Ollie Clark—Saturday, June 29, 2019
Johnson didn’t like their answers. Well, no, Ollie corrected herself: he acted like he didn’t like their answers. It was probably a ploy, because if they kept insisting that yes, Jared could’ve done it … this could be true … then they were adding more bricks to the case. She really needed to get “The Cask of Amontillado” out of her head.
Exactly how much legal wrangling did they have to do if Jared confessed? And stood by his confession, of course. A lawyer, even a court-appointed, would probably try to talk him out of it. Try to get whatever he’d said thrown out, even if the Miranda Warning was properly given and he talked, anyway, just because he hadn’t said it in front of a lawyer. And obviously he’d given enough details for them to find a gun and the necklaces, which clearly nobody would’ve looked for without a nudge, but …
But. Ollie and Eli were still here, and so was Lieutenant Samuel Johnson, doubting everything they said.
“Mr. Chapman, you already went on trial for these murders.”
Eli gave a tight smile. “I remember.”
“So, if you thought we were wrong again … and we were going to put your cousin through the same thing …”
“Are you saying the case is just as circumstantial as the one Denomie built against me?”
Johnson winced. Ollie didn’t think the wince was intentional.
“If you think you have evidence against Jared in an open murder case, then yes, you should proceed along the normal tracks. Trial of his peers. Isn’t that how it’s supposed to go?”
“Trials are expensive, Mr. Chapman.”
“Well.” The tight smile stayed. “Good thing he’s confessed, then.”
Johnson cleared his throat and shifted in his chair, but Ollie wasn’t sure if he was back on track and this was part of his act, or if Eli really just threw him. “A confession isn’t a guilty plea. He still has rights.”
“So you want to tread carefully this time? Move slowly?”
“We have faith in the system, Mr. Chapman.”
Right. That’s why they were so sure Eli wasn’t guilty after the verdict came back.
Eli just looked at him. “Type up his confession and ask him to sign it.”
A muscle in Johnson’s jaw twitched.
Ollie wanted to ask Johanna how iron-clad that would be, but not in front of him. Did you really have to go to trial if someone said flat-out that they did it? Or could you just run that past a judge somehow and skip straight to the sentencing? More questions for Johanna, but again, not in present company.
Eli shrugged. It wasn’t his usual easy and open shrug, but it wasn’t a tight jerk, either. “Was there anything else you wanted from us?”
“I understand you’re moving downstate.”
“I am.”
“I also understand the wedding’s off.”
“Is that relevant to this investigation?”
Johnson looked at him, but Eli blinked as usual and didn’t let himself get drawn into a staring competition. He just waited, apparently politely, for an answer, but when Johnson opened his mouth it was to tell them he needed their phone numbers and all possible addresses at which they might be reached over the next few weeks. Good thing they weren’t taking one of those all-expenses-paid destination weddings. Eli wrote down his apartment’s address, Ollie’s apartment address, and both cell phone numbers.
They already had samples of his handwriting. It had never been relevant to the case, but they had it. And somehow he was thinking shrewdly enough to conclude that they shouldn’t give a sample of Ollie’s, just because you never gave the police anything for free. Even if you didn’t think they could use it. Maybe especially if you didn’t think they could use it. Although Ollie couldn’t come up with suspicious writing out there that needed to be tied back to her. Seriously, how long could a person’s head ache before you had to start worrying about things like brain tumors? How much chronic stress could a body be under before something broke?
Okay and that was part of the problem: if it was Jared, then this could stop. Everything since Kelly has an alibi could disappear. Just get lost in the fog that covered so many of her memories from a decade ago, and why the hell did they all have to be brought up again so fresh and raw after all this time? If Jared really did it, then she could bury this once and for all.
Johanna accompanied them back out onto the street, but Eli sighed as he started toward his car. “I know that look. She has something else to say,” he informed Ollie. “But not something to say too close to …” He jerked his head back to the police station.
“The weather’s been nice,” Johanna said in a tone that sounded like this was a perfectly rational response to Eli’s comments. “Not too hot. I’m really not used the heat anymore.”
“Where are you from?” Ollie tried not to show how inane she thought the cocktail party question was.
Johanna smiled. “Albuquerque. It’s a dry heat.”
“How the hell did you get here from Albuquerque?” At least this was an honest question.
She shrugged. “My partner went to Tech. I met them in Seattle, actually, but they always wanted to move back here. Life is weird.”
Eli snorted at that, hands in his pockets as he waited for the light to change. “This far enough?”
“Let’s mosey on down by the water.”
“Perfect paranoia is perfect awareness,” Eli recited with a sigh, turning to head down the hill instead of waiting for the walk sign to change. “She’s still not really used to the small-town thing.”
Johanna shrugged and took the critique literally in stride. “Actually, I’m wondering if you might need to use the small-town thing. Did you see the news last night?”
“Yes.” Eli pulled one hand out of his pocket to reach for Ollie’s.
“And, unless you’ve buttered Porvoo up lately, it’s just going to get messier. Right?”
Ollie sighed. “Because he’s going to muddy the waters?”
“Sure. He’ll play up the fact that they tipped to your dad because of Len Wilcox, who isn’t a police officer, and then how Jared idolizes Randy, so of course he came up with an elaborate confession to free him. Meaning your dad’s still guilty and shouldn’t have been let out on the streets to kill again, even though with the scenario he’ll be painting, your dad hasn’t killed since. So.” Johanna’s heels clicked along the paved bike path at a steady pace.
“So you think we have to talk to Roger?” Eli made a face.
Johanna tapped at her lips with one perfectly polished light pink fingernail. “I wonder if you shouldn’t talk to Mr. Wilcox.”
Ollie stopped walking. “Johanna.”
“He’s got a larger platform,” she explained, although it sounded more like musing. Like she hadn’t actually thought this through, or she suspected Ollie might agree if she laid it all out. “He’s also got to publish some sort of mea culpa for being wrong about your dad, and that would be easier for him if he’s got you apparently on his side, right?”
“I am not on his side.”
“The internet’s full of lies. I’m thinking he shares the interviews he’s collected, you say something like well, sure, if you only saw my family from the outside, I guess you could reach that conclusion, and then …”
Her head shook like a metronome. “I am not sharing anything with that—”
“Language,” Eli admonished.
“Oh, so now all of a sudden you’re down with this? Collaborating with Len Wilcox?”
“Just to be clear, we’re talking fully clothed and with me as a witness. Not whatever else he’d like to collaborate on.”
She pulled her hand away from his. “What?”
“You use Len to shape your story,” Johanna argued. “Use him. His platform. He’s your springboard because he’s already connected, he’s here, and if he writes something and puts it on his blog, it’ll get picked up and everybody will run with it, because he’s already connected and he’s here.”
“I’m not saying you bare your soul, Olls,” Eli argued. “Just give him enough to push things in the right direction. And it’s not even about your mom or Birdy, not really—I can even help you, okay? We can figure it out and write it down and give it to him so you’re sure of what he’s getting.”
“But …”
“Media and public pressure,” Johanna agreed grimly. “I know you hate the phrase, but in this day and age …”
Eli shrugged when she turned to appeal to him. “Use or be used. Rock and a hard place.”
Scylla and Charybdis, and oh, God, seriously, when would this odyssey be over?
Excerpts from Randy Clark’s interview with Sergeant Glen Waara, Deborah Binkman present, Saturday June 29, 2019
GW: Mr. Clark, I need to ask you about Jared Chapman’s suicide attempt.
RC: Jesus.
GW: I reviewed the police report this morning—
RC: Great, so you’ve got everything.
GW:—but I would like to hear from you. It’s about more than just the facts, Mr. Clark. We need to know if Mr. Chapman is believable.
RC: Shit. You guys just pile it on, don’t you?
DB: Perhaps you’ll give Mr. Clark a moment. Some breathing room.
GW: I’ll go get you a bottle of water. Coffee? Pop?
RC: Water’s fine.
GW: All right. You ready?
RC: No, but … okay. We made it through that first year, yeah? All those first anniversaries that everyone braced for. First holidays, first birthdays, the first … you know, first June 19. But then it seemed like a lot of people forgot. Most of them didn’t want to talk about Wendy and Birdy, anyway, like they thought we’d forgotten and moved on, or maybe just like they wished we’d forgotten and moved on, but after the first year? Yeah, no. Crickets. Ollie checked in, sure, and maybe Eli checked in with her, but … well. We’re not here to talk about Eli. I was the one with Jared. I learned to text because of Jared—how’s that for …? I don’t even know. It’s not irony, but …
GW: Go on.
RC: It wasn’t like I thought the one-year thing was going to solve it. Like he should just buck up immediately and move on, you know? But I still kind of … I was hoping it would help. It doesn’t help everything—I don’t want to leave that impression. You’re further away from That Day, sure, but you also keep getting further and further from the life you thought you were going to live. That still hurts. And forgetting hurts—when you wake up and go about your morning whistling before you realize oh, shit, they’re still dead. So I thought I got it, you know? He was still moping and trying to figure out where his life was going without her.
GW: Yeah?
RC: I thought I got it. But then I get home from work one day, tired as hell, and there’s a note stuck through the letter slot. Which is a joke in South Range, you know? Because we get all our mail at the post office. Nobody carries letters around, so I knew it was weird, and it was from him. You’ve probably … you’ve seen it? Is it still in the file?
GW: Yes.
RC: Right, so …
GW: What struck you about it?
RC: What …? Jesus, man. It’s this handwritten thing, barely legible, where Jared says he’s sorry for everything because he’s the cause of all our misery. Something like that. Classic depressed person thinking. I didn’t need anybody to tell me that. And he’d been getting better, or looking like he was getting better, and we all know that’s a sign, right? Ever since that one case … what was it, senator’s son?
GW: I’m not sure what you’re referencing.
RC: Doesn’t matter. The point is, I knew. He looked like he was getting better, pulling out of it, but he only pulled out of it enough to have the energy to do something about it. I turned right around and got in my car and drove to his apartment.
GW: Even though it wasn’t that far away.
RC: No, but it seemed like time was of the essence. I had no idea when he’d left the note. Hell, I was lucky I had my cell phone on me. I pulled up to his apartment—it’s not the one he’s in now—and it was a good thing I had his keys on my keyring, you know?
GW: Did you call him?
RC: I didn’t even think of it. If he hadn’t been home, maybe, but my first thought was just “Get there.” I would’ve broken in if I didn’t have the keys. It just … I never for a second thought it wasn’t a suicide note, you know? I wasn’t sure what I’d find. Pills, maybe, but … God, the blood. It stopped me. Not for too long, thank God, but it stopped me. So I called 911, and put the pressure on, and … God.
GW: Was he conscious when you showed up?
RC: God, I don’t know. He opened his eyes and sort of turned his head, but I don’t know if he even realized I was there. Realized anyone was there.
GW: Did he say anything?
RC: No. He was too far gone. I thought he was going to die before the ambulance showed up, and I thought … Jesus.
GW: You thought?
RC: I thought he was going to die thinking he made it worse for me. You know? By being … by missing Birdy. That he blamed himself for so much, when … God. Helping that kid kept me going. Especially those first couple years. I wanted Ollie out and away. I didn’t want to pull her down. But … Jared? The kid was drowning. He was worse than me, and saving him meant … God, this sounds like some hippie shit. Saving him felt like saving myself, and I couldn’t let him die thinking he hadn’t done any of that. You know? Like … okay, I’ll say it: like knowing Jared needed help got me out of bed in the mornings when I wouldn’t have gotten out for myself. Okay? Because he was a kid, and he didn’t have life experience, not really, not even with the shit his dad pulled, so he needed help. He needed me. I needed Ollie to grow up, to grow into her life and actually have one, but Jared …
GW: So he didn’t say anything to you?
RC: That day? No.
GW: When did you talk to him next?
RC: Next? Geez, um … weeks later. They took him away. I don’t know if Serena signed something or if it’s standard, with an adult or whatever, but they took him away. It was a while later. Quite a while.
GW: Did you talk about the suicide attempt?
RC: No. He didn’t want to. He wanted to ignore it and just … move on. Forget it.
GW: And you were okay with that?
RC: I figured it didn’t really matter if I was okay with it. The question was whether he was okay with it. I didn’t want to push him. I didn’t know what he’d talked about, who he’d talked to, that kind of thing. I figured maybe they’d told him not to talk about it with me, you know? Like he had a therapist or whatever and he’d talk about it with him, and then I just followed Jared’s lead.
GW: And Jared’s lead was to not talk about it.
RC: Right. He’d tried, he failed, it was over, and we could move on. I thought that, maybe, he could finally move on.
Bury the Dead 33 – coming May 3