by Tami Hoag
“No one has missed her yet. How awful is that?”
The door opened then, and Principal Garnett ushered in a blonde woman and a little girl who was her spitting image in miniature.
9
Wendy walked into the big conference room with its big windows and big table, and felt as if she were getting smaller and smaller. Even though she was way over having to hold hands with her mom, she was glad to be doing so in that moment.
Miss Navarre looked angry at first—she was looking at the man at the end of the table—but then she turned and smiled a little.
“Hi, Wendy. Hi, Mrs. Morgan,” she said. She had dark circles under her eyes, just like Wendy’s mom did. “How are you doing today?”
“I’m okay,” Wendy said. “I’m just weirded out, that’s all.”
“She had bad dreams,” her mother confessed. “So did I.”
“So did I,” Miss Navarre admitted.
“So did I,” said the man at the end of the table. He came around and offered his hand to Wendy’s mom. “I’m Detective Mendez from the sheriff’s office.”
“Sara Morgan.”
“And you’d be Wendy,” he said, offering his hand to her.
Impressed, Wendy shook it. He was very cute. He looked a little like Magnum P.I. with the dark hair and the mustache—only he was shorter, and he probably didn’t drive a red Ferrari or live on a fabulous estate. And he was wearing a coat and tie instead of shorts and a Hawaiian shirt. That was the difference between being a TV star and working in Oak Knoll, she supposed.
“I’m the detective assigned to investigate the case,” he explained as he motioned for everyone to take a seat. “So one of the first things I need to do is ask you and your friends some questions about what happened in the park yesterday. There’s nothing for you to be worried about. You’re not in any trouble.”
“I didn’t do anything to be in trouble for,” Wendy said, taking the chair nearest to the detective at the head of the table. She straightened her acid-washed denim skirt and matching jean jacket, wanting to look appropriately grown-up and hip. Copying the style from a picture of Madonna in a magazine, she had pulled half her thick wavy hair up into a ponytail on top of her head.
“Dennis touched her,” she said. “He should be in trouble for that, right? Touching a dead person. Isn’t that illegal or something?”
“That depends,” the detective said.
“It was all Dennis’s fault,” Wendy said. “If he wasn’t such a psycho and hadn’t been chasing us, we never would have cut through the woods.”
Detective Mendez stopped her to turn on his tape recorder and announce who was in the room.
“Did you see anyone else in the woods, Wendy?” he asked.
“No.”
“No one around the area where the body was?”
“No people, but there was a dog. He came out of the bushes and it was like he was guarding her or something.”
“What kind of a dog?”
“The scary kind with big teeth and beady eyes. You know.”
“A pit bull?”
“Maybe. But he didn’t attack us,” she hastened to add. “He just growled like he was telling us to stay away from the lady. Dennis said maybe the dog killed her and buried her like a bone, but that’s stupid—right?”
Her mother spoke up then. “She tells me that they didn’t touch the dog—”
“We didn’t!” Wendy insisted, mortified that her mother would bring this up again. Who cared if they touched the stupid dog?
“So it was just the three of you that found the body.”
“Four. Me and Tommy, and Dennis and Cody.”
“Cody was there too?” Miss Navarre asked.
“Who’s Cody?” the detective asked.
“Cody Roache,” Miss Navarre said. “I thought of him last night. He’s usually wherever Dennis Farman is, but he wasn’t in the park when I got there.”
“Because he screamed like a baby and ran away,” Wendy said with a certain amount of disgust. “The deputies came because of him.”
The detective looked at Miss Navarre. “I’ll need to speak to him as well.”
“Have you found out who the woman was?” Wendy’s mother asked.
“Not yet.”
“This is so awful. Nothing like this ever happens here.”
“The dog knows who she is,” Wendy said.
“Wendy,” her mother said impatiently, “enough about the dog.”
Mendez held his hand up to stop her talking, but his eyes were on Wendy.
“Did the dog have a collar on?”
Wendy shrugged. “I don’t remember. He had big teeth. I remember that.”
“What color was the dog?”
“White with big black splotches.” She turned and gave her mother her best so-there look, then turned back to the detective. “He was black all around one eye and ear.”
Detective Mendez scribbled that all down in his notebook. Obviously, these were very important clues.
“Could this really be important?” Wendy’s mother asked.
“If we can find the dog, and the dog has tags, maybe the dog belonged to the victim and we can find out who she was through the registration with the city,” Detective Mendez explained. “It’s probably a long shot, but you never know.”
“You’ve been a big help, Wendy,” Miss Navarre said. “It’s a good thing you’re so observant.”
“Thank you, Miss Navarre,” Wendy said, beaming. Detective Mendez reached out his hand to her again. “Thanks, Wendy. If you remember anything else, you can have your mother or Miss Navarre call me.”
Wendy had never felt quite so important. This was just like being in a Nancy Drew mystery. Maybe she would write this story herself and become famous. Maybe Tommy would want to be in on it with her. Now that the idea had come to her, she couldn’t wait to ask him.
Miss Navarre led the way out the side door to the dark, quiet hall, a place that called for whispers.
“I’m still not sure what we’re going to do about counseling,” her mother whispered to Miss Navarre.
Wendy intervened. “Mom, I’m fine. I saw a dead person. I’m not warped for life.”
“No, I am,” her mother said. “Maybe I’m the one that needs counseling.”
“Everyone is shaken up,” Miss Navarre said. “But if Wendy feels all right to come back to class, then that’s probably what she should do.”
“Yeah, Mom, don’t make such a big deal.”
Miss Navarre turned to her then. “It is a big deal, Wendy. So if you’re in class and find yourself suddenly feeling scared or upset, you have to promise you’ll tell me right away.”
“I will. I promise,” Wendy said and looked up eagerly at her mother, who was clearly not convinced.
“I’ll keep a close eye on her,” Miss Navarre promised.
“All right,” Wendy’s mother said grudgingly. She looked down at Wendy, worried. “But you do exactly what Miss Navarre just told you, and under no circumstances are you to walk home. I will be here to pick you up.”
So much for revisiting the scene of the crime so she could make notes about the setting for her story, Wendy thought. Oh well. It wasn’t like she was ever going to forget what had happened.
That was for sure.
She couldn’t wait to talk to Tommy.
10
Jane Thomas always began her day in the garden. This was her quiet time to think and reflect. Working in the garden was her version of meditation and the closest she would ever come to actually stilling her always-busy mind.
Even though she had gotten in late, driving up from LA after a long day of meetings, she had still managed to rise before most of Oak Knoll. The sky was that perfect electric blue of fall, the temperature comfortably in the low seventies. She made her way along the row, deadheading roses while Violet, her black pug, patrolled for mice among the overgrown patch of purple cone flowers.
Jane loved her home in Oak Knoll. She had purchased the 1928 Spa
nish hacienda-style house nearly five years before, after she had divorced her husband and Los Angeles. Oak Knoll had always attracted her with its interesting mix of people and small-town feel. The college gave it the sophistication of academia and the vibrancy of youth. Its proximity to Santa Barbara and to the northern parts of the LA sprawl made it a doable commute for young professionals with young families, promising a future. All of Oak Knoll’s attributes made it a desirable place for retirees with money, bringing affluence and support for the arts.
The college boasted a well-respected music program that attracted talented musicians and singers, both as students and teachers. Every summer Oak Knoll was home to a renowned festival of classical music.
Even though Jane still kept a condo in LA, Oak Knoll was her true home and the Oak Knoll Thomas Center for Women was her focus.
The Oak Knoll center was a scaled-down version of the original Thomas Center in Los Angeles. The centers, brainchild of Jane and her two sisters and started with money from the Thomas family philanthropic trust, were places for women to reinvent themselves.
The clientele was made up of women from all walks of life, women who needed and deserved a second chance. Homeless women, battered women, women with drug histories or police records—all were welcomed and not judged. Each center offered shelter to those who needed it, assistance with health care, psychological and job counseling, and the makeovers of wardrobe and self that would send them out into the job market with confidence and newfound self-esteem.
The Thomas girls had been raised on the ideal of giving back to the community and helping the less fortunate. Forty-one, Jane had found success in the business world and was a well-known patron of the arts. She sat on the boards of several nationally significant charities, but the Thomas Centers for Women were her pride and joy.
Through the open back door of her house she could hear the phone ringing for the third time in an hour. She never took calls during her gardening time, everyone who knew her knew that. But three calls in an hour made it seem like someone was desperate to get hold of her, and a strange uneasy feeling moved through her.
Her parents were both alive and well, but that didn’t mean something couldn’t happen to them. Her sister Amy was vacationing on a ranch in Idaho. She could have fallen from a horse or been attacked by a bear while hiking.
“You’re being ridiculous,” Jane muttered to herself, but she was moving toward the house and pulling off her gloves as she said it.
The answering machine had picked up by the time she walked through the kitchen to her antique desk in the front room. Angry red numbers flashed seven messages unheard. She hadn’t taken the time to listen to the four that had been there the night before. She had been tired and had gone straight to her room for a bath, bed, and a chapter of Sense and Sensibility.
The first message was from her assistant at the center, Tuesday, 10:34 A.M.
“Hi, Jane. Sorry to bother you, but Quinn, Morgan and Associates called to say that Karly Vickers was a no-show this morning. Today was supposed to be her first day on the job. I thought you’d want to know.”
Second message: Tuesday at 3:23 P.M.
“Miss Thomas, this is Boyd Ellery from The Nature Conservancy. Could you please give me a call when you have a chance. I want to run something past you with regards to the benefit.”
Third message: Tuesday, 5:14 P.M.
“Jane, it’s me again. I’ve been trying to contact Karly, and she doesn’t answer her phone. I’m going to drop by her house on my way home and make sure she’s all right.”
Fourth message: Tuesday, 7:11 P.M. “It’s me again. I’m at Karly’s. She’s not here. I don’t know what to think.”
Fifth message: Wednesday, 7:27 A.M. Her assistant again. She sounded tired and nervous.
“Jane, I don’t know what time you got in last night. Did you see the news? Call me.”
Sixth message: Wednesday, 7:39 A.M.
“Jane, it’s Mom. We haven’t heard from you in a couple of days. We just saw the news. Please call and let us know you’re all right.”
The news. What news? Why wouldn’t she be all right?
Seventh message: Wednesday, 7:52 A.M. Her assistant again.
“Jane, there’s been a murder. Answer your damn phone. I have a terrible feeling it might be Karly.”
11
Tommy hadn’t slept very much at all. Every time he had started to fall asleep, he had jerked himself awake, afraid of the dreams he knew would come. But every time his father or mother would come to check on him—which they did several times—he would pretend to be sound asleep.
He had gotten up as soon as it started getting light outside and started the homework he hadn’t done the night before. He didn’t know what the day would bring. Maybe he would be taken to a doctor or a psychiatrist, or maybe the police would take him in for questioning. The thing he most wanted to do was go to school and carry on as if the day before had never happened. As if.
Now he sat in the school office, waiting, his mother on one side, his father on the other. The secretaries kept looking over at him, then exchanging glances. He felt like a freak in the circus. Murder Boy.
He sighed and shifted on his chair. His father put his hand on his shoulder and gave a little squeeze. His mother got up and went to the counter to ask the secretary how long it would be.
“Are you nervous?” his father asked.
Tommy shrugged.
“All you have to do is tell the detective what happened and what you saw.”
Tommy said nothing. He stared at the doorway that led into the hall where the principal’s office and the conference room were, willing Wendy to come out and give him some kind of signal.
He heard a door open, but it wasn’t Wendy who emerged from the hall. It was a dark-haired man in a coat and tie, and he looked right at Tommy, then at his dad.
“Dr. Crane?”
“Yes,” his father said, rising.
His mother turned away from the secretary and stepped forward with her hand outstretched and her smile wide. “Janet Crane.”
“I’m Detective Mendez.” The detective greeted his parents only briefly, then focused on Tommy, bending over and offering his hand. “Hey, Tommy. How you doin’?”
Tommy shrugged and slid off his chair, sticking his hands in his pants pockets. Adults always thought they could impress kids by pretending to treat them like they weren’t kids.
“Tommy,” his mother said. “Manners.”
“I’m okay,” Tommy said. He was fine for having fallen on a dead woman.
They all went down the hall to the conference room, where Miss Navarre was waiting, trying not to look anxious. Pale with dark smudges under her eyes, she smiled at him like she was willing him to be brave.
“Did you get any sleep last night, Tommy?” Miss Navarre asked as they all took seats at the big table.
“He slept through the night,” his mother announced. “I gave him an antihistamine before bed. To help him relax.”
Detective Mendez raised an eyebrow but didn’t look at Tommy’s mother. He was messing with a tape recorder and shuffling through some papers.
“Tommy has allergies,” his mother went on. “He has a prescription. It’s nothing he hasn’t taken before.”
The detective spoke to the cassette recorder, telling it who was in the room.
“Dr. Crane. What kind of a doctor are you?”
“I’m a dentist. Tommy has a pediatrician, of course.”
Mendez pursed his lips and went, “Hmmm.”
Tommy’s mother frowned, displeased. She thought the detective was disapproving of her. Tommy could tell by the way she narrowed her eyes and pressed her lips together.
“I spoke to his doctor last night,” she said. “I was concerned about Tommy having nightmares.”
“Tommy, did you have any nightmares?” the detective asked. “You had quite a scare yesterday.”
Tommy shook his head and scratched his left forearm wher
e his cuts had begun to itch.
“Really? That’s impressive. I had nightmares. Miss Navarre had nightmares.”
“I was just asleep,” Tommy said, looking down at the tabletop.
“Can you tell me how it went down yesterday?”
“We were running, and we fell down a hill, and I landed by the dead lady.” Short and sweet.
“Did you see anyone else around? Any adult?”
“No.”
“Do you think the killer could have still been there?” Tommy’s mother asked, alarmed.
“I don’t know,” Mendez said. “I’m just asking.”
“He could have seen the kids,” his mother went on, her eyes widening. “And now their names will be in the press.”
Mendez flicked a glance at her. “They’re minors. No one can legally print their names without permission.”
“We’re certainly not giving permission.”
“It wouldn’t be very likely that the killer was there,” Tommy’s father said. “Right? I mean, he would have to be crazy to bury a body in the park in broad daylight.”
“Who other than a crazy person could have done this?” his mother asked.
“You’d be surprised, Mrs. Crane,” Detective Mendez said. “I’ve done a lot of research on the subject. This guy could appear as ordinary as anyone in this room. He’s not crazy in the common sense of the word. In fact, he’s probably of above-average intelligence.”
“That’s unnerving,” Tommy’s father said.
“Ted Bundy had been to law school. He was a Young Republican and people in high places believed he had a big future ahead of him. He murdered—”
Miss Navarre cleared her throat the way people do when they want someone to shut up. Mendez looked at her and she tipped her head in Tommy’s direction.
Tommy made a mental note to look up this Bundy guy in the encyclopedia.
“Is that what you think is going on here, Detective?” Tommy’s father asked. “A serial killer? What would make you think that?”
Detective Mendez looked like he’d gotten caught saying something he shouldn’t have. “It’s really too soon to say.”