Death Du Jour (29 page)

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Authors: Kathy Reichs

BOOK: Death Du Jour
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“Do you live here, ma’am?”

She hesitated, then nodded. A curtain rippled in a window behind me and I felt a damp breeze on my neck.

“We’re curious about some calls made to this house,” Baker went on.

“Phone calls?”

“Yes, ma’am. Last fall. Would you have been here at that time?”

“There’s no phone here.”

“No phone?”

“Well, just an office phone. Not for personal use.”

“I see.” He waited.

“We don’t get phone calls.”

“We?”

“There are nine of us in this house, four next door. And of course the trailers. But we don’t talk on no phones. It’s not allowed.”

Upstairs, another baby started to cry.

“Not allowed?”

“We’re a community. We live clean and don’t cause no trouble. No drugs, none of that. We keep to ourselves and follow our beliefs. There’s no law against that, is there?”

“No, ma’am, there isn’t. How large is your group?”

She thought a minute. “We’re twenty-six here.”

“Where are the others?”

“Some’s gone off to jobs. Those that integrate. The rest are at morning meeting next door. Jerry and I are watching the babies.”

“Are you a religious group?” Ryan asked.

She looked at him, back to Baker.

“Who are they?” She raised her chin toward Ryan and me.

“They’re homicide detectives.” The sheriff stared at her, his face hard and unsmiling. “What is your group, ma’am?”

She fingered the baby’s blanket. Somewhere in the distance I heard a dog bark.

“We want no problems with the law,” she said. “You can take my word on that.”

“Are you expecting trouble?” Ryan.

She gave him an odd look, then glanced at her watch. “We are people wanting peace and health. We can’t take no more of the drugs and crime, so we live out here by ourselves. We don’t hurt no one. I don’t have no more to say. You talk to Dom. He’ll be here soon.”

“Dom?”

“He’ll know what to tell you.”

“That would be good.” Baker’s dark eyes impaled her again. “I wouldn’t want everyone to have to make that long trip into town.”

Just then I heard voices and watched her gaze slide off Baker’s face and out the window. We all turned to look.

Through the screen I saw activity at the house next door. Five women stood on the porch, two holding toddlers, a third bending to set a child onto the ground. The tot took off on wobbly legs, and the woman followed across the yard. One by one a dozen adults emerged and disappeared behind the house. Seconds later a man came out and headed in our direction.

Our hostess excused herself and went to the foyer. Before long we heard the screen door, then muted voices.

I saw the woman climb the stairs, then the man from next door appeared in the archway. I guessed he was in his mid-forties. His blond hair was going gray, his face and arms deeply tanned. He wore khakis, a pale yellow golf shirt, and Topsiders without socks. He looked like an aging Kappa Sigma.

“I’m so sorry,” he said. “I didn’t realize we had visitors.”

Ryan and Baker started to rise.

“Please, please. Don’t get up.” He crossed to us and held out a hand. “I’m Dom.”

We all shook, and Dom joined us on one of the sofas.

“Would you like some juice or lemonade?”

We all declined.

“So, you’ve been talking to Helen. She says you have some questions about our group?”

Baker nodded once.

“I suppose we’re what you’d call a commune.” He laughed. “But not what the term usually conjures up. We’re a far cry from the counterculture hippies of the sixties. We are opposed to drugs and polluting chemicals, and committed to purity, creativity, and self-awareness. We live and work together in harmony. For instance, we’ve just finished our morning meeting. That’s where we discuss each day’s agenda and collectively decide what has to be done and who will do it. Food preparation, cleaning chores, housekeeping mostly.” He smiled. “Mondays can be long since that’s the day we air grievances.” Again the smile. “Although we rarely have grievances.”

The man leaned back and folded his hands in his lap. “Helen tells me you’re interested in phone calls.”

The sheriff introduced himself. “And you are Dom . . . ?”

“Just Dom. We don’t use surnames.”

“We do,” said Baker, his voice devoid of humor.

There was a long pause. Then,

“Owens. But he’s long dead. I haven’t been Dominick Owens in years.”

“Thank you, Mr. Owens.” Baker made a note in a tiny spiral notebook. “Detective Ryan is investigating a homicide in Quebec and has reason to believe the victim knew someone at this address.”

“Quebec?” Dom’s eyes widened, revealing tiny white creases in his tan skin. “Canada?”

“Calls were made to this number from a home in St-Jovite,” said Ryan. “That’s a village in the Laurentian Mountains north of Montreal.”

Dom listened, a puzzled look on his face.

“Does the name Patrice Simonnet mean anything to you?”

He shook his head.

“Heidi Schneider?”

More head shaking. “I’m sorry.” Dom smiled and gave a light shrug. “I told you. We don’t use last names. And members often change their given names. In the group one is free to choose whatever name one likes.”

“What is the name of your group?”

“Names. Labels. Titles.
The
Church of Christ.
The
People’s Temple.
The
Righteous Path. Such egomania. We choose not to use one.”

“How long has your group lived here, Mr. Owens?” Ryan.

“Please call me Dom.”

Ryan waited.

“Almost eight years.”

“Were you here last summer and fall?”

“On and off. I was traveling quite a bit.”

Ryan took a snapshot from his pocket and placed it on the table.

“We’re trying to track the whereabouts of this young woman.”

Dom leaned forward and examined the photo, his fingers smoothing the edges. They were long and slender, with tufts of golden hair between the knuckles.

“Is she the one that was killed?”

“Yes.”

“Who’s the boy?”

“Brian Gilbert.”

Dom studied the faces a long time. When he looked up his eyes had an expression I couldn’t read.

“I wish I could help you. Really, I do. Perhaps I could ask at this evening’s experiential session. That’s when we encourage self-exploration and movement toward inner awareness. It would be an appropriate setting.”

Ryan’s face was rigid as his eyes held Dom’s.

“I’m not in a ministerial mood, Mr. Owens, and I’m not particularly concerned with what you consider appropriate times. Here’s chapter and verse. I know calls were made to this number from the house where Heidi Schneider was murdered. I know the victim was in Beaufort last summer. I’m going to find the connection.”

“Yes, of course. How terrible. It is this kind of violence that causes us to live as we do.”

He closed his eyes, as though seeking holy guidance, then opened them and gazed intently at each of us.

“Let me explain. We grow our own vegetables, raise chickens for eggs, we fish, and gather mollusks. Some members work in town and contribute wages. We have a set of beliefs that forces us to reject society, but we wish no harm to others. We live simply and quietly.”

He took a long breath.

“While we have a core of longtime members, there are many that come and go. Our lifestyle is not for everyone. It’s possible your young woman visited with us, perhaps during one of my absences. You have my word. I will speak to the others,” said Dom.

“Yes,” said Ryan. “So will I.”

“Of course. And please let me know if there is anything else that I can do.”

At that moment a young woman burst through the screen door, a toddler on her hip. She was laughing and tickling the child. He giggled and batted at her with pudgy fingers.

Malachy’s pale little hands skittered across my mind.

When she saw us, the woman hunched and gave a grimace.

“Oops. Sorry.” She laughed. “I didn’t know anyone was here.” The toddler thumped her head, and she scratched a finger on his stomach. He squealed and kicked his legs.

“Come in, Kathryn,” said Dom. “I think we’re finished here.”

He looked a question at Baker and Ryan. The sheriff retrieved his hat and we all rose.

The child turned toward Dom’s voice, spotted him, and began to wriggle. When Kathryn set him down, he teetered forward with outstretched arms, and Dom bent to scoop him up. His arms looked milky white around Dom’s sun-darkened neck.

Kathryn joined us.

“How old is your baby?” I asked.

“Fourteen months. Aren’t you, Carlie?” She extended a finger and Carlie grabbed for it, then held his arms out toward her. Dom returned the baby to its mother.

“Excuse us,” Kathryn said. “He needs a nappy change.”

“Before you go, may I ask you one question?” Ryan produced the photo. “Do you know either of these people?”

Kathryn studied the snapshot, holding it beyond Carlie’s reach. I watched Dom’s face. His expression never changed.

Kathryn shook her head, then handed back the photo. “No. Sorry.” She fanned the air and wrinkled her nose. “Gotta go.”

“The woman was pregnant,” Ryan offered.

“Sorry,” said Kathryn.

“He’s a beautiful baby,” I said.

“Thank you.” She smiled and disappeared into the back of the house.

Dom looked at his watch.

“We’ll be in touch,” said Baker.

“Yes. Good. And good luck.”

*   *   *

Back in the car, we sat and studied the property. I’d cracked the passenger-side window, and mist blew in and settled on my face. The flash of Malachy had depressed me, and the damp, gray weather mirrored my mood perfectly.

I scanned the road in both directions, then looked again at the houses. I could see people working in a garden behind the bungalow. Seed packets stuck on sticks identified the contents of each patch. Otherwise, there were no signs of life.

“What do you think?” I asked no one in particular.

“If they’ve been here eight years they’ve kept a very low profile,” said Baker. “I haven’t heard a thing about them.”

We watched Helen leave the green house and walk to one of the trailers.

“But they’re about to be discovered,” he added, reaching for the ignition.

For several miles, no one spoke. We were crossing the bridge into Beaufort when Ryan broke the silence.

“There’s got to be a link. It can’t be coincidence.”

“Coincidences do happen,” said Baker.

“Yes.”

“One thing bothers me,” I said.

“What’s that?”

“Heidi quit going to the clinic here in her sixth month. Her parents said she showed up in Texas in late August. Right?”

“Right.”

“But the phone calls continued to the number here until December.”

“Yes,” said Ryan. “That’s a problem.”

T
HE MIST CHANGED TO RAIN AS WE DROVE TO THE
Beaufort-Jasper Comprehensive Health Clinic. It turned the tree trunks dark and shiny and painted a sheen on the blacktop. When I cracked the window I could smell wet grass and earth.

We located the doctor with whom Ryan had spoken, and he showed her the photo. She thought she recognized Heidi as the patient she’d treated the previous summer, but couldn’t be sure. The pregnancy was normal. She’d written the standard prenatal prescriptions. Beyond that, she could tell us nothing. She had no recollection of Brian.

At noon Sheriff Baker left us to handle a domestic situation on Lady’s Island. We agreed to meet at his office at six, by which time he hoped to have information on the Adler Lyons property.

Ryan and I stopped for barbecue at Sgt. White’s Diner, then spent the afternoon showing Heidi’s snapshot around town, and asking about the commune on Adler Lyons Road.

By four o’clock we knew two things: No one had heard of Dom Owens or his followers. No one remembered Heidi Schneider or Brian Gilbert.

We sat in Ryan’s rental car and stared up Bay Street. On my right customers entered and left the Palmetto Federal Banking Center. I looked across to the stores we’d just canvassed. The Cat’s Meow. Stones and Bones. In High Cotton. Yes. Beaufort had embraced the world of tourism.

The rain had stopped but the sky was still dark and heavy. I felt tired and discouraged, and no longer sure about the Beaufort–St-Jovite connection.

Outside Lipsitz Department Store a man with greased hair and a face like bread dough waved a Bible and screamed about Jesus. March was the off season for sidewalk salvation, so he had the stage to himself.

Sam had told me about his war with the street preachers. For twenty years they’d been coming to Beaufort, descending on the city like pilgrims on hajj. In 1993 His Honor had the Reverend Isaac Abernathy arrested for harassing women in shorts, calling them whores and bellowing about eternal damnation. Suits were filed against the mayor and the city, and the ACLU jumped to the defense of the evangelists, the issue being one of First Amendment rights. The case was pending review by the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals in Richmond, and the preachers still came.

I listened to the man rant about Satan and heathens and Jews, and felt tiny hairs rise on the back of my neck. I resent those who see themselves as God’s spokesmen and next of kin, and am disturbed by people interpreting the Gospel to push a political agenda.

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