Ollie Clark—Sunday, June 23, 2019
Ollie knew some church families, but she’d never really been involved with any, so Sundays weren’t for church. They were a time to generally avoid restaurants and grocery stores when the local services got out, since they’d be flooded, which made it the perfect day to hit the Keweenaw Co-Op, grab sandwiches from the deli, and head out to Calumet Waterworks for a picnic lunch. True, there were so many places on the Keweenaw you could just park and head down to a secluded section of beach, but this way Harper and Brad would be able to meet up with them.
The Waterworks was not the sunrise beach. That one had been just a little stretch where Eli had pulled over and they’d spent the night talking and … well. They’d officially been a couple again since that morning, that was all. If not for that sunrise …
The beach was rocks instead of sand, but Ollie spread a blanket anyway and slipped off her shoes to sit and wait for the other two. Eli had his head down as he walked along the waterline, bending every so often to grab an agate. Seriously, it was like his eyes weren’t even the same as hers—Ollie had never found an agate in her life, but he spotted them from yards away. Local jewelers were always looking for them, so he had a pretty good side hustle going on as far as agates went.
When Ollie had tried suggesting that her engagement ring could have an agate instead of a diamond, she’d offended him. Apparently engagement ring stones were supposed to be something rare.
“Hey, don’t get all the good ones!” Harper called as they came over the rise to the beach, clamping down their giant straw hat with one hand while they ran toward the water to join Eli, playfully shoving him out of the way.
Brad joined Ollie with a sigh, spreading his own blanket. “We didn’t bring any spare clothes. They’re not riding home in my car wet.”
Ollie snorted. “After all the times we’ve just jumped on in?”
“Stripped to our undies and jumped on in,” he corrected, setting down an actual wicker picnic hamper before stretching out next to her, propped up on one elbow as though the rocks weren’t digging into it. “We at least had some dry layers for going home.”
She shrugged. “They could wrap in a blanket.”
“We’d get stopped for indecent exposure, sure as anything.”
“All those nights …”
“Yeah, well, my brain’s fully formed now, Olls, and we’re damn lucky nobody ever spotted our bare asses.” Brad grinned though and shook his head. “I swear there were times I wanted to tell your mom you were getting far more than Birdy ever did, except you just did it all with the same guy.”
“You wanted to talk about sex with my mom?”
He shrugged, watching the agate hunters. “She would’ve laughed. Your dad would’ve gotten pissed and I don’t know what he would’ve done to Eli, but your mom would’ve laughed. Sorry, did I say something?”
Ollie had drawn in a quick breath through her nose and she was around someone who cared enough to catch it. “I just, uh.” She cleared her throat and shook her head. “She would’ve laughed because she saw us together and, um … well. I wasn’t bruised or anything.”
Brad blinked and sat up. “Olls?”
“Not me. Mom.” She licked her lips. “Had some stuff in her past. That’s all. Stuff that I don’t think she knew how to approach Birdy about it, you know? Ask her if it was true. All the sex at that age … I don’t know.”
“Olls, do you need to talk about something?” he asked quietly.
“Araminta knows, so no, I don’t think so.” Somehow both Ollie and Eli ended up with good therapists who had unique names, so it wasn’t like she had to clarify who, exactly, Araminta was.
Brad frowned, chewing on his lip, and nodded to himself as he lay back down again. “I’m sorry.”
For Mom? For bringing it up? Or in some complicated way for Ollie having grown up with a mom who knew too much about the ways sex could turn bad?
Eli and Harper came back up the beach a couple minutes later, Harper laughing and nudging Eli in the ribs, making him grin. “He’s a cheat and thief, Olls,” they announced. “Leave him. We’ll run away together. Aw, hell.”
That last part didn’t seem to fit, and Ollie followed Harper’s gaze.
“What the fuck,” Eli agreed quietly, joining Ollie on the blanket and adding a handful of agates to her purse all by feel, watching Len Wilcox as he scanned the beach, visibly started, hesitated—Good, go away, Ollie thought—and then came toward them.
“Should’ve picked a different beach,” Harper muttered, slipping into their usual poker face. The one that meant most people thought they were a cold-hearted … well, strangers usually wanted to follow that up with bitch or bastard. Harper preferred the gender-neutral fool of a Took.
“Hey.” Len Wilcox stopped a few steps away, hands in his pockets, and grinned, but the light was wrong so Ollie couldn’t tell if it was sheepish or faking. At least he wore jeans and a T-shirt, but they were the kind of jeans that came with the holes already in them and a T-shirt that was bought pre-faded. “Your dad gave me a list of places to see, so I was just doing a tour. Everything’s so far away up here.”
“Len, this is Harper and Brad,” Eli told him, doing a good job of keeping his voice neutral and not, for example, clearly pointing out that the other man had zoomed in on Ollie with a laser focus.
Harper held out their hand. “Harper Moilanen. They/them.”
Len Wilcox blinked but came forward to shake. “Hi. Len.”
Brad smiled and, although Ollie couldn’t be sure, she guessed it was his shark smile and not his teddy bear smile. “Brad Culver. He/him.”
This time Len Wilcox just nodded but, before Ollie could relax, he crouched down, elbows on his knees and hands clasped. “I’ve emailed both of you. About the book.”
“Wendy and Birdy aren’t in your book anymore,” Brad pointed out, accepting the sandwich Harper passed him. “Since they aren’t connected to Kelly. So.”
Len Wilcox shrugged, content to stay here like this forever. Apparently he didn’t skip leg day. “Maybe it’s not a serial killer, but it’s still a fascinating story, don’t you think? You grew up with Ollie and Eli, and you knew Wendy and Birdy. Those are valuable perspectives. You could really shed light on them as complex individuals.”
Oh God, it really was his line.
“We have your contact info.” Harper’s voice was the same dead robotic thing they usually used when their face went blank. “We know how to tell you if we change our minds.”
“Look, I’m just saying.” Len Wilcox tilted his head and spread his empty hands. “I get the resistance. I do. But I don’t want to get them wrong. The more information I have, the more people willing to share their memories …”
“Mr. Wilcox, you really need to learn how to take no for an answer.” Although Brad’s posture was easy, his voice was cold.
Len Wilcox looked at him, apparently trying to figure out how much of Brad’s bulk was muscle and what might not be. Who might win in a fight.
Who’d be taller if they both straightened up.
Then he looked at Ollie, like maybe she’d change her mind and beg her friends to talk to him. Sign their names and their words away in the name of shedding light on complex individuals.
“You’ve got a whole list of places, hey?” Brad reminded him. “And nothing’s all that close here. So.” He raised an eyebrow when Len didn’t move. “Get on to the next one.”
Len Wilcox slowly rose to his feet, the gesture smooth and even with no wobbles. So yes, Ollie confirmed, he kept up with leg day. He paused there a moment, looking down at Brad, before turning and heading back to the parking lot.
“Phew,” Harper murmured, eyebrows going up as their mask fell off. “I’d hate to meet his mother.”
“His mother?” Eli echoed.
“Yeah. The woman who put that up on a pedestal and turned him into an entitled brat.” They shook their head.
“Bastard,” Brad agreed. “Olls, do we need to tell our little ace friend how he was looking at you?”
She shook her head, but Harper said it anyway: “He wants you bad and he wants Eli to know it. Just another notch on his bedpost.”
“Can we not talk about Len Wilcox?” she requested. “It’s ruining my appetite.”
“I’m just saying,” Brad protested, clearly trying to be reasonable. “I myself am fully capable of looking at your fiancé without obviously undressing him with my eyes. It’s not my fault Harper doesn’t have that kind of self-control around you.”
“Bradley Dennis,” Ollie groaned, dropping her face into her hand.
Harper just shrugged. “Eli knows I’m all about consent and I’m not down with cheating, so it’s pure admiration. You two want some Doritos, or are you feeling all high and mighty with your preservative-free meats and fresh-pressed organic juice?”
Interview excerpts, Len Wilcox with Jared Chapman, April 27, 2019
JC: Okay so can I go?
LW: Yep, we’re good to go.
JC: Okay, so: I wasn’t lying when I said I woke up that night and didn’t see Eli, but that doesn’t mean he killed anyone. Okay? Because he didn’t. He didn’t have access to a gun, he didn’t even know how to fire a gun, and he didn’t have a beef with Randy and Wendy. Okay? Things were going good with Ollie and I know she thought they were going good, too.
LW: How do you know?
JC: She told me. Okay? We were friends. We’d talk, and I’d see them together, and she’d get this goofy little grin when we talked about him. Things were good. She stuck to him like glue. He was over there all the time. Wendy’d ask him to stay for dinner so he didn’t have to go home, that kind of thing. Make it so my mom didn’t have to feed him all the time. That family supported him, okay? They were there for him when his own parents couldn’t be. And he would’ve known, okay, that he couldn’t try to pin it on Randy and get Ollie to himself, because first of all he already had Ollie all to himself, and second Randy couldn’t have done it. His own wife and daughter? And for Eli it was like a bonus mom and a sister.
LW: Do you want to talk about how it felt when Eli was arrested?
JC: How do you think it felt, man? They’re all turning on me, like vipers, saying it’s my word that did it. Eli said he slept over here all night and then I’m saying I woke up and he wasn’t there, but I didn’t actually check the house, okay? He just wasn’t in the bedroom. But it was already out there, okay, and it’s not like I could backtrack on it because that would’ve been a lie, except I didn’t get to clarify, either. Nobody put it in the headlines when I was like hey, dude, I said he wasn’t in the bedroom. Maybe he was in the bathroom, maybe he was in the house, how should I know? I didn’t conduct a search. If he says he was here, he was here. And he certainly wasn’t out there freaking killing anyone.
LW: But you were the only one willing to go on the record to say that.
JC: Dude, don’t make that a dig at Ollie, okay? Full on the record here. She was nineteen, everyone was talking about how her mom and her baby sister died, and I mean brutal disgusting details. Out in public and everything. Everyone was going on about how Eli did it, speculating details, and of course she couldn’t say anything. She’s lost, she’s confused, she’s in mourning, and half her family’s gone. Her family and Eli both. The police were coming after her, trying to make it her fault that Eli did it. The flipping police, man. Her dad got her a lawyer and everything. Can you imagine? Nineteen, you can’t go home until your mom and sister’s blood has been cleaned out of the house, and the police are trying to blame it on you. Saying you made your boyfriend do it. Then he’s arrested, and she can’t even talk to him, and man. Of course she kept saying “No comment.”
LW: Through her lawyer.
JC: Of course through her lawyer. They were accusing her of being an accessory. What did Eli do as soon as they arrested him? Asked for a lawyer. That’s what you do when the cops start talking to you. And what else was she going to say? If she’d defended him, nobody would’ve believed her. Randy would’ve disowned her, and then she would’ve been left entirely alone. Besides, the police were after it like a whole Bonnie and Clyde thing. Like Eli did the shooting but Ollie orchestrated the whole thing.
LW: How long did it take them to figure out that wasn’t true?
JC: Not very. Before the weekend was over, at least. They had Randy saying hey, so, actually the daddy-daughter weekend was switched because Birdy asked for it.
LW: Because Eli asked her to ask.
JC: So he said. Randy. Not Eli. And I think—okay, this is speculation, and I told them back then, but it didn’t make it into the courtroom. Because I don’t have any evidence. Okay? I think Birdy wanted the time with her mom. It had nothing to do with getting Ollie to “safety” or whatever the argument was. It was Birdy, who figured she could come at her dad using Eli, because she … shit, okay.
LW: Do you need a moment?
JC: No, I just … I don’t know if this is smart. Telling you. But, like you said … if I can take it back later …
LW: Yes.
JC: Okay, so … Birdy thought she was pregnant. So she would’ve wanted to get her mom’s advice on what to do next.
LW: Because one of the options would be marrying you?
JC: Yeah. Yeah, that was one of the options.
Bury the Dead 11 – coming April 11