Ollie Clark—Sunday, June 30, 2019
Esther looked around the apartment. “This is depressing. Are you staying through the whatever tomorrow? When we find out if he actually pleads guilty?”
“Arraignment,” Eli informed his mom, looking inside the bags from Taco Bell and starting to pass the food around. “At this point we figure we won’t leave until Tuesday, anyway, because we need to take some of the furniture to the dump.” That had always been the plan, but they thought they’d have another week to take care of all of that.
A week while Ollie hung out with Dad. So. She took a long drink of her Baja Blast and stopped at the ice pick headache from the cold. The trick was to warm up the roof of your mouth as quickly as possible, so she plastered her tongue to it and waited it out.
Mom taught her the ice cream headache trick. Usually it didn’t hurt her heart this bad.
“Your dad still hasn’t reached out?” Esther asked sympathetically.
“No.” This, Eli, was why you didn’t just keep water in the fridge. Room-temperature water helped warm your mouth back up. “I don’t expect to. Not after … everything. You hear from Serena?”
Esther tilted her head to say touché. “No. I don’t expect to.”
“Look at all of us and our utter lack of expectations,” Eli observed before biting into his Crunchwrap.
“Use a napkin,” his mom chided. “And I have a pretty good idea of what Serena’s going through.”
“Except,” Eli interjected, despite his full mouth, “her son actually did it.”
“Eli James, table manners! And I think, at this point, what I’m comfortable saying is that her son’s actually confessed to it.”
He grinned at her and grabbed some of the flimsy paper napkins. “That was good. You going to law school?”
“You and your sass,” she sniffed, but ruined it with a smile. “It’s good to see you acting more like yourself.” Except that made everyone recall that the entire reason Eli could relax was because Jared confessed to wanting to kill Ollie ten years ago. It wasn’t exactly a Disney ending. Esther delicately lifted her burrito. “Ollie, pick a topic.”
“Um. Elephants are the only animals with four forward-facing knees.”
“Sounds fake,” Eli countered before taking another huge bite.
“No phones at the table,” Esther reminded him, dabbing her lips with her napkin. “They don’t have elbows?”
Ollie shook her head. “Remember MindTrap?”
Eli nodded. “Sid Shady, Sam Sham … Detective Shadow …”
“One of the cards was basically the explorer guy, I forget his name, hearing that someone saw an animal come out of the pond and all four of its knees were wet, and he knew what animal it was.”
He pointed at her and turned to his mom. “We couldn’t actually play that game because she’d read the cards for fun and then read the answers and then remember all of them, so it was pointless. How many cards were in that thing? A couple hundred?”
“Something like that, yeah.”
“Ahhhh.” Esther nodded deeply. “That’s why you started getting all of those, what, logic puzzle book things?”
“Lateral thinking puzzles,” he corrected grudgingly.
“Out of the library!” She turned to Ollie with a knowing smile. “Because he was trying to beat you.”
Eli shook his head. “Because I thought they were interesting puzzles and if I had a book all to myself it didn’t matter if I had to flip to the hints or to the answers and get it wrong, because nobody knew I got it wrong.”
“Why did nobody else ever learn that, if you don’t react, Birdy stops trying to poke at something?” Ollie sighed.
“Because we all saw you,” he countered, “and how she kept trying to find other things to poke.”
“So I forced her to be creative and branch out.”
He grinned and leaned over to kiss her temple. “Sure, honey. Keep telling yourself that.”
“What about centipedes?” Esther asked suddenly.
Ollie blinked.
“As far as knees,” she explained. “I know they don’t actually have a hundred legs, but do they have knees? Do any bugs have knees?”
“This would all be so much easier if I could just pull out my phone and Google it,” Eli pointed out.
“Wait, so if you say something’s the bee’s knees, you’re actually saying it … doesn’t exist?” Ollie tilted her head as she sipped more reasonably at her drink.
Eli grinned at her. “Aren’t you a teacher? You should know this.”
“The whole deal about teaching secondary is that you have a specific certification, and mine’s English. There weren’t any questions about bug knees on my exam.”
“It could’ve come up,” Esther argued. “As a metaphor question. Does ‘It’s the bee’s knees’ mean a, it’s wonderful; b, it doesn’t exist, or c …”
“Very low to the ground,” Eli suggested. “Oh, knee-high to a grasshopper. Do grasshoppers actually have knees? They’ve got those giant thighs.”
“Aren’t the knees the highest part of a grasshopper?” Esther wondered. “Something knee-high to us is very short, comparatively, but with their legs all jacked up like that …”
Ollie laughed. “Do all sayings about knees involve bugs?”
“Again, if I could just get out my phone …”
“Mealtime is family time,” his mom responded, once again prim and proper. “Even if it’s Taco Bell for lunch at a rickety old table you’re taking to the dump tomorrow and there aren’t enough chairs.”
“Yeah, I don’t remember these rules from when I was a kid.”
She arched an eyebrow. “We’re allowed to grow and learn, Eli James. Even at my advanced age.”
Ollie smiled, because it sounded a lot like how she’d grown up. These were even things that she could see taking forward into the future, if she and Eli had kids of their own.
He caught her eye and shook his head, apparently reading her mind. “You’re no fun.”
“Hey, I just taught you elephants are the only animals with four knees,” she countered. “I’m tons of fun.”
Eli opened his mouth but nothing came out, so he ended up catching her hand and kissing the back of it as Ollie and Esther laughed.
Excerpt from the Keweenaw Report’s radio update, June 30, 2019
… and tomorrow, South Range resident Jared Chapman, thirty-one, will be arraigned for the 2009 murder of Wendy and Catherine Clark. Mother and daughter died as the result of a shotgun attack. Chapman’s cousin went to trial for the murder in 2009 but was acquitted. The case made headlines last winter when accused serial killer Sean Kelly was attached to the crimes but then, just over a week ago, Kelly was found to have an alibi. Chapman is the second person to be arrested in connection with the murders this past week, but his arrest follows a full confession. Chapman is expected to plead guilty tomorrow. We will explore the case more fully during Copper Country Today next Sunday when our host Finn Overton talks with retired attorney Clarence Neimi about the case.
Ollie Clark—Monday, July 1, 2019
Eli flatly declared that he didn’t even want to try to attend Jared’s arraignment, so they went through the rigmarole of renting a truck, loading up most of Eli’s furniture, taking it to the dump, returning the truck, and getting back to the apartment without mentioning that they were clearly keeping an eye on the time. Waiting for when it was reasonable to expect an update, even if they kept pulling out their phones under other pretenses. Esther said she wasn’t going, and Ollie really didn’t expect an update from Serena, but she had no idea what Dad thought, or if he’d go.
Len probably went, but even though he had Ollie’s cell phone number, she didn’t expect an update from him, either. Same with Roger Porvoo, although Ollie thought he probably already had his article written, even if nobody would read it until Tuesday. Late Tuesday, in most cases. There wasn’t really early delivery in South Range. At least the paper did come to your door, unlike the mail. It was usually a couple people in a car, one driving and the passenger tossing them out the window, instead of a kid on a bicycle, but the paper made it onto your property.
Most likely she’d get the news when a bunch of new messages came in asking about how she felt about the result. If she were lucky, the first one she listened to would actually tell her what the result was instead of just leaving it vague, like maybe the people calling had a standard recording and just had to add the right name to the intro, like an email list. And maybe all of this waiting and feigning nonchalance was doing odd things to her brain.
Eli told her to take the shower first once they got back because, even if they were going to start loading the cars later, they needed to cool off. When she came out, he passed his phone over so she could see a text from Len: Jared pleaded guilty. Sentencing is set for the 12th. Serena caused a scene. Randy was here at the back and didn’t say a word to anyone.
Wow. That was a lot of information.
“My turn,” Eli murmured, waiting for her to look up so he could give her a kiss. “You can check my other messages if you want, but I haven’t seen any from anyone I recognized until Len’s. Maybe you have one, too.”
There wasn’t a bedside table anymore—hell, there wasn’t a bed; tonight would be spent on an inflatable mattress borrowed from Harper and Brad—so her phone was on the kitchen counter. She checked it and found the same message from Len, like he’d copied and pasted it to each of them instead of just making it a group chat. That was weird, unless he had a whole list of people he sent it to and didn’t want any of them to know how many others got it. She gave the message a thumbs-up, because it was a half-step above leaving him on read, and took a slow breath.
Okay, Olls. This was further legally with Jared than it had ever been with Kelly. Jared said Guilty, so it leapfrogged a trial.
Well. In Michigan, at least. She hadn’t looked up what would happen if Kelly pleaded guilty in Ohio. On top of which, there probably wasn’t any reason for him to be moved to Michigan and plead. It was possible to get a death sentence in Ohio, even if it was a suspended death sentence. What would be the point of wasting the money to bring him anywhere else and go through a process that could end, at most, in more life sentences? Maybe—maybe—it would be worth taking Kelly to Indiana if they could prove he murdered people there, since they were still using the death penalty following the sentencing, but Ollie had tried to figure out the eighteen things that meant a case was really a death penalty case and her eyes crossed so … it didn’t matter. Rewind things back to June 20 and she never expected anyone to go on trial for Mom and Birdy’s murder, anyway. Anyone other than Eli, of course, but man, that felt like a lifetime ago. Now they had someone legally guilty of the murders, and … well. And.
Once they got back, she’d call Araminta and see if she could move up her next appointment. Especially if Dad was still incommunicado by that phone call. At some point Jared’s full confession would be made available to the public. Someone like Len, if not Len himself, would get his hands on it and incorporate it into a think piece, or a blog post, or … it probably wouldn’t just go up online in its entirety, but you could pay for copies of legal documents, right? So at some point she’d be able to read and … well, see if it made sense.
Except it didn’t make sense. She’d spent ten years living with it not making sense. Even Kelly and his traveling shotgun story didn’t really make sense. So why should it matter now, when the case was legally closed, if it didn’t make sense? There wasn’t just a suspect but a perpetrator, and even the schoolboard member with the mustache couldn’t say anything to her because it wasn’t Eli. Yes, it was his cousin, but she wasn’t marrying Jared.
Jared set out that night intending to kill Ollie.
That was something else for Araminta. She could shove it in a box and compartmentalize it as long as there was an open by date on the lid. Push it away for now and force herself to deal with it when she had Araminta to metaphorically hold her hand and literally pass her Kleenex.
So, right now … focus on getting Eli moved. On praying the inflatable mattress wouldn’t develop a leak and dump them on the floor in the middle of the night. On making the long drive and crossing the Mackinac Bridge with a car full of stuff blocking the rearview mirror when the construction meant she’d have to drive on the grate, guaranteed. And then on unloading the freaking boxes once they reached her apartment, although at least it was on the first floor. And they didn’t have to unload it all right away—Eli had a duffel bag to at least get him through tomorrow night without doing all that work. Right. That wasn’t exactly all positive, but she could concentrate on that and just get through the next couple days before she looked any further ahead.
Bury the Dead Epilogue – coming May 5