Hello, Summer

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Hello, Summer Page 7

by Mary Kay Andrews


  “What’s done is done,” she said softly. She saw a doe standing in the middle of a cornfield, calmly munching on the tender green stalks, and nearby, she spotted two fawns half-hidden in a clump of trees.

  She glanced over at him. “Ever kill a deer?”

  “Who, me? No. I’m a lousy shot.”

  “I did.”

  “For real?”

  “One of my boy cousins bagged an eight-point buck one year right before Thanksgiving. My granddad put his picture on the front page of the Beacon. You would’ve thought he’d won a Nobel Prize. So I started practicing in secret—”

  “Holy shit!” Skelly yelped.

  She turned in time to glimpse something in the road just as Skelly slammed on the brakes, veering sharply to the right to avoid a collision.

  It was an overturned vehicle, a gleaming black SUV.

  The Subaru jounced onto the shoulder of the road, coming to rest against a barbed wire fence.

  “Call 911,” Skelly said, fumbling around for his cell phone.

  But Conley was already out of the Subaru and running. Oily black smoke poured from beneath the hood of the wrecked vehicle. She squatted on the pavement beside the driver’s window and peered inside.

  “There’s somebody in here!” she called to Skelly as he sprinted to her side.

  He flattened himself against the pavement, trying to get a look, then began tugging at the handle of the door, grunting with exertion. “It’s locked.”

  Conley ran around to the other side of the SUV and yanked at the door handle to no avail. She could see the shape of a person inside, slumped forward against the shattered windshield, see the back of a balding head and a trickle of blood on a white collar. His arm was flung sideways, and she saw the gleam of a heavy gold wristwatch. She tugged again, harder this time.

  “Hey!” she called loudly, rapping on the window. “Sir? Are you okay?”

  No answer. She banged again on the window. “Wake up! You gotta get out of the vehicle!”

  “Get away!” Skelly yelled, running around the end of the SUV.

  “We gotta do something.” Conley protested.

  “I already called 911.”

  “That’ll take forever. The fire station’s at least fifteen minutes away,” Conley called.

  “Have you got a tire iron in your trunk?” Skelly asked.

  “Yeah. Under the carpet in the cargo area.”

  A moment later, he was back with a tire iron. “Get back,” he cautioned.

  He aimed the tool squarely at the driver’s-side window and swung. The glass stayed intact. “Damn it,” he muttered. He took a step backward, poised to swing again, then stopped. Flames were licking from beneath the hood of the vehicle. “It’s on fire!” he yelled.

  Conley stood rooted to the spot.

  “Get away!” Skelly grabbed her arm and pulled her toward the shoulder of the road.

  She stumbled, corrected, then slowly backed away from the SUV, watching helplessly as the flames rose higher, sending sparks shooting into the thick night air. The intense heat drove them backward, and they were both coughing and choking from the oily fumes.

  She gave Skelly a pleading look. He shrugged and started back toward the SUV, but within seconds, it was engulfed in rolling waves of black smoke.

  “Come on,” he urged, tugging her toward the Subaru. “These SUVs have huge gas tanks. This thing could explode.”

  Choking and coughing from the noxious fumes, they backed farther away. Finally, in the distance, they heard the wail of a siren. Probably too late for the injured driver.

  “Do you recognize the car?” Conley asked. “Anybody from around here?”

  “It’s got a Griffin County license tag,” he said, pointing.

  “There was some kind of parking decal on the front windshield, but upside down like that, I couldn’t make out what it said,” Conley added. “It was like a green sort of crest.”

  “SBCC,” he said. “Silver Bay Country Club. I’ve got the same one on my truck.”

  “Right. G’mama and Grayson have the same decal.”

  Without thinking, she grabbed her cell phone and, standing beside the Subaru, began clicking the camera’s shutter. She was scrolling through the contacts on her phone, getting ready to call the AJC’s city desk to let them know she’d just witnessed a wreck with a possible fatality.

  “What the hell are you doing?” Skelly asked.

  Conley sighed and stopped scrolling. “I was trying to do my job. But it just occurred to me: I don’t have a job anymore.”

  But she raised the phone anyway and began shooting video of the inferno, of the fire truck as it roared up as the first responders clambered down and began what would surely be a doomed rescue attempt.

  She decided it didn’t matter that she didn’t actually have a job in Atlanta. Whoever was in that SUV tonight was surely dead. Pretty soon, somebody would get a phone call, and their lives would be changed forever. There was a story to tell here, and that’s what she did. It was who she was. She’d figure out the rest later.

  * * *

  “He’s dead, right?” Conley asked as the firefighters trained their hoses on the blazing Escalade. She stopped shooting and wearily leaned her head on Skelly’s shoulder.

  “Oh yeah,” Skelly said, absentmindedly rubbing her arm. “Jesus, what a way to die.”

  Conley looked up the road and pointed at the approaching vehicle, blue lights flashing. “Police. Better late than never, I guess.”

  The Bronson County sheriff’s vehicle pulled behind the Subaru. Conley watched warily as the deputy approached. He was huge, with a thick neck and shoulders and a blocklike body. His right hand rested on his holstered gun, and he held a flashlight in his left, which he played over Conley.

  “Ma’am? Are you the one that called this in?”

  “That was me.” Skelly spoke up.

  The cop stared at him. “Do I know you?”

  “Don’t think so,” Skelly said.

  The cop shone his flashlight on Skelly’s face. “I need some ID.”

  Skelly brought out his billfold and handed over his driver’s license.

  “Son of a bitch!” the cop exclaimed. “I knew it. Sean Kelly! You skinny son of a bitch.” He clamped a thick mitt on Skelly’s shoulder. “It’s me, Walter Poppell!”

  The deputy held the flashlight under his own chin, illuminating a fleshy head the approximate size of a garbage can lid.

  “Popps?” Skelly did a double take. “Holy shit! You’re a cop?”

  Poppell shrugged. “Right? Y’all used to take bets on who’d be the first guy on the team to end up in jail. Guess what? It’s me—only I’m the one locking up all y’all’s sorry asses.” The cop gestured toward Conley. “This your lady?”

  “No!” Conley exclaimed.

  The deputy flicked the beam of the flashlight up and down her body. “Too bad.”

  “Cool it, Popps. We’re old friends. Neighbors, actually,” Skelly said. “We bumped into each other earlier tonight at the Legion, and we were headed home when we ran up on this.” He pointed at the Escalade.

  “Y’all been drinking?” The cop’s voice was stern. “Which one of you was driving?”

  “I was driving, and I stopped after two beers,” Skelly said. “Way before midnight.”

  “Screw it, then,” Poppell said. “Dispatch said there was just the driver, that right? No passengers?”

  “Not as far as we could tell,” Skelly said. “It must have happened right before we drove up. Sarah—I mean, Conley—ran up to try to open the door while I called 911.”

  “I saw the driver. He was slumped sideways, and I could see some blood on his collar,” Conley said. “I called to him, but he didn’t respond. I guess he was unconscious.”

  “Well, if the dude wasn’t dead before, he’s toast now. Literally.” Poppell chuckled.

  Conley winced and looked past the cop, letting her eyes focus on anything other than him or the blaze that the firefig
hters had almost extinguished.

  “The door was jammed shut,” Skelly said. “I tried to break the window in with a tire iron, but I only got one swing in before the vehicle caught fire. The blaze was so hot, there was nothing we could do. I was afraid it would explode.”

  “Y’all didn’t recognize the driver?” Poppell asked.

  “No.”

  “All right,” Poppell said. “Guess there’s nothing to do now but wait for the ambulance.”

  “Can we go?” Conley asked abruptly. She had no desire to watch the rest of this inevitable scene unfold.

  “Don’t see why not,” Poppell said. He unbuttoned a flap on his breast pocket and brought out a small notebook. “Here. Y’all write down your phone numbers and contact info. We’ll be in touch if we need anything else.”

  Conley scribbled her cell phone number and handed the pad to her friend, who did the same.

  “What are you up to these days, Skelly?” the deputy asked.

  “Same old, same old. Running the drugstore, trying to stay out of trouble.”

  Skelly held the passenger door open, and Conley climbed onto the seat.

  “See ya around, Popps,” Skelly said, turning to go.

  “Hey, we should get the guys together sometime,” Poppell said. “Grab a beer or something.” He reached back into his pocket and brought out a card. “Gimme a call, okay?”

  “For sure,” Skelly said. He started the Subaru and steered carefully around the blackened, smoldering wreck. The firefighters were packing up their gear to go too, and in the distance, they heard the wail of an approaching ambulance.

  Conley leaned her head back and closed her eyes. “How do you know that creep?”

  “Popps? We played jayvee football together. He was six two, weighed two-forty in eighth grade. Started shaving in seventh grade. He played left tackle. And when I tell you he was dumber than a box of rocks, that’s being charitable.”

  “I didn’t know you’d played football.”

  “There’s a lot you don’t know about me,” Skelly said.

  “So when do you think you’ll be getting together with good ol’ Popps to throw back some brewskis?” she asked.

  “Hmmm. I’d say never-ish.”

  10

  “Sarah! Sarah Conley. Sarah. Conley. Hawkins.” The voice in her ear was soft but persistent. “Come on now. Wake up.”

  She rolled onto her stomach, but now someone was tapping her shoulder. Tap. “Sarah.” Tap. “Wake up.” Tap. “I’m not going away, so you’d best just get up so we can all get going.”

  Conley groaned and sat up. Winnie stood by her bed with a steaming mug of coffee in her outstretched hand.

  “That’s better. If you don’t get dressed and get downstairs right this minute, I swear your grandmother is going to finish loading the car and drive herself out to the beach, and ain’t nobody wants that,” Winnie said.

  “What time is it?”

  “It’s quarter ’til nine. Lorraine called me at seven, told me to get myself over here no later than eight.”

  Conley took a sip of coffee and yawned.

  “Late night?” Winnie raised an eyebrow.

  “Too late,” Conley said as she headed toward the bathroom. “You can tell G’mama I said to hold her horses. I’m already packed. I’ll be downstairs in fifteen minutes, and then we can get started.”

  * * *

  Winnie was dragging the potted fern out the front door just as Conley reached the hallway.

  “For Pete’s sake, Winnie. I’ll get that.” She sat her suitcase near the bottom step. “Where’s G’mama?”

  “Been setting out in the car for ten minutes. You didn’t hear her honking the horn?”

  “I was in the shower,” Conley said. She picked up the fern and steered her rolling suitcase out onto the front step and was greeted by a long blast from the Wagoneer’s horn.

  Lorraine sat in the front seat, arms crossed over her chest, Opie draped across her lap.

  Conley raised the Wagoneer’s hatch. Suitcases, coolers, garment bags, the television, and Opie’s dog bed took up the entire cargo area. She managed to shove the fern inside the dog bed, but there was not another spare inch in the car as far as she could see.

  She sighed and shook her head, then turned back toward the house.

  G’mama rolled down the window and stuck her head out. “Where do you think you’re going? It’s blazing hot in this car, and I’m not getting any younger, you know.”

  Conley didn’t bother to answer. When she got back to the car, she used a pair of bungee cords to strap her own suitcase to the Wagoneer’s roof.

  * * *

  Lorraine sulked in silence for the first ten minutes of the drive.

  Conley decided to ignore her grandmother and instead engaged in a friendly conversation with the housekeeper.

  “How’re your nephews doing, Winnie?”

  “Real good. Jesse, the youngest, got out of the army, and he’s back working at the auto body shop and driving their tow truck, says he’s fixing to buy the shop from old man Widener. Jason’s down in Tampa, working as a longshoreman at the port authority. And Jerry just got promoted to head teller at the bank. Everybody says he’ll be the next branch manager.”

  “That’s amazing,” Conley said. “I know Nedra would be so proud of them, and grateful to you, for raising them into such successful young men.”

  “Those boys gave me a run for my money, that’s for sure,” Winnie said.

  “Not to mention a lot of gray hair,” Lorraine put in. “Same as you did me, staying out all hours of the night last night.”

  Conley rolled her eyes but kept quiet.

  “I almost called the sheriff’s office last night to ask them to put out an APB on you,” Lorraine said. “But then I finally fell asleep. What time did you actually come dragging home?”

  “It was after three,” Conley admitted.

  “Three o’clock in the morning? No wonder you’re a mess. Like I always used to tell your mother, nothing good happens after midnight. What kind of foolishness were you up to?”

  “I went to the American Legion. You’ll never guess who I ran into there.”

  “Nobody decent, I bet.”

  “Skelly was there,” Conley said. “It’s all his fault. We got to talking and catching up.”

  Lorraine’s face softened at the mention of Sean Kelly’s name. “I always did like that boy. Such a shame about Doc, and of course, now June.”

  “What’s wrong with Skelly’s mother?” Conley said, alarmed. “Don’t tell me she died too. G’mama, you never said anything about Miss June dying.”

  “Be better if she had passed,” Winnie put in. “Poor woman has dementia. I heard she thinks young Sean is her husband. You know he moved back home after that wife took off and left. He’s got a lady comes in and stays with Miss June, but still, that’s a boy loves his mama.”

  “He didn’t mention anything about his mom,” Conley said sadly.

  “Did he tell you he’s single again?” Lorraine asked eagerly.

  “He mentioned it.”

  “I never liked that girl,” Lorraine said. “She put Sean through hell and back, and then she up and leaves him again. He deserves better.” She gave her granddaughter a meaningful sidelong glance.

  “Forget it, G’mama,” Conley said flatly. “Skelly’s like a brother to me. And I am definitely not interested in romance.”

  “We’ll see about that,” Lorraine said. “But you still haven’t said what kept you out so late. I didn’t know there were any bars in town that stayed open ’til three.”

  Conley exhaled slowly. They were approaching the turn onto the beach road. The memory of the previous night’s inferno came rushing back, and her stomach churned.

  “There was a terrible one-car wreck on the county road, about fifteen miles out of town,” she said. “It must have happened right before we got there. An SUV had flipped completely upside down. As soon as we saw it, Skelly called 911,
and we ran over and tried to get the driver out, but…” She shuddered at the memory. “We were too late. The engine was already smoking and the doors were locked, so we were trying to break one of the windows, but then flames were coming from under the hood, and the heat and smoke were so intense we had to back away.”

  “Oh my Lord,” G’mama said. “How awful.”

  “It really was,” Conley agreed. “There was nothing anybody could do. The firefighters got there as quickly as they could, but really, we knew it was too late.”

  “Any idea who it was?” Lorraine asked. “Nobody we know, I hope.”

  “Not sure. The car did have Griffin County tags, and there was also a country club parking decal on the windshield.”

  Lorraine looked shocked. “What kind of car did you say it was?”

  “A black Escalade. It looked pretty new.”

  “I don’t really know one car from another these days,” G’mama admitted.

  “An Escalade is a kind of Cadillac,” Winnie said.

  “Did you call Grayson and let her know about the wreck?” G’mama asked.

  “I didn’t get a moment’s peace this morning, because somebody was in such a hurry to leave for the beach, it was all I could do to swallow some coffee and strap my suitcase to the roof of the car,” Conley said. “Besides, I’m not sure Grayson wants to hear anything from me. We kinda had words yesterday when I went by the paper to tell her I was moving you out here today.”

  “I’ll call her myself when we get to the Dunes.”

  “Be my guest,” Conley said, adding as an afterthought, “I guess you could tell her I took some photos and some video of the wreck with my phone. Just in case she’s interested.”

  * * *

  “Oh!” G’mama said abruptly as they were passing through the island’s tiny business district. “Pull in here, Sarah.” She pointed at the island’s IGA. “Winnie and I need to get our groceries.”

  “G’mama, we can’t fit as much as a stick of gum in this car right now. We’ll make a grocery run after we get unpacked.”

 

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