Garden of Darkness (19 page)

Read Garden of Darkness Online

Authors: Anne Frasier

Tags: #Thrillers, #Suspense, #Fiction

“I dread calling the parents.” He looked terrified at the thought. Not cut out for this job. Too old, too softhearted.

“What about the skin?” Rachel asked.

A lot of people didn’t know that Alastair had suffered a breakdown when Evan was ill. Rachel’s father had told her about it, and told her not to mention it to anyone. Rachel was afraid that returning to his old job had been a bad idea. He should be golfing in Florida. He should be enjoying life.

“Officers are searching the area, hoping to find it.”

“The last one was never found,” she said. “Was information about the body being skinned released to the media?”

“Yeah, but we deliberately kept it vague.”

“So would that rule out a copycat?”

“Not necessarily. Tuonela might have its secrets, but things get out. People talk. Especially when it comes to murder.”

 

Chapter Twenty-seven

 

 

The gurney with the black body bag was slid into the coroner van. Alastair Stroud slammed the door and moments later Rachel pulled away.

This second death would bring state investigators, even the FBI if it made a big media splash.

Maybe it wasn’t Evan. Maybe Evan hadn’t done it.

For a brief second, Alastair considered framing the documentary crew. He was instantly mortified.
Jesus Christ.
He was one sick son of a bitch. He’d never as much as condoned white lies when Evan was growing up, and here he was toying with the idea of framing innocent kids.

But were they innocent?

Maybe not.

He wanted to hop in the car and drive directly to Evan’s, but that would have been a strange thing for him to do when he had witnesses to question. Instead, on the way to the police station, he tried Evan’s number. Nobody answered. He tried Graham’s cell phone. No response.

He met the kids at the police station, where he interviewed them separately. Their stories were all pretty much the same. They’d been partying, had gotten fairly drunk, probably passed out. The next thing they knew Claire was missing.

The girl—Kristin Blackmoore—was still shaking. And the kid Ian—he was in shock.

“I liked her,” Ian said, not looking at Alastair.

Maybe he’d forgotten he was even in the room.

“Wish I’d told her that.”

Poor kid.

Ian frowned in concentration, as if trying to tie events together. “We had fun last night. We laughed and played around.” He shook his head. “That seems so wrong now.”

“You didn’t know.” Alastair made his voice sound soothing and calm. “Did you?”

The kid looked up, hair hanging over his forehead, his eyes clearing. “What do you mean? Are you saying I did that to her?”

“I have to ask these questions. What about the others? Did she get along with Kristin?”

“Not really. But Kristin didn’t do it. None of us did it.”

Ian was coming around quickly. He jabbed his finger in Alastair’s direction. “It wasn’t any of us. You just want to be able to blame somebody else. You want to blame it on an outsider when it was somebody or some
thing
from your own town.”

Alastair kept his expression neutral and felt himself shut down a little. These were kids. They may have been from the outside, but they were still kids.

He continued with the interview and discovered that Claire and Stewart had dated a little.

Jealousy?

Grasping at straws. That’s what he was doing. And Ian was right about his looking for a scapegoat. He needed a scapegoat.

 

Chapter Twenty-eight

 

 

“I wanna get the hell out of here,” Stewart said.

He was leaning against the wall, arms crossed tightly over his chest, Ian beside him. Same pose, although Ian’s head was down, his gaze directed at the floor.

I stood with my hands in my sweatshirt pockets, facing them. “They have to compare our stories. I’ve seen that on television.” Since I was the one who’d found her, my interview had taken longer. “Is it cold in here? It’s cold in here, isn’t it?”

My words didn’t register at first. After a second Ian looked up, stared, then said, “I don’t think so.”

“Who’d you get?” Stewart asked.

“The old guy.” I tugged at my zipper, pulling it to my chin. “I think we all got him. Do you know he’s Graham Stroud’s grandfather?”

Without uncrossing his arms, Stewart pushed away from the wall. “Everybody in this town is related. It creeps me out.”

Ian nodded but didn’t say anything.

I felt like we were in some old movie.

The wall was cement block painted a glossy shade of cream. The acoustic tile ceilings were low, the yellowed squares repeating the pattern on the floor. Beneath an overpowering scent of pine cleaner was an odor that hinted of structural decay and urinal cake.

I automatically reached for my shoulder and the camera bag strap, then paused.

How could I be thinking about my camera at a time like this? But weren’t these exactly the times when history was captured? When other bystanders simply watched, mouths agape?

“It’s like some damn collective or something.” Ian looked up. His eyes were bloodshot and not quite focused. Was he still drunk from last night?

I pulled out my camera and uncapped the lens.

“What are you doing?”

I pushed the power button. “What does it look like?”

Ian pulled his hands from his pockets and straightened away from the wall. “This isn’t some goddamn photo op. Claire is dead. Claire just died.”

“I know she did. I found her, remember?”

Ian shoved my shoulder. Not hard, but in a threatening way. “You parasite. You fucking opportunist.”

He started to shove me again, but Stewart jumped between us. “Hey, come on.”

“Did you film Claire’s dead body, too?” Ian asked.

My face gave me away. While Stewart and Ian had been overcome by shock and grief, I’d gone back to the scene before the cops came.

“You bitch.” He started swinging and flounder- ing, trying to get around Stewart, who held him tightly. “You did! You bitch!” He quit fighting and collapsed against the wall.

I put the camera away.

I wanted to explain myself and defend myself, but maybe Ian was right. Maybe I was looking to exploit the situation while slapping a definition of gonzo journalism on it.

Unfortunately we all have some Jerry Springer in us.

Did I see the death of Claire as an opportunity to advance my nonexistent career? God, I hated to think I was that shallow, but at the same time I knew it was human nature to fool yourself. People wore public masks, but it was the private masks, the masks we wore to fool ourselves, that were the scariest and most disturbing.

“Don’t worry,” I said. “They confiscated the videotape.” I had nothing left. All the footage I had shot was gone, and I’d probably never get it back.

Police Chief Stroud showed up. “You can go. We have phone numbers and addresses in case we need to contact you.”

“We can leave town?” Stewart asked.

“I’d recommend it. You can pick up your belongings from the campsite. Investigators are done with it, since it wasn’t part of the crime scene.”

“I’m not going back there,” Ian said.

Stewart shook his head. “Me either.”

Stroud eyed us one at a time, his expression growing more sympathetic with each face. He reached into his back pocket, dug out a wallet, flipped it open, and extracted a twenty. “There’s a truck stop five miles out of town. Cheap but good. Stop there and get yourselves some breakfast.”

Ian stared at the money as if it were contaminated. Just the thought of food made me queasy, but we hadn’t eaten in a long time.

Stewart must have been thinking the same thing. He grabbed the bill and stuck it in the front pocket of his jeans. But he didn’t say thank-you. That would be letting him off the hook, when they all—Stroud included—knew Claire would still be alive if not for Tuonela.

We left the building.

“He may as well have said, ‘Don’t let the door hit you in the ass on the way out,’ ” Stewart said once we were outside and hurrying down the wide steps that led away from the police station. One half block and we were at the van.

Ian paused with his hand on the handle of the passenger door. “What about Claire?”

“What do you mean, what about Claire?” Stewart asked.

“We can’t leave her here.”

“Claire is dead,” I said clearly.

He’d lost it. I remember when Grandpa died, they had to give Grandma something to knock her out because she couldn’t stop screaming. Maybe Ian needed to be medicated.

He dropped limply against the van. “I know that.”

I’d never noticed how fragile he was, with his thin wrists and bony elbows. Just a kid.

“We can’t leave her.” His mouth was all bent, and he wiped the back of his hand across his nose.

“The body has to stay here, at least for a while,” I explained. “They want to do an autopsy.”

He shook his head. “Here? With all these Stepford people? That isn’t right. She should come back to Minnesota with us. She should be looked at by real fucking people, not a bunch of freaks who are probably trying to cover up shit anyway.”

“They’ll send the body home once they’re done with it.”

His shoulders began to shake, and pretty soon he was sobbing uncontrollably.

I’m not a physical kind of person. I don’t like to be hugged, and I don’t really even like kissing, but a surge of sympathy swept through me and I found myself wrapping my arms around him. He was taller, and he bent his head over me. All the pain and tension seemed to transfer to his hands as they clutched my arms. I immediately regretted my impulse, but I could hardly pull away. I patted his back, then rubbed like a mother might do with a child.

While human contact made me uncomfortable, it seemed to bring Ian something he needed. He began to calm down, and his shaking subsided.

We finally broke away from each other and automatically piled into the van. I sat in front in Claire’s seat; Ian got in back.

That was when it hit me: I couldn’t leave. Not yet.

Maybe I
was
a parasite; maybe I
was
just thinking of myself.

“We can’t go.”

They both stared in an are-you-fucking-kidding-me way. I wasn’t going to convince them of anything.

“We’re getting the hell out of here,” Stewart said, obviously appointing himself group leader now that Claire was gone.

People were watching us.

They stood in groups on the sidewalk, huddled, talking, glancing our way, some staring, not even pretending to be doing anything else.

“Drive.” I made a shooing motion with my hand.

“Gladly.” Stewart put the van in gear and pulled away from the curb.

Heads swiveled. All the faces we passed held the same expression—or lack of expression—with a slightly slack jaw and unblinking gaze.

“Why are they looking at us like that?” Ian’s voice was congested. “Like we did something bad.”

“You were crying like a baby out there,” Stewart said. “People stare. One time I saw a lady have a heart attack at a mall. People came and watched her blouse get ripped open and the paddles get slapped to her chest.”

“We’re their freak show,” I said. “We came to watch them; now they’re watching us.”

We went a few blocks.

I pointed. “Pull over.”

“No.”

I had to raise my voice and get pissed off.

Stewart pulled over.

“We have to stay,” I repeated, as if speaking to the village idiot.

He shook his head. Ian shook his head.

“If you cared that much about Claire, you’d agree with me.” What was I talking about?

“This isn’t about Claire.” Stewart draped one arm over the steering wheel. “You just want to film some weird crap, put together a documentary, and raise your profile. You said it yourself—we came to make fun of the freaks. This was supposed to be funny. Well, it sure as hell isn’t funny anymore. I’m going home.”

He reached for the gearshift and I reached for the door release. “I’m staying.”

“Kristin—no.” He gave me a pleading look that said,
Don’t do this. Don’t make me feel like a jerk and a coward.
Because I could see he wasn’t staying. And Ian . . . Well, Ian needed to go home.

I got out and went around back. I opened the rear door and dug out my equipment.

“Come on, Kristin,” Ian begged. He was a wreck. I felt bad about leaving him, but I shook my head and took a couple of steps from the van.

“Wait.” Stewart unbent himself and pulled out the twenty Stroud had given him. “Take this.”

I waved a hand in refusal. “You need to eat. You’ll need gas.”

“I can get some money from a bank machine,” Ian said, still sitting in the backseat. “Take it.”

I took it.

“Are you sure you won’t come with us?” Stewart asked.

“I’m sure. Go. You need to go.”

I wanted them out of there before they started asking obvious questions, like where would I stay and how would I eat once the twenty was gone. All the camping gear was still at the site. I wouldn’t stay there, but I could get some fresh footage and pack up some stuff. My indecision must have shown on my face.

“Kristin?”

A car stopped behind the van.

Why didn’t they just go around? Old people. Sit -ting there waiting like something was going to happen. Or not.

“Go.” I waved them on. “I’ll call you.”

Stewart nodded. “You’d better.”

He pulled away. I watched the van with the Minnesota plates until it crested a hill and disappeared.

What had I done? What was I doing?

The old people put their car in gear and puttered by. As if nothing in the world were wrong.

 

Chapter Twenty-nine

 

 

After Stewart and Ian left, I called Graham Stroud and asked for a ride back to the campground. It wasn’t a rash decision. I thought about it quite a while, considering my options. I didn’t have any, other than hitchhiking. And God, I didn’t want to do that. I’ve hitchhiked before. It’s humiliating, and there’s always the chance of getting picked up by a serial killer. I also didn’t want to do anything that would draw attention to myself.

Other books

Christmas Without Holly by Nicola Yeager
September by Gabrielle Lord
Whip Hands by C. P. Hazel
Play On by Heather C. Myers