by DB Gilles
I crept along his driveway, then went around back looking for the compressor, but couldn't see it, partly because of the dark and also because it was hidden by a fifteen foot long row of shrubbery. As I made my way through the shrubs I could hear the soft hum the unit. For a second I wondered why he had the air conditioning on at such a late hour on such a cool October night.
When I got to the compressor, which was behind the fifth shrub in from the driveway, I felt around the back, looking for the fake rock with the keys. There was nothing, except smooth dirt and a few twigs. With my foot I felt around the entire perimeter of the unit and still found nothing, but as I was about to get down and feel around my left hip bumped into something solid that I knew wasn't the next shrub.
It was a second air conditioning compressor. Before I had time to ask myself why Nolan had two units to keep such a small house cool, I reached down and immediately found the rock with the keys. I opened it and one Medico key was inside. It would open the back door, which was a few shrubs from where I was standing.
The door opened easily. I stood in a small landing with three steps leading up to the kitchen and a stairway to the basement. I went to the kitchen. It was smallish and neat with a breakfast nook. The appliances looked old. Directly through the kitchen was a dining room with a table, buffet table and hutch, and through it was the living room with an old comfortable-looking couch. I stared at the Oberfuolner name on the crest hoping that up close it would be spelled differently than the headstone at the cemetery. It wasn't. The crest's design was two Crossed swords resting on a laurel wreath with the name of a city and country: Landkern, Germany.
The mantle and fireplace wall were also filled with a dozen or so framed photographs, two of which I was in. I looked closely at the photos, most were of Nolan at various stages in his life. I assumed they were with his parents and grandparents and perhaps even great grandparents. The photos of me were all with Lew. I was about nineteen in one, about twenty-five in the other. There was also a picture of Nolan as a young man with an attractive young woman. They were dressed up. I guessed it was his wedding picture.
Off to the left side of the house was a bathroom and two bedrooms, one of which Nolan used as a den. There was a small desk with a computer, 40” High Def TV, DVD player and stereo system that looked years old. There were more record albums than CDs. The bedroom had a queen-sized bed and a dresser. The entire house was furnished not so much in a bachelor-like manner, but it sent off a vibe that it needed a woman’s touch.
The physical appearance of the inside of Nolan's home was so normal, so ordinary that I was at a loss for words. There were no unusual smells except possibly cleanliness. I knew that Nolan was finicky about keeping the Embalming Room spotless so it stood to reason that he would be a neat freak about his residence. Nothing struck me as unusual. If Nolan had indeed taken Quilla I couldn't see or hear anything that suggested her presence. There were no signs of a struggle. I didn't see blood or broken furniture or weapons or knives.
Although I was beginning to feel ill at ease being in the house, I decided that since I was there I might as well check the upstairs. Because of the design of the house, to get to the stairs that led to the second floor, I had to go through Nolan's den. Just like in the house I grew up in there was also a door that led to the attic.
I turned the doorknob, but the door was locked. I was curious enough to wonder why it was locked, but the overriding feeling I had was guilt for suspecting Nolan of being a killer when the only thing he was guilty of was having the same last name as that on an old headstone.
I tried the door a few more times to see if it was stuck, but it was definitely locked. I didn't know what to do. I wasn't about to knock it down and I didn't know how to pick a lock, so I decided to leave. This had been a moronic idea. Nolan wasn't exactly my friend, but he was an acquaintance and a co-worker and we had a history that had to stand for something. If I made good time I could get to the Home in fifteen minutes. Nolan would beat me there and I would have to come up with a lie about where I was and where the body I'd told him about was.
I moved quickly out of the den and through the small hallway that led to the dining room. It wasn't until I was passing through the dining room that I realized I was sweating, dripping wet, actually. For a second I attributed it to my nervousness at breaking into Nolan's home, but then I remembered that one of the air conditioning compressors outside was on.
Then why was I so hot?
For the first time since I'd entered the house I realized that the entire first floor wasn't cooled at all. It was normal October weather outdoors and the temperature inside reflected that.
So what was being kept cool?
I decided to check the basement. I went to the stairs and flipped on the light. It was divided into two sections, the first serving as what could best be described as a giant workshop. My first reaction was that it looked like the set of a handyman show on TV. Professional-looking carpentry tools of all kinds hung neatly on the walls in pegboards. Wood was piled in a corner. The smell of sawdust permeated the air. Paint cans, opened and never used, were on a five feet high metal shelving unit. There was a long workbench against one wall and a smaller worktable in the center of the room. Two types of electric saws were in another corner.
I poked my head into the second section of the basement and found the utility sink, washer and dryer. I was about to leave when the smell of the sawdust was overtaken in my nose by the faint smell of something else, an aroma that I had lived with virtually every day of my adult life.
Formaldehyde.
It was coming from somewhere in the utility room. I flipped on the light, getting a clearer view of the washer and dryer. Other than a couple boxes of detergent and large can of bleach placed neatly on a shelf next to the washer, the small area was empty. I stepped inside, sniffing the air, following the smell which led me to another door on the far side of the washing machine. The door was secured by a bolt from the outside. I opened it and before I even stepped inside felt the full force of the formaldehyde.
I reached my hand to the wall and flipped on the light only to discover that I was in an Embalming Room. My heart started to pound. It wasn't as spacious or sophisticated as the Embalming Room at the Home or in most of the embalming rooms I'd seen. There was only one embalming table and instead of a large utility sink, the one in here was much smaller. But all the tools of an embalmer were there.
What Nolan was doing with an embalming room in his basement I didn't know, but what I saw on the walls caused me even more concern.
There were a couple of dozen articles dealing with the preservation of bodies, including several on Eva Peron. I checked them out quickly. Some were yellowed with age, others seemed newer. I could tell by the color and texture of the pages that some had originally appeared in newspapers, while others had been in magazines, undoubtedly embalmer trade publications. Like everything else in Nolan's house, the room was spotless and orderly. And again, like every other room I'd been in, the temperature wasn't cooled. The only place I hadn't seen was the attic. And even though the door was locked, I was determined to get inside.
I felt in my bones that the innocence or guilt of Nolan had something to do with whatever was in that room.
Chapter 23
I headed up stairs, knowing I would have to break down the locked door. I got to it, shook the doorknob again, hoping that maybe it wasn't really locked.
But it was. Using my right shoulder as a battering ram, I slammed against the door several times. It wouldn't budge. I was sweating even more now. And panicking. I'd forgotten to keep track of the time. I wasn't sure if Nolan would have reached the Home by now. If he did and didn't find me there I wasn't sure if he would wait. I pounded against the door several more times. Nothing. And not only was I getting out of breath, but my shoulder was starting to hurt. I lay on the floor on my back and, using the bottoms of my feet, tried to kick open the door.
Again, nothing.
I sat up and leaned against the wall facing the door, breathing hard, feeling nervous and scared and still filled with the shred of doubt that this was all a mistake and that Nolan would not only be hurt but angry at me. I was actually seriously trying to break down his door. What would I say if when I got up there I found nothing except junk that belonged in an attic? Or what if he had paintings or artwork or something that needed climate control? And what if he'd turned on the air conditioning accidentally?
Moreover, what was I looking for? What did I think he would have up there? I was getting more confused, but something inside told me that I had to get into that attic, if for no other reason than to appease my curiosity.
I stood up, took several deep breaths and was again about to try slamming into the door when I saw it nestled precariously on the top rim of the door.
A key.
I grabbed it and slid it into the lock. It opened easily. The moment I stepped through it and started up the stairs I felt the coolness of an air-conditioned room. I ran my hand along the wall, looking for a light switch, but found none. The only light available to me as I moved up the stairs was from the den and the further I went the dimmer it got. By the time I reached the top of the stairs it was virtually pitch black and I still hadn't found a light switch. I decided to move around the room. Maybe I would find a lamp.
As my eyes adjusted to the darkness I tried to find a window, but I found none. I moved slowly, hands outstretched like a blind man.
I bumped into what I thought was a wood table, about waist high. I moved a foot or so to the right expecting to go around the table, but it was still there. I moved to the left, again giving myself enough space to go around the table, but it was still there. It was odd because I was in the middle of the room and a table that seemed to be about seven feet long was blocking my way. Not wanting to knock it over I lifted my hand and raised it a few inches over the table to see if there was a lamp or a knick-knack that I would make sure to avoid knocking off.
That's when I felt what I thought was the face of a doll. Cold, not so much wooden, but like Formica or plastic. I ran my right hand over the contours of the doll's face, clearly feeling the nose, lips, eyes, cheeks and chin. But what didn't seem normal was the size of the face. It seemed too big to be the head of a little girl's doll.
It seemed life-size. And it seemed to be setting neatly on this unusually long table. Not setting. Lying horizontally. And not on something, but in something.
I ran my hand from the chin to the chest, gently sliding over a pair of life-sized breasts. I pulled back my hand because the horrible truth was beginning to dawn on me.
It wasn't a doll. And it wasn't a table. It was a coffin. And the body was that of a full grown woman.
I knew there had to be a light somewhere, so I backed away, my heart pounding, sweat forming on my brow despite the coolness of the room. I wasn't sure if I would vomit or pass out from the fear that was growing in the pit of my stomach.
I stepped backwards toward the stairs, feeling more carefully on the wall for a switch. After grasping frantically I finally found it and quickly flipped it on. Although only a soft, pink glow came from the track lighting on the ceiling, my eyes took a moment to adjust to the light.
Then I saw them.
Five coffins, about ten feet apart, containing the bodies of five women. It took me a few seconds to comprehend what I was seeing. As I moved slowly back towards the first coffin, the one I'd bumped into, I saw that it was handmade, undoubtedly the work of Nolan in his basement workshop.
I stepped up and gazed at the face I had touched. She looked about nineteen or twenty. Very pretty. Dark brown hair. Had I not touched her face moments ago, had she been laid out in a Viewing Room at a Funeral Home I would have assumed she had died recently, maybe the day before, and that she had been embalmed either that same day or even today. But from touching her face, non-pliant and firm, I knew she could've been dead for weeks or months. Even years.
I turned to the four other corpses in the room. I had a fairly good idea who I was going to find inside at least one of them. I started to shake as I approached the next coffin. I closed my eyes and took a deep breath before looking down. I hoped I wouldn't be staring down into the face of the only woman I'd ever loved.
It wasn't Alyssa. Again, I didn't recognize this face either, but she was in her late teens or early twenties and her hair was a lighter brown than the first woman. Could she and the first girl been the two names Perry had pinpointed on his computer search?
I moved to the next one, again holding my breath. This one I recognized. It was Virginia Thistle. Because I knew she was thirty-two when she vanished twenty-four years ago it was easy to calculate that she would be fifty-six, but she looked seventeen. I wanted to cry for Gretchen, but before I would shed any tears for her, I needed to know if Alyssa was in this room too.
The next one I also recognized, but only because I had just seen her picture hanging on the wall next to Nolan's family crest. It was Nolan's wife, Patricia. She looked older than the others, perhaps twenty-five.
I moved to the last coffin. I was shaking, my teeth were chattering. I hadn't laid eyes on Alyssa Kirkland in fifteen years. I hoped to the God I had stopped believing in years ago that it wouldn't be her. I would rather know she was alive and out of my reach, than to see her dead.
I looked down.
It was as if time had stood still. Her face looked pure and unblemished. Her brown hair, longer than she used to wear it, was spread out across her shoulders. The oversized freckle on the tip of her slightly upturned nose was still there. Nolan had managed to shape her lips into the ironic pout I had found so cute. I wanted to touch her, but I knew that what I would be feeling wouldn't be the warm flesh I'd once kissed. It wouldn't even be the freshly embalmed corpse still pliant. It would be like touching a piece of plastic.
I couldn't bear to do that. So I just stared. And cried.
“Closure,” I thought to myself. Is that what this is? I finally found out what happened to her, but it wasn't over. I knew who, but before I got closure I needed to know why. As I stared at Alyssa's face, truly looking as if she were sleeping, my thoughts turned to the only person I could help at this stage: Quilla.
I wondered if Nolan had gotten to her yet.
“Go ahead and touch her,” said Nolan, his voice causing me to almost jump out of my shoes.
I turned around. He had a gun in his hand, pointed at my head. I wanted to kill him so bad I was shaking.
“Her cheeks just had a treatment, let's see... three days ago. Alyssa's day at the beauty shop is Tuesday.”
“You sonofabitch!” I screamed.
“Don't go screaming so late, Del. It's late. The girls are sleeping.”
“Do you have Quilla?”
“Don't worry about her.” He shook his head back. “Boy oh boy, Del. Imagine my surprise when I come in the house and find the back door open. I figure I'm being broken into. I'm saying to myself that it's a good thing I had to come back for my glasses, I'm gonna nail the burglar. And imagine my surprise when I hear footsteps upstairs.” He shook his head again. “And how do you think I felt when I saw it's you.”
“Where do you have Quilla?”
“She's sleeping now.”
“Where? I looked all over the house.”
“Right in here,” said Nolan calmly. “By the way, Del, put your hands in the air. I know you probably hate me right now and would like to kill me, but I don't want to kill you up here and make a mess. The girls like neatness and beauty. So, raise your hands slowly.”
I did what he told me, then with the gun still pointed at my head he walked to a door in the corner of the room with a deadbolt, undid it and turned on the light to reveal a tiny room with bed in it.
“Go ahead,” Nolan said, stepping back from the doorway. “Move slowly. Take a look. I'm not a mean person.”
I walked to the doorway of the room and looked inside. Sleeping on a single bed was Quilla. She was tie
d to the bed with two leather straps. She breathed evenly. I detected a slight snore. I guessed that Nolan had her drugged.
“What's the deal, Nolan, is she next?” I asked.
“She's not here to get away from her folks.” Nolan laughed. “Alright, let's go. Downstairs. C'mon.”
“Why?” I stood my ground.
“Why what?”
“Why Quilla? Why Alyssa? Why all of them? Jesus. Your wife?”
“How'd you know she was my wife?”
“I saw her picture on the fireplace. Why, Nolan?”
“With regard to Patricia, it was a matter of not wanting her to leave me. No matter how much I begged her to stay, she wouldn't, so one night I got this crazy idea and, well, there was never anymore talk from her again about leaving me.” He turned off the light in the room Quilla was in, then closed the door. “There's no sense dragging this out, Del. Move.”
Nolan nudged me in the back with his gun, almost knocking me down the stairs. “Why is she in that room?”
“She's too skinny. Needs some fattening up. The best preservation is done with bodies who have some meat on them. That's why I've always had such a hard time making them damn anorexics look good. I never kill them right away. I want them to look just right when they die, especially their faces, since that's the area of the body I'm primarily interested in. The girls I pick usually need to be a tad fleshier, considering all the experimentation and work I do on their faces, so I fatten them up a little.”
I was getting sick to my stomach as we walked through the den, into the dining room, then past the kitchen and out the back door, but I was compelled to keep asking questions.
“Wasn't it taking a big risk to leave them alive? Didn't they try to escape?”
“They're not alive for long. A week tops. And I let them think I won't be hurting them. A real trust thing happens quickly. By the time they're ready to die I think it's fair to say we've bonded. And when they die they feel no pain. I give them an injection. Puts them to sleep. That's when I begin the embalming.”