstairs collecting a large suitcase on the way. It had been tossed from the attic and its handle had caught on the banister.  In her room I put together a few outfits and underthings as best as I could and then went into her personal bathroom and gathered all the unbroken toiletries putting them into a string bag that I found under her sink. When the collection of clothes and toiletries filled the suitcase I closed it and pulled out my phone, punching in Jake’s home number. He grunted a hello.

            “Jake, we got a real problem over here at John MacDonald’s house.” I told him about Mason and the state of the house. “You know people. Could you arrange some contractors and get them over here today…”

            “It’s Sunday, Teacher.”

            “C’mon, Jake, you and Althea have been part of this town since Noah. You have to have some pull with somebody. Get them here and tell them to work through the night if they have to. I’ll pay them…”

            “Not by yourself, you won’t.”

            “… and then get a maid service in as soon as they are done. If they have any questions, have them call Althea. She’d know better than me about replacing stuff.”

            “I’ll send Althea over with them. She’ll make sure it’s done right,” He said. I had no doubt about that. I would need to remember to say a prayer for the contractors.

            “I’m going to need to get Cindy out of here for at least a day or so, until things are organized again,” I said.

            “Any ideas about where?”

            I rubbed my forehead and left eye. The pain was not getting any better. “No. I haven’t thought that far ahead. I guess I could take her back home with me.”

            “Teacher, you’re not thinking. How would that look to Mason and his crew?”

            I almost said something stupid like “why should I care what Mason thinks” but he was right. I was John’s friend. Taking John’s wife into my home, as innocent as it really was, would look terrible to the detectives.

            “Okay, Jake. You have any suggestions?”

            “Sure. Bring her here. We’ll put her up. We have a lot of room and we aren’t connected with her husband at all, so it’ll look better.”

            “You’re a prince, Jake.” I hung up and carried the bag downstairs. Cindy was now standing, hugging herself tightly and staring vacantly at nothing at all. I took her arm and guided her to the Toyota and we drove silently away from the torn and scattered remnants of her life.
 

Chapter Four

February 18th, 2007

 

[note: this is the last chapter to be posted until I return on March 1st. The comments were slowing down so I might have been posting them too quickly anyway! Enjoy your week and a bit. God give you peace] 

Four days later, Pelechik, Jake, and I sat in my office with the lights off while the wind and rain spat at the window and the lights from High Street slipped through the dying trees of early October, throwing spider web shadows across the walls. The dry cleaners’ shop downstairs had closed down for the day and the sounds of traffic leaving Ohio’s capitol city for the suburbs and home had little competition from us. We had nothing to say.

            We were stumped. We had the coroner’s report. We had the daily reports of the detectives assigned to the case. But we didn’t have a clue why someone had taken John, or taken him as they had. We had gone over everything again and again.

They’d nailed him to a tree.

 Eventually.

 First, they took him – off the street, from his office, out of his car – we still didn’t know the answer to that one. It was possible, though hard to imagine, that he had gone with them willingly. Sometime later, for reasons none of the three of us could guess, they’d killed him in Blacklick Park. Our best guess was that they had first stuffed his socks in his mouth to muffle his screams, and then beaten him as he was held in place with three strands of barbed wire, cruelly tightened around his chest and upper thighs, fastening him to a white oak.

Then came the pole barn nails through his wrists and three gunshots – one each through his kneecaps and the final one through his forehead. Four days later and we had no idea why