…closed, that is, in every mind except Shelly’s.
The dinner had been great. The wine loosened him some and
he began telling her about the “interesting” discovery and the 25-year-old case
that no one was interested in any longer.
“…so they thought the husband killed her after she disappeared. He didn’t have any record, but he lost his
temper that night during an argument and pushed her down. The young kids saw it and of course told the
investigating officer. Hell, he was the
one who called the cops when she didn’t come home. I guess they thought he was
being clever. They harassed him on an
epic scale but he never caved. They were able to take his kids, talked CPS into
believing he was a danger to them. Got him fired from a few jobs and then he
literally disappeared from the radar… and get this, the coroner didn’t come
out! He said he was “full up” with cold cases… just bag the remains, it was
clearly an accident!
He hadn’t finished shaking his head when he looked over at
her. She looked annoyed and even a bit
angry.
“What?”
She began clearing the table abruptly, placing the dishes in
the sink with “accent.”
“Hey … it’s me. Remember?
Husband, friend, pal … buddy?”
She wasn’t having any.
It was what he had come to call her “Mount Rushmore” face. He studied
what he had told her, sipped, and again finally asked her to sit down and talk
to him. She sat down hard on her chair,
leaned forward with both palms on the table.
“Ever occur to you that a man has been accused of murder,
had his children taken away, made to abandon his life, and is still carrying
that?”
He acknowledged what she said with a shrug and a nod.
She continued, “What are you prepared to do about it?”
He was being looked at now with eyes that were leveled so
evenly on him he felt like he was in a room with one of those pictures that, no
matter where he stood, would be staring at him.
“You need to find him, and
his children—tell him you know he didn’t kill his wife and tell his children
the same. My God, Jordan … no one
cares!”
“Yeah, I have to be married to the one person who does!”
“That’s bullshit! If this didn’t bother you, you would never
have told me about this “interesting” case.
You wouldn’t have dug deeper into the circumstances if you weren’t
interested, concerned.”
He played with the remaining wine in his glass, swirling it
around until it came close to the rim.
It was a lousy case, an assumption, easily made, perfectly
circumstantial. Only the missing body
kept them from charges. The alternative
was to harass the husband into absence.
Case “closed” with back slaps, smiles, and absolute belief the right
thing was done.
Only it wasn’t. And
the only two people who cared sat across from each other in silence. He could see her imagining the insanity it
must have brought the husband, and he had no idea where he would begin to look
for him. He’d already collected notes,
asked around for information, run out the husband’s name in the computer—nothing.
Subconsciously he had probably already come to that
crossroads, and now he had just crossed it. Even though he could probably live
without looking for the husband, he knew
he couldn’t live with the face across the table unless he tried…
No comments:
Post a Comment