Read Blood on My Hands Online

Authors: Todd Strasser

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Mysteries & Detective Stories, #Social Issues, #Emotions & Feelings

Blood on My Hands (20 page)

BOOK: Blood on My Hands
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Bloom continues the thread: “When you went toward the dugout, did you see anyone else around there?”

I try my best to remember, then shake my head. “No.”

“Did you hear anything that might have made you think someone else was there?”

“I don’t think so.”

Bloom and Jenkins glance at each other. The questions go on and on. What did I do when I saw Katherine’s body? Why did I pick up the knife? Why did I run away? Is it true that Katherine and I were supposed to go into peer mediation? Why did I write that article for the school newspaper? Just as Gail predicted, sometimes the questions are reworded and then asked again.

“If you didn’t do it, why did you run away?” Bloom asks for what must be the third time.

“I told you, I was scared. Someone took a picture of me with that knife in my hand. After what happened with my brother, I just assumed they’d think I did it.”

“Okay,” says Chief Jenkins. “Even if that’s true, why
continue
to hide? Once you’d had a chance to calm down and think about it, why not turn yourself in then?”

I look at Gail, who nods, indicating I should answer. “Because by then I thought I knew who really did kill Katherine. And I believed the only way I could prove I didn’t do it was by proving she did. But I wouldn’t be able to do that if I turned myself in.”

The room goes quiet. Jenkins and Bloom look at each other with grave expressions. Neither speaks. Meanwhile, Gail frowns and asks, “Who do you think killed her?”

I stare at Chief Jenkins, right into his pale hazel eyes, and say, “Your niece, Dakota.”

Gail blinks with astonishment and sits back in her chair. She also looks questioningly at Chief Jenkins. “No, I’m happy to say that’s not true,” he says.

“How do you know?” I ask. “I bet you haven’t even considered that possibility.”

“Whoa!” Gail says, interrupting again, and places her hand on my arm. She gives me a concerned, quizzical look, as if it’s suddenly occurred to her that I may have a few loose screws. She turns to Chief Jenkins. “Sir, I think at this point I need to familiarize myself a little more with this case. Can we continue the questioning tomorrow?”

The two men share another glance. Bloom nods. Chief Jenkins turns to Gail. “Only if you’re okay with us keeping her in custody.”

“You heard they caught her?”

“Uh-huh.”

“I feel awful. I keep thinking that maybe if I hadn’t asked her to help me …”

“But she didn’t let on to you, right?”

“I know. That’s what makes it so hard to believe.”

“Just don’t blame yourself, okay? You didn’t know.”

Chapter
40

Thursday 9:35
A.M.

ONCE AGAIN IN handcuffs, I am driven to a juvenile detention facility and taken through a metal detector and several heavily reinforced doors before being placed in a cell by myself away from the rest of the inmates. Meals are brought on a tray by a silent matron, who waits and watches while I eat, and then takes the tray away.

My mother arrives with dark bags under her eyes and her hair hanging limp and unbrushed. She looks even more exhausted and worn out than usual.

In the visiting room, the matron watching us doesn’t stop me from reaching over and taking my mother’s hand, which feels cold and bony. She’s weepy and bewildered and doesn’t understand why the police won’t let me go. All I can do is reassure her. “It’s going to be okay, Mom. I promise. Everything’s going to work out. If they really thought I did it, they would have arrested me, right? They’re just holding on to me to make sure I tell them everything I know.”

After a while, Mom says that she has to go home and take care of Dad, and that she’ll come back tomorrow if I’m still here. I ask her to bring some clean clothes. In the afternoon I am driven back to the police station and taken to the interrogation room, where I am joined by Gail and the two men. Once again they ask me questions about Katherine, about what I did the night she was killed, and about what had happened between us in the weeks leading up to that night.

The questioning lasts several hours, and then the camera is turned off. The men leave and Gail and I are alone.

“How much longer are they going to keep asking the same questions?” I ask.

“Until they decide whether you’re telling the truth,” Gail explains. “Since yesterday, I’ve been able to learn a little more about the case, and I have to tell you honestly, Callie, it’s a very difficult situation. They have a lot of evidence against you.”

I feel my spirits sink. It sounds like she’s paving the way to a plea bargain. Only there’s something I still don’t understand. “Then why do they keep questioning me? Why don’t they just …?”

“Arrest you and charge you with the murder?” It sounds horrible when she says it out loud. “I’m not one hundred percent sure, Callie. Part of the reason, I suspect, is that there were no witnesses. So most of the evidence the police have is circumstantial. The other part may be that you’ve stuck to your story consistently, and no matter how many times they ask, you give them the same answers. And, in a trial, that could be enough to raise reasonable doubt.”

“Then why don’t they let me go?”

“I assume it’s because they’re still trying to build a case,” Gail says. “Under the law they can hold you for up to seventy-two hours. And I think they’re determined to do that, because you’ve demonstrated such a talent for avoiding capture. They’re afraid if they let you go, they may never see you again.”

There’s an irony, I can’t help thinking.

Gail clears her throat in an awkward way, and I sense there’s something else on her mind. “Listen, Callie, there’s something … I need to toss out to you just because … well, because I want to be completely honest with you. Based on the evidence they’ve shown me, I think we should at least consider the possibility that they may still charge and arrest you in Katherine’s murder. It would be foolish for us not to consider the possibility and start preparing for it.”

Why am I not surprised to hear her say this? “Prepare for it how?” I ask, because I know that’s what she expects.

“By considering the option of claiming it was self-defense.”

Huh?
It takes a moment for me to grasp what she’s saying. Claiming self-defense means admitting I killed Katherine. It’s saying that she attacked me and I fought back, and in the process she died. “So, it’s like a plea bargain, right?”

“Well …” She hesitates. “Not exactly. You’re not pleading guilty to anything.”

“Except
killing
her,” I point out.

“In self-defense.”

“But that’s not what happened,” I answer.

It’s difficult to read Gail’s expression. I wonder if lawyers are
taught to hide what they’re thinking. She leans forward, her gold hoop earrings swinging gently. “Callie, as a public defender it’s my job to represent you in the best way I know possible. Given the amount of evidence they have—the photo, the fingerprints on the knife—it may be difficult for a jury to believe you had nothing to do with the murder. However, I believe, based on your history with Katherine, specifically what happened in school, that we can make an argument that she attacked you and you defended yourself.”

I’m stunned. She’s saying I can go free … by
admitting
I killed Katherine. By doing the
exact opposite
of what I know I should do. It’s crazy. “What about Dakota? What about Griffen Clemment and the threatening texts?”

“His parents have hired a defense attorney. Griffen isn’t talking.”

“Doesn’t it mean he’s hiding something?” I ask.

“Not necessarily. He could be completely innocent, and his parents are just being careful. From what I hear, they can afford it. But it doesn’t matter. The police have got the record of the text messages he received. But we haven’t been able to link the phone they were sent from to Dakota Jenkins.”

“But who else would have sent them? They
have
to have come from her.”

Gail shrugs. “The law doesn’t work that way. We need real evidence linking Dakota to the phone that sent those texts and we don’t have it.”

“Then what about the knife that should be missing from the set at the Jenkinses’ home?”

Gail looks down at the table and then back at me. “I spoke to Congresswoman Jenkins. She checked the set of knives you talked about. They’re all there. She’s not missing any.”

“That can’t be! She’s lying! She knows what Dakota did and she’s trying to protect her. All they had to do was go out and buy a replacement knife. I’m telling you she—”

Gail raises her hand, gesturing for me to stop. “Callie, what made you think the knife came from Dakota’s house?”

“It was a special brand,” I explain. “I … The only time I’ve ever seen it was in Dakota’s kitchen. I can’t remember the name now, but it had two little stick-figure men against a red square background.”

Gail purses her lips sympathetically. “The brand is called Henckels, and to be honest, Callie, it’s not that special. Lots of people have them.”

Chapter
41

Friday 9:47
A.M.

THERE’S A CHANCE I can go free.

All I have to do is pretend I killed Katherine.

I spent another night in juvie, despondent and miserable. Gail says that if I don’t agree to the self-defense idea, it’s possible that I could spend the next ten or fifteen years in prison. But how do you
pretend
you killed someone?

I’m taken to the visitors’ room again. Only this time my mother is waiting there with Gail. Mom’s hair is brushed and she’s even wearing a little makeup. She’s got a smile on her face, but I know her well enough to suspect it’s forced.

“What’s going on?” I ask suspiciously as soon as I sit down. Mom and Gail share a pensive glance. Now I know for certain they’re up to something.

“Honey, Gail told me about her idea,” Mom says.

A sense of betrayal hurtles through me. It may not be rational, but I’m furious at Gail, who has obviously brought my mother here to try to persuade me to agree to claim self-defense.

“But I didn’t kill her!” I cry. “You can’t—”

Gail raises her hand to quiet me. “Callie, you have to put it in perspective.”

“You want me to put it in perspective?” I shoot back angrily, and turn to Mom. “She’s using you. She wants me to pretend I killed Katherine because it’s way too much work to try to prove I’m innocent. Just like when that jerk who defended Sebastian wanted him to plead to attempted manslaughter. Is that what
you
want, Mom? Do you want the world to think that your son attempted murder and your daughter killed someone in self-defense?”

“Yes,” Mom replies calmly.

After the article came out in the school newspaper, I found myself in the same position as Dakota, spending lunchtime in the library rather than face Katherine. The first day I went to the library, Dakota was sitting at the computer table. I sat on a couch near the fiction section and we didn’t speak.

But the next day I decided I wanted to talk and started toward her. As soon as Dakota realized what I was doing, she got up and walked toward the back of the library, where the tall stacks of books were.

It didn’t take a nuclear physicist to figure out that she didn’t want to be seen talking to me.

She went down one aisle of bookshelves and I went down the next. We stood facing each other with the shelves between us and pretended to be looking at books.

“Nice article,” Dakota whispered sarcastically, as if she
knew that was why I was in the library and not the cafeteria.

“Thanks,” I answered, emphasizing it with a groan.

“I can’t believe the way you singled out Katherine.”

“First of all, I didn’t write it alone,” I said, and explained that I’d written it with Mia and that it was supposed to have both our names on it. “She asked me to help her. I was just trying to be supportive. And second, it wasn’t meant to be about Katherine. We were writing about a trend.”

Through the shelves, Dakota gave me a “get real” look. “The thing about how it used to be that kids had to be good at something, but now all you need is to be born rich? Jodie acts and does ads. Zelda’s the captain of the girls’ volleyball team. Everyone knows I’m going to run for president of the student council. The only one who did nothing except be born rich, who never runs for an office where she has to be elected, and who isn’t involved with sports is Katherine.”

“It still wasn’t supposed to single her out,” I insisted.

“Maybe not, but that’s
exactly
what it did,” Dakota said, then leaned closer and dropped her voice even more. “Just between you and me? I’m glad
you
did it.”

The way she said “you” made me think she meant that it was something she’d wanted to do, too. “Why?”

“Because now the rumors she’s spreading are about you, not me.”

“What rumors?”

Dakota smiled, but it wasn’t a friendly smile. “About the night before school started? About you and two guys at once.”

“That’s—” I started to react, but the outrage passed quickly.
“That’s lame. Everyone’ll know she’s just trying to get back at me.”

“Maybe.” Dakota shrugged.

Since we were speaking confidentially, I decided to bring up the reason I’d wanted to talk to her. “What happened between you two?”

“Nothing.”

“You can’t stand her being more popular than you?” I asked, pressing her.

Dakota lifted her eyes to the ceiling. “Oh, please, that’s
so
seventh grade.”

“Then what?” I asked. “Why can’t you be honest with me?”

After a moment of silence, she said, “Look, Callie, I’m never going to confide in you. You and I are never going to be friends, okay? It’s just not happening.”

And then she walked away.

Chapter
42

Friday 9:57
A.M.

IN THE VISITORS’ room, Mom’s answer nearly knocks me off my chair. I stare at her in utter disbelief.

BOOK: Blood on My Hands
2.88Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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