by Gregg Olsen
“Can I send you something?” she asked, letting go of what she’d wanted to share about her own reading.
“No,” he said. “They’d probably just steal it. Bunch of thieves in here.”
She winced at the irony. “Were you abused? You know sexually?”
“Whoa! Where did that come from?”
“My reading. Just some FBI perv thinks that a lot of people like you, you know, have been abused.”
It was his turn to let it slide. The “people like you” comment was made without judgment.
“Wish I could be with you. I’d like to take you for a drive. Maybe up in the mountains.”
“I’d love that, Ted. More than anything.”
“Guard says that I have to go now. Guy’s an asshole. A couple of the jailers aren’t so bad. Gave me access to a typewriter. I’m thinking of writing to my congressman to see if I could get a little consideration. Maybe even the president. Bet he’d like a letter from Teddy Bundy.
“I’d like a letter, Ted,” she said.
“Okay. Will do.”
And then the call was over. Peg Howell didn’t know it, but it was the last phone call for a very long time that she’d get from the guy she’d fallen in love with.
The first letter came four days later. It was stamped by a jailer that it had been opened and reviewed for content. Peg wondered what it was they were looking for in the letter. Ted was an eloquent, thoughtful writer. He wasn’t going to put anything on paper that wasn’t in keeping with his very important stature. He was also a lover, the gentlest she could imagine.
Dear Peg,
You probably have a little idea about how lonely I am. Because judging by your last letter, you are too. I sit in my cell all day—except for one fifteen-minute stretch where they let me go out into the so-called yard for exercise. It is a total joke. The “yard” is about the size of a Ping-Pong table. I walk around it about a hundred times and then my time is up. I am glad that you are in my life. I think about you all day—and all night. If you were in the yard with me, I’d bet we’d figure out real fast what we could do in fifteen minutes. Are you blushing? I bet you are.
Hey, I’m about out of cigarette money. Can you send me some? Same as last time? The food here is crap too. I wish you could fix me one of those sausage and peppers dinners you were talking about in your last letter. Sounds good.
Tomorrow I have a psych evaluation with the county-appointed shrink. I’ll ask him if I’m supposed to be a bed wetter!
Love, Ted
She answered back right away. In fact, Peg Howell never put off writing back to Ted. A man like him—refined, charming, handsome—was not the kind of man a woman should ever keep waiting. Peg always wrote in longhand and she sprinkled some Jontue on each of her love-laced missives. She was fascinated by him and so very much in love. There was no way that she could explain to anyone that she’d fallen for Ted Bundy, because no one could ever understand. Their love for each other was epic, beyond all reason. She knew it. He knew it. No one else in the world mattered.
Dear Ted,
I was thinking that when you get out we should move far, far away from Tacoma. It holds nothing but bad memories for both of us. Maybe we could go to Idaho or somewhere where no one would know who you are. That sounds dumb now that I’ve committed it to paper. I don’t think there is a person on this planet who hasn’t heard of you. I want them to know the Teddy that I know—the smartest, most handsome man that ever walked the earth. I mailed a check for $100 for your canteen. I wish that you’d quit smoking, babe. It isn’t good for you. You’ll die of cancer or something, and then where will I be? I’m letting my hair grow out like you want me to. It is getting longer and longer by the day. I’ll be ready to send you a photo in a couple of weeks. Well, that’s all for now. Have got a lot of things to do.
Love, Peggy
Peggy Howell hurried inside, the package held tightly in her arms. She spun around the kitchen looking for a knife to unzip the clear plastic tape that sealed the box shut. The outside of the box was emblazoned with the logo WIGS BY GABOR. Her heart pounding with anticipation, she pulled the two facing pieces open. Inside, under a blanket of cellophane, was shiny swirl of hair; a wig with a style name of SUSAN. There was no saying who Susan was, but when Peggy saw the photo in the back of the National Enquirer she was sure it was styled after the actress Susan Dey, who played Laurie, the eldest daughter, in the ABC TV series The Partridge Family.
She lifted it out as if it was a treasure beyond every expectation. Gently. Respectfully. She held it on her balled-up fist and shook it carefully, letting the genuine synthetic locks fall around her upright arm.
Peggy bent forward and placed the wig over her own hair. As she hurried down the hallway to the bathroom, her heart beat faster and faster. She flicked on the light switch and nodded in approval.
“Oh Ted,” she said as her eyes ran over her face in the mirror, “you really like it? I grew it out just for you.” She tilted her head and twirled a long strand. “Honestly, I don’t know what I was thinking wearing my hair so short before. This is so, so much more attractive, don’t you think?”
Peggy wasn’t sure who she’d get to take her picture. She didn’t have any real friends. There was always her mother. As much as she hated her, her mother could probably be put to use in some way. She owed her something.
That night in her dreams, Ted came to Peggy. He appeared out of the darkness next to her bed like some unbelievably handsome phantom. His eyes flashed a kind of wild sexiness that made her blush. It was as if he knew that he could do anything he wanted to her and she’d let him. She’d beg him. The window was open and Peggy reasoned that he’d come from somewhere outside. Ted was shirtless, in blue jeans and Nike running shoes. His brow, his tangle of brown hair, his chest were sticky with sweat.
“Ted?” she asked.
“Yes,” he said, studying her with a grin stretched across his face.
She sat up in the bed. “Where were you?” she asked.
“I was out running,” he said. She couldn’t quite determine if his tone was dismissive or angry, as if she dared to question him. She hadn’t meant it in an accusatory manner, just a question. And yet he seemed a little on edge, so she pushed harder.
“Where?” she asked, this time with more force. She wanted to know where she stood with Ted. Was she a lover? A confidante? Or just another groupie of a man who other girls swooned over? His dangerousness. His charm. His ability to weaken them at the knees. She was sure she was more than that, but she asked anyway.
Ted stood still by the open window as the air sucked right out of the room. “Nowhere, really,” he said. “Just out. Trying to sort things out.” When he looked away, a shard of light caught his cheek and Peggy noticed three parallel scratches ran from his temple to his jawline. Pinpricks of blood oozed from each scratch.
Panic and concern replaced Peggy’s omnipresent neediness. She wanted to be strong, but she knew that she could barely manage that when it came to Ted Bundy.
“You’re hurt, Ted. What happened?” She slid toward the edge of the bed, and beckoned for him to sit next to her. “Tell me, Ted.” She patted the mattress.
He didn’t even look at her before he started back toward the open window. She wondered a second if that was how he’d made his way into her bedroom.
“Not really hurt, Peg,” Ted said over his naked shoulder. “Just a scratch from running. Hit a damn branch.”
Peggy put her feet on the dust-bunny-littered wood plank floor and started to fumble in the darkness, clawing toward him, her handsome, elusive Ted.
“Let me help you,” she said, pleading as though her life depended on it.
Silence echoed in the bedroom.
“Let me take care of you,” she said. “Come to me. Don’t make me beg, but if you do, I will. I want you. Whatever it takes.”
Ted Bundy had a cold side. She knew it, though she’d never directly experienced it before. Not even in a dream. That chan
ged when Ted came through her window. He actually glowered at her.
“Don’t need help from some stupid bitch,” he said, his voice a little soft, as if he was trying to mitigate the true meaning of his words. Yet there was no mistaking it. No matter how clever Ted was or wanted to be. It was still loud enough to hear.
Peggy’s chest tightened and tensed. She wasn’t sure of the meaning of Ted’s words, if he was directing them specifically at her or, she hoped, someone else.
“Theodore, what in the world are you saying?”
He turned toward her, his eyes dark and cold. A puff of warm air came from his mouth. “Kidding, Peg. Love you. Love your hair, too.” Then he winked.
She looked downward and touched her hair—the shimmery, silky Gabor wig. The Susan was fashioned of long dark tresses, parted in the center with the precision of a ruler. It was just what he loved.
He loved the way she looked.
When she turned to embrace and kiss him, Ted was gone. A breeze caused the curtain to flutter. Peggy got up and rushed toward the window, holding her wig in place.
“Theodore, come back! Don’t go to her! You only love me!”
“I can’t wait to show you what I bought, Mother,” Peggy said the next morning when she’d summoned the courage to model her latest purchase. Behind her back, she gripped the Gabor wig.
Donna Howell looked excited. “Did you get me my favorite chocolates? Almond Roca, you know. Tacoma’s finest and famous candy.”
Peggy shook her head. “No, Mother, not Almond Roca. Next time, I promise. But this is even better.”
“Nothing’s better than chocolate,” the older woman said, a cigarette dangling from her thin lips. “Except maybe sex, but it’s been a while since I’ve had either.”
“Close your eyes, please,” Peggy said. “No fair peeking, either.”
“Good God, Peggy, will you grow up and quit playing games?” Donna closed her eyes and expelled a lung-full of smoke, and it joined the cloud of yellow and white that circled over her like a swarm of wasps. She loved Almond Roca and the pretty pink tins that the candy came in.
“You can open them now,” Peggy said.
Donna looked at her daughter. She immediately had a disgusted look on her face. “What in the world have you got on your head now?”
“Mother, it’s a wig. Long hair is very, very in, and you know mine takes forever to grow out.”
“You look like some kind of a slut with that kind of long hair. Cheap. Like a dime-store floozy.”
Peggy felt her face grow warm, but she vowed that she wouldn’t argue with her mother. She didn’t have anyone else she could really turn to. She needed that favor.
“I’m not so sure about it, either.”
“I must be going deaf,” Donna said. “I thought I heard you agree with me.”
Peggy didn’t, but she hated fighting with her mother about everything. “I said I wasn’t sure. I looked in the mirror and I don’t think I like it as much as I had hoped I would. It’s a Gabor wig, you know.”
“The Green Acres actress?”
“Yes,” Peggy said, swinging her hair slightly as if to make it all the more real looking.
“Makes sense in a way. Like one of those wigs on Miss Piggy.”
“Mother!”
Donna shrugged and reached for her smokes. “You asked my opinion. You get what you ask for when it comes to me. No holds barred. That’s the kind of mother I am and always will be. No matter how stupid you are, I’ll never feel sorry for you. Your stupidity came from your father’s side.”
Peggy pulled a small Instamatic camera from her purse.
“Will you take my picture? I want to see what it looks like in a photograph. It’ll help me decide.”
“Waste of film,” Donna said.
“Please, Mother. I’ll go to the mall and get you those chocolates.”
Donna thought a moment. “I don’t know. I don’t know why I have to do something in order to get a gift from you. Doesn’t seem right. You always were an unbelievably selfish creature. Got that from your dad, too. Bad genes.”
Peggy ignored the poisoned words. As awful as her mother was just then, there were times when she was far, far worse.
“Please,” Peggy said. “I’ll get you a two-pound tin.”
Another drag on the cigarette followed by two streams of smoke out of her widening nostrils and then she held her hand out for the camera.
“You look wretched,” Donna said. “But I want the candy.”
Peggy handed her mother the small Kodak camera. She posed with her hand on her hip and her lips slightly parted. It was her attempt at a come-hither look. She wasn’t sure if she’d be able to pull it off. There wasn’t going to be any coaxing from her mother to make sure the shot was just right.
“Take another, Mother, please. I’m at the end of the roll.”
Peggy had known her mother would only snap one or two, so she’d taken a bunch of filler photographs before coming over.
“Waste of film,” she said.
“Only three left. I could take your picture.”
“Like hell you will. Unlike you, I know I’m past my prime. I don’t need any reminders of what I used to look like. Too bad you didn’t get my good looks. And too bad you got your dad’s bad hair. Whole family on his side has bad hair.”
The camera went off two more times and Peggy’s mother pushed it back at her.
“Now get out of here and get me my candy, you stupid little bitch.”
“Yes, Mother,” she said. “Fuck you, Mother.”
Donna narrowed her brow. “What did you just say?”
“I said, ‘thank you, Mother,’ ” Peggy said.
Donna paused a moment, scouring her daughter’s face for the trace of a lie.
“That’s what I thought you said,” she said.
Peggy spun around and went for the door, promising to come back right away with the chocolates.
A half hour later, she stood at the one-hour photo place and waited for the images to roll off the conveyor belt.
A spectacled worker in a white lab coat with a name tag that said ANSON met her back at the counter.
“Only three shots,” he said. “The rest of the roll must have been damaged. Other shots look blurry like they were taken of a carpeted floor or something.”
He was very observant.
“I’m sure they are fine.”
“No really. I can give you a free roll.”
“No, I’ll pay for those now.”
“Honestly, no problem, ma’am.”
“Give me those photos,” she said, her voice carrying the distinct tenor of a person impatient and annoyed.
Peggy didn’t even wait until she got in to the car. She’d gone to a lot of trouble—not to mention the purchase of some chocolates for the woman she hated more than anyone in the entire world. It was ironic that her mother had taken the photos. Her mother would call her every name in the book if she’d known how she’d fallen for Ted Bundy. She would never, ever understand.
Peggy took a deep breath as she stood in the parking lot and opened the envelope. The first one had her sexy look approximating something closer to indigestion. She blamed her mother for that. She was always putting her down. The second photo depicted her with her eyes half closed.
Her mother’s fault, too!
Finally, photo number three. Her last chance. Peggy took in a deep breath. “Oh God,” she said loud enough for a box boy nearby to hear her. He probably thought she was looking at some baby pictures. She didn’t know why people always acted so animated about such photographs.
She smiled and put the envelope in her purse.
Ted will adore this. I am the girl of his dreams and I alone can save him.
When Peggy got home, she ignored her cat and hurried to the kitchen table. The post office was open for another hour. He’d have the photo before the weekend—before their weekly phone call. Being in love with Ted was a dream come true.
&nb
sp; That stupid professor would never have left his wife.
CHAPTER 44
Peggy Howell put on a coat and stomped out the door. She was irritated by a lot of things and she needed to get out of the house. She cracked her window and smoked her last cigarette as she moved into downtown Tacoma traffic heading east toward River Road and the smoke shop where she bought her weekly carton. She turned up the music on the radio and listened to another Captain and Tennille song, “The Way You Touch Me.” Like “Love Will Keep Us Together,” it always made her think of Ted.
Peggy Howell’s best friend, the one who understood her above all others, the one who knew that she was worth something, was Ted. He was always the man of her dreams—smart, sexy, charismatic. He could have chosen any other girl in the world.
She looked over at the turnoff where the dead girls had been found. The yellow tape that announced a criminal investigation had been removed. She slowed her car and pulled over. The field of grass and blackberries had been trampled by the investigators as they sought to assemble the flotsam and jetsam of a murderer’s work. She unrolled the window and looked around, noticing the tire tracks, the footprints, even a LUNA bar wrapper that someone had left behind.
Chocolate chip, she mused. Ted’s favorite cookies were chocolate chip, not shortbread or oatmeal.
Next, she remembered a conversation they’d shared a few weeks before his execution.
“I can’t believe they are going to do this to you,” she said.
“I’m not done yet.”
“I know. I have faith.”
“Babe, we all need faith. Faith and peace.”
“I wish I could see you.”
“They won’t even let Carole,” he said.
“Do you have to bring her up?”
“She’s my wife,” he said. “But she’s nothing compared to you.”
“I know. But it still hurts whenever I hear her name. I would have done the same thing if you called me as a witness. I would be Mrs. Theodore Robert Bundy. Not her. She’s not even pretty, Ted.”