Ollie Clark—Wednesday, June 26, 2019
Eli shrugged when Ollie said “Dad’s house,” but he dropped the transmission into drive and took her there, parking on the street instead of pulling into the driveway. “I’ll come in if you need me.”
That surprised a laugh out of her. “Always. You won’t miss much—I can tell you after—but maybe he needs to see you with me.”
He shrugged and undid his seatbelt. Ollie waited for him to come around to her side and he kissed her before they started up the walk.
To the front door. Because today she rang the bell and waited, here on the spot where Birdy died because someone shot her when she came to answer either a knock or this same freaking doorbell.
The curtain obscured her enough that Dad had the door most of the way open before he realized who it was. “Shut up and listen,” Ollie told him, forcing him back as she came inside. She could at least wait for Eli to shut the door before she said anything else. “We just talked to Len. No.”
Dad shut his mouth but also crossed his arms and lowered his head, fixing her with that You’re on thin ice, young lady look.
“Len doesn’t think Eli did it. He lied to you.”
Cindy came out of the kitchen and hovered near the vague dividing line between it and the living room, and Jared—of course Dad would’ve called Jared for moral support—appeared over her shoulder.
“He did a lot of lying to you to keep you talking. You’re right—he thinks he’s figured it out. That he’s made connections.”
Even in a better mood Dad wouldn’t get a You didn’t connect shit reference.
“He had Mom and Birdy’s blood types from their autopsies, and he said he asked you yours. So he knows. And he thinks you did it. He seriously thinks—shut up. He seriously thinks you did it, so you need to think long and hard about everything you’ve ever told him and everything he could even suspect you’ve told him.”
Randy laughed, a single short exhale. “I know you’ve got this thing against him, but Len’s not behind this. Besides, you’re my alibi, kiddo.”
“Yeah? Did the police say oh, sorry, right, we totally forgot we had Ollie’s statement in evidence?”
His eyes narrowed. “They let me go.”
“They don’t arrest you right away,” Cindy hissed.
“Shush.” Randy didn’t even glance at her. “Look, kiddo, I know you’re pissed about what I said about Eli, and the florist already called with condolences that the wedding’s off, but whatever this is? It’s done.”
She ignored him. “You have a lawyer?”
“One’s coming,” Cindy answered, this time earning herself a glare.
“Good. You tell them,” she ordered her stepmother. “Dad, if you’ve got any record of what you said to Len … copies or transcripts or anything …”
“Get out of my house. Both of you.” Dad grabbed the doorknob, twisted violently, and pulled it open with a sort of mocking bow. “And don’t darken my door again.”
Behind him, pale and small, Cindy nodded slightly. Ollie nodded back before she let Eli guide her out first, his hand on the small of her back, and he even opened the door for her as she got into the car. The short drive—two blocks down and two blocks over—put them back at his apartment building, and Ollie wasn’t sure she even really breathed until the car was off again. “Cindy listened.”
“Ah. Good.” Eli licked his lips. “I’m sorry, Olls.”
“He’s going to get himself arrested. At least they called a lawyer.”
He grimaced. “Even the best lawyers only work with what you can give them. Saying ‘I don’t know, I fell asleep on the couch and was there all night’ doesn’t do much when it’s already out there that Jared woke up and I was gone.”
She slowly turned her head. “How much of you wanting to stick around for him now is feeling guilty about how utterly pissed you were at him for saying that and getting you into all this in the first place?”
“Pretty sure he wasn’t the one who put the target on my back, Olls. I was that Chapman kid.” But then Eli sighed. “Okay. Yeah. It was a thoughtless comment and I could’ve ended up in prison, but … well, this is the long run. I didn’t lose you, but he lost her, and he’s never gotten over it.”
Ollie bit her lip. “Did he …?”
It was such a vague start to a question, but Eli held out his left wrist and drew a cross on it with his right forefinger. “Your dad found him. They didn’t keep him in the area—they took him away and locked him up for supervision, which to me seems like the opposite thing you want to do with someone who keeps insisting he doesn’t deserve to live.”
She reached for his hand and gripped his cold fingers.
“They all kept trying to get him in therapy, something more permanent, but he refused. So your dad started showing up. I could see him, actually.” Eli pointed behind them. “Just sitting on the front stoop, waiting either to be let in or for Jared to get home. Letting Jared have all this time, and I kind of hated him for that, too. He sent you away as often and as far as possible, but Jared? He wouldn’t let him get away. All that macho male bonding and … shit. Your dad was married twenty years. Jared was screwing your sister for a handful of weeks.” He closed his eyes. “Sorry.”
“I’ve thought that much myself.”
He squeezed her hand. “All our lives, everyone’s always liked Jared better. Short notice, long notice … it doesn’t matter. You’re the only one I’ve ever known who’s always, always, always put me first, even when I told you not to. Maybe I don’t deserve someone like you, but you deserve better than your dad.”
“Eli.” Ollie squeezed back. “Take me upstairs so I can kiss you properly.”
“My pleas–”
They jumped at a sharp knock on the driver’s side window and Ollie stifled a yelp, both hands going to her mouth. Eli swore, but only after he realized it was Jared and his shoulders could come back down. He opened the door. “Yes?”
Jared didn’t seem to realize he’d startled them. “Olls, do you want to tell me what the hell’s going on? Your dad refused.”
She leaned forward to peer around Eli. “Did you just run down here?”
“Yeah.” He didn’t even seem to notice he was breathing hard. “So can you explain or are you going to shut me out, too?”
Well. Apparently Jared wasn’t used to being shut out. Dad only did that to the women in his life. “Yeah, come on. Upstairs.” Even though both she and Eli went with far less enthusiasm than previously, Eli didn’t waste time. He didn’t understand everything, either.
Interview excerpts, Len Wilcox with Randy Clark, January 29, 2019
RC: I think it’s harder to talk about Wendy. I’ve had less practice. With Birdy, you got her whole high school class there at the service, wanting to share their memories. And it’s tragic, being eighteen and just so … so full of life. Not that forty isn’t tragic, but it’s middle-aged, and none of your friends want to look at that and admit it could’ve been them. They don’t want to think it could’ve been their kids, either, but there’s just this huge difference. Wendy …
LW: We don’t have to do this today.
RC: Nah, I’m up for it. I can. I just … well. I’m out of practice. Here, hang on. You’ve got the scans of the wedding album, right? Can you … I don’t know how this thing works. Can we both look at it together?
LW: Yeah, here, just a minute. I have to find it, and then … share my screen … here we go. Can you see that?
RC: Yeah. Go ahead to the next page. That’s weird, scrolling instead of flipping. Okay. So that’s my mom’s old church. She went there until she got sick. I never really got into the religion thing, but she made me go until I was old enough to be the one taking her. She got buried out of there. Grace Lutheran. And it wasn’t like Wendy was religious, either, but that’s where you get married, right? In a church. We did the counseling stuff the minister asked for, and I think he wanted to give us hell because she was pregnant, but he couldn’t because he thought we were doing the “right” thing, you know? And my mom had just died, and her parents had just died, so yeah, maybe we slipped, according to the whole judgmental Christian faith, but … like I said, we were doing the right thing. Getting married. Making sure our kid wasn’t born a bastard and all the rest. Sorry, are you religious?
LW: My parents are, sort of. They didn’t make us keep going when we said we didn’t want to, but they always did.
RC: Yeah, well, that’s probably a good thing, you know? Keep you from resenting it. But you return, I guess, for the big moments. Marrying and burying—isn’t that what they say? So we decided to get married there, maybe do the thing right. Wendy bought a dress at St. Vinnie’s and sewed some more lace on it. I borrowed that suit jacket. We had a potluck reception in the Fellowship Hall, can you believe it? How cheap is that? Everyone showed up with a hot dish, plugged it in or whatever, came in for the ceremony, and then got out all the spoons and stuff so we could go through first. Those photos? Our friends took them. Anyone with a camera, and then they printed doubles and gave us copies. That was our wedding present.
LW: It sounds like it was really personal.
RC: Cheap, is what it was. But yeah, sure, if you want to put the positive spin on it, it was personal. But also … keep going. Find that one big group shot … yeah, okay, you see? That’s everyone who was there. The church definitely wasn’t packed. If we’d had an open bar, that would’ve been one thing, but … Wendy didn’t have many friends. I think it’s why she let Birdy hang out with those other girls, even though it was bad news. They kept getting her in trouble, but they were friends. Wendy would rather I keep paying for trips to the emergency room than let Birdy grow up like she did. Without friends.
LW: Did Wendy ever talk about why she didn’t have friends?
RC: Didn’t have to. We went to school together, remember? All the way up through graduation. She was pretty. You can see that. She had a rough start, her family and all, but she was just naturally pretty. Put her in oversize secondhand clothes and it just made it more obvious. I guess all the boys wanted her, had crushes on her, my own girls would’ve said, but they weren’t supposed to. She was trash. But she looked better than any of the other girls in the class, even on the days when they spent hours on their makeup and stuff. She was pretty, she was sweet, and you really couldn’t hate her because she was so sweet, so they hated her because she was pretty.
LW: Were you the first person to date her?
RC: Hah. No, yeah, I was first, but we didn’t really “date.” Didn’t go out anywhere, at least. She started cooking dinner, and first it was so it’d be ready when I got home and I could make sure Mom ate, but then Wendy started sticking around. Joining us. So if that’s dating, then … sure. We spent a lot of time together. And you and everyone else in the world knows how that went, because you can see she’s pregnant in all these photos, but that wasn’t a mistake. A surprise, maybe, but not a mistake. I asked her, Wendy, if she really wanted to marry me or if she was just going to do it because of the baby, and she shrugged and said she figured she’d still be married to me when we were eighty, so … no, keep going. I’ll tell you when—there, that one?
LW: Yeah?
RC: That’s Agatha Grace. My mom’s best friend. And just—this is the best one of the bunch, okay? And she’s still giving Wendy that side-eye. She’s got that little prune mouth. Always looks like she just ate a lemon, but she’s also the kind of woman who goes looking for lemons. She had all these theories about Wendy. You hear any of those?
LW: No.
RC: Oh, I’m sure you will. Starting with how Wendy killed my mom. She wanted the house for herself, and me for herself, I guess that one goes. So she killed mom, and probably slept with the coroner or whoever to get him to sign off on the death certificate. Agatha’s never had sex so she figures all the pretty little things can’t keep their legs together. Tells you more about her than about them, hey? But yeah, Wendy killed my mom so she could have the house. Then she got pregnant, but the rumor there was that Ollie wasn’t actually mine. She slept with the coroner so he’d cover for her, that kind of thing. I don’t think Ollie’s ever heard that one, thank God, but it was out there for a while. She looks too much like me, though. Our baby photos? Practically identical. But Agatha … she’s always been a thorn in my side, but she’s a respected member of the community, you know? You can’t call her a cranky old biddy with her nose where it doesn’t belong. If she said Wendy’s a whore, then Wendy’s a whore. And then there was all that shit about Birdy … like mother, like daughter? Utter BS. But you can bet she was one of them saying it.
LW: The joys of a small town?
RC: Everyone thinks they know why you do everything, even when they’ve got no clue, and what they think is usually so much more fun than the real reason, so that’s what sticks. You’d think we’d all know better by now, because it’s happened to all of us, but no. That day? Our wedding? Wendy was a slut and I was the fool who thought the baby was mine. I was throwing my life away for a little tramp who was playing me. Can you believe it? I’d never looked at anyone else in my life, and I didn’t need to. For me it was Wendy, for better or for worse. You dating anyone?
LW: No. RC: I hope you find your Wendy. I joke, hey, about the cheap wedding. Hot dish potluck. But that? One of the happiest days of my life. Don’t make me rate it against the days my girls were born, but those are my top three. All my girls. Can’t imagine what my life would’ve been like without them.
Bury the Dead 17 – coming April 17