Bite the Moon (5 page)

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Authors: Diane Fanning

Tags: #Mystery, #houston, #Police Procedural, #Murder, #country music, #murder mystery, #austin, #molly mullet, #Thriller

BOOK: Bite the Moon
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For a brief, jubilant moment, I thought it was working. But my efforts had not slowed his rapid loss of blood, Charlie was losing blood pressure. He was bleeding out.


Charlie, don’t you do this to me. You promised, Charlie. You promised we would grow old together. Damn it, Charles Mullet, stop bleeding. Stop it!”

I knew it was hopeless. I knew he was gone, but still I raged on. My anger built as his life faded, as if the fires of my ire could raise him like a phoenix from the ashes left in its wake. “Breathe, Charlie. Damn it, breathe!”

When the police arrived, I sat, arms hanging limp, eyes reflecting no light, all of me covered in blood and surrounded by mountains of bloody napkins embossed with the McDonald’s arch. Gentle hands slid under my arms and lifted my limp body off the floor. Someone else slipped their fingers beneath my legs and laid me on a stretcher.

As they carried me away, I saw Charlie lying there waiting for the ID techs before he left for the morgue. I, on the other hand, was bound for the hospital—probably the psycho ward. “Charlie, Charlie, take me with you, please.”

Charlie did not answer. He didn’t even utter a mumble or grunt the way he did when he wasn’t really paying attention. Charlie was gone.

I was numb. I heard words, I saw lips move, but all I heard was gibberish. The world did not look right. It all blurred and tilted like a mean nightmare ride at a maniacal carnival. And all I could smell was the desperate scent of fresh-spilled blood even after I was miles away.

Chapter Eight

I attended the funeral loaded with Xanax. I was numbed, tearful and surrounded by blue uniforms. Each blue chest bore a badge with a stripe of black electrical tape. Black tape for Charlie. The same black tape that wrapped around my heart, holding the pieces together. All was black and blue.

I yearned to crawl into the coffin and snuggle up next to my Charlie. I wanted to hear the lid shut over my head, the latches lock in place, binding us together for eternity.

On the drive home from the cemetery, I stopped at HEB. My cupboard was bare, my refrigerator an empty shell. I roamed up and down one aisle after the other like an automaton. I grabbed what appealed to me: bags of potato chips, half gallons of ice cream, chocolate chip cookies, four bright red bags of dark roast Community Coffee. I thought I was ready for checkout until I looked into my basket. I had to buy real food.

I rolled through produce and picked up nothing. I pushed my cart through the meat department but the sight of the bloody packages invoked a swell of nausea. I ended up in the frozen foods aisle where I grabbed a few TV dinners. I picked the same ones that Charlie stocked in the freezer at his apartment before we were married. I teased him about those dinners once. Now, I piled them in with my junk food.

The checker had to have thought my assortment of groceries was odd. But if she said a word, I did not hear it. She even had to ask me twice for payment before it registered that she had spoken.

I unloaded my car and withdrew into my home. I did nothing but eat and sleep. I tried to read but every time I reached the end of a page, I realized my mind had only seen a clutter of words and had not formulated them into a sentence or a thought. I might as well have picked up a book filled with the Cyrillic alphabet or Japanese characters.

I ignored the telephone when it rang and never checked my messages. Soon it was full and no more could be recorded. I did not respond to the ringing of the doorbell. Mail piled up in my mailbox.

About four days into my hermit state, the front bell rang and rang and rang. I peered through the bathroom window and saw the mail delivery truck parked in front of my house. When it pulled away, I eased open the front door and snatched up rubber-banded bundles of mail. I dropped them on the dining-room table, grabbed a bag of potato chips and climbed back in bed.

I wanted to be dead. Gone. Deceased. With Charlie. I wasn’t suicidal in the active sense. I didn’t dwell on the means I could use to dispose of myself. I’m not sure why I didn’t travel down that road. There were means all over the house. A gun in the bedroom closet. Pills in the medicine cabinet. Knives in the kitchen. I did not go there. But I did wish I were dead and prayed for release as if I could will my heart to stop its beat.

A few days later, another persistent visitor arrived. First the bell rang—again and again. Then, a fist pounded on the front door. I slid down in the bed until my head was covered. I heard a mumbled voice but I had no desire to investigate. Silence. Yes. Another well-wisher foiled. I lowered the blankets off my face.

Two seconds later, I exploded out of my bed. It was just rapping on the glass of my bedroom, window but it might as well have been machine gun fire the way adrenaline was now coursing through my bloodstream. I sat on the bed wanting to hold my breath but panting instead.


Molly. Molly Mullet. I know you’re in there. Molly. Let me in this house now.”

It was Franny. Francine Albert—the woman I normally considered my best friend. Right now, she was the bane of my existence.


Molly. I am not leaving until I see you.”

I knew she wouldn’t. I pulled back the curtain and gave her a flash of my face.


Molly, don’t be a smart-ass. Open the front door.”

I did not move. I did not speak.


Molly. If you do not open that door in the next thirty seconds, I am calling the police. And don’t tell me they won’t come. I’ll tell them you attempted suicide. I swear I will.”

I recognized the futility of my resistance, rose to my feet and plodded to the front door. I swung it open and retreated to my bed before Franny could get up on the porch.


Molly Mullet,” she exclaimed as she walked into my room and ripped the covers off my body. She grabbed both my hands and pulled me to my feet. “Look at you. Charlie would be ashamed.”


Not fair,” I hissed at her.

I stood there in my unwashed hair, one of Charlie’s ratty old Tshirts and his pair of jalapeno-pepper-adorned flannel pants. I looked down. There were chocolate stains on the shirt. I forced myself to stand in the shower every day but I never had the energy to open the bottle of shampoo or pull fresh clothes out of the closet.


Life’s not fair, Molly Mullet,” she said as she dragged me into the bathroom. There she grabbed the shampoo and a towel and pulled me into the kitchen. She turned on the water, got the right temperature and dunked my head under the faucet. The whole time, she tsked at me.

I took no independent action, but I cooperated—mostly out of surprise. On a typical day, Franny is a disorganized, unfocused airhead whose conversations hopped from one pad of thought to another like a frog on speed. In the classroom, she was an inspired and inspiring art teacher. Her flakiness branded her as a real artist—an eccentric—to her students. But here was a new Franny—the woman in charge.

She cleaned me up and dressed me down and planned my future. “Molly, I’ll be by at 7:20 Monday morning to pick you up. It’s time for you to get back to your students.”

I acquiesced. What else could I do? As soon as her car pulled away, I grabbed a bowl of chocolate chunk ice cream and went back to bed.

I reported to school that Monday morning, but I still wallowed in my slough of despond. My dull outlook on life drowned any sparks I may have lit with my students earlier in the year. I continued to drug myself with food, and my clothes became formless as I packed on the pounds.

A small pod of girls surrounded me after my honors chemistry class a few weeks after my return to school. Alison Knieper with her perfect straight blond hair, no-nonsense blue eyes and flawless complexion was the leader of the pack. She always would be. She was centered and focused beyond her years. Her straightforward face and squared shoulders underlined her agility with language and her natural knack for communication.

She gave me the dead-on look that Clint Eastwood perfected. Her girlfriends shuffled their feet and stared at the floor as intently as if the meaning of life was embedded in the tiles. “Are you pregnant?” she asked.

Tact was not one of Alison’s virtues. I stared back at her and willed my slack jaw to return to closed position. I stroked my right upper arm. I had expected most anything from Alison, but that never crossed my mind.


I know this is blunt, Ms. Mullet. And quite personal. We are well aware of your personal loss and have great empathy for your situation. We’ve stood by and watched you disintegrate. You had warm brown eyes that always seemed to be laughing at the world. Now they look like dead, charred holes to an empty soul. What used to be bouncy brown curls framing an optimistic face are now dirty limp rags bracketing an expression of total despair. If you are the only individual involved in this miasma of misery, then that is your prerogative. However, if you are pregnant you have a responsibility to pull yourself together. And we have a moral obligation to conduct an intervention.”

I wanted to say, “Leave me alone,” and flee to the teachers’ lounge, where not even Alison would follow. But I could not deny the girls before me. In the timid, eye-darting, creased-brow faces gathered around their leader, I saw genuine concern. And I remembered with clarity my concern for them that I had buried beneath my avalanche of self-pity.


Ms. Mullet?” Patience was not one of Alison’s virtues either.

I pulled in a deep, stalling breath and returned Alison’s intense stare. “Thank you, Alison, girls. You are right to be worried about me. I’ve been wrapped in my misery. I’ve been self-indulgent. But, no, I am not pregnant.”

A chorus of sighs and a flash of weak smiles punctuated my statement. “Thank you, Ms. Mullet,” Alison said. “Please let us know if there is anything we can do to help.” She turned on her heel and led her gaggle out of the classroom.

I stepped into the doorway and watched them disappear down the hall. I shook my head and smiled. It had been so long since the corners of my mouth turned upward, I could hear my cheeks creak with the effort.

When I got home that afternoon, I took the first step to regaining my life. Grabbing a cardboard box from the garage, I marched to the pantry. I filled the bottom with packages of cookies and bags of chips. Then I hit my squirrel drawer, pulling out seven candy bars, four packs of cheese crackers and a monster bag of Hershey’s kisses. The refrigerator was next. I relieved it of a gallon of ice cream and a box of chocolate-chocolate ice cream sandwiches.

I delivered it all to my next-door neighbor. With four active boys and a constant parade of other neighborhood kids in and out of her house, the snacks would disappear in dissipated energy without leaving an added ounce in its tracks.

That night, I took a power walk around the neighborhood. Well, at least it started as a power walk. I returned home panting as if I’d run a marathon. The next day, I signed up at Curves and forced myself to make the circuit of machines three times. I knew if I focused on the physical, my thought process would clear and sharpen. I needed that. I had a lot of thinking to do.

I loved teaching chemistry. Now, though, it just didn’t seem to be enough. A T-shirt I saw on one of my students summed up my feelings best: “If you’re not living on the edge, you are taking up too much space.” I wanted to find my edge.

I followed that siren call and did not sign a contract for the coming school year. Instead, I filled out an application for the police department. I passed the tests, went to the academy and joined the force.

Here I stood, five years older than I was the day Charlie died. Three years older than when I joined the force. Was I any wiser? I hoped so. I thought I had found my life’s path when I embarked on this journey. But now I realized it was just a side trip—a blind stumbling after Charlie. I had lost my way in a blur of misplaced grief and good intentions. It was time to alter course.

Chapter Nine

Commander Ed Schultze had an open-door policy but that didn’t make it any easier to cross his threshold. Pity for all the students I’d ever sent to the principal’s office washed over me. Now I knew how it felt.

I took a timid half step into the room where Schultze sat facing the computer instead of the door. I saw the back of his salt-and-pepper brush cut and watched him pound keys that looked far too small for his broad fingertips. My watery knees caused me to sway as I stood in place. I was thinking about backing out of the doorway when Schultze spun around and spotted me.


Mullet! Come on in. Have a seat. I’m armed but I’m not dangerous,” he said with a small chuckle. He’d been using that line for more years than I’d been on the force. You’d think by now it would have ceased to amuse him.

An involuntary swallowing spasm racked my throat as I took wooden steps across the floor to the chair. I sat down with all the grace of a tumbling two-by-four.


Mullet,” he continued. “I’m glad you stopped by my office. If you hadn’t, I would have had to send word.”

That was not a good sign. Schultze never sent for you to tell you that you did a good job. It always meant trouble.


I had a concern expressed to me this morning . . .” he began.


Lieutenant Hawkins,” I interrupted. There was a full sentence formed in my head, but only his name could escape my lips.


As a matter of fact, yes. It was Lieutenant Hawkins. I imagine it was all just a misunderstanding. Why don’t you explain the situation to me from your point of view?”

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