Ollie Clark—Saturday June 22, 2019
Eli adjusted the rearview mirror even though it was his car and it really didn’t need adjusting. “Moving to Traverse City isn’t going to stop that from happening. Not when it’s me.”
Even though it more or less worked that way for Ollie. The murders hadn’t really made it downstate, or at least hadn’t lingered in the collective consciousness by the time Ollie moved down there. Clark was a common enough last name and if anyone remembered first names it was Wendy and Birdy, even though Eli had been the sister’s boyfriend. But, with these new headlines …
“I’ll figure it out.”
He sucked his teeth, which she took to mean he wished she didn’t have to figure it out and was blaming himself again, but at least he didn’t say anything, so she didn’t have to say anything. “Did Cindy say we’re totally cool or do I take the scenic route?”
“We’re fine. Dad already gave him the tour.” She closed her eyes and let her head fall back against the headrest. “Why didn’t he sell the house?”
“Good memories?” Eli suggested. “That’s where you both grew up. They moved, when, like right after Birdy was born? So … your childhood … the best years of his life …”
“So your wife and kid get shot in the living room and you’re like oh, yeah, we’ll just redo the walls and rearrange the furniture and like it’s fine? Because I have a hard time being in that house remembering the good stuff when their freaking ghosts are so loud.”
He probably looked over at her, at least for as long as he could when heading into the Yooper Loop, but she kept her eyes closed. “Maybe he’s trying to banish the ghosts.”
“Is that what you’re thinking or something Jared relayed?”
“Jared,” he admitted.
Because Jared was far closer to Dad than she was. Than she’d ever been.
“Maybe he also just didn’t want to sell,” Eli added, shrugging when she looked at him. “It’s like a local landmark now. Yeah, there’s the purple house, but the one next to the purple house is the murder house. If he sold it, he’d risk someone turning it into … I don’t know, a gruesome Airbnb or something.”
“I think you watch too much TV.”
“Really? Because the Len Wilcoxen of the world would jump all over that.”
She laughed without really wanting to. “Wilcoxen?”
“It’s the accepted plural. And just because you think he’s some sort of ghoul doesn’t mean everyone does. The guy gets clicks. Bucks. Attention. People want what he does and other people want to be a part of it.”
“Like Dad.”
“Yeah, sure. That part I can kind of see. First the only guy put on trial gets off, and then there’s a big fat goose egg for years. The whole cold case aspect … like they forgot them. Like even the local police forgot them. Denomie was a laughingstock because he couldn’t get the conviction, so he sure as hell wasn’t going to get any support for another trial with someone else. Even if he honestly believed it was me and tried to argue they actually had the killer, he couldn’t prove it. Not in court. Double jeopardy says he gets one chance. Which he lost, along with public support, and …” Eli shrugged. “Even if your dad kept it up, trying to find justice, he didn’t get any responses. They shut him out. Hey, Randy, there’s no evidence. We can’t find a single person who’d want to kill Wendy. Birdy, well …”
Ollie shook her head. “Birdy was just a kid.”
“An annoying kid.”
She licked her lips and looked out the passenger window.
“Olls. I know you loved her, but even I couldn’t always see why.”
“Maybe because she was such a kid, but she didn’t want everyone to know it, so she …”
“Slept around and kept propositioning her friend’s boyfriends.”
Her head shook again before she could stop it. “Teenager. Her brain didn’t get the chance to fully form. Bad impulse control, destructive decisions …” Like maybe she’d chosen to teach high school in part because she’d spent a lot of time thinking about how much those years could change someone. Or how much potential existed, if only there was enough time for teenagers to grow up, and learn from their mistakes, and channel their energies into sustainable actions instead of self-destructive ones. When Ollie looked back at Eli, she caught him licking his lips and focusing quickly on the road again. “Say it.”
“You don’t want to talk to Len Wilcox just to give him another side of her?”
Ollie rubbed at her mouth and wiped her hand on her jeans and shifted in her seat. “Why do I owe anyone my side of Birdy?”
“Because otherwise he’ll get it wrong?”
She shook her head. “He’s going to get it wrong anyway. You think I’d talk to him and he’d be like oh, gee, sorry, I guess I have to throw all these other interviews out? I’d just be … I don’t know, the big sister trying to whitewash Birdy’s reputation. He’d make it look like I was ashamed of her, or always annoyed with her, or … you realize nobody other than you actually believes I did love her?”
“You don’t have to like someone to love them.”
Ollie licked her lips and then pressed them together.
Eli chuckled. “Your turn. Go on.”
“You don’t have a Birdy in your family.”
He took a hand off the wheel to circle it and draw out the rest of what she was thinking.
“You’ve got, like … the single mom thing, and alcoholism, and … I don’t know, however you want to define your relationship with Jared, but … it’s not like guys get painted the same way girls do, so even if Jared slept around a lot, it’s like oh, yeah, sure, he’s a stud. Local sports hero. Good for him. So Birdy does it, plays up her sexuality into a freaking parody, but she’s just a slut. A slut,” she hammered home, “who propositioned you.”
Eli wrinkled his nose. “I shut her down before she really could. Most people didn’t shut her down.”
“Most people blame Birdy for the offers, however authentic they may have been, and not the guys for accepting.”
He frowned, clearly debating something, then brought it out: “Do you think she really slept with everyone who said they did? Hell, everyone who even walked away with her? Because all we know is that yeah, fine, she’d get into the car with people, or go off with people. I mean, I’m not saying she was a virgin or anything …”
“You …?”
“Olls?”
She blinked and shook her head, but it wasn’t working. “You …?”
“What?”
“Jared’s never …?”
They were out of town now, on M-26 on the way to South Range, so he had a longer moment to be able to look at her face. “Jared and I don’t talk about our sex lives. He just assumes I have one.”
“No, they …” Could you be disloyal to someone who’d been dead for a decade? Someone who hadn’t even told you? “I don’t know if they always test, or if it was a special case. I mean, they kept it out of the trial because it didn’t have any relevance, and I’m not even sure it made it into the actual report. Birdy was pregnant when she died. Not very far along, but … Dad and I figured that’s what she really wanted to talk to Mom about that night.” She shrugged, feeling like she should apologize. “And I always assumed it was Jared’s.”
Interview excerpts, Len Wilcox with Carrie Jameson, March 15, 2019
CJ: Okay, so you’re not supposed to say this kind of thing? But I’m going to, because otherwise it’s lying, and I tell my kids all the time that they have to be truthful. Birdy Clark was someone you were only friends with because she’d make your life miserable otherwise, except it wasn’t exactly a walk in the park to be her friend in the first place. You couldn’t do anything that made her think you were cooler than her, even if you didn’t think that way, and it was exhausting trying to keep up with what made that list.
LW: Do you have an example?
CJ: Oh, millions. Say, Kendra came to school one day with new shoes. They weren’t expensive. They weren’t even brand name. They were very clearly cheap knockoffs from ShopKo, but Birdy threw a fit. She wouldn’t talk to Kendra or let her sit with us, and I heard she had a screaming fight with her mom that night, but two days later, she had the same shoes and Kendra could sit with us again. So you had to run stuff by her, like bring it along in your backpack and show it to her, except you couldn’t make it look like you were asking permission. You’d be like hey, I got this skirt in Green Bay last weekend. What do you think? And she’d be like oh, yeah, it’ll go so well with that top, or she’d say something like mmm, are you really sure it’s your style? Then show up in one almost exactly like it the next week, so at least you knew you could wear yours then, because it’d look like you were second.
LW: So she wanted to be first with all of the trends.
CJ: She wanted everyone looking at her and saying her name. So it wasn’t oh, did you see Carrie’s new haircut? It was oh, did you see Carrie got her hair cut to look like Birdy’s? Everything. When she quit ballet, the rest of us had to quit ballet. When she joined choir, the rest of us had to join choir—except we couldn’t be as good as her. She wanted you under her thumb, trailing after her, looking up at her, whatever. Not equals. I don’t know how Ollie could even stand living with her. At least the rest of us could go home, you know? Get a break. Her freshman year at Northern must’ve been the best one of her life.
LW: So when you hung out with Birdy, it wasn’t also with her sister.
CJ: No. Or her mom, unless we were spending the night and Wendy had to feed us dinner. But then we got to eat somewhere special and the rest of them, Wendy and Ollie and Mr. Clark, ate at the table like usual. Birdy didn’t really like having Ollie around.
LW: Because they didn’t get along?
CJ: Because Ollie was like the only one who didn’t care. She just … let Birdy have the spotlight and the cool pencils and whatever else. Even if they went back to school shopping together and picked out their own stuff, if they got home and Birdy decided she wanted Ollie’s binder instead, Ollie didn’t fight it. She just took whichever one was left. It’s the fight Birdy thrived on. Her and Wendy both—they were always at each other. And Ollie and their dad were just … there. Waiting for the screaming to stop so they could go into the kitchen and make a sandwich or whatever.
LW: So Birdy didn’t fight with her dad?
CJ: She’d yell at him if she thought he was being unfair. Talk about him when he wasn’t around—complaining and stuff. She thought he went out of his way for Ollie and wouldn’t do squat for her, except if you asked the rest of us, even he gave her more. Ollie went off to school and it was like oh, good, she escaped. Maybe somebody’ll treat her right for once. But it didn’t help, because then Birdy was the only one home, and she kept demanding more. Full on princess treatment. Our senior year … did you hear the rumor that she had sex with the math teacher right there in his classroom so he’d give her a passing grade?
LW: Can’t say I did.
CJ: Oh, yeah. He was new, too. Young. Right out of college. And he left after that one year, so of course it stuck. Oh, that’s why. I mean, there’s probably nothing to it, but the rumor was there. And she didn’t deny it. That was her style: bat her eyes, maybe giggle, but don’t say yes or no. Let people talk. Encourage people to talk. You wonder what the administration was thinking. They should’ve quashed it. Had a talk with her. But Birdy just kept on getting away with things none of the rest of us could’ve dreamed of. So there were rumors about that, too.
Bury the Dead 6 – coming April 6