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Missing Pieces

Page 25

by Joy Fielding


  “Marijuana?!”

  “Ssh!” She immediately returned the container to her bag. “Do you have to yell everything?”

  “Are you crazy?” I demanded. “Bringing that stuff in here.”

  “Will you lower your voice and stop acting like some silly schoolgirl. Everybody does it.”

  I looked anxiously around me, at the black woman crying on her husband’s shoulder, the girl with the lip rings and tattoos pacing nervously behind the next table. “But how did you sneak it past the guards? Tom went through our bags with a magnifying glass.”

  “I stuffed it up my snatch,” she said, and giggled. “Close your mouth. Flies will get in.”

  “Your vagina?”

  “Vagina,” she echoed, her mouth twisting with disdain. “God, Kate, who but you uses words like vagina anymore?”

  “I don’t believe this.”

  “You’d be amazed to find out what goes on in places like these.”

  “But how does Colin get them back to his cell?”

  “Trust me, you don’t want to know.”

  “I think I’m going to be sick.”

  “You can’t be sick now. Here they come. Remember to keep your eyes on the watercooler.”

  I looked quickly from the door to the watercooler and back again to the door as several guards—tall, burly, vaguely menacing—escorted a coterie of about ten men into the room. All were dressed in the same blue prison garb, with one notable exception—Colin Friendly. Like me, he was wearing blue pants and an orange top.

  Now I understood why Jo Lynn had laughed at my choice of clothes. Orange T-shirts were what distinguished the prisoners on death row from the other inmates.

  My fingers went self-consciously to the neck of my orange blouse, as I watched my sister leap from her seat to embrace the convicted serial killer, his hands sliding down to cup her rear end, his palms catching the hem of her short skirt, momentarily exposing the rounded bare flesh of her buttocks. I realized, in that instant, that when Jo Lynn had rid her body of its hidden contraband, she’d also removed her panties. “Oh God,” I moaned as they broke from their embrace and walked toward me.

  Colin Friendly seemed taller than I remembered him from court, and while somewhat thinner, he was definitely more muscular. Probably he’d been working out, I thought as I rose unsteadily to my feet, my hands resolutely at my sides, trying to decide how I would react were he to offer his hand in greeting.

  He didn’t.

  “Colin,” Jo Lynn said, hanging on to his arm, “I’d like you to meet my sister, Kate. Kate, this is Colin, the love of my life.”

  “Nice to meet you, Kate,” he said easily. “Your sister talks about you all the time.”

  Or words to that effect. Truthfully, I’m not exactly sure what was said that morning, or during most of our time together in that so-called visiting park. The hours pass through my brain with the swiftness and cruelty of an ambush. I remember our conversation in fits and starts, a few choice words here, a chilling phrase there, most topics blending one into the other, one hour disappearing inside the next.

  “You don’t look much like sisters,” Colin was saying as we took our seats, Colin beside Jo Lynn, their hands in each other’s laps, despite the rules against touching. Prisoners were permitted opening and closing embraces, nothing in between, but the three guards who were present often looked the other way, and a wide variety of indiscretions were taking place, all of which I tried hard not to notice.

  “Different fathers,” I told him.

  “So Jo Lynn tells me.”

  “Isn’t he the most gorgeous thing you’ve ever seen?” Jo Lynn said, and giggled, like an adolescent. She leaned toward him, her bosom grazing the side of his arm, and wiped a dark curl away from his high forehead.

  He laughed with her. “You’re the most gorgeous thing I’ve ever seen, that’s for sure,” he told her without a trace of self-consciousness, as if I weren’t privy to their conversation, as if they were the only two people in the room. “You have no idea how jealous everybody is of me back on the row. They know I have the most beautiful, sexy woman in the world waiting for me every Saturday.”

  “I’m wearing your favorite underwear,” she told him, and I drew a huge intake of breath as I saw his hand sneak beneath her short skirt, and the laughter spread to his cold blue eyes.

  “I hope you’re taking real good care of your baby sister,” he said without looking at me, “until I get out of here.”

  I said nothing, tried to look elsewhere, saw similar gropings at other tables.

  “You gotta make sure she’s eating right and getting plenty of exercise and sleep.”

  “You shouldn’t be worrying about me,” Jo Lynn said. “You’ve got enough to worry about in here with all these perverts.”

  He laughed. “Yeah, we got ‘em all in here. Sodomites, pederasts, necrophiliacs, faggots. We even have guys that drink their own urine and eat their own shit. One guy likes to smear the stuff all over his body. Disgusting son of a bitch if there ever was one. I stay away from him, I tell you.”

  “Colin is in R Wing now,” Jo Lynn said, glancing briefly in my direction, “but when he first got here, they put him in Q Wing, which is where they house all the nut cases. Colin’s lawyers got him out of there pretty damn quick.”

  “It was a scary place,” Colin agreed, shaking his head, his hand disappearing farther under my sister’s skirt. “Here they pretty much leave me alone.”

  “Colin lets them think he’s guilty,” my sister explained.

  “Smart move,” I mumbled.

  “One of the perks of being on death row is that we get our own cells.”

  “You’re a lucky man,” I said.

  Colin’s head slowly turned from my sister to me, his eyes piercing through mine like a pin through a butterfly. “Your sister told me you had kind of a sarcastic sense of humor. I see what she means.”

  I said nothing, surprised and dismayed that my sister had discussed me in any kind of detail at all.

  “You don’t approve of me, do you?” he asked some time later, and it took me a moment to realize he was serious.

  “Does that surprise you?” I asked in return.

  “Disappoints me,” he answered.

  “You’re a convicted murderer,” I reminded him.

  “He’s innocent,” Jo Lynn said.

  “I’m innocent,” he repeated, eyes twinkling.

  I nodded, fell silent.

  “I brought you a present,” Jo Lynn said as we were eating our sandwiches, her voice a singsong. She indicated her purse with a nod of her head.

  “Brought you something too,” Colin told her, reaching into the pocket of his blue pants.

  Jo Lynn squealed with delight as he produced a handful of letters. “Oh good, fan mail,” she trilled, laughing as she opened the first letter. “‘Dear Colin,’” she read aloud, “‘you are the handsomest man I have ever seen. Your eyes are like sapphires, your face the visage of a Greek god.’ Visage? That’s one of your words, Kate.” She laughed. “Don’t you just love this stuff?” She tore into the next one. “‘Dear Colin, do not despair. As long as you accept Jesus and take Him to your heart, God will forgive you your sins and evil deeds.’ Stupid woman,” Jo Lynn proclaimed. “Colin didn’t commit any evil deeds.” She opened another letter, read silently for several seconds. “Oh, this is the best one yet. Listen to this, Kate. I bet you can identify with this one. ‘Dear Colin, I am fifty years old with brown hair and hazel eyes, and friends tell me I still have a pretty good figure.’” She glanced knowingly in my direction. “‘I know I’m a married woman with a husband who loves me, but the truth is, the only man I want is you. I think about you night and day. I long to suckle you to my breast, to cradle you in my arms, to give you all the love your mother denied you.’ What do you think, Kate?”

  “I think the woman wants a baby, not a man,” I answered, embarrassment staining my cheeks, like the blush I hadn’t bothered to apply.


  Jo Lynn handed the letters back to Colin. “Thanks for showing them to me, sweet buns.”

  “You know I don’t keep any secrets from you,” Colin said.

  “Just don’t go writing any of these crazies back,” Jo Lynn cautioned.

  “You don’t have to worry about a thing from me, babe,” he told her. “You know that.”

  “I know I love you.”

  “Not half as much as I love you.”

  “Now!” Jo Lynn suddenly hissed across the table, motioning with her chin toward the watercooler in the far corner of the room. I watched as one of the inmates snuck in behind it with his wife, another inmate and his wife positioned in front of it, perhaps blocking, perhaps guarding, perhaps simply waiting their turn. Seconds later, the cooler began shaking, the water inside it sloshing from side to side, like waves in a turbulent sea.

  “What happens if they get caught?” I asked.

  “You worry too much about consequences,” Jo Lynn said. “Besides, it’s the state’s fault for not allowing conjugal visits.”

  “A guy’s gotta do what a guy’s gotta do,” Colin Friendly said, squeezing my sister’s thigh.

  “You haven’t …” I started, then stopped, deciding I didn’t want to know.

  “Gone for a drink of water?” Jo Lynn teased. “No, we haven’t. Not yet, anyway.”

  “We’re saving ourselves for our wedding night,” Colin said, and they laughed.

  I jumped to my feet, although I’m not sure what I was planning to do. One of the guards looked over, his eyes an inquisitive squint. I smiled, pretended to stretch, then sat back down. “Have you set the date?”

  “Not yet. There’s still a lot of things that have to be arranged. Blood tests, shit like that. But it’ll be soon,” Jo Lynn assured me.

  “A simple thing like getting married, and they make it so difficult.” Colin shook his head in dismay. “Have you asked your sister yet?”

  “Asked me what?”

  “To be my matron of honor,” Jo Lynn said hopefully.

  I swallowed hard, looked away, tried not to burst into tears. She couldn’t be serious, I thought, knowing she was. “I don’t think that would be a very good idea.”

  “Why don’t you give yourself some time to think about it,” Colin advised, eyes boring into mine. “We’d sure appreciate your support.”

  “I’d sure appreciate knowing what happened to Amy Lokash,” I said, shocking not only my sister and her so-called fiance but myself as well. I’d been planning to ask about Rita Ketchum, not Amy. Obviously, my subconscious had other plans.

  “Amy L-lokash?” Colin stuttered for the first time all day.

  Jo Lynn rolled her eyes in disgust. “What are you trying to pull, Kate? Who the hell is Amy Lokash?”

  “She’s a seventeen-year-old girl who disappeared about a year ago. I thought you might know something about it.”

  “This is ridiculous,” my sister raged. “Colin, you don’t have to answer any of her stupid questions.” In the next instant, Jo Lynn was out of her seat and on her way to the rest room, adjusting her skirt across her bottom as she walked.

  “Isn’t she the juiciest thing you ever saw?” Colin marveled, eyes trailing after Jo Lynn until she disappeared.

  “Why don’t you just leave my sister alone.”

  “Say ‘please,’” he said, casually, almost as if he hadn’t spoken.

  “What?” Maybe I hadn’t heard him correctly.

  He swiveled toward me. “You heard me. Say ‘please.’” A sneer tugged at the corner of his lips. “Make that ‘pretty please.’”

  I said nothing.

  “You want me to leave your sister alone, you gotta do something for me. Say ‘pretty please.’ Go on, say it.”

  “Fuck you,” I said instead.

  He laughed, ran his tongue across his upper lip. “Maybe in time.”

  My body went instantly cold as I recalled my earlier nightmares. My heart beat wildly, its errant pulse reaching inside my brain, as noisy and relentless as a massive tractor-trailer, so loud against the inside of my ear that I could barely hear the sound of my own voice. “This is all a sick game to you, isn’t it?”

  “I don’t play games. I play for keeps.”

  “Did you kill Amy Lokash?” I asked, struggling to regain control.

  Colin Friendly leaned closer, rested his elbows on the table. “Cute kid, dimples, wore a little red plastic barrette in her hair?”

  I grabbed the side of the table for support, felt it cold against the palms of my hands. “Oh God.” I thought of Donna Lokash, wondered if I’d have the courage to confide in her the certainty of her daughter’s fate. “She was just a baby, for God’s sake. How could you hurt her?”

  “Well, you know what they say,” Colin said lazily. “Old enough to bleed, old enough to butcher.” He paused, allowing several seconds for this latest obscenity to sink in. “You familiar with John Prince Park?” he asked.

  I shook my head, too numb to do anything else.

  “Real pretty park. Just east of Congress between Lake Worth and Lantana roads. You should go there sometime. There’s barbecues and picnic benches, and a bicycle path, even a playground. Real pretty sight. Right on Lake Osborne. You know Lake Osborne?”

  “No.”

  “Too bad. It’s a pretty big lake, one of those long and winding numbers. A couple of little bridges. Real scenic. Lots of people fishing from the shore. Or you can rent boats. You should do that sometime, Kate. Rent a boat, take a little ride out to about the middle of the lake, where it’s deepest.”

  “What are you saying?”

  “Your daughters would really like it,” he said, smiling widely. “You’ve got a daughter Amy’s age, don’t you? Real attractive girl, if I remember correctly.”

  I held my breath.

  “And a younger one too. Michelle, right? Maybe one day, you, me, Sara, and Michelle, we could all get together, have some fun. I’ve never had a mother-daughter act before.”

  “Bastard,” I muttered.

  “So they say.”

  “I hope you rot in hell.”

  He smiled. “Does that mean you won’t be coming to the wedding?”

  I’m not sure what I said next, if, in fact, I said anything at all. I wanted to lash out, to slap that stupid smirk off his face, to pummel him lifeless. Instead I fled the room, as helpless as any of his victims, crying as I raced toward the parking lot, bugs swarming around my face, seagulls screeching overhead, a slight rain starting to fall. By the time Jo Lynn appeared, at just after three o’clock, I was soaking wet, my orange blouse clinging to my arms, like Saran Wrap, my hair plastered against my head, like seaweed.

  “The cows were right,” my sister said, unlocking the car door. Neither one of us said another word for the duration of the long ride home.

  Chapter 22

  Four days later, I stood on the shore of Lake Osborne, watching the police drag the area from small, flat-bottomed boats. A dive team, complete with scuba gear, had been in the water for the better part of the morning.

  “What are they looking for?” a woman asked, coming up beside me.

  “I’m not sure,” I said, truthfully. Amy Lokash had been missing, and presumably in her watery grave, for almost a year. What could the police hope to find?

  Unless Colin Friendly had weighted down her body, or encased it in cement, Amy’s body would have floated to the surface within days of its disposal. No such body had been found, the police were quick to assure me when I reported my conversation with the convicted serial killer.

  “He’s just playing with you,” one police officer told me. But they agreed to search the area anyway.

  Generally speaking, spectators aren’t allowed close to such a scene, but John Prince Park is a large public area, and easily accessible from a variety of spots. It’s impossible to close off the area entirely. In any event, it wouldn’t have been necessary. It was the middle of the week in the middle of February. There were only a smatte
ring of people in the park: a young mother pushing her toddler on a nearby swing, oblivious to everything but each other; two men strolling arm in arm, who took off as soon as they saw the police; a man drinking from a paper bag, too far gone to care if anyone saw him or not; several joggers, pausing briefly in their run to ask what was going on, then be on their way.

  I wasn’t sure why I’d come. Maybe I was hoping for some concrete evidence that I could present to my sister before it was too late. Maybe I was looking for some closure for Donna Lokash. Or maybe I was just putting off getting on with my own life, which today meant picking up my mother for our scheduled mammograms.

  By noon, the divers had returned to the surface shaking their heads, and it was becoming obvious that the police were about to call it quits, not having turned up anything but an old tire and several stray pairs of men’s shoes. Colin Friendly might have killed Amy Lokash, but he hadn’t thrown her body into Lake Osborne. The police were right—he’d been playing with me.

  An hour later, I was standing naked from the waist up, watching as expert, but indifferent, fingers placed first my right breast, then my left, between two cold surfaces, and squished them flat as a pancake. Smile for the camera, I thought, as I listened to the buzz of the large X-ray machine.

  “Okay, we’re done,” the technician said, releasing my breast as I restarted my breathing. “Have a seat in the waiting room. Please don’t get dressed until I make sure the X-rays are all right.”

  I slipped my arms back through the blue hospital gown that hung around my waist, and shuffled into the hallway, over to the waiting area, where my mother sat among four other women, all dressed in similar smocks, waiting for either their turn to be photographed or their permission to get dressed.

  “How’re you doing, Mom?” I asked, sliding into the seat beside her, leaning my head back against the cool blue wall, breathing deeply.

  She smiled pleasantly, eyes unfocused, staring toward the Matisse print on the wall across from us. “Magnificent.”

 

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