Chapter Twenty-Eight
Georgetown
Dr. Samantha Owens
Sam was dreaming. She knew she was dreaming, because the twins were in dark blue graduation gowns, and Simon’s hair was shot through with silver. He held the hand of a younger girl, a serious-faced teen who had sherry-drowned eyes, just like Sam. She watched them from afar, not a part of the day, not able to straighten Matthew’s cap, where it had gone askew over his thick dark blond curls, nor retie the bow that held back Madeline’s lighter blond waves, like a field of wheat in a steady breeze. Not able to touch the ghost child under the chin to make her smile. Where had they gotten such gorgeous hair? She didn’t have good hair, it was thin and needed constant brushing, and Simon’s was straight as a stick. They were both dark-headed, too, yet they’d created two stunning blondes, and one mini-Sam.
The sight of them all together, laughing, made her happy. She wanted to join them. She started their way but ran into something, a barrier, clear and intractable, barking her shin and elbow so hard that tears sprang to her eyes. She hammered on it with her fists, hoping that they’d hear her and invite her to be with them, something, anything, to get their attention, but they turned away and walked off the stage. The scene became black, dark, empty.
She realized she was looking inside her own body, on the table at Forensic Medical, where she’d cut herself open to perform her own autopsy, and instead found that she’d been full of nothing but the dimmest air.
No lungs. No brain. No heart.
There were mighty red gashes up her arms and across her stomach. Everything had leaked out through the wide slices of flesh.
She was screaming.
She knew she was screaming.
But she couldn’t seem to stop, and the sound swallowed her whole.
She bolted upright, eyes wide, breath coming in little pants. Her hands grasped her stomach. She could feel the rough, raised scars under the fabric of her T-shirt. Her subconscious was punishing her. Punishing her for not fighting harder. For asking too much. For not loving them all enough.
Every moment of the dream played out again and again in her head. She fought to hold on to it: the way Matthew’s eyes crinkled when he smiled, and Maddy’s wide grin spilled sunshine as she played with her father. And the last child, the one that never was, the one Sam hadn’t gotten a chance to know, watching them, so serious and sad. Tears rolled down her face, and as they did, the dream faded, until she was grasping to remember the details. What color were the gowns? How tall was Matt? When did Simon’s hair go gray?
She covered her mouth with her hand and bit down, trying so hard not to lose it. Not to crawl right back into the dream. It wasn’t real. None of that had happened. It never would.
Despair, as bleak and unforgiving as the inside of an ice storm, rained down on her.
These were the moments she wondered why she bothered. She had no one left. No one who needed her. Her job was meaningless. Her life wasn’t worth living.
God, she missed them so much.
She curled into a ball and let the tears come, hard and insistent. She tried to focus on what might have been, instead of what had really happened. That was a place she couldn’t allow herself to go.
There was a soft knock on the door. She ignored it. Maybe whoever it was would go away.
No such luck. The door rattled and opened, and Sam felt the warm, soft arms of her old friend Eleanor, who crawled right into the bed and spooned Sam, holding on for dear life.
“I know,” Eleanor said. “I know.”
Sam didn’t know how long they stayed like that, only that it felt like a great deal of time had passed and she had finally, finally stopped crying.
Eleanor gave her a last squeeze, then sat up.
“Come on downstairs, sweetie. Let me make you some breakfast. They just called to let us know they’re releasing Eddie’s body today. We have a funeral to plan.”
Sam stayed on her side for a moment, then rolled onto her back with a great, gusting sigh.
Oh, my darlings. I miss you so.
* * *
Sam showered while Eleanor cooked.
She’d driven back to Georgetown late last night, Susan in the seat next to her nearly asleep, afraid to stay alone in her own house. Sam hadn’t blamed her a bit. She’d had that exact same reaction at the beginning, not wanting to be alone, begging friends to stay over so she wouldn’t have to face the immense emptiness by herself. Only she wasn’t being stalked, and
her
husband wasn’t harboring secrets…
She was going to have to sell the house.
The thought jumped into Sam’s mind so suddenly, so strongly, that she gasped a little. She didn’t know why she hadn’t thought of it sooner. It wasn’t a home anymore, but a mausoleum. A prison. One that, until this very moment, she’d wanted to keep herself in.
But her rational mind had finally poked through. She was hurting herself more staying there than selling it. As soon as she went home, she was going to put it on the market.
An inexplicable feeling floated through her as she washed the shampoo out of her hair.
She almost didn’t recognize it. She hadn’t felt it in so long.
Sam used to be a decisive person. Strong. Capable. Not just nominal, but forward and somewhat brash, though never forceful.
The feeling she’d had was one of decision, and with it, she felt the first tiny brick being laid, just at the bottom of her feet. A new foundation. It was small, and the structure was going to take months, if not years, to rebuild. There would be cracks, huge, gaping holes, but there would be mortar, ready mix, wattle and straw. Somehow, she would hold the miniature slabs together.
She toweled off and blew her hair dry. Put on her fresh clothes, grateful that Eleanor had done the wash for her unasked. She’d forgotten how nice it was to have someone take care of her.
She could hear the delighted screams of Susan and Eddie’s children down the hall, some game that they’d devised to keep themselves amused. They all needed to keep a closer eye on them, just to make sure they were managing. But children were resilient. They would never forget, but they were young enough to actually heal.
How Susan would cope, Sam had no idea. She didn’t know what the relationship between her and Donovan was really like. He’d been unhappy, that much was clear from his journal, but whether that stemmed from his work, his time overseas, PTSD or his home life, she couldn’t be sure. She’d lay bets on the military issue, but it had been so long… . Donovan was always so gung ho, it would have taken something huge to change his feelings.
An act of God.
As she brushed her teeth, she thought about the entries in the journal she’d had trouble deciphering. They were misuses of the Latin language. In someone less versed, she’d call them mistakes. But for a scholar of Latin like Donovan, little mistakes were a red flag.
What looked on the surface like mistakes were, she felt sure now, codes. Messages meant to be read.
Now she just had to figure out what he was trying to say.
Part II
We few, we happy few, we band of brothers…
—William Shakespeare,
Henry V
Chapter Twenty-Nine
New Castle, Virginia
Detective Darren Fletcher
The Blue Ridge Mountains run from Maryland to Tennessee, leaking across the borders of North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, West Virginia and Pennsylvania in the process. A blue haze hangs in the sky along the mountaintops, giving them their name, making them look like the keepers of long-lost secrets, hill ghosts from epochs past. It is an area full of mystery and distrust. The people along the knolls and rivers forever take care of their own. Generation after generation of settlers, wary and resistant to the rules of law enforcement, of anything that wasn’t theirs, fight against the encroachment of civilization. They have their own rules, their own language, their own food, traditions, even their own liquor.
They do not look kindly on outsiders.
Darren Fletcher observed the long shadows where the trees of the mountains hung across the road, keeping it cool and dark in the brightest of sunlight, and felt a chill crawl up his arms. He felt like he was being watched, but not by a person. No single human being could cause the shivers he felt running through his spine. This was something older, ancient even, something he didn’t belong to. He was an interloper, unwelcome, seen as nothing more than a threat.
He shook himself.
Good grief, Fletch, what was in that barbecue you ate for lunch?
He glanced over at Hart, who also seemed uneasy. They were standing at the foot of the porch that led to the doorstep of a house that belonged to the mother of one William Everett, and the sheriff’s deputy who’d driven them out here had backed away from the door after knocking once and calling out their intentions.
No one charged out with a shotgun, so that was a plus.
The deputy had been clear that Mrs. Everett didn’t like to be surprised. Still, everything felt wrong. All three of them were seasoned professionals, though the deputy was young. They’d all seen their share of the surreal. So the fact that all three had the hair on the backs of their necks standing on end was something to pay attention to. Something was off, and Fletcher was pretty sure he knew what that was. He squared his shoulders, went up on the porch and knocked himself, three hard raps with his balled-up fist. “Police, Mrs. Everett. Open up.”
There was still no answer.
“Force it,” he said to the deputy.
“But…”
“No buts. We have a warrant. Get it open, Deputy.”
The young man just shrugged his shoulders and went to grab the battering ram from his trunk.
The Department of Defense had cooperated fully with the “official” inquiry into the deaths of Edward Donovan and Harold Croswell. They’d provided name, rank and socials, all they were required to by law, and very little else outside of the men’s discharge papers.
DOD had also cooperated with the “unofficial” inquiry made into the records of five soldiers from the 75th Ranger Regiment, Bravo Company, though the powers that be probably weren’t aware of that fact, and Fletcher hoped to God they never would be. He liked living as a free man.
Felicia’s lunch with her oldest friend, Joelle Comprant, had been fruitful to the extreme. Giddy with the knowledge she was going to be a fairy godmother, not once, but twice over, Joelle had been more than happy to dive into the personnel records—it was her job, after all. She’d broken just about every rule she’d promised to uphold by making printouts of all the records she could get her hands on, but Fletcher was a man of his word. He’d guaranteed Felicia that Joelle would never, ever be compromised, that he would resign without his pension before her name would ever leave his mouth in conjunction with this case.
He and Felicia had formed some sort of new bond, as well. On the plane down to Roanoke, when he told Hart that she’d actually offered to increase his visitation time with Tad, his partner had grinned.
“All she ever wanted was to be a part of your life, Fletch. You kept the job so separate from her that she felt unwelcome, and left out. By asking her for help, you thawed a long-frozen icicle. Learn from it.”
“Why didn’t you ever say that before?”
“I did. You just never wanted to hear it. Ginger and I were talking—”
“You told Ginger?”
“Dude. Unlike you, I plan to keep my wife around for a while. Of course I tell her. I tell her everything. That’s why she loves me. And puts up with my bullshit.”
Fletcher had just shaken his head, wondering what in the hell he was going to do with everyone in his life. Maybe he’d been too dumb and too blind to listen to them before, who knew. But he was determined not to fuck this up again. Tad was everything to him, and if he could get more time with the boy, he’d move heaven and earth to do it.
Just as soon as they figured out what the hell was going on with Edward Donovan and the men from Bravo Company he served with.
There were two people left alive from the picture in Donovan’s office. The illicit DOD records confirmed the obvious: the five men had served together in Afghanistan.
But the man they were here to see, William Everett, hadn’t gone gently into that good night upon his return home. A little extra digging showed he was on a watch list the Secret Service kept of possible threats to the executive branch. Mr. Everett didn’t like the fact that American lives were being lost in an unwinnable war, so he availed himself of his considerable skills as a writer to let the President know exactly what he thought about the current administration’s foreign policy agenda.
Homegrown terrorists, the folks at Homeland Security liked to call them. Ironic, really, that the government would turn on the very men and women they’d relied on to keep them safe. Still, Everett had been low on their totem pole of possible threats. He was just an angry soldier who liked to send letters.
Except that now he was a suspect in the murders of two of his fellow soldiers, on home soil. He became the subject of record by default—their other possible, Alexander Whitfield, was a ghost. He’d come back from the war, mustered out and literally dropped off the face of the earth. It was going to take considerably more time to dig up his whereabouts.
And so they’d caught a flight to Roanoke and driven northwest. The last known address for William Everett had led them directly to this little cabin, outside of the small, picturesque town of New Castle.
The deputy approached the rickety porch again, this time with the cylindrical metal ram in hand. The door didn’t look too stable, would probably only take a kick, but Fletcher wasn’t in the mood to pull splinters out of his shin should it collapse too easily. No, make the locals work for it.
He and Hart raised their weapons to cover the young deputy, who gave a halfhearted swing. The door withstood the force with only a minor shiver. Fletcher cleared his throat and the deputy rolled his eyes and gave it a good thrust. The door spun open, flashing back, and the great gusting scent of decomposition wafted out.
“Jesus,” the deputy said. He dropped the ram on the porch and covered his nose and mouth with his hand. A few flies bumbled out the door, escaping into the open air.
Fletcher caught Hart’s eye.
“No one smelled this when they came out last night?” Hart asked the deputy, the insinuation clear.
The deputy was still young enough to be intimidated by Hart’s steely glare, and the knowledge of what he was about to have to deal with. “I doubt anyone got close enough, to tell you the truth, sir. Like I said, old Mrs. Everett can be a might tetchy. And she’s got wicked aim. They probably called out to the house and, when no one answered, came on down the mountain.”
Hart muttered something that sounded suspiciously like “incompetent hillbillies” and Fletcher shot him a look, glad the kid hadn’t heard. It wasn’t his fault. He wasn’t the one who’d screwed the pooch.
He said a very bad word under his breath, then sighed and led the way.
The inside of the cabin was worse than he expected. It was hot, musty and stinking of death. Dust motes floated through the air, accompanying the flies on their perpetual journey. Newspapers were stacked up on the table, along with the remnants of a meal laid out for two. Maggots writhed on the plates. Fletcher made sure to breathe through his mouth.
The cabin wasn’t very big, mostly comprised of a large room off a utilitarian kitchen housing the table, a couch, an armchair and a beat-up television set. A short hallway led to a bathroom, with two doors on either side.
“Let’s find him,” Fletcher said to Hart, who set off down the hall. He turned to the deputy. “Anyone heard from the mom recently?”
“Mrs. Everett was in town beginning of last week, getting supplies. I saw her myself, at the hardware store.”
“But no one saw William?”
“Not that I know of, but we can ask around. Bill doesn’t come home much. Once he got out… Well, who could blame him? His momma is mean as a snake. There was nothing for him here anymore.”
“A dead snake.” Hart appeared, face pinched. “Mrs. Everett’s tucked up in her bed, single gunshot to the head.”
“Aw, shit,” the deputy said, pulling his hat from his oversize head and mopping the sweat off with a red bandanna.
“What’s in the other room?” Fletcher asked.
“Empty.”
“The bath?”
“See for yourself.”
It wasn’t a pretty sight. A man who matched the description of William Everett sprawled in the tub, canted to one side, the water a murky black. A straight razor was on the floor, the blood long crusted. His face was congested with blood, the skin turning a dark puce.
“Suicide?” Fletcher asked, not really as a question. He was merely stating the obvious.
“Could be. Killed his momma, then slit his wrists.”
“Why, though?”
Hart shook his head. The deputy was getting greener by the second. Fletcher barked at him. “Get out of here before you puke all over my crime scene.”
The kid didn’t have to be asked twice. He bolted from the room. Fletcher didn’t blame him. He’d like to, as well. Billy Shakes smelled like hell, and looked ten times worse, to boot.
“Let’s take a quick gander for a note, then let the Roanoke police, or whoever handles their shit around here, deal with the scene. Damn it.”
“You thinking what I’m thinking?”
Fletcher nodded. “This much decomposition? He’s probably been dead too long to have killed Donovan. Definitely too long to have hit Croswell.”
“Yep, that’s what I was thinking. Experts will know for sure, but he’s been gone for a while.”
They backed out of the bathroom, took a cursory glance around the house, but didn’t see anything that smacked of a suicide note. Fletcher didn’t feel like digging through the mess himself. He left that job to the techs.
The deputy was sitting on the front porch with his head between his knees. Fletcher patted him on the shoulder as he walked down the stairs.
“You okay, kid?”
“My name’s Brendan.” A little bite to him still. He’d make it eventually. The scene inside the Everett house could have been worse, but it was none too pleasant. Fletcher took pity on him.
“Ah. Brendan. Sorry, I’m a little preoccupied at the moment. When you’re feeling up to it, let’s call in your crime scene folks, have them take a look. Apparent murder-suicide. Warn them about the decomp. They’ll want to bring extra suits.”
“Yes, sir,” the deputy said, misery making his shoulders droop.
“Brendan. Seriously, you okay?”
“Yeah. Just… No one deserves to go on like that, rotting in their bed. And I just saw her last week. And him, well, I mean…he got out. Why in the world would he come back to this? And kill your own mother? That’s just cold. She wasn’t a nice lady, God rest her soul, but she still birthed him.”
“We might never know the answer to that. Go on. Make that call,” Fletcher said. The deputy rose to his feet and went to his cruiser. Fletcher turned to Hart, who was fanning himself.
“This is a dead end.”
“No pun intended, of course.”
“Of course. He’d been dead at least a week, right?”
“I’d say so. If the deputy is accurate about seeing the mother in town last week, that absolutely would be before the Donovan murder. But murder-suicide?” Hart rubbed his chin. “I don’t know, Fletch. This case get’s weirder by the day. You realize Alexander Whitfield just became our prime suspect.”
Whitfield, the hermit, living up in the woods. Whitfield, the ex-soldier, who would most likely be armed to the teeth. Fletcher couldn’t think of a more dangerous wild card.
A wild card who may have four fresh bodies to his name.
Fletcher heard the thin wail of sirens bleeding through the air. The New Castle folks would arrive soon enough. The last thing he felt like doing was playing patty-cake with the locals, but it must be done. He needed as much information out of Everett’s house as they could dig up before they took off.
There was a funeral in D.C. tomorrow, and he planned to be there.