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Authors: Tawni O'Dell

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BOOK: Angels Burning
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I step gingerly over the scorched ground, fully aware of the dangers beneath my feet, while Nolan stomps heavily behind me, daring it to give way.

Where the fire burns hottest, more than a dozen smoldering gashes have opened up. Dead trees have broken loose from the weakened soil and fallen over. Their exposed roots remind me of the tangled legs of dried-out spiders that Neely and I used to find in our attic.

In one of these fiery holes in the ground, someone has stuffed a dead girl.

Nolan and I stare down at her.

The top portion of her body has been badly burned. Her eyes are open and staring in surprise out of a face that looks as if it's been slathered in barbecue sauce and overbaked until it's begun to crack and flake. Most of her hair is gone, and the damage to her skull is obvious. I highly doubt she survived those blows. Hopefully they were inflicted before she was lit on fire.

“We've searched the area and the road. There's no sign of blood from those head wounds. She must have been killed somewhere else and brought here,” I tell him, needing to fill the silence. “It's been dry lately, so unfortunately, no footprints, no tire tracks.”

Nolan kneels down to get a closer look.

“I think whoever put her here thought she'd burn up and disappear,” I go on, “and when she didn't catch on fire, he doused her in some kind of accelerant. Then there's this.”

I gesture at a comforter streaked in bloodstains and black burn marks we found in a bank of weeds.

“Chantilly pattern in corals and oranges with a turquoise medallion overlay. I'm pretty sure that's from the Jessica Simpson Sherbet Lace collection. You can find it at Bed, Bath and Beyond.”

Nolan looks up at me with his unreadable reflective eyes.

“I was shopping for some new bedding recently,” I explain. “I didn't get
that
,” I further justify myself. “It doesn't look like she was allowed
to burn long. Maybe someone tried to put out the fire with the blanket.”

“Could be the killer felt some remorse, or could be someone was with him who couldn't stand to watch,” Nolan contributes. “How'd Mayfield find her?”

“His dog.”

He doesn't say anything else. My officers and I stand by while he continues to stare intently at the dead girl from behind the black depths of his glasses.

Even eerier than the landscape is the absence of any noise. It's a perfect June day and not a single bird is chirping, not a fly is buzzing, dogs aren't barking and children aren't calling out to each other. No one is mowing a yard or playing a radio or wielding a power tool.

“How do you want to get her out of there?” I ask Nolan.

She's only a few feet down, but there's no way of knowing how fragile the earth is around her and how deep the chasm might be beneath her. There's also no way to know the extent of her burns and the resulting condition of her body. If we try to pull her out, she might come apart.

Nolan finally stands back up.

“One of us needs to get down there to help hoist her up,” he says. “We can tie a rope around whoever goes. I've got two troopers with me, but they're big guys.”

He sizes up Blonski, who has a stocky, no-neck weight lifter's build, then Singer, who's tall and lanky, then me.

“Do you weigh more than him?” he asks me.

“No,” I reply sharply.

“You sure? He's skinny as a stick.”

“He's six-two and a man. I weigh the least. I'll do it.”

“You're wearing a skirt, Chief,” Singer ventures hesitantly. “And you don't have any shoes.”

“Yeah,” Blonski chimes in. “Shouldn't we wait for someone with the proper clothes and equipment who knows what they're doing?”

“Who knows what they're doing?” I repeat in a tone that puts an end to any further argument.

I take off my jacket and slip a rope under my arms while the men hold the other end. I'm not worried for my safety, but I am worried about my blouse. I hate the fact that I've been caught off guard unprepared to do my job, but in all fairness to me, this is not my job anymore. I have an office now with a comfortable chair and a Keurig: I'm a coordinator, a schedule maker, a form filer, a public relations maven, a handshaking figurehead. I'm the first female police chief in the county. I cling to this knowledge in an effort to maintain some dignity as I descend into a muddy hole to retrieve a corpse.

I try not to think about the girl or to look at her until I absolutely have to. The hole is hot and steamy, and I also try not to think about the earth around me falling away, exposing the leaping flames of hell a mile beneath my dangling feet.

I wedge myself against one side and reach out to grab the body around its midsection. It looks as if the fire didn't spread below her hips.

The sight of her young bare legs sticking out from a pair of cutoff shorts makes my throat tighten. Miraculously one of her flip-flops is still on one of her feet. Her toenails are painted neon pink, and an anklet made of sparkly hearts glimmers in the black dirt.

I gently pull her toward me, ignoring the sound, smell, and feel of seared flesh and bones, and try to imagine the girl she once was before her heart stopped beating and her soul fled. Did she like school? Did she have a lot of friends? What did she want to be when she grew up? Did she ever get to do it in a pickup truck?

None of us speak once we have her laid out on the ground. We stand around her in a protective circle and silently share our individual grief. Tears are acceptable in even the most hardened police officers in situations like this. They're all thinking of sisters or daughters. I'm the only one who sees myself.

I'm the first to look up and away from the dead girl and this dead town to the lush green waves of rolling hills on the blue horizon, and I feel the familiar ache that always comes over me whenever I'm faced with ruined beauty.

One by one, the men turn away, too, consumed for a final moment
by their private tortured thoughts before returning to the practiced numbness that enables them to do their job but unfortunately can't shield them from their dreams.

Our sleep will be haunted tonight by those legs that even in death look like they could get up and run away from here.

chapter
two

SINGER AND BLONSKI
arrive back at the tan brick municipal building that houses our department well before me. I had to stay and talk to the coroner and strategize with Nolan. Campbell's Run is a no-man's-land when it comes to police jurisdiction since it doesn't exist as a town anymore according to the state of Pennsylvania. The road going through it doesn't exist either. Buchanan is the nearest community with its own police force, and I've been the chief here for the past ten years.

Nolan has all the resources of the state police at his disposal, including their forensic lab. I have six officers (two on vacation), four vehicles, and a frequently broken vending machine. The investigation is his, but we'll assist. The arrangement would be the same if the girl had been found on my doorstep. The crime is too heinous to risk failure due to our inexperience with homicides and a budget that can barely put gas in our cruisers and ink in our printer.

It doesn't hit me until I pull into my parking space and realize I'm still in my bare feet because I wouldn't put my new shoes back on, that I forgot to go home and shower and change. I think about turning around and leaving, but we have a single shower in our locker room and I have a pair of sweats in my office. I have a lot to tackle this morning. I'll go home and get some real clothes on my lunch hour.

Singer and Blonski are deep in conversation with Karla, our dispatcher, and Everhart and Dewey, my two other available officers. This
was their day off, but I need all hands on deck. Dewey has four kids out of school for the summer and seemed happy to be called into work. Everhart's wife is pregnant with their first child, just past her due date, and is driving him crazy; he seemed even happier. All talking ceases when I enter the building.

“I realize I'm a little dirty,” I say, and walk past quickly without allowing any commentary.

I motion at Singer and Blonski.

“You two. A word, please.”

They follow me into my office. This ten-by-twenty-foot enclosure painted the color of khaki pants with one window overlooking a parking lot and no central air is the closest I come to having a nest, and the vigilant fondness that comes over me once my officers enter here is the closest I come to feeling maternal.

“How much do you weigh?” I ask Singer as I open my window and perch on the sill, hoping for a breeze.

“One sixty,” he says.

“No way,” Blonski cries out, plopping down in a chair the same way he might land on a buddy's chest during a backyard tussle. “And you're six-two? You're a freak. You need to bulk up.”

“It doesn't matter how much I eat. I don't bulk,” Singer replies, lowering himself into the other chair.

“I didn't appreciate your comments in front of Corporal Greely,” I tell them.

“We were trying to protect you,” Singer replies.

“You're an idiot,” Blonski informs him, shaking his head.

“If I were a man would you have felt the need to protect me?”

“If you were a man you wouldn't have been wearing a skirt and a—”

“Do you know why I'm dressed like this?” I interrupt Singer.

“I like your blouse,” he says.

“Because I was on my way to eat tasteless scrambled eggs and soggy bacon with town officials and concerned citizens and discuss the potholes on Jenner Pike and the new dog-barking citation. Next time you want to protect me, protect me from that.”

“Yes, ma'am.”

Blonski grins. The chastisement was meant for both of them, but Singer has taken on all the blame and this means Blonski won.

The first time I saw
BROCK BLONSKI
written across the top of a job application, I pictured a linebacker from Fred Flintstone's favorite football team, and when I met him, aside from the fact that he wasn't a cartoon character wearing a loincloth, he fit the bill: square-jawed, broad-shouldered, competitive, with a deceptively lumbering large-primate gait. He spoke in grunts and monosyllables and ate entire rotisserie chickens for lunch. I was beginning to think the fact that his first name was only one swapped vowel away from the word “brick” completely summed up his personality until I overheard him explaining the latest developments in neuroscience nanotechnology to the mother of a boy who had just suffered a head wound after wrecking his dirt bike. He only pretends to be dumb.

“I wanted to thank you for volunteering,” Singer says to me. “I was afraid the detective was going to ask me to do it.”

“I wanted to do it,” Blonski says.

I look at them sitting side by side: one with thick dark hair parted fastidiously on one side, long limbs folded into his seated body umbrella-style, a live-wire jumpiness about him; the other a human ATV, head shaved, leaning back in his chair with eyes half-closed like he's about to nod off. They're two seemingly very different young men, physically and mentally, but to someone my age all that matters is they're both twenty-three, which means they're exactly the same.

“Were any missing-persons reports filed recently for a teenaged girl?”

“Nothing in our county,” Blonski responds.

“Too bad it's summer and school is out. An absentee list from the high school would be a good place to start looking.”

“Won't the state police be doing all that stuff?” Singer asks.

“I'm sorry, Officer, would you like the day off?”

His face reddens.

“No, it's just that . . . ” he begins.

“We're going to conduct our own investigation. We know the area and the people living in it better than they do. Corporal Greely welcomes our help.”

“Welcomes?” Blonski wonders skeptically.

“Feels obligated to accept our assistance,” I correct myself. “I'm going to take a shower. When I'm done, we're going to brainstorm.”

Singer gets up from his chair and heads for the door. Blonski lingers.

“She might not be from around here,” he says.

“Only someone from around here would think to dump a body out at the Run,” Singer counters.

“Maybe the killer is from around here but the girl is from somewhere else?”

Singer disagrees.

“How would he have found her? Have you ever run into anyone around here who isn't from around here?”

Blonski gets up and leaves. I stop Singer as he's heading out my office door and hand him one of my new pumps.

“Can you get out that scuff?” I whisper to him.

“Sure thing, Chief,” he says.

I NEVER USE
the locker room. I'm surprised to find that it's neat and clean. I realize immediately that I don't have a towel, soap, or a comb. There's a faded blue beach towel with a picture of a shark on it, fangs bared, folded and sitting on the end of the bench. I pick it up and inspect it. It's dry and it doesn't smell. Wrapped inside is some kind of bodywash.

As I walk past the mirror, I stop and stare dumbly at my reflection. I can't believe I just had a conversation with two of my men in this condition and they were able to keep straight faces. I look like a chimney sweep.

I can't help thinking about my mom and what her reaction would have been to my appearance. She was obsessive about personal cleanliness to the point where she named her first child after her favorite
soap. She took at least two showers a day and set aside a full hour every evening for her religiously observed bubble bath complete with lit candles, soft music on the radio, fizzy pink Mateus wine in a plastic gold chalice from a Renaissance Faire, and an altar set with shiny glass bottles, tubes and ceramic pots with metallic lids, and sparkly silver lipstick cases.

Her desire to be immaculate didn't extend past her body, however. I can't ever recall seeing my mother run a vacuum or wash a dish. Our grandmother used to stop by sometimes and tidy up until I got old enough to do it, but her visits weren't often enough to combat the filth, piles of clutter, and soiled clothes that accumulated everywhere.

BOOK: Angels Burning
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