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:: "Safe" by Gary Braunbeck
Author's note: If there is one story that I would point to
as being the central piece in the Cedar Hill cycle, it would
be "Safe." In one way or another, directly or indirectly,
each story in the cycle has a connection to the events depicted
in this novella. This may be my most-reprinted story (it's
been translated into at least 3 languages), and was the first
piece in which the overall character of Cedar Hill--the city
itself--made itself known to me. The version you're about
to read is the author's preferred version, as it will appear
in Home Before Dark: The Collected Cedar
Hill Stories, Volume 2.
"'A fine setting for a fit of despair,'
it occurred to him,
'if only I were standing here by accident instead of design.'"
Franz Kafka, The Castle
1.
Violence
never really ends, no more than a symphony ceases to exist
once the orchestra has stopped playing; bloodstains and bullet
holes, fragments of shattered glass, knife wounds that never
heal properly, nightmarish memories that thrash the heart
. . . all fasten themselves like a leech to a person's core
and suck their spirit bit by agonized bit until there's nothing
left but a shell that looks like it once might have been a
human being.
My
God, what do you suppose happened to that person?
I heard it was something awful. I guess they never got
over ithell, you can just look at 'em and know
that.
Drop a pebble in a pool of water and the vibrations
ripple outward in concentric circles. Some physicists
claim that the ripples continue even after they can
no longer be seen.
Ripples continue.
A symphony does not cease.
And violence never really ends.
It took half my life to learn that.
2.
Three days ago a man named Bruce Dyson walked into an
ice cream parlor in the town of Utica, Ohio and opened
fire with a semiautomatic rifle, killing nine people
and wounding seven others before pulling a Smith &
Wesson Ladysmith .38 Special from his coat pocket and
shooting himself in the head.
Some will cry, others will rage, many will question,
but life will go on for the rest of us until the next
Bruce Dyson walks into the next ice cream parlor, or
bank, or convenience store, or whatever, and then we'll
shake our heads and wring our hands once again and go
tsk-tsk and wonder aloud how something so terrible
could happen.
Newscasts were quick to mention Cedar Hill, of course,
and to draw tenuous parallels between what took place
there and what happened in Utica. When one of my students
asked me if I was "around" for the Cedar Hill
murders I laughednot raucously, mind you,
but enough to solicit some worried glances from the
class.
"Yes,"
I said. "I was around. Please excuse my laugh,
it's just that no one has ever asked me that before."
At a special teachers' meeting held the previous evening
a psychologist had suggested that we try to get our
students to talk about the killings; four of the dead
and three of the wounded had attended this school.
"Do
any of you want to discuss what happened in Utica?"
Listen to their silence after I asked this.
"Look,
I don't want to make anyone feel uncomfortable but odds
are someone in this room knew at least one of the shooting
victims. Believe me when I tell youand
I know from experienceyou don't want to
keep this to yourself. It's important to talk about
what you're thinking and feeling."
Still nothinga nervous shrug, perhaps,
a lot of downcast stares, even a quiet tear from someone
in the last row of desks, but no one spoke.
I rubbed my eyes and looked toward the back wall where
the ghosts of the Cedar Hill dead were assembling.
Go
on, they whispered. Remember us to them.
"No
one's going to laugh at or judge you. Nine people are
dead and some of them were your friends. You have to
feel something."
A girl in one of the middle rows slowly raised her hand.
"Could you . . . could you maybe tell us about
Cedar Hill? How did you deal with it?"
I smiled my thanks to her, as did the ghosts. "In
many ways I still am dealing with it. I went back there
a while ago, in fact, to find some of the survivors
and talk with them. I needed to put certain things to
rest andwait a second."
The ghosts of the four dead students joined those from
Cedar Hill. All of them smiled at each other like old
friends.
I wished I could have known them.
Tell
them everything.
Go on.
I nodded my head to them and said to the class: "Let's
make a deal. I'll tell you about Cedar Hill only if
you agree to talk about Utica. Maybe getting things
out in the open will make it easier to live with. How's
that sound?"
Another student raised their hand and asked, "Why
do you suppose somebody'd do something like that?"
Tell the tale, demanded the ghosts.
Remember
us to them . . . .
3.
I've gotten a little ahead of myself.
My name is Geoff Conover. I am thirty-six years old
and have been a high school history teacher for the
last seven years. I am married to a wonderful woman
named Yvonne who is five-and-a-half years my junior
and who is about to give birth to our first child, which
will be a boy. Yvonne has a six-year-old girl from her
previous marriage. Her name is Patricia and I love her
very much and she loves me and we both love her mother
and are looking forward to having a brand-new member
added to our family.
This story is not about me, though I am in it briefly
under a different name. It's about a family that no
longer exists, a house that no longer stands, and a
way of life once called Small Town America that bled
to death long before I explained to my students how
violence never really ends.
I did go back to Cedar Hill in hopes of answering some
questions about the night of the killings. I interviewed
witnesses and survivors over the telephone, at their
jobs, in their houses, over lunches, and in nursing
homes; I dug through dusty files buried in moldy boxes
in the basements of various historical society offices;
there were decades-old police reports to be found, then
sorted through and deciphered; I tracked down over two
hundred hours' worth of videotape, and then subjected
my family to the foul moods that resulted from my watching
those tapes; dozens of old transcribed statements had
to be located and copied; and on three occasions I had
to bribe a certain seedy individual into letting me
glance at a file, listen to a snippet of audio tape,
and allow me forty minutes alone with several boxes
of aged evidence. There were graves I had to visit,
names I needed to learn, individual histories lost among
bureaucratic paper trails that I had to assemble, only
to find they yielded nothing of useand
I would be lying if I said that I did not feel a palpable
guilt in deciding that so-and-so's life didn't merit
so much as a footnote.
I do not purport to have sorted everything out as a
result of my research. In some instances the gaps between
facts were too wide and I had to fill them with conjectures
and suppositions that, to the best of my knowledge and
abilities, provided a rightness to the story
that the facts did not. Yvonne says that I did it in
an effort to forgive myself for having survived. She
may be right. No one asked me to do it; nonetheless,
certain ghosts demanded it of meand I say
this to you as a man who had never thought of himself
as being particularly superstitious.
That afternoon, when my students asked to hear the tale,
I once again hoped that its telling would in some way
release us all from the shame and anger and guilt that
threatened to forever diminish us.
I cleared my throat, smiled at the ghosts in the back
of the room, and said, "In order for you to understand
. . .
4.
. . . what took place in the small, Midwestern city
of Cedar Hill, Ohio, you must first understand the place
itself, for it shares some measure of responsibility.
If it is possible to characterize this place by melting
down all of its inhabitants and pouring them into a
mold so as to produce one definitive citizen, then you
will see a person who is, more likely than not, a laborer
who never made it past the eleventh grade but who has
managed through hard work and good solid horse sense
to build the foundation of a decent middle-class existence;
who works to keep a roof over his family's head and
sets aside a little extra money each month to fix up
the house, maybe repair that old back-door screen or
add a workroom; who has one or two children who aren't
exactly gifted but do well enough in school that their
parents don't go to bed at night worrying that they've
sired morons.
Perhaps this person drinks a few beers on the weekendnot
as much as some of their rowdier friends but enough
to be social. They've got their eye on some property
out past the county line. They hope to buy a new color
television set. They usually go to church on Sundays,
not because they want to but because, well, you never
know, do you?
This is the person you would be facing.
This is the person who would smile at you, shake your
hand, and behave in a neighborly fashion.
But never ask them about anything that lies beyond the
next paycheck. Take care not to discuss anything more
than work or favorite television shows or an article
from this morning's paper. Complain about the cost of
living, yes; inquire about their family, by all means;
ask if they've got time to grab a quick sandwich, sure;
but never delve too far beneath the surface, for if
you do the smile will fade, that handshake will loosen,
and their friendliness will become tinged with caution.
Because this is a person who feels inadequate and does
not want you to know it, who for a good long while now
has suspected that his life will never be anything more
than mediocre. He feels alone, abandoned, insufficient,
foolish, and inept, and the only thing that keeps him
going sometimes is a thought that makes him both smile
and cringe: that maybe one of his children will decide
for themselves, Hey, Dad's life isn't so bad, this 'burg
isn't such a hole in the ground so, yeah, maybe I'll
just stick around here and see what I can make of things.
And what if they do? How long until they start to walk
with a workman's stoop, until they're buying beer by
the case and watching their skin turn into one big nicotine
stain? How long until they start using the same excuses
he's used on himself to justify a mediocre life?
Bills,
you know. Not as young as I used to be. Too damn tired
all the time. Work'll byGod take it out of you.
Ah, well . . . at least there's that property out past
the county line for him to keep his eye on, and there's
still that new color television set he might just up
and buy . . . .
This is the person who would look back at you, whose
expression would betray that they'd gotten a little
lost in their own thoughts for a second there.
It happens sometimes.
So they'll blink, apologize for taking up so much of
your time, wish you a good day, and head on home because
the family will be waiting supper. It was nice talking
to you.
Meet Cedar Hill, Ohio.
Let us imagine that it is evening here, a little after
ten p.m. on the seventh of July, and that a pair of
vivid headlight beams have just drilled into the darkness
on Merchant Street. Seen from behind the safety of living
room windows, the magnesium-bright strands make one
silent, metronome-like sweep, then coalesce into a single
lucent beacon that pulls at the vehicle trailing behind.
Imagine that although the houses along Merchant are
dark, no one inside them is asleep.
The van, its white finish long faded to a dingy gray,
glides toward its destination. It passes under the diffuse
glow coning down from the sole streetlight, and the
words "DAVIES' JANITORIAL SERVICE" painted
on its side can be easily read.
The gleam from the dashboard's gauges reveals the driver
to be a tense, sinewy man whose age appears to fall
somewhere between a raggedy-ass forty-five and a gee-you-don't-look-it
sixty. In his deeply lined face is both resignation
and dread.
He was running late, and he was not alone.
A phantom, head half-bowed and tilted slightly to the
side, its face obscured by alternating knife-slashes
of light and shadow, sat on the passenger side. Three
other phantoms rode in the back, none of whom could
summon enough nerve to look beyond the night at the
end of their nose.
The van came to a stop, the lights were extinguished,
the engine grumbled and complained, and with the click
of a turned key Merchant Street was again swallowed
by the baleful graveyard silence that had recently taken
up residence there.
The driver reached down next to his seat and grabbed
a large flashlight. He turned and looked at the phantoms,
who saw his eyes and understood the wordless command.
The driver climbed out as the phantoms threw open the
rear double doors and began unloading the items needed
for this job.
Merchant Street began to flicker as neighbors turned
on their lights and lifted small corners of their curtains
to peek at what was going on, even though no one really
wanted to look at the Leonard house, much less live
on the same street.
The driver of the van walked up onto the front porch
of the Leonard house. His name was Jackson Davies and
he owned the small janitorial company that had been
hired to scour away the aftermath of four nights earlier
when this more-or-less peaceful industrial community
of 42,000 had been dragged kicking, screaming, and (most
of all) bleeding into the national spotlight.
Davies turned on his flashlight, gliding its beam over
the shards of broken glass that littered the front porch.
As the shards caught the beam, each glared at him defiantly:
Come on, tough guy, big macho Vietnam vet with your
bucket and Windex, let's see you take us on.
He shifted his position, moving the beam to his right
where it landed squarely on the bay windowwhich,
like all the first-floor windows of the Leonard house,
was covered by a large sheet of particleboard crisscrossed
by two strips of yellow tape. A long, ugly stain covered
most of the outside sill, dribbling over the edge in
a few places and down onto the porch in thin, jagged
streaks. Tipping the beam, Davies followed the streaks
to another stain, darker than the mess on the sill and
wider by a good fifty percent. Just outside of this
stain was a series of receding smears that stretched
across the length of the porch and disappeared in front
of the railing next to the glider.
Footprints.
Davies shook his head in disgust. Someone had tried
to pry loose the board and get inside the house. Judging
by the prints, they'd left in one hell of a hurry, running
across the porch and vaulting the railscared
away, no doubt, by neighbors or a passing police cruiser.
Probably a reporter from one of those goddamn tabloids,
eager to score a hefty bonus by snapping a few graphic
photos of the Scene.
Davies swallowed once, loud and hard, then swung the
light over to the front door. Spiderwebbing the frame
from every conceivable angle were more strips of yellow
tape emblazoned with large, bold, black letters: KEEP
OUT BY ORDER OF THE CEDAR HILL POLICE DEPARTMENT. An
intimidating, hand-sized padlock held the door securely
closed.
As he looked at the padlock, a snippet of Rilke flashed
across his mind: Who dies now anywhere in the world,
without cause dies in the world, looks at me
and
Jackson Davies, dropout English Lit. major, recent ex-husband,
former Vietnam vet, packer of body bags into the cargo
holds of planes at Tan Son Nhut, one-time cleaner-upper
of the massacre at My Lai 4, hamlet of Son My, Quang
Ngai Province (after Lt. William Calley, Jr. and company
finished their infamous testosterone tantrum), a man
who thought there was no physical remnant of violent
death he didn't have the stomach to handlethis
same Jackson Davies heard himself muttering, "Goddamn,
goddamn, goddamn," and felt a lump dislodge
from his groin and bounce up into his throat and was
damned if he knew why but suddenly the thought of going
into the Leonard house scared the living shit out of
him.
Unseen by Davies, the ghosts of Irv and Miriam Leonard
sat on the glider a few yards away from him. Irv had
his arm around his wife and was good-naturedly scolding
her for slipping that bit of poetry into Davies' head.
I
can't help it, Miriam said. And even if I could, I wouldn't.
Jackson read that poem when he was in Vietnam. It was
in a little paperback collection his wife gave to him.
He lost that book somewhere over there, you know. He's
been trying to remember that poem all these years. Besides,
he's lonely for his wife and maybe that poem'll make
it seem like part of her's still with him.
Could've
just gone to a library, said Irv.
He
did but he couldn't remember Rilke's name.
Think
he'll remember it now?
I
sure do hope so. Look at him, will you? Poor guy, he's
so lonely, God love 'im.
Seems
nervous, doesn't he?
Wouldn't
you be? asked Miriam.
That
was really nice of you, hon, giving that poem back to
him. You always were one for taking care of your friends.
Charmer.
What
can I say? Seems my disposition's improved considerably
since I died.
Oh,
now, don't go bringing that up. There's not much we
can do about it.
How
come that doesn't make me feel any better?
Maybe
this'll do the trick: Who laughs now anywhere in
the night, without cause laughs in the night, laughs
at me, said Miriam.
Don't
tell me, tell the sensitive poetry soldier over there.
I
just did.
They watched Davies for a few more seconds: He rubbed
his face, then lit a cigarette and leaned against the
porch railing and looked out into the street.
It's
not right, said Irv to his wife. What happened to us
wasn't fair.
Nothing
is, dear. But we're through with all of that, remember?
If
you say so.
Worrier.
Yeah,
but at least I'm a charming worrier.
Shhh.
Did you hear that?
Hear
what?
The
children are playing in the backyard. Let's go watch.
A moment later, the wind came up and the glider swung
back, then forward, once and once only, with a thin-edged
screech.
Jackson Davies dropped his cigarette and decided screw
this, he was going to go wait down by the van.
He turned and started off the porch and ran smack into
a phantom. Davies recoiled slightly. The phantom stepped
from the scar of shadow and into the flashlight's beam
and became Pete Cooper, one of Davies's crew managers.
Davies, through clenched teeth, said, "It's not
a real good idea to sneak up on me like that. I have
a tendency to hurt people when that happens."
"Shakin'
in my shoes," said Cooper. "You gettin' the
jungle jitters again? Smell that napalm in the air?"
"Yeah,
right. Whacked-out 'Nam vet doing the flashback boogie,
that's me. Was there a reason you came up here or did
you just miss my splendid company?"
"I
just . . ." Cooper looked over at the van. "Why'd
you bring the Brennert kid along?"
"Because
he said yes."
"C'mon,
fer chrissakes! He was here, you know? When it
happened?"
Davies sighed and fished a fresh cigarette from his
shirt pocket. "First of all, he wasn't here when
it happened, he was here before it happened.
Second, of my forty-eight loyal employees, not counting
you, only three said they were willing to come out here
tonight, and Russ was one of them. Do you find any of
this confusing so far? I could start again and talk
slower."
"What're
you gonna do if he gets in there and sees . . . well
. . . everything and freezes up or freaks or something?"
"I
talked to him about that already. He says he won't lose
it and I believe him. Besides, the plant's going to
be laying his dad off in a couple of weeks and his family
could use the money."
"Back
up," said Cooper. "You're telling me that
you couldn't find anyone else who wanted to make three
hundred bucks for a couple of hours, work?"
"Not
for this house, I couldn't."
"Yeah,
well, Brennert's your problem, okay? I'll keep
the other guys in line, but Russ is all yours."
"Fine.
Anything else? The suspense is doing wonders for my
ulcer."
"Just
that this seems like an odd hour to be starting."
Davies made a quick, sweeping gesture with his arm that
drew Cooper's attention to the street. "Look around
us, Pete. Tell me what you don't see."
"I'm
too tired for your goddamn riddles."
"You
never were any fun. What you don't see are any reporters
or any trace of their nauseating three-ring circus that
blew into this miserable burg a few nights back. The
county is paying us, and the county decided that our
chances of being accosted by reporters would be practically
nil if we came out late in the evening. So here we are,
and I'm no happier about it than you are. Despite what
people say, I do have a life. Admittedly, it isn't much
of one since my wife decided that we get along better
living in separate states, but it's a life, nonetheless.
I just thank God she left me the cats and the Mitch
Miller sing-along records or I'd be a sorry specimen
right about now. To top it all off, I seem to have developed
a retroactive case of the willies, which is why I'm
prattling on like this. Please tell me to be quiet."
"But
it's so entertaining."
"Of
course. It wouldn't be a traffic accident without innocent
bystanders."
They watched as a police cruiser pulled up behind the
van.
"Ah,"
said Davies. "That would be the keys to the kingdom
of the dead."
"You
plan to keep up the joking?"
Davies's face turned into a slab of granite and his
voice dropped to a deadly whisper. "You bet your
ass I do, Pete. And I'm going to keep on making jokes
until we're finished with this job and loading things
up to go home. The sicker and more tasteless I can make
them, the better. Don't worry if I make jokes; worry
when I stop."
They went to meet the police officers, unaware that
as they came down from the porch and started across
the lawn they walked right through the ghost of Andy
Leonard, who stood looking at the house where he'd spent
his entire, sad, brief, and ultimately tragic life.
5.
On
July fourth of that year Irv Leonard and his wife were
hosting a family reunion at their home at 182 Merchant
Street. All fifteen members of their immediate family
were present and several neighbors stopped by, at the
Leonard's invitation, to visit, watch some football,
enjoy a hearty lunch from the ample buffet Miriam had
been preparing since early in the week, and to see Irv's
newly acquired pearl-handled antique Colt Army .45 revolvers.
Irv, a retired steel worker and lifelong gun enthusiast,
had been collecting firearms since his early twenties
and was purported to have one of the five most valuable
collections in the state.
Neighbors later remarked that the atmosphere in the
house was as pleasant as you could hope for, though
a few did notice that Andyhe youngest of
the four Leonard children and the only one still living
at homeseemed a bit "distracted."
Around 8:45 that evening Russell Brennert, a friend
of Andy's from Cedar Hill High School, came by after
getting off work from his part-time job. Witnesses described
Andy as being "abrupt" with Russell, as if
he didn't want him to be there. Some speculated that
the two might have had an argument recently that Andy
was still sore about. In any case, Andy excused himself
and went upstairs to "check on something."
Russell started to leave but Miriam insisted he fix
himself a sandwich first. A few minutes later Andyapparently
no longer upsetreappeared and asked if
Russell would mind driving Mary Alice Hubert, Miriam's
mother and Andy's grandmother, back to her house. The
73-year-old Mrs. Hubert, a widow of ten years, was still
recovering from a mild heart attack in December and
had forgotten to bring her medication. The eighteen-year-old
Brennert offered to take Mary Alice's house key and
drive over by himself for the medicine but Andy insisted
Mrs. Hubert go along.
"I
thought it seemed kind of odd," said Bill Gardner,
a neighbor who was present at the time, "Andy being
so bound and determined to get the two of them out of
there before the fireworks started. Poor Miriam didn't
know what to make of it all. I mean, I was on my way
out and didn't think it was any of my business, but
you'd think somebody would've said . . . I don't
know . . . said something about it. Andy started getting
outright rude. If he'd been my kid I'd've snatched him
bald-headed, acting that way. And after his mom'd gone
to all that fuss to make everything so nice."
Mrs. Hubert prevented things from getting out of hand
by saying it would be best if she went with Russell;
after all, she was an "old broad," set in
her ways, and everything in an old broad's house had
to be just so . . . besides, there were so many
medicine containers in her cabinet Russell might just
"bust his brain right open" trying to figure
out which was the right one.
As the two were on their way out, Andy stopped them
at the door to give Mrs. Hubert a hug.
According to her, Andy seemed ". . . really sorry
about something. He's a strong boy, an athlete, and
I don't care what anyone says, he should've got that
scholarship. Okay, maybe he wasn't as bright as some
kids, but he was a fine athlete and them college people
should've let that count for something. It was terrible,
listening to him talk about how he was maybe gonna have
to go to work at the factory to earn his college money
. . . everybody knows where that leads. I'm sorry, I
got off the track, didn't I? You asked about him hugging
me when we left that night . . . well, he was always
real careful when he hugged me never to squeeze too
hardthese old bones can't take it . . .
but when he hugged me then I thought he was going to
break my ribs. I just figured it was on account he felt
bad about the argument. I didn't mean to create such
a bother, I thought I had the medicine with me but I
. . . forget things sometimes.
"He
kissed me on the cheek and said 'Bye, Grandma. I love
you.' It wasn't so much the words, he always said that
same thing to me every time I left . . . it was the
way he said them. I remember thinking he was going to
cry, that's how those words sounded, so I said, 'Don't
worry about it. Your mom knows you didn't mean to be
so surly.' I told him that when I got back we'd watch
the rest of the fireworks and then make some popcorn
and maybe see a movie on the TV. He used to like doing
that with me when he was littler.
"He
smiled and touched my cheek with two of his fingershe'd
never done that beforeand he looked at
Russ like maybe he wanted to give him a hug, too, but
boys that age don't hug each other, they think it makes
them look like queers or something, but I could see
it in Andy's eyes that he wanted to hug Russ.
"Then
he said the strangest thing. He looked at Russ and kind
of . . . slapped the side of Russ's shoulderfriendly,
you know, like men'll do with each other when they feel
too silly to hug? Anyway, he, uh, did that shoulder
thing, then looked at Russ and said, 'The end is courage.'
I figured it was a line from some movie they'd seen
together. They love their movies, those two, always
quoting lines to each other like some kind of secret
codelike in Citizen Kane with 'Rosebud.'
That kind of thing.
"It
wasn't until we were almost to my house that Russ asked
me if I knew what the heck Andy meant when he said that.
"I
knew right then that something was wrong, terribly wrong.
Oh Lord, when I think of it now . . . the . . . the
pain a soul would have to be in to do something
. . . like that . . . ."
Russell Brennert and Mary Alice Hubert left the Leonard
house at 9:05. As soon as he saw Brennert's car turn
the corner at the end of the street, Andy immediately
went back upstairs and did not come down until the locally
sponsored Kiwanis Club fireworks display began at 9:15.
Several factors contributed to the neighbors' initial
failure to react to what happened. Firstly, there was
the thunderous noise of the fireworks themselves. Since
White's Field, the site of the fireworks display, was
less than one mile away, the resounding boom of the
cannons was, as one person described, ". . . damn
near loud enough to rupture your eardrums. Some folks
was even stuffing cotton into their ears."
Secondly, music from a pair of concert hall speakers
that Bill Gardner had set up in his front yard compounded
the glass-rattling noise and vibrations of the cannons.
"Every Fourth of July," said Gardner, "WLCB
(a local low-wattage FM radio station) plays music to
go along with the fireworks. You know, 'America the
Beautiful,' 'Stars and Stripes Forever,' Charlie Daniels's
'In America,' stuff like that, and every year I tune
'em in and set my speakers out and let fly. Folks on
this street want me to do it, they all like it.
"How
the fuck was I supposed to know Andy was gonna flip
out?"
Third and lastly, there were innumerable firecrackers
being set off by neighborhood children. This not only
added to the general racket but also accounted for the
neighbors ignoring certain visual clues once Andy moved
outside. "You have to understand," said one
detective, "that everywhere around these people,
up and down the street, kids were setting off all different
kinds of things: firecrackers, sparklers, bottle-rockets,
M-80s, for godssake! Is it any wonder it took them so
long to tell the difference between the flash of a firecracker
and the muzzle-flash from a gun?
"Andy
Leonard had to've been planning this for a long time.
He knew there'd be noise and explosions and lights and
a hundred other things to distract everyone from what
he was doing."
At exactly 9:15 p.m. Andy Leonard walked calmly downstairs
carrying three semiautomatic pistolsa Walther
P.38 9mm Perabellum, a Mauser Luger 7.65mm, and a Coonan
.357 Magnumand a Heckler & Koch HK53
5.56mm assault rifle which he laid across the top of
the dining room table. He had taken the weapons from
his father's massive oak gun cabinet upstairs after
forcing open one of its doors with a crowbar.
Of the thirteen other family members present at that
time, fiveincluding Irv Leonard, 62, and
his oldest son, Chet, 25were outside watching
the fireworks. Andy's two older sistersJessica,
29, and Elizabeth, 34 (both of whose husbands were also
outside)-were in the kitchen hurriedly
helping their mother put away the buffet leftovers so
they could join the men on the front lawn.
Jessica's three childrenRandy, age 7; Theresa,
4; and Joseph, 9-1/2 monthswere in the
living room. Randy and his sister were just finishing
changing their baby brother's diaper and were in a hurry
to get out and see the fireworks, so they paid no attention
to their uncle. They were strapping Joseph into his
safety seat. The infant thought they were playing with
him and giggled a lot.
Elizabeth's two childrenIan, 12, and Lori,
9were thought to be already outside but
were upstairs in the "toy room"which
contained, among other items, a pool table and a 27-inch
color television for use with Andy's extensive video
game collection.
By the time Andy walked downstairs at 9:15, Ian and
Lori were already dead, their skulls crushed by repeated
blows with, first, a gun butt, then a pool cue, and,
at the last, with billiard balls that were crammed into
their mouths after their jaws were wrenched loose.
Laying the HK53 across on top of the dinner table, Andy
stuffed the Mauser and blood-spattered Walther into
the waist of his jeans, then walked into the kitchen,
raised the .357, and shot his sister Jessica through
the back of her head. She was standing with her back
to him, in the process of putting some food into the
refrigerator. The hollow-point bullet blew out most
of her brain and sheared away half of her face. When
she dropped she pulled two refrigerator shelves and
their contents down with her.
Andy then shot Elizabethonce in the stomach,
once in the center of her chestthen turned
the gun on his mother, shooting at point-blank range
through her right eye.
After that things happened very quickly. Andy left the
kitchen and collided with his niece, who was running
toward the front door. He caught her by the hair and
swung her facefirst into a fifty-inch high
cast-iron statue that sat against a wall in the foyer.
The statue was a detailed reproduction of the famous
photograph of the American flag being raised on Mount
Suribachi at Iwo Jima.
Theresa slammed against it with such force that her
nose shattered, sending bone fragments shooting backwards
down her throat. Still gripping her long strawberry-blonde
hair in his fist, Andy lifted her off her feet and impaled
her by the throat on the tip of the flagstaff. The blood
patterns on the wall behind the statue indicated an
erratic arterial spray, leading the on-scene medical
examiner to speculate she must have struggled to get
free at some point; this, along with the increase in
serotonin and free histamine levels in the wound, indicated
Theresa had lived at least three minutes after being
impaled.
Seven-year-old Randy saw his uncle impale Theresa on
the statue, then grabbed the carrying handle of Joseph's
safety seat, picked up his infant brother, and ran toward
the kitchen. Andy shot him in the back of his right
leg. Randy went down, losing his grip on Joseph's safety
seat, which skittered across the blood-sopped tile floor
and came to a stop inches from Jessica's body. Little
Joseph, wide awake, frightened, and helpless in the
seat, began to cry.
Randy tried to stand but his leg was useless, so he
began moving toward Joseph by kicking out with his left
leg and using his elbows and hands to pull himself forward.
Nine feet away, Andy stood at the kitchen entrance watching
his nephew's valiant attempt to save the baby.
Then he shot Randy between the shoulders.
And the kid kept moving.
As Andy took aim to fire again, the front door swung
open and Keith Shannon, Elizabeth's husband, stuck his
head in and shouted for everyone to hurry up and come
on.
Shannon saw Theresa's body dangling from the statue
and screamed over his shoulder at the other men out
on the lawn, then came inside, calling out the names
of his wife and children.
He never stopped to see if Theresa was still alive.
Andy stormed across the kitchen and through the second,
smaller archway that led into the rooms on the front
left side of the house. As a result of taking this shortcut
he beat Shannon to the living room by a few seconds,
enabling him to take his brother-in-law by surprise.
Andy emptied the rest of the Magnum's rounds into Shannon's
head and chest. One shot went wild and shattered the
large front bay window.
Andy tossed the Magnum aside and pulled both the Mauser
and Walther from his jeans, holding one pistol in each
hand. He bolted from the living room, through the dining
room, and rounded the corner into the foyer just as
Irv hit the top step of the porch.
Andy kicked open the front door and for the next fifteen
seconds, while the sky ignited and Lee Greenwood sang
how God should bless this country he loved, God bless
the USA, the front porch of the Leonard house became
a shooting gallery as each of the four remaining adult
malesat least two of whom were drunkcame
up onto the porch one by one and were summarily executed.
Andy fired both pistols simultaneously, killing his
father, his uncle Martin, his older brother Chet, and
Tom Hamilton, Jessica's husband.
A neighbor across the street, Bess Paymer, saw Irv's
pulped body wallop backwards onto the lawn and yelled
for her husband, Francis. Francis took one look out
the window and said, "Someone's gone crazy."
Bess was already dialing the police.
Andy went back into the house and grabbed the rifle
from the dining room table, then headed for the kitchen
where Randy, still alive, was attempting to drag Joseph
through the back door. When he heard his uncle come
into the kitchen, Randy reached out and grabbed a carving
knife from the scattered contents of the cutlery drawer
which Miriam had wrenched loose when she had fallen,
then threw himself over his infant brother.
"That
was one goddamn brave kid," an investigator said
later. "Here he was, in the middle of all these
bodies, and he had two bullets in him so we know he
was in a lot of pain, and the only thing that mattered
to him was protecting his baby brother. An amazing kid.
His folks would've been proud. Hell, it makes me proud.
If there's one bright spot in all this shit, it's in
knowing that that kid loved his brother enough to .
. . well . . . ah, hell, I can't talk about it any more."
For some reason Andy did not shoot his nephew a third
time. He came across the kitchen floor and raised the
butt of the rifle to bludgeon Randy's skull, and that's
when Randy, in his last moments, pushed himself forward
and jammed the knife in his uncle's calf. Then he died.
Andy dropped to the floor, screaming through clenched
teeth, and pulled the knife from his leg. He grabbed
his nephew's lifeless body and heaved it over onto its
back, then beat its face in with his fists. After that,
he loaded fresh clips into the pistols, grabbed Joseph,
and stumbled out the back door to the garage and drove
away in Irv's brand-new pickup.
At 9:21 p.m. the night duty dispatcher at the Cedar
Hill Police Department received Bess Paymer's call.
As was SOP, the dispatcher, while believing Bess had
heard gunfire, asked if she were certain that someone
had been shot. This dispatcher later defended their
actions by saying, ". . . every year we get yahoos
all over this city who decide that the Kiwanis' fireworks
display is the perfect time to go out in their backyard
and fire their guns off into the airwell,
the Fourth and New Year's Eve, we get a lot of that.
We had every unit out that night, just like every holiday,
and there were drunks to deal with, bar fights, illegal
fireworks being set offM80s and such, traffic
accidents . . . holiday's tend to be a bit of mess for
us around here. Seems that's when everybody and their
brother decides to act like a royal horse's ass.
"The
point is, if we get a report of alleged gunfire during
the fireworks, we're required to ask the caller if anyone
has been hurt. If not, then we get to it as soon as
we can. It may take a while but we'll get there. If
we had to send a cruiser to check out every report of
gunfire that comes in on the Fourth of July, we'd never
get anything else done. I didn't do anything wrong.
It's not my fault."
It took Bess Paymer and her husband the better part
of two minutes to convince the dispatcher that someone
had gone crazy over at the Leonard house and shot everyone.
The dispatcher agreed to send a cruiser to check it
out.
Francis, red-faced with fury at this point, screamed
at the dispatcher that they'd better make it fast because
he was grabbing his hunting rifle and going over there
himself, goddammit.
And he did.
The first cruiser was dispatched at 9:24 p.m.
At 9:27 a call came in from the Leonard house; by noon
the next day, that phone call would be heard by most
of the nation, courtesy of all six networks, as well
as newscasts from hundreds of local stations across
the country:
"This
is Francis Paymer. My wife and I called you a couple
of minutes ago. I'm standing in the . . . the kitchen
of the Leonard house . . . that's 182 Merchant Street
. . . and I've got somebody's brains stuck to the bottom
of my shoe.
"There's
been a shooting here. A little girl's hanging in the
hallway and there's blood all over the walls and the
floors and I can't tell where one person's body ends
and the next one begins because everybody's dead. I
can still smell the gunpowder and smoke.
"Is
that good enough for you to do something? C-could you
maybe please if it's not too much trouble send someone
out here NOW? It might be a good idea, because the crazy
BASTARD WHO DID THIS ISN'T HERE
"and
I think he might've took a baby with him."
By 9:30 p.m. Merchant Street was clogged with police
cruisers.
And Andy Leonard was halfway to Moundbuilder's Park,
where the Second Presbyterian Church was sponsoring
Parish Family Night. Over one hundred people had been
gathered at the park since five in the afternoon, picnicking,
tossing Frisbees, playing checkers or flying kites.
A little before nine, the president of the Parish Council
had arrived with a truckload of folding chairs that
were set up in a clearing at the south end of the park.
By the time Francis Paymer made his famous phone call,
107 parish members were seated in twelve neat little
rows watching the fireworks display.
Between leaving his Merchant Street house and arriving
at Moundbuilder's Park, Andy Leonard shot and killed
six more people as he drove past them. Two were in a
car, the other four had been sitting out on their lawns
watching the fireworks. In every case, Andy simply kept
one hand on the steering wheel while shooting with the
other through an open window.
At 9:40 p.m., just as the fireworks kicked into high
gear for the grand finale, Andy drove his father's pickup
truck at eighty miles per hour through the wooden gate
at the northeast side of the park, barreled across the
picnic grounds, over the grassy mound that marked the
south border, and went straight down into the middle
of the spectators.
Three people were killed and eight others injured as
the truck plowed into the back row of chairs. Then Andy
threw open the door and leapt from the truck and opened
fire with the HK53. The parishioners scrambled in panic,
many of them falling over chairs. Of the dead and wounded
at the park, none was able to get farther than ten yards
away before being shot.
Andy stopped only long enough to yank the pistols from
the truck. The first barrage with the rifle was to disable;
the second, with the pistols, was to finish off anyone
who might still be alive.
At 9:45 p.m. Andy Leonard crawled up onto the roof of
his father's pickup truck and watched the grand finale
of the fireworks display. The truck's radio was tuned
in to WLCB. The bombastic finish of "The 1812 Overture"
erupted along with the fiery colors in the dark heaven
above.
The music and the fireworks ended.
Whirling visibar lights could be seen approaching the
park. The howl of sirens hung in the air like a protracted
musical chord.
Andy Leonard shoved the barrel of the rifle in his mouth
and blew most of his head off. His nearly-decapitated
body fell backward on the roof, then slid slowly onto
the hood of the truck, smearing a long trail of gore
down the center of the windshield.
Twenty minutes later, just as Russell Brennert and Mary
Alice Hubert turned onto Merchant Street to find it
blocked by police cars and ambulances, one of the officers
on the scene at Moundbuilder's Park heard what he thought
was the sound of a baby crying. Moments later, he discovered
Joseph Hamilton, still alive and still in his safety
seat, on the passenger-side floor of the pickup. The
infant was clutching a bottle of formula that had been
taken from his mother's baby bag.
6.
I stopped at this point and took a deep breath, surprised
to find that my hands were shaking. I looked to the
ghosts and they whispered Courage.
I swallowed once, nodded my head, then said to my students,
"That baby was me.
"I
have no idea why Andy didn't kill me. I was taken from
the carnage and placed in the care of Cedar Hill Children's
Services." I opened my briefcase and removed a
file filled with photocopies of old newspaper articles
and began passing them around the room; I had brought
several pieces of my research along that morning in
case I'd need them to prompt discussion among my students.
"The details of how I came to be adopted by the
Conover family of Waynesboro, Virginia are written in
these articles. Suffice to say that I was perhaps the
most famous baby in the country for the next few months."
One student held up a copy of an article and said, "It
says here that the Conovers took you back to Cedar Hill
six months after the killings. Says you were treated
like a celebrity."
I looked at the photo accompanying the article and shook
my head, somewhat sadly. "I have no memory of that
at all. At home, in a box I keep in my filing cabinet,
are hundreds of cards I received from people who lived
in Cedar Hill at that time. Most of them are either
dead or have moved away now, and when I went back there
a few years ago I could only find a few of them.
"It's
odd to think that, somewhere out there, there are dozens,
maybe even hundreds, of people, who prayed for me when
I was a baby, people I never knew and never will know.
For a while I was at the center of their thoughts. I
like to believe these people still think of me from
time to time. I like to believe it's those thoughts
and prayers that keep me safe from harm.
"But
as I said in the beginning, this story isn't really
about menot yet, at least. Maybe it never
will be. Some mysteries interwoven with one's heritage
must be confronted even if there is no possible chance
of finding an answer, and since I am not arrogant enough
to say, 'Listen: I know everything now,' I have little
choice but to offer this as something of a folk tale,
because that's what it is and always has been to me.
I suspect it will be this way until I die. If there
is any Great Truth to be discerned, I'm not the one
to proclaim what it might be. From the moment that nameless
police officer found a squalling baby on the floor of
a murderer's truck I ceased to be a part of the story.
But it has never stopped being a part of me."
7.
Details were too sketchy for the eleven p.m. news to
offer anything concrete about the massacre, but by the
time the local network affiliates broadcast their news-at-sunrise
programs, the tally was in.
Counting himself, Andy Leonard had murdered 32 people
and wounded 36 others, making his spree the largest
single mass shooting to date. (Some argued that since
the shootings took place in two different locations
they should be treated as two separate incidents, while
others insisted that since Andy had continuously fired
his weapons up until the moment of his death, including
the trail of shootings between his house and the park,
it was all one single incident. What could not be argued
was the body count, which made the rest of it more than
a bit superfluous.)
Those victims were what the specter of my uncle was
thinking about as Jackson Davies and Pete Cooper walked
through him.
Andy's ghost hung its head and sighed, then took one
half-step to the right and vanished back into the ages
where it would re-live its murderous rampage in perpetuity,
always coming back to the moment it stood outside the
house and watched as two men passed through it on their
way toward a police officer.
8.
Russell Brennert looked at the two other janitors who'd
come along tonight and knew without asking that neither
one of them wanted him to be here. Of course not; he
had known the crazy fucker, he had been Andy
Leonard's best friend, his presence made it all
just a bit more real than they wanted it to be. Did
they think that some part of what had driven Andy to
kill all of those people had rubbed off on him, as well?
He finished unloading the last of the wheeled buckets,
then filled each one with towels, scrub sponges, one-quart
bottles of industrial cleaner concentrate, wax remover,
and finish-stripping liquid, a pair of yellow rubber
gloves, Fiberglass face masks to protect against chemical
fumes, a roll of paper towels, a spray-bottle of Windex,
an extra mop head and, of course, a mop. There were
five buckets in all, so this took a few minutesduring
which neither of his coworkers offered to help, for
which Russell was grateful; at least he wouldn't have
to stand here and try to make conversation with . .
. with . . . .
Christ, he couldn't even remember their names. Not that
it was any big deal, mind you. He'd seen these guys
around school often enough but never in any kind of
a social situation. They passed in the halls during
class change, stood in line in the cafeteria, Russell
had home room with one of them
hell
with it, he thought. Call them Mutt & Jeff and leave
it at that. Odds were they wanted even less to do with
him than he did with them.
He checked (for the third or fourth time) to make sure
each plastic barrel had plenty of extra trash bags.
Then Mutt came over and, fighting the smirk trying to
sneak onto his face, asked, "Hey, Brennertthat's
your name, right?"
"Yeah."
"We
were just wonderin' if, well, it's true, y'know?"
"If
what's true?"
Mutt gave a quick look to Jeff, who turned away and
oh-so-subtly covered his mouth with his hand.
Russell dug his fingernails into his palms to keep from
getting angry; these guys were going to pull something,
or say something, he just knew it.
Mutt sniffed dryly as he turned back to Russell. He'd
given up trying to fight back the smirk on his face.
Russell bit his lower lip. Stay cool, you can do
it, you need the money . . . .
"We'd
just been wonderin'," said Mutt, "if it's
true that you and Leonard used to . . . go to the movies
together."
Jeff snorted a laugh and tried to cover it up by coughing.
Russell held his breath. "Sometimes, yeah."
"Just
the two of you or you guys ever take dates?"
You're
doing fine, just fine, he's a mutant, just keep that
in mind . . . .
"Sometimes
it was just him and me. Sometimes he'd bring Barb along."
"Yeah,
yeah . . ." Mutt leaned in, lowering his voice
to a mock-conspiratorial whisper. "The thing is,
we heard that the two of you went to the drive-in together
a couple of days before he shot everybody."
Fine
and dandy, yessir. "That's right. Barb was
going to come along but she had to babysit her sister
at the last minute."
Mutt chewed on his lower lip to bite back a giggle.
Russell caught a peripheral glimpse of Davies and Cooper
heading back up to the porch with one of the cops.
"How
come you and your buddy went to the drive-in all by
yourselves?"
"We
wanted to see the movie." Jesus, Jackson, get down
here, will you?
Russell didn't hear all of the next question because
the pulsing of his blood sounded like a jackhammer in
his ears.
".
. . thigh?"
Russell blinked, exhaled, and dug his nails in a little
deeper. "I'm sorry, could you run that by me again?"
"I
said, last week after gym when we was all in the showers
I noticed you had a sucker-bite on your thigh."
"Birthmark."
"You
sure about that? Seemed to me it looked like a big ol'
hickey."
"Stare
at my thighs a lot, do you?"
Mutt's face went blank. Jeff jumped to his feet and
snarled, "Hey, watch it, motherfucker."
"Watch
what?" snapped Russell. "Why don't you feebs
just leave me alone? I've got better things to do than
be grilled by a couple of redneck homophobes."
"Ha!
Homo, huh?" said Mutt. "I always figured the
two of you musta been butt-buddies."
"Fagbags,"
said Jeff, then the two flaming wits high-fived one
another.
Russell suddenly realized that one of his hands had
reached over and gripped a mop handle. Don't do it,
Russ, don't you dare, they're not worth it. "Think
whatever you want. I don't care." He turned away
from them in time to see a bright blue van pull up behind
the police cruiser. A small satellite dish squatted
like a gargoyle on top of the van and Russell could
see through the windshield that Ms. Tanya Claymore,
Channel 9's red-hot newsbabe, was inside.
"Oh
shit," he whispered.
One of the reasons he'd agreed to help out tonightthe
money asidewas so he wouldn't have to stay
at home and hear the phone ring every ten minutes and
answer it to find some reporter on the other end asking
for Mr. Russell Brennert oh this is him I'm Whatsisname
from the In-Your-Face Channel, Central Ohio's News Authority
and I wanted to ask you a few questions about Andy Leonard
blah-blah-blah.
It had been like that for the last three days. He'd
hoped that coming out here tonight would give him a
reprieve from everyone's constant questions but it seemed
put
the ego in park, Russ. Yeah, maybe they called the house
and Mom or Dad told them you'd be out here, but it's
just possible they came out in hopes of getting inside
the house for a few minutes' worth of video for tomorrow's
news.
He thought about it for another second and decided that
his second notion was the right one. The police hadn't
let any reporters see the inside of the house and had
even posted guards to make sure no one tried to sneak
in. News vans had police scanners, didn't they? Tanya
Claymore and her crew had probably heard the cops in
the cruiser radio that they were going over to let the
janitors into the house.
"Hey,
gay-boy!"
Russell looked down at his hand on the mop handle and
smiled but there was not one ounce of humor in it.
Mutt smacked the back of his shoulder much harder than
was needed just to get his attention. "Hey, yo!
Brennert, I'm talking to you."
"Please
leave me alone? Please?"
All along the murky-death membrane that was Merchant
Street porch lights snapped on and ghostly forms shuffled
out in bathrobes and housecoats, some with curlers in
their hair or shoddy slippers on their feet.
Mutt & Jeff both laughed, but not too loudly.
"What's
it like to cornhole a psycho, huh?"
"I"
Russell swallowed the rest of the sentence and started
toward the house but Mutt grabbed his arm, wrenching
him backward and spinning him around.
One of the tattered spectres grabbed her husband's arm
and pointed from their porch to the three young men
by the van: Did it look like there was some trouble?
The ghosts of Irv and Miriam Leonard, accompanied by
their grandchildren Ian, Theresa, and Lori, stood off
to the side of the house and watched as well. Irv shook
his head in disgust and Miriam wiped at her eyes and
thought she felt her heart aching for Russell; such
a nice boy, he was.
On the porch of the Leonard house, an impatient Jackson
Davies waited while the officer ripped down the yellow
tape and inserted the key into the lock.
"Jackson?"
said Pete Cooper.
"What?"
Cooper cleared his throat and lowered his voice. "Do
you remember what you said about no reporters being
around?"
"Yeah,
so wha" Then he saw the Channel 9
News van. "Ah, fuck me with a fiddlestick! They
plant a homing device on that poor kid or something?"
He watched Tanya Claymore slide open the side door and
lower one of her too-perfect legs toward the ground
like some Hollywood starlet exiting a limo at a movie
premiere.
"Dammit,
I told you bringing Brennert along would be a
mistake."
"Thank
you, Mr. Hindsight. Let me worry about it?"
Cooper gestured toward the news van and said, "Aren't
you gonna do something?"
"I
don't know if I can." Davies directed this remark
to the police officer unlocking the door. The officer
looked over his shoulder and shrugged, then said, "If
she interferes with your crew performing the job you
pay them for, you've got every right to tell her to
go away."
"Just
make sure you get her phone number first," said
Cooper.
Davies turned his back to them and stared at Tanya Claymore.
If she even so much as looked at Russell, he'd drop
on her like a curse from heaven.
Down by the trash barrels and buckets, Mutt was standing
less than an inch from Russell's face and saying, "All
right, bad-ass, let's get to it. People're sayin' that
you maybe knew what Andy was gonna do and didn't say
anything."
"I
didn't," whispered Russell. "I didn't know."
Some part of him realized that Tanya's cameraman had
turned on his light and was taping them but he was backed
too far into a corner to care right now.
"Yeah,"
said Mutt contemptuously. "I'll just bet you didn't."
"I
didn't know, all right? He never said . . . a
thing to me."
"According
to the news, he was in an awful hurry to get you out
before he went gonzo."
For a moment Russell found himself back in the car with
Mary Alice, turning the corner and being almost blinded
by visibar lights, then that cop came over and pounded
on the window and said, "This area's restricted
for the moment, kid, so you're gonna have to"
and Mary Alice shouted, "Is that the Leonard house?
Did something happen to my family?" and then the
cop shone his flashlight in and asked, "You a relative,
ma'am?" and Mary Alice was already in tears and
Russell felt something boiling up from his stomach because
he saw one of the bodies being covered by a sheet and
then Mary Alice screamed and fell against him and a
sick cloud of pain descended on their skulls
"I
had no idea, okay?" The words fell to the ground
in a heap. Russell thought he could almost see them
groan before the darkness put them out of their misery.
"Do I have to keep on saying that or should I just
write it in braille and shove it up"
"you
knew, you had to know!" The mean-spirited
mockery of earlier was gone from Mutt's voice, replaced
by anger with some genuine hurt wrapped around it. "He
was your best friend!"
You
need the money, Russell.
"Two
of 'em was always together," said Jeff, just loud
enough for the microphone to get every word. "Everybody
figured that Brennert here was gay and was in love with
Andy."
Three
hundred dollars, Russell. Grocery money for a month
or so. Mom and Dad will appreciate it.
It seemed that both of his hands were gripping the mop
handle, and somehow that mop was no longer in the bucket.
He heard a chirpy voice go into its popular sing-song
mode: "This is Tanya Claymore. I'm standing outside
the house of Irving and Miriam Leonard at 182 Merchant
Street where"
"You
wanna do something about it?" said Mutt, pushing
Russell's shoulder. "Think you're man enough to
mess with me?"
Russell was only vaguely aware of Davies coming down
from the porch and shouting something at the news crew;
he was only vaguely aware of the second police officer
climbing from the cruiser and making a beeline to Ms.
Newsbabe; and he was only vaguely aware of Mutt saying,
"How come you came along to help with the clean-up
tonight? Idea of seeing all that blood and brains get
you hard, does it? You a sick fuck just like Andy?";
but the one thing of which he was fully, almost gleefully
aware, was that the mop had become a javelin in his
hands and he was going to go for the gold and hurl the
thing right into Mutt's great big ugly target of a mouth
Three
hundred dollars should just about cover the emergency
room bill
then
a hand clamped down so hard on Mutt's shoulder Russell
thought he heard bones crack.
Jackson Davies's smiling face swooped in and hovered
between them. "If you're finished with this nerve-tingling
display of machismo, we have a house to clean, remember?"
Still clutching Mutt's shoulder in a Vulcan death-grip,
Davies hauled the boy around and pushed him toward one
of the barrels. "Why can't you use your powers
for good?"
"Hey,
we were just"
"I
know what you were just, thank you very much.
I'd appreciate it" he gestured toward
Jeff "if you and the Boy Wonder here
would get off your asses and start carrying supplies
inside." Russell reached for a couple of buckets
but Davies stopped him. "Not you, Ygor. You stay
here with me for a second." Mutt & Jeff stood
staring as Ms. Newsbabe came jiggling up to Russell
in all of her journalistic glory.
Davies glowered at the two boys and said, "Yes,
her bazooba-wobblies are very big and no, you can't
touch them. Now get moving before I become unpleasant."
They became a blur of legs and mop buckets. Russell
said, "Mr. Davies, I'm sorry but"
"Hold
that thought."
Tanya and her cameraman were almost on top of them;
a microphone came toward their faces like a projectile.
"Russell?"
said Tanya. "Russell, hi. I'm Tanya Claymore and"
"A
friend of mine once stepped on a Claymore," said
Davies. "Made his sphincter switch places with
his eardrums. I was scraping his spleen off my face
for a week. Please don't bother any member of my crew,
Ms. Claymore."
The reporter's startling green eyes widened. She made
a small, quick gesture with her free hand, and her cameraman
swung around to get Davies into the frame.
"We'd
like to talk to both of you, Mr. Davies"
"Go
away." Davies looked at Russell and the two of
them grabbed the remaining buckets and barrels and started
toward the house.
Tanya Claymore sneered at Davies's back, then turned
around and waved to the driver of the news van. He looked
over and she mimed talking into a telephone receiver.
The driver nodded his head and picked up the cellular
phone. Tanya gave her mike to the cameraman and took
off after Davies.
"Mr.
Davies, please, could youdammit, I'm in
heels! Would you wait a second?"
"She
wants me." whispered Davies to Russell. Despite
everything, Russell gave a little smile. He liked Jackson
Davies a lot and was glad this man was his boss.
Tanya stumbled up the incline of the lawn and held out
one of her hands for Davies to take hold of and help
her.
"Are
those fingernails real or press-ons?" asked Davies,
not making a move.
Russell put down his supplies and gave her the help
she needed. As soon as she reached level ground she
offered a sincere smile and squeezed his hand in thanks.
Davies said, "What's it going to take to make you
leave us alone?"
Her eyes hardened but the smile remained. "All
I want is to talk to the both of you about what you're
going to do."
"It's
a little obvious, isn't it?"
"Central
Ohio would like to know."
"Oh,"
said Davies. "I see. You're in constant touch with
Central Ohio? Champion of the common folk in your fake
nails and designer dress and tinted contacts?"
"Does
all that just come to you or do you write it down ahead
of time and memorize it?"
"You're
not being very nice."
"Neither
are you."
They both fell silent and stood staring at one another.
Finally, Davies sighed and said, "Could we at least
get our stuff inside and get started first? I could
come out in a half-hour and talk to you then."
"What
about Russell?"
Russell half-raised his hand. "Russell is
right here. Please don't talk about me in third person."
"Sorry,"
said Tanya with a grin. "You haven't talked to
any reporters, Russell. I don't know if you remember,
but you've hung up on me twice."
"I
know. I was gonna send you a card to apologize. We always
watch you at my house. My mom thinks you look like a
nice girl and my dad's always had a thing for redheads."
Tanya leaned a little closer to him and said, "What
about you? Why do you like watching me?"
Russell was glad that it was so dark out because he
could feel himself blushing. "I, uh . . .Ilook,
Ms. Claymore, I don't know what I could say to you about
what happened that you don't already know."
The radio in the police cruiser squawked loudly and
the officer down by the vans leaned through the window
to grab the mike.
"All
right," said Tanya, looking from Davies to Russell,
then back to Davies again. "I won't lie to either
of you. The news director would really, really prefer
that I come back tonight with some tape either of Russell
or the inside of the house. I almost had to beg him
to let me do this tonight. Don't take this the wrong
wayespecially you, Russellbut
I'm sick to death of being a talking head. Don't ever
repeat that to anyone. If"
"Oh,
allow me," said Davies. "If you don't come
back tonight with a really boffo piece, you'll be stuck
reading Teleprompters and covering new mall openings
for the rest of your career, right?"
Tanya said nothing.
Russell looked over at his boss. "Uh, look, Mr.
Davies, if this is gonna be a problem I can"
"She's
lying, Russ. Her news director is all hot to trot for
some shots of the inside of the house and he'll do anything
for the exclusive pictures, won't he? Up to and including
having his most popular female anchor lay a sob story
on us that sounds like it came out of some overbaked
1940s melodrama. Nice try, though. Goddammitit
wouldn't surprise me if you and your crew were the ones
who tried to break in."
Tanya looked startled. "What? Someone tried to
break into the house?"
"Wrong
reading, sister. Don't call us, we'll call you."
The hardness in Tanya's eyes now bled down into the
rest of her face. "Fine, Mr. Davies. Have it your
way."
The officer in the cruiser walked up to his partner
on the porch and the two of them whispered for a moment,
then came down toward Davies and Tanya.
"Mr.
Davies," said the officer who'd unlocked the door,
"we just received orders that Ms. Claymore and
her cameraman are to be allowed to photograph the inside
of the house."
Behind her back, Tanya gave a thumbs-up to the driver
of the news van.
"What'd
you do," asked Davies, "have your boss call
in a few favors or did you just promise to fuck the
mayor?"
"Mr.
Davies," said one of the officers. The warning
in his voice was quite clear. "Ms. Claymore can
photograph only the foyer and one other room. You'll
all go in at the same time. I will personally escort
Ms. Claymore and her cameraman into, through, and out
of the house. She can only be inside for ten minutes,
no more." He turned toward Tanya. "I'm sorry,
Ms. Claymore, those're our orders. If you're inside
longer than ten minutes, we're to consider it to be
trespassing and are to act accordingly."
"Well,"
she said, straightening her jacket and brushing a thick
strand of hair from her eye, "it's nice to see
that the First Amendment's alive and well and being
slowly choked to death in Cedar Hill."
"You
should attend one of our cross burnings sometime,"
said Davies.
"You're
a jerk."
"How
would you know? You never attend the meetings."
"That's
enough, boys and girls," said Officer Lock &
Key. "Could we move this along, please?"
"One
thing," said Tanya. "Would it be all right
if we got some shots of the outside of the house first?"
"You'd
better make it fast," said Davies. "I feel
a record-time cleaning streak coming on."
"Or
I could get them later."
Russell had already walked away from the group and was
setting his supplies onto the porch. The front door
was open and the overhead light in the foyer had been
turned on and he caught sight of a giant red-black spider
clinging to the right-side wall
he
turned quickly away and took a breath, pressing one
of his hands against his stomach.
Mutt & Jeff laughed at him as they walked into the
house.
Pete Cooper shook his head and dismissed Russell with
a wave of his hand.
The ghosts of the Leonard family surrounded Russell
on the porch, Irv placing a reassuring hand on the boy's
shoulder while Miriam stroked his hair and the children
looked on in silence.
Tanya Claymore's cameraman caught Russell's expression
on tape.
It wasn't until Jackson Davies came up and took hold
of his hand that Russell snapped out of his fugue and,
without saying a word, got to the job.
And all along Merchant Street, shadowy forms in their
housecoats and slippers watched from the safety of front
porches.
9.
Even more famous than Francis Paynter's phone call is
Tanya Claymore's videotape of that night. It ran four-and-a-half
minutes and was the featured story on Channel 9's six
o'clock news broadcast the following evening. Viewer
response was so overwhelming that the tape was broadcast
again at seven and eleven p.m., then at six a.m. and
noon the next day, then again, re-edited to two minutes,
forty-five seconds, at seven and eleven p.m. The story
won Tanya a local Emmy Award and caught the attention
of a network executive who flew her to Los Angeles later
that month for an audition. She was offered a network
job and accepted it.
She credited all of her success to the "Clean-up"
tape.
It is an extraordinary piece of work, and I showed it
to my students that day. I eventually received an official
reprimand from the school board for doing itseveral
of the students had nightmares about it, compounding
those about the Utica killingsbut I thought
they needed to see and hear other people, strangers,
express what they themselves were feeling.
The ghosts wanted to see it again, as well.
As did Iand why not? In a way it is not
so much about the aftermath of a tragedy as it is a
chronicle of my birth, a point of reference on the map
of my life: This is where I really began.
10.
The tape opens with a shot of the Leonard house, bathed
in shadow. Dim figures can be seen moving around its
front porch. Sounds of footsteps. A muffled voice. A
door being opened. A light coming on. Then another.
And another.
Silhouettes appear in an upstairs window. Unmoving.
The camera pulls back slightly. Seen from the street
the lights from the house form a pattern of sorts as
they slip out from the cracks in the particleboard over
the downstairs windows.
It takes a moment, but suddenly the house looks like
it's smiling. And it is not a pleasant smile.
All of this takes perhaps five seconds. Then Tanya Claymore's
voice chimes softly in as she introduces herself and
says, "I'm standing outside the house of Irving
and Miriam Leonard at 182 Merchant Street where, as
you know, four nights ago their son Andy began a rampage
that would leave over thirty people dead and over thirty
more wounded."
At that very moment, someone inside the house kicks
against the sheet of particleboard over the front bay
window and wrenches it loose while a figure on the porch
uses the claw end of a hammer to pull it free. The board
comes away and a massive beam of light explodes outward,
momentarily filling the screen.
The camera smoothly shifts its angle to deflect the
light. As it does so, Tanya Claymore resolves into focus
like a ghost on the right side of the screen. Whether
it was purposefully done this way or not, the effect
is an eerie one.
She says, "Just a few moments ago, accompanied
by two members of the Cedar Hill Police Department,
a team of janitors entered the Leonard house to begin
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