by Craig Thomas
They had walked perhaps fifty meters when Robert said, “Mom?”
“Yes?”
“Why did the man go away?”
“What man?”
“The bus driver. He didn’t stop for us. Is he mad at me, mom?” He looked up at her again.
“No one is mad at you.” Holly didn’t meet her son’s gaze, or slow her pace. She moved on, a thousand thoughts racing through her brain.
“Why didn’t he stop for us, then?”
“I think the bus isn’t going our way. Must have been a different route.”
“It’s the same one we ride home everyday. I even know the man driving the bus,” Robert pressed on. “Is he mad at you, mom?”
She stopped then. “Hey, what made you think anyone is mad at me—or at you, for that matter?”
“I don’t know.” There was a tiny stone perched on top of a bigger one on the ground, right in front of him. Robert kicked it hard, so hard he jerked forward and almost yanked himself off Holly’s grip. His gray pants shimmied in the process. “But I wanna know why, mom. Please, could you tell me?”
“Robert, I do not know why, okay? So, you cut that out and let it rest.” The words rushed out of her mouth unchecked, too harsh and cold. She felt bad instantly for exploding at her son, for taking her frustration out on him.
Robert recoiled a little.
She pulled him towards her. “All right, listen. I’m sorry I flew off the handle. But don’t you worry about the bus driver, about what he did or didn’t do. What’s important is that we’re heading home now, where there’s a lot of cheese and cookies to feast on.”
Robert smiled.
“And you like walking, don’t you?”
“I love it.” The smile on his face had put on some weight. “And I love picking berries, too.”
As they advanced home, Holly wondered how diverse—and greatly polarized—their thought patterns were. As far as she was concerned, the world was a ginormous eye-riddled ball, evil in its entirety. And it rolled after her every second, keeping track of everything she did, and poised to condemn each of her steps. To Robert, however, the enemies could be put behind at Our Lady of Peace Junior High, and they could lunch on wood shavings for all he cared. Whenever he was alone with Holly, all the ills of the world received adequate cures. It became a better place again.
A better place where his worries and frights of the Carters and Murphys of this world became but history.
The world of bliss.
Of chocolate and cookies and cheese.
Robert laughed at various jokes told by his mother, but later threw a tantrum, because Holly wouldn’t let him pick berries.
Chapter 6
Monday, August 17
On the fifth day of Carter’s murder, Sheriff Stack visited Mrs. Wilson.
And Brad Conner on successive occasions. It was about eight-thirty in the morning. Our Lady of Peace was yet to open.
******
“It’s not uncommon that people begin to recollect the details of an incident after some time has elapsed, Mrs. Wilson,” Brian said. “Has anything drifted back to your memory from the last week’s incident?” There was a plate of apple cake on the table in front of him.
“Well, nothing has returned, because nothing left in the first place. There’s nothing different than what I stated from the outset when I was interrogated. Didn’t see a bird,” Mrs. Wilson said. She perched on the edge of her seat, palms wrapped around her coffee mug as though trying to draw warmth from it. “Have you pressed Ed Gibson further for information?”
Ed was the security guard at the Junior High. He had claimed vehemently that he didn’t see any strange visitor come into the school premises, and that such would have been impossible, anyway, since he was doing a thorough watch of the entire school. His report reeked of discrepancy. He’d been in custody since Trevor Carter’s murder.
“Yes,” Brian said. “He’s running a different version of his story now. He wasn’t telling the truth before.”
“Doesn’t come as a surprise at all. I’ve been suspicious of him all along. The way he acts and looks ... oh, boy—it tells me something’s crooked about that man.”
Brian cleared his throat. “Well, just for clarification—he certainly didn’t bend the story to cover up his murderous act or anything like that, but rather to conceal his irresponsibility at work. He later confessed that an old bum was roaming the vicinity of the school earlier that morning. A bum by the name Jeremiah Blair.”
Mrs. Wilson laughed. “JB?” she said. “JB’s been roaming the vicinity every single day for the past ten years that I’ve been teaching at the school. Plus he could barely hold his own in a fight with a ten-year-old girl. He’s so wasted it’s a miracle he hasn’t kicked the bucket all these years. So, what’s Ed insinuating?”
“Well, I suppose not a lot. Perhaps he was just trying to atone for his sin, the sin of keeping information back. Trying to come clean at last. Adequate interrogation has already exonerated Jeremiah, even though he came inside the school premises at some point that morning, panhandling from kids. But the point is, keeping anything back—however irrelevant or insignificant it might look—during the investigation of a case is a serious offense.”
Mrs. Wilson sipped her coffee. “I agree with you on that, Sheriff. That’s still pretty cunning, not telling it all.”
“Yes, it is.” Brian forked a big chunk of apple cake into his mouth.
“I don’t mean to pry, Sheriff,” Mrs. Wilson said, “but I was wondering if there’s any development on Robert’s reports so far.”
Brian tried to work on the cake in his mouth as fast as he could in order to create an unimpeded passage for air. His voice still sounded throaty when he spoke. “As a matter of fact, yes. The strands of hair collected at the scene belonged to Robert. The final DNA reports of the blood samples is still underway. Might not have the concluding part till Thursday or Friday—unless a miracle occurs. Tardiness, you see, is the chief bane of small-town investigation.”
“Ah, I see,” Mrs. Wilson said, and suddenly digressed, yapping about Trevor Carter. Brian let her, seizing that opportunity to finish his cake as he listened. “God, I still feel sick each time I picture Mr. Carter lying on the floor with blood on his neck. And that innocent smile of his. Oh, he guarded it so much he had to carry it to the grave with him. Just couldn’t leave it behind and let some scumbags trample on it. That was Mr. Carter for you—always exhaustive in whatever he did. And needless to say he remained his happy self, even to the very morning of his death. He wasn’t at all like the commander-in-chief of the grumpy people.”
All along, Brian was nodding and nodding as he chewed and savored and swallowed. “And who’s that?” he said at last, pushing the empty dessert plate aside.
“Donnie Murphy, of course. He’s one of a kind.”
“Any clue why?”
“Why he’s habitually grumpy?”
“Yes.”
Mrs. Wilson shook her head. “It’s the same question we’ve all been asking. Wish somebody would find out.” She shoved further into her seat. “But then again, who cares? Let him be grumpy like a woman going through a perpetual period. I wouldn’t give a hoot about a mean man like him, anyway.”
“Does he direct his mean attitude towards teachers alone?”
“Everyone. Teachers, students. Even so many people in Ogre’s Pond will testify.” She paused, frowned, and said, “I can’t believe you didn’t know this. There’s hardly a single soul in Ogre’s Pond who’s not aware of Donnie’s annoying personality.”
Brian shrugged. “I guess there’ll be a huge shakeup now that he’s in charge—at least, for the length of time he’ll be acting as the principal, if he doesn’t end up holding the office permanently.”
“Oh, yeah. A huge shakeup for the worse.”
“Or for the better.”
“Maybe some parents will have to withdraw their kids from the school.” Mrs. Wilson laughed. “And Robert won’
t have to deal with his brutality anymore, since the kid will likely be taken away soon.” Then, she stopped abruptly.
Brian sensed she had slipped into her zone of discomfort. She probably didn’t want to let out that piece of information. Not that much. Or perhaps Brian’s hunch was wrong. At any rate, he pursued it. “Brutality?”
“What?”
“Did you say Donnie maltreats Robert?”
“Yes, he does.”
“Tell me more.”
******
“Trevor was a good man,” Brad said, adjusting his hearing-aid device, “especially in the business of the school. Very loved by teachers and students alike. I think that helped a great deal in hiding the other aspect of him, which was the way he treated Robert.”
“Mrs. Wilson never said a thing about the principal bullying the kid,” Brian said. “Even though I tried really hard to extract the truth from her. She only focused her revelation on Donnie.”
“Well, like I’ve stated, Mr. Carter’s good personality was strong enough to mask the other side of him,” Brad said.
“I had a chat with Donnie himself a few days ago, trying to pry some facts out of him.”
“And what did he offer?”
“Nothing useful. He denied ever noticing the boy being maltreated by fellow students, let alone fessing up to his own hostile disposition towards the boy. He made no mention of the deceased man’s role, either.”
Brad blinked. “I don’t suppose you have a notion I made this up, Sheriff, do you?”
“Oh, not at all,” Brian said.
“Good,” Brad said. “Because even the boy’s mother is aware of this. I contacted her about it once, though I warned her not to mention my name if she decided to lodge a complaint. She did nothing about it. And you would’ve thought she would be eager to deal with the situation, wouldn’t you?”
“That’s what one would have expected. But she was probably thinking of you—of not wanting to get you involved and end up getting you in trouble.”
“She doesn’t have to mention me. How would anyone have known about me if she’d pursued the issue?”
“Words have their own ways of bursting out, however hard we try to keep them secretive. That’s just my take on it.”
Brad shrugged. He made his next comment as if he wasn’t following Brian’s line of thought about the probable reason for the woman’s inaction. “I don’t understand her at all.”
Sheriff Stack steered the conversation forward. “So, for how long has this been going on? The bullying, that is?”
“Since the first day Robert set his feet on the soil of the school. I gotta tell you one thing, though. The boy’s a little weird.”
“Weird in what sense?”
“Stories, Sheriff. An overdose of horror stories. And at his age, I think it’s a little outlandish to have such a thing going for him.”
“I’ve got that info as well,” Brian said. “Is that it?”
Brad appeared puzzled. “Is what what?
“Is that everything weird about the boy?”
“Well, yeah. With the strange pictures he used to bring to school. Kinda creepy, and that’s not just my opinion,” Brad said. “It’s what everyone thinks.”
Chapter 7
At five-thirty on a drizzly Tuesday morning, the week following Trevor Carter’s murder, Brian and his Deputy, Allan Moore, paid Holly a second visit. They had gone there the previous night to inform her that the hair sample at the scene of murder was certainly Robert’s. And though more reports on the blood specimen were still under way, it already seemed Robert might be getting very close to being charged with murder.
“Have you received the rest of the reports now, Sheriff?” Holly asked as she opened the front entrance door, one hand on the knob, the other trying to put her unruly night robe in check. “Since you couldn’t even wait for the day to break, is it time to arrest my son?”
“We’re not here to arrest your son, Holly. Not yet, anyway.”
“What a respite,” Holly said, and Brian could feel the heat of sarcasm radiating from her. “I’m trying to take a guess on the purpose of this visit. Are there more bodies—like maybe two or three together this time?”
The two men exchanged glances briefly.
“Well, since I’ve figured there’s no point beating around the mulberry bush,” Allan said, his shaggy raven black hair peeping out of the hood, which in turns dripped water onto the porch steps, “yes, there’s been another murder down the Sebastian River, but—”
Holly gasped.
“But it’s only one—not two or three like you stated. Perhaps the remaining two will be discovered later,” Allan concluded in his own sarcastic way.
“Good Lord,” Holly said. “Again? And I didn’t mean any of my words. I was only ... was only ...”
“It’s all right,” Brian said, hunching over as a plastic bag he carried under his raincoat scratched his groin. “But first things first—may we come inside? This drizzle is soaking us the heck up—defying even the raincoats.”
******
“What has this new death got to do with my son again, Sheriff?” Holly asked, once seated in the living room.
Brian scratched at the nape of his neck. “I hate to say this, but Rob’s getting caught up in something really messy, messy and pretty mysterious. And when I speak of mystery, I mean the reason why he’s doing what he’s doing.”
“Doing what? Killing the residents one by one?”
Allan cleared his throat. “Mrs. Smallwood—”
“Call me Holly, please.”
“All right, sorry, Holly. As I was saying, Rob’s paraphernalia was found at the bank of Sebastian River: a knife, exactly the size and type as the one found in Mr. Carter’s office, soggy red hair—”
“And that has to belong to Rob? Deputy, the red hair has to be my son’s?”
“Not necessarily, but—”
Holly went on. “Oh, wait a minute. I just got it. Every red hair in this community will automatically be his. And as a result, the most notorious twelve-year-old redhead in the community has become the murderer of men. See how ridiculous and dumb that sounds?”
“Maybe it does, but Mrs. Smallwood ... I mean, Holly, we’re stringing different facts together to make a solid and convincing case here, rather than cherry-picking a single shred of evidence that might mislead us.”
“Exactly my point. It feels like everything’s been going the wrong direction since last week,” Holly said.
“Your point isn’t exactly ours—hell, it’s not even close,” Brian snapped. “If you would just hear us out—calm down and hear us out.”
Holly relaxed in her seat. “Okay, I’m listening. Tell me everything.”
“In addition to what Allan just stated, there’s a copy of The Black Mirage at the scene, a novel—a horror novel—by Orrobbs Porter. It’s Rob’s copy, judging by the name on it,” Brian said, dipping his hand into the translucent plastic bag he had brought along with him. He drew out the book. Shoving forward a bit in his chair, he opened the first page, revealing Rob’s name for Holly to see. Holly’s jaw dropped, and her lips trembled momentarily. “Not a big surprise to me. I’ve already learned that Rob has a copy from my last chat with him.” Brian put the book back in the bag. “Holly, are you aware Rob has such a book, or is this fresh revelation to you?”
“Of course, I do. I bought it for him. And a lot more. I don’t suppose that’s a criminal thing for a parent to do, is it?”
Brian ignored her question. “Ever noticed any of those books missing? Or maybe loaned to his friends?”
“He doesn’t loan his books out. Doesn’t have any friends interested in the same thing he reads. Hardly has any friends at all. In fact, he has none.”
“Not even a friend?”
“Not even one.”
“If my memory serves me right, you stated that he likes watching soccer as much as he likes playing it.”
“Correct.”
“
Do you like soccer, Holly? Do you like to watch and play it?”
Holly frowned. “What has that got to do with the news of death you’ve brought?”
“Oh, I was just wondering if Robert has to play his soccer and enjoy it to a good extent, he’ll need to do so with at least a friend. But since he doesn’t have a friend—”
“He plays all by himself, Sheriff,” Holly cut in. “All by himself.”
“All right, Holly,” Brian sat back straight in his chair. “May we have a look-through of your son’s collection?”
Holly’s eye grew bigger. “Where’s this heading?”
Allan said, “We’re all out to help you—as well as find an answer to all of this. But if we’re gonna pulled anything through, we’ll need your co-operation in place.”
******
In the reading room, they went through Rob’s pile of books.
“Damn,” Allan remarked, “this’s an awful lot of books for a twelve-year-old.”
“Keep at it, Allan. We’ve got a long trip ahead of us. This journey has probably just begun.”
“Or perhaps it’s not even started yet,” Allan joked.
After they rummaged through a hundred and ninety-nine books and found out The Black Mirage was missing, Brian said, “I think this just seals the deal. The book is his.”
Tears had started gathering at the corners of Holly’s eyes, getting ready to roll down her cheeks. “What‘s gonna become of me ... and my baby? This is too much for me to bear. What am I gonna do? Who’s gonna help me?” She turned to Brian. “Why’s this happening to me, Sheriff?”
Brian moved towards the doorway, and ran his fingers through his hair. He sounded as concerned as he could. “I wish I knew. We all wish we did. And maybe we would—in good time. That’s our hope.”
“Where’s he?” Allan said.
“Who? Rob?”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“In bed, of course.”
“Could we check on him briefly?”