Quiet Dell: A Novel

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Quiet Dell: A Novel Page 37

by Jayne Anne Phillips


  Morris questioned him: “That is the same bone you were talking about in the others?”

  Goff asserted, “Yes, sir, and the injuries to his head would have caused death, but he was certainly strangled in addition.”

  Someone in the gallery retched.

  Emily waited, her breath shallow. They must say what Powers had done, his violation of the boy’s body. It should be known, but she could not prove it, for it was hearsay from a confidential source. She looked up at William, in the gallery above and to her right, and saw him lean into the railing before him, as though to move toward her.

  Law sprang to his feet. “I move to strike out the witness’s testimony with regard to the examination of the boy’s body just completed.” It was theater, with Law shouting, drawing attention to himself when details were most grotesque.

  Judge Southern declared the motion overruled as Law shouted, “Exception!” and shook his fist in the air. Southern ignored him and leaned back to attend Morris’ question to Goff, “regarding a woman purported to be the last woman taken from the ditch at Quiet Dell.”

  No, they were not going to say, for they were on to Lemke.

  Eric, beside her, pressed a small vial into her hand. “Emily, take this.”

  It was smelling salts. She resisted the impulse to throw the glass vial at the stage.

  Goff was testifying, reading his notes. “Her hands tied behind her back with a window sash cord . . . a webbing band strap was twisted around her neck and her body tied up in feed sacks. She was dressed with stockings and dress and underclothes; her hair was, had been, long and black and done up with pins . . .”

  And gone from her head, fallen from her round bald skull. Emily prompted him to say it. He did not.

  “. . . an operation scar over her lower right body or abdomen, three and a half inches long . . . like a drainage tube had been in the wound. . . . The lungs were completely collapsed . . . fracture of the hyoid bone, contusion and discoloration . . .”

  The redirect began, but Emily could not continue writing. She heard Law propose, “Isn’t it true that . . . collapse of the lungs follows immediately after death, in any case?”

  Goff coughed. “I don’t know that it is.”

  Law adopted a professorial tone. “You don’t know that it is not?”

  “No, sir.” Goff answered with an air of patience.

  “That’s all, Your Honor.” Law pretended to satisfaction.

  Southern banged his gavel and announced court adjourned until tomorrow, December 8, at 9:00 A.M. Emily looked numbly before her. Audience members in the orchestra section and galleries began to stand and shift, moving to the lobby.

  • • •

  She had typed her notes into a cogent account. “Here you are, sir. Special to the Chicago Tribune.” Emily waited as he transmitted her words. The first day of the trial was finished. Mason stood beside her.

  “This is the entire transmission, Miss Thornhill?”

  “Yes, thank you. Date of today, December seventh. I shall be sending more tomorrow morning.”

  Mason looked up at her. “Was it terrible?”

  She knew she must look exhausted, and didn’t want to worry him. “It’s going exactly as it should. All right, Mason?” He picked up the dog, for Duty was jumping at his knees; she bent down to embrace them both and usher them before her to the elevator.

  Her concluding graph had to do with the lights, and stagecraft itself: Tall scenic panels of glittering papier-mâché trees and a “backdrop” of a typical small-town street, a church at the judge’s back, set the stage for a living drama of life or death, and love.

  Love, of course, was her angle, not the moral tedium concerning knaves and “love criminals.” News coverage, legitimate or yellow, constantly pressed the notion that a bad end awaited women who responded to invitation, who wished for romance and the only self-determination available to most: a respectable, financially solvent man. Woe to the buxom woman over forty who imagined sincere interest in her exhausted charms. Powers and the case itself were excuses to shame women and keep them in their places. She could not entertain the deeper questions for the Tribune; her dispatches must be entertaining and factually accurate, but her bias underscored every line.

  Mason turned to smile at her. They ascended, ensconced in the soothing machine hum of the elevator, blessedly alone.

  The crowd was on trial, to Emily’s mind, this crowd and every crowd drawn by grim spectacle, by fascination with each new detail; she was herself on trial, pointing out storybook elements in a case in which the murderer’s given name, Harm Drenth, duly matched the sobriquet of Sheriff W. B. Grimm. Grimm was looking extremely handsome, his hundred-watt smile grown brighter at each interview, on each transport of the accused from the jail to the opera house. Powers followed him, manacled, in tow between armed guards like a shambling accountant trailing a movie star.

  Mason was opening his door with the hotel key. Bless Grimm, he had helped them; and William, waiting to hear Mason’s answer, would stand by them.

  “Let’s go through into my room,” she said, turning on lights, “and sit here, on the settee.” She watched him order on the hotel phone and thought to put off her news, to be sure he ate his meal, but found she could not.

  “Mason,” she said, and he turned to her. “I must tell you something that is important and difficult.” His face paled. She went on hurriedly; unconsciously, she extended her open hands toward him, and he took them, pressing her fingers in his smaller ones as though to hold on through the moment at which they’d arrived.

  “Sheriff Grimm has made inquiries; he told me that your father passed away some days ago.” She must say it all at once. “He was drinking, as you’ve said he does, and fell asleep in his bed, and did not wake up. It was very cold—it is, very cold—”

  “He froze, then.”

  “Yes, he froze, and felt no pain, for he was asleep.”

  Mason nodded. Duty was in his lap. “I don’t have to be afraid, then—” His voice broke and his eyes filled.

  “No, never.” Emily clasped him to her gently, tearful herself, and was silent until he looked up at her, as though for reassurance. “If you want to stay here after the trial, I shall help you find a situation. If you have no reason to stay, you might consider coming back to Chicago with Duty and me, where you would make your home with us, and when you are ready, attend a good school, perhaps a boarding school such as I attended myself, where you would receive an education and have friends your own age. But your home would be with me.” She paused, trying to gauge his reaction. “It would be a big change for you.”

  “Yes—” His eyes widened and he blinked, cringing ever so slightly in that old, involuntary movement. “I mean, yes, I want to come with you. I will . . . help you, and take care of Duty—”

  “Of course, but you needn’t help . . . at home, with clippings and filing newspapers. You will just be at home, studying, getting ready for school, seeing a new place, a big city, Chicago—”

  “Oh, yes,” he said, “and I will go to school, like other people.”

  “Yes, and I could become your legal guardian. Your home with me would be protected. Might you agree, Mason?”

  He nodded, his eyes still brimmed with tears. “And does it mean, no one can take me away from you? My mother used to worry, that if anyone saw where we lived and knew she was sick, they would take me away from her, and her not strong enough to get me back.”

  “Ah, Mason.” His head on her shoulder released a weariness that seemed to fall down all around them. “My boy,” she said, and knew it was true for the first time. “You have a home always. I will honor your mother, just as you do, and try to guide you.”

  “She would be so glad.” He closed his eyes for a moment, his long lashes brushing his cheeks.

  Emily held him close beside her. “I’ll engage a tutor to help you, and perhaps in spring you can apply to schools, nearby I hope, so that you can come home easily to see Duty and me, and
Eric and William, on weekends and holidays. For we would all miss you a great deal, if we don’t see you often.”

  “And I would miss you,” Mason said. He looked wistful, uncertain.

  “But we will be together.” She smiled softly. “What is it, Mason?”

  “Sometimes”—he faltered—“I think about stealing, to know I still can. I’m afraid to forget.”

  “Afraid to forget—you put it so well.” She sat a moment, then took up her purse and opened it to him. “Steal from me then, Mason, only from me, and tell me about it if you like. To know you’re protected, after so long, will take time.”

  He reached inside and brought out a small pearl button, and clasped it in his hand. “I’ll keep it to remind me.”

  Emily blessed the anonymous glove whose button had come loose months ago, no doubt. His eyes were full, and hers as well. She touched her mouth to his forehead, and sat back. “Are you hungry? I’m starved.”

  He nodded, for they could smell the food arriving, and heard the knock at the door.

  Mason went to the door and opened it wide. Mr. Woods wheeled in the cart and looked at them over the table as he set it, for they were both gazing at him so happily.

  “Can I tell him?”

  “You may tell him, Mason, and tell whomever you like. It is not a secret.”

  Mason said, with shy pride, “Mr. Woods, Miss Thornhill will be my legal guardian, and I will be going home with her to Chicago when the trial is over.”

  “Well, my stars. That is good news for both of you.” He shook Mason’s hand, and then Emily’s.

  • • •

  They ate as though famished, and then Emily insisted Mason take a warm bath and go to bed, where he might read his library books as late as he liked. He was asleep in twenty minutes, and she put on her hat and coat, and took Duty out on the leash. It was frigid. The night sky above her was clear and pierced with lights, the line of the horizon curving above dark hills.

  The hotel was quiet. She passed her room and went to William’s, and knocked softly.

  He opened the door, his robe pulled loosely on, and led her near the window to see her face in moonlight. “What’s your news, Emily?”

  “It’s cold out, very cold,” she whispered. “I must get into bed with you this second, and Duty too. Take off my boots.”

  “Only your boots?”

  “For now.” She’d shed her coat and hat, and leaned back as he held one ankle, then the other, to his naked thigh, and caressed her feet inside her heavy stockings. She pulled his robe away and followed him into bed. They lay embraced, the dog near them. “William, he said yes. He’s so happy, to know he’s safe.”

  “He’s far more than safe, but safety may be what he can comprehend just now.”

  “So much to do. I must find a tutor, a larger apartment, yet I must be near the Tribune, and in my same neighborhood.”

  He was taking the pins from her hair and lifting it free. “Emily, you have a larger apartment.” He waited to meet her eyes. “I’ve bought the apartment next door, which is twice the size of yours, and has a deep broad terrace, with planted beds. The construction of breaking through is finished. The small details must be completed to your taste.”

  “What? Do you mean, we have the entire floor?”

  “It was meant to be a surprise, a luxurious love nest. Now it shall be more. There are two additional bedrooms, one for Mason, each with a bath. A library, a living room with a fireplace, a kitchen to be fitted out, a small conservatory by the terrace—” He stroked her face. “Emily, you look stunned.”

  “You must have been engaged . . . for months—”

  “In the purchase and planning, yes. The breaking through was not difficult. It was one apartment, years ago; there’s still some fine architectural detail. It all occurred to me because I needed to dodge neighbors on your floor. Safety concerns me, sadly, just as it concerns Mason.” He searched her eyes. “I hope you’re not unhappy, that I took your life in hand without permission.”

  “My life is in your hands. I gave permission long ago.”

  He held her face and kissed her deeply.

  “The taste of you,” she said, “like heaven. Oh, I must go. The trial begins in a few hours. I must sleep.”

  “You will.” He pulled her before him to the edge of the bed and pushed her clothes up between them. “Don’t you need this now? Time is short, for we met so late.” He stopped her voice, his fingers on her teeth. “It will take a moment, and let you sleep soundly, so soundly, to face tomorrow.”

  The Word of “Love”

  December 8, 1931

  Stage left featured a single row of chairs for witnesses. Gretchen Fleming held her purse on her lap; Emily could see her press and release the clasp. Coley Woods and Truman Parrish sat to her right, with two men unknown to Emily.

  Eric leaned close to her. “Bank tellers.”

  Yes, Lemke’s checks. The tellers, their fitted suit jackets buttoned, their pocket squares neatly obvious, were here from Uniontown.

  Dr. Goff was on the stand to “produce and identify” the band tied around the neck of “the last woman found in the ditch,” Dorothy P. Lemke. “This is a webbing band,” Goff said, holding it up. “It looks like it might have been a buggy strap, and it was placed around her neck like that.”

  Morris interrupted him. “And tied there?”

  “No, sir, it was not tied there. There was a buckle or something on the end, and when we took it off it dropped to the floor, a metal fastener or buckle, and we did not pick it up then, and it became lost.”

  “For want of a nail . . .” Eric said under his breath.

  The buckle was part of the murder weapon; why else, but to tighten it and watch her struggle, would Powers have attached it? Emily imagined it falling away, trampled by Goff or the police.

  Exhibit “Band” was filed; Morris asked Goff to produce what tied or wrapped the body in its burlap sack.

  “Yes, sir. This is part of . . . what I understand to be a liner for an inner tube on an automobile tire . . . placed on to protect the inner tube.”

  Exhibit “Inner Tubes,” tattered pieces, was marked and filed. And yes, Goff had accompanied police and Powers to the morgue, to view the victims. “Heavens, isn’t that horrible” was Powers’ placid remark. Emily glanced up to find William in his box-row seat, staring ashen faced at the players on the stage.

  Morris called, first a bank teller and then a cashier, from the Second National Bank of Uniontown, Pennsylvania. Both identified Powers as the man who came to the bank on August 1, 1931, demanding payment on two checks written on the bank—by Dorothy Pressler Lemke, and by Dorothy A. Pressler. One A. R. Weaver had endorsed both, and the combined amount was in excess of four thousand dollars. Weaver returned, they said, on August 7, and got the funds. Asked to identify the man who obtained the money, both witnesses, in turn, pointed dramatically at Powers.

  Coley Woods confirmed that he was employed at the Gore Hotel as night porter on the night of July 30, 1931. Yes, he remembered a white woman who registered that night, Dorothy A. Lemke. “Around one-thirty in the night . . . I responded for the baggage.”

  “What do you mean?” Morris asked.

  Emily leaned toward Eric. “He thinks the answer too well phrased to be understood by the rabble.”

  “I went out,” said Coley Woods.

  “That should be clear enough,” Eric said quietly.

  Truman Parrish followed Woods on the stand. Morris asked that he produce and identify the Gore Hotel registry sheet showing the name of Mrs. Dorothy A. Lemke. Parrish offered the broad white sheet. “It is registered, ‘Mrs. D. A. Lemke.’ ”

  Law objected. “There is no definite proof that this is the same party. . . . Mrs. D. A. Lemke . . . is not the name or initials of the party claimed to have been killed—”

  Gretchen Fleming stood in her seat, flames of color in her cheeks, but Morris quickly asked for a short recess. Witnesses were shown offstage to the lef
t, the jury to the right. By turns, counsel, judge, and defendant, dog-collar-chained once more to his minder’s steel cuff, left the stage. Four state troopers’ boots resounded in perfect time until the general clamor eclipsed all.

  • • •

  She stood in the lobby with Eric.

  “Take this water, Emily. Are you all right?”

  She drank. “Are you, Eric?”

  “It helps to know there is life beyond the opera house. We will go back to Chicago, Emily, to lead changed lives.” He leaned with her against the wall, out of the milling crowd.

  “Your life is changed, Eric? By Charles O’Boyle?”

  “Yes, changed. We are seeking adjacent accommodations. A stairway closed off, easily restored, a door built through; we shall be neighbors and business associates.”

  “That is how it’s done,” Emily agreed, smiling.

  “Have you something to tell me, Emily?”

  “I think someone else might like to tell you.”

  “He did. Mason joined William and me at breakfast, and told us both. Not a secret, he said.”

  “No, when so much is, and must remain so.”

  “It’s curious, isn’t it? Social convention restricts and threatens, yet class and convention protect us if we behave within certain parameters.”

  “Not everyone is so fortunate.”

  “No, but we are all quite capable of being happy.”

  She wanted to embrace him. “Yes, and Mason will come with us. You will be Uncle Eric.”

  “Far too bourgeois. But I will be his family, with you. He must be allowed false steps, Emily. He will surely make them.”

 

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