“Sanford?… hey, Sanford?… um, Sanford?”
“Okay. What? I can’t let you out. I can’t let myself out, understand?”
“You mean you’re stuck here too?”
“Forget about that. Listen to me. You have to do whatever he wants. Don’t argue with him. Don’t say no to him.”
Nelson began to cry hard enough that his words were difficult to make out. “Sanford! When we get out of here, you have to come and tell our mom and dad that we didn’t run off on purpose!”
“… What?”
“She probably thinks we’re off on an adventure or something, and by now she’s really mad.”
“She thinks that you’re off on an ‘adventure’?”
“You have to tell her or we’re both gonna get killed. Would he let you come over and do that? I mean once we can go and everything, would he let you come and tell our mom that?”
“Shut up, Nelson,” Lewis said from his seated position. He did not even look in their direction.
“I sure won’t shut up, Lewie! He can smooth it with Mom after we’ve been gone so long. He can tell her for us!”
“I said
shut up,
Nelson,” his brother repeated in the same quiet, steely voice. This time he looked up at his brother and made eye contact so powerful that Nelson gave a small sob and flopped back down into the dirt. Then Lewis looked straight at Sanford for the first time. “He still thinks we’re getting out of here.”
Sanford stared back, at a loss for words. The older boy’s truthful view of his circumstances hit hard. Finally he found his voice. “Here’s the thing: he’s going to want you to write a couple of letters home. He’s playing a joke on your parents. Just write whatever he says, okay? He’ll make you do it one way or the other, and I really think that you should just write whatever he tells you to. It’s all part of doing whatever he says, understand?”
It was Lewis who replied. “So you really can’t get out of here yourself, can you? You’re as stuck as we are. Right?”
Sanford looked at him and flicked his eyes toward the door. Then he looked back at him and flicked his eyes toward the door a second time. Lewis just squinted in confusion. Sanford sighed. “Lewis—”
“It’s Lewie.”
“Okay, Lewie. Just write what he tells you when he brings the paper in. I’m telling you now, it’s easier that way. Just do it.”
“Sanford—” Little Nelson began again, but Sanford was already out the door. He closed it behind himself so that he did not hear whatever Nelson wanted to say. Outside, Uncle Stewart leaned against the wall right next to the door where he had listened to it all. He handed Sanford the padlock for the door and Sanford slid it into place. Then Uncle Stewart took him by the lower ear lobe and walked them both away from there until they were out of earshot.
“Want to do one? I like Nelson, but you can have Lewis.”
“No.”
“Oh, as if to say that you are virtuous and pure—eh, Killer?”
“It’s not that.”
“Suit yourself. But you don’t think it keeps your hands clean, do you?”
“I don’t think my hands are clean.”
“Yeah, and just so you don’t forget, go inside and take all those clippings about Walter Collins and hang them back up in the kitchen.”
“I hate seeing those things.”
“I know. That’s why you need to get used to them. Sanford. Sanford! After you do one murder, everything else is free! How many times can they hang you? Ha-ha-ha! You owe it to yourself! We have a level of freedom that all those working stiffs out there are never going to know. Doesn’t that make you feel sorry for them?”
“I was thinking more about those kids.”
“All right, shut up and mind your own business. Get in there and close up the house; all that plaster’s dry by now. You stay there tonight and bring breakfast in the morning.”
“Enough for all three of you, though, right?”
“Why not? Keep the guests happy.”
The next day, Uncle Stewart posted a letter to the frantic parents of the Winslow brothers from a mailbox in their home town of Pomona:
Dear Mother and Dad: We are going to Mexico to make a lot of money making yachts and airplanes. A woman gave us something to eat. Don’t worry. We will be O.K. —Lewie and Nelse
One week later, Sanford stood inside a freshly dug hole in the floor of another neglected coop. It served as a storage shed but was nearly empty. The hole in the ground was wider than his shoulders, about as long as his own body. Fresh earth lay in a grim pile right next to it. Uncle Stewart leaned in the doorway and watched him work. “That’s about good enough,” he finally said. “Took you long enough. Hell, all day to dig one hole?”
“This hardpan dirt is the worst you can imagine. And you didn’t give out any help at all around the place today.”
“And risk getting a callus? Do you not remember my mother?”
Sanford put the shovel down and looked up at him. “All right. But if this is big enough now, it’s time for me to turn the eggs in the incubator house.”
Uncle Stewart failed to answer right away. He took a deep breath through his nose and stared thoughtfully ahead. He took a second deep breath through his nose before he replied. “Turn the eggs. Mm. Yes. Good a time as any. Good a time as any, I say.”
“You want to help this time?” Sanford asked, daring to find himself for a moment in a little smart-assed humor while he smacked the dust off of his pants.
“Believe I will.”
Sanford stood up straight in surprise. “What, really?”
“Oh yes indeedy, my good man.”
“What’s going on?” Sanford asked before he realized that a good-sized portion of his brain preferred to avoid the answer.
“You’re doing it again.”
“What?”
“Playing dumb to avoid something that you already know.
You just dug a grave,
asshole!” Uncle Stewart kicked at the butt of Sanford’s pants.
Sanford tried to think of a reply and came up empty. He could only fall back on his basic skill of keeping his eyes on the ground.
“Things outlive their usefulness. You’ve done a good job of not outliving your own usefulness. So far. Lewis and Nelson have been here for over a week now. That’s about as ripe as I can stand ’em.”
“Uncle Stewart, is your mind made up to do this?”
“Maybe. Why?”
“I just mean, if you could see your way clear to, this time, just—”
“Just
what?”
Uncle Stewart hollered so loud that it hurt Sanford’s ears. “Let them go? Is that what you want? You want two boys out there who could bring the police down on us? You don’t seem to believe that you are just as far into this as me and your grandmother.”
“Why do you call her that? She’s your mother.”
“Well, well! We’re feeling ornery today, aren’t we, my little darling?”
“I’m not ornery, Uncle Stewart, but those boys are both really scared.”
“Is a chicken scared before you wring its neck?”
“I don’t know. Maybe.”
“Exactly! And who cares, right? Look, I’ll tell you what: you go get Lewis and take him over to the house. Tell him to go in and wait for me. Leave Nelson in the incubator house and then meet me back out there. First we’ll make sure that little Nelson can keep a story straight, and then I’ll have a talk with Lewis, and since he’s the oldest, if he can see his way clear to promising me for both of the boys that he will keep quiet forever, and that if he ever talks we will hunt him down and kill his entire family, then we can talk about letting them go.”
“Really? Oh God! I’ll be right back.” Sanford took off toward the incubator house where the two boys were still being held. As soon as he pulled the lock and opened the door, he saw that both were asleep. So he stepped over to Lewis, unlocked his chain, and gently shook him.
“Lewis!” he whispered. “Lewis, it’s Sanford. Wake up.”
“Huh? What’s going on?”
“Shhh. Don’t wake up Nelson. You have to come to the house with me and talk to Uncle Stewart. He’s thinking about letting you guys go!”
Lewis bolted upright. “Really?”
“Shhh! Let your brother sleep so you don’t raise his hopes until you know for sure. It’s gonna be up to you to talk your way out of here.” He pulled Lewis to his feet and out the door, then softly closed it without bothering to lock it against the chained younger boy. He took Lewis on a fast walk toward the house. “I talked to him! He’s gonna give you a chance! All you have to do is promise not to say anything to
anybody
about him or about what happened here, you know.”
“What am I supposed to tell people about where we’ve been?”
“That’s what I’m telling you! You have to make up something that you can tell people and then tell Uncle Stewart that it’s what you’ll say to everybody. Lewis—” Sanford clasped Lewis by the shoulders and looked him in the eyes, something he never did to anybody. “You guys can get out of here tonight if you play this one just right!”
“Okay! Uh … uh, let’s see—well, that first letter that he made me write said that we were going to Mexico. We could always say that we just got homesick.”
“That’s it! That’s a story that you can both keep straight. It’s hard for two people to keep a story straight. You have to be ready when he asks you about it—make up all the little details, you know: where you stayed, who you met, things you did, all that stuff. You have to make him believe that you can make everybody else believe it.”
“Details? Sure, I can make up details. Hell!”
“Yeah, but this guy is the Devil’s own liar. You have to keep your facts straight. Uncle Stewart can lie for an hour nonstop and never trip over a single detail. That’s what he’s gonna want from you.”
“I can do it. We can both do it. We lie to our parents all the time.”
“Shame on you,” Sanford replied with a straight face. Both boys laughed at the same time, and it was like a clean wind had just blown in. Sanford put an arm around Lewis’s shoulder in a protective gesture that he did not understand but which felt good anyway. The boys walked up to the front porch of the little ranch house.
As soon as Sanford opened the door, he was surprised that none of the lanterns were lit and the house was pitch-black inside. “All right,” he told the boy. “I’m going to go over to the incubator house and talk to him now, and then he’ll be right back in here. Practice what you’re going to tell him. Make it good!”
“I will!” Lewis agreed. Sanford turned to go, but Lewis stopped him. “Sanford?”
“Yeah?”
“I’m never gonna forget you helped us.”
Sanford smiled. It felt wonderful. “All right, just get your story straight in your mind. I’ll be back with Uncle Stewart.”
“I’ll be ready.”
Sanford sprinted away and back to the incubator house. He poked his head inside just after Uncle Stewart had awakened Nelson. The boy was out of his chains and sitting up on a wooden chair near the candling table. He was still rubbing sleep from his eyes while he gazed around in mute confusion.
“Nelson,” Uncle Stewart said, “you can go ahead and sit there. Talk to Sanford while I turn the eggs in the incubator here.” He stepped over and physically maneuvered Nelson and the wooden chair until the back was to him. “Sanford, you’ve explained things to Lewis already, yes?”
“Yeah, just now.”
“Good. You may tell Nelson, then.”
“What about Lewie? Where is he?” Nelson demanded.
“He’s over in the house,” Sanford told him. “Don’t worry, he’ll be right back. In the meantime, Uncle Stewart has this idea about how you and your brother can go back home!”
“We can?” Nelson’s breath caught in his throat. He started to cry. Uncle Stewart whirled from the incubator table holding his hatchet and smashed it into Nelson’s head so hard that the boy gasped a noise that sounded like “Pwuhhh!” and fell out of the chair.
Sanford screamed before he found the words. “No! No!”
Uncle Stewart flew across the tiny room and clubbed Sanford with the blunt end of the hatchet, sending shooting stars across his vision. Then he clapped his hand over Sanford’s mouth and softly said, “Shut up! I need his brother to be calm. Don’t you dare let him hear you. Do not make one sound, Sanford. You so much as shed a single tear and I will take you out next! I’m sick of you anyway!” He gradually released Sanford’s mouth, making sure that he wouldn’t try to make any noise.
Blood streamed from Sanford’s scalp. He pressed his palm onto the broken skin and went down to one knee to keep from falling. He didn’t dare to attempt to warn Lewis; he had no idea how he could do that for a chained boy anyway. If all he did was to scream out some kind of warning until Uncle Stewart bashed him the same way that he had just done to Nelson, it might scare the hell out of the surviving brother but it would do nothing to save him.
“Come on,” Uncle Stewart said, grabbing the dying boy under the arms. “Pick up his feet. We’re gonna carry him back to your brand-new grave.”
Sanford did not say a word, as ordered. He was unable to speak. If he dared to make a sound, he might slip and begin screaming in horror and outrage and not be able to stop. His weight instantly increased by threefold, maybe even four. His limbs were so heavy that he could barely carry Nelson at all. When he let go of his head, the bleeding continued; but he needed both hands, so he had to let it stream down his face and onto his shirt. He walked with the boy’s feet and legs while Uncle Stewart carried the heavier end. In less than a minute, they had little Nelson inside the shed and dropped him into the pit. Nelson moaned a little when he hit the ground. The sound nearly peeled Sanford’s skin. Half a moan and half a gasp, it was as awful a sound as he ever wanted to hear.