Fallout (Joshua Stokes Mysteries Book 2) (20 page)

BOOK: Fallout (Joshua Stokes Mysteries Book 2)
2.27Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Joshua had listened and heard all of what Scarborough said, but what he had said about his mother caused him to ask, “You said that you remember when my mother went missing. Could you elaborate on that a bit for me? I cannot seem to find out too much about her disappearance.”

“She went missing April, 1938. I was working on the Le Fleur Plantation.” Scarborough gave him a searching look. “That was the name of the place before Early Dixon bought it and turned it into a funeral home. During that time, my father was the overseer there. We had lost the farm and the plantation was where we landed when the bank took it. We lived in a small house about a half a mile south of the main house.

The old slave quarter’s was between the plantation and us. Some of the workers stayed in those. We chopped cotton twelve hours a day during harvest, worked ten hours a day the rest of the year. It was not an easy life at all, not for any of us,” Scarborough stopped and took a sip of his coffee and then took up where he left off.

“I remember riding to Mobile in the back of a truck with a load of watermelons we were taking to market down in Pascagoula. On the way there, we stopped by Stokes Grocery to get a soda water. The day we stopped there, the man who owned the store, your father, was talking with the sheriff about his wife’s disappearance. I remember every word of that conversation,” he said, stirring cream and sugar into a second cup of coffee. Joshua poured himself another cup and did the same.

“Are you going to elaborate?” he asked Scarborough.

“Of course, if that is what you wish.”

“Yes, I definitely want to know what you heard. My father never would talk about my mother’s disappearance. He died when I was eighteen years old. There is no way he can ever tell me anything, even if he wanted to.”

“Your father told the sheriff that his wife had been missing for almost a week. He said that he thought she was suffering from some sort of depression because she missed her family. He thought she had gone to the reservation to try to locate her brother and sister and that she would return after a couple of days. However, she had been gone so long that he was beginning to think that she had run off with a traveling salesman that had been showing her some attention.

That sheriff told your father that could be the case, but if it was, it was
contagious
. He told your father that he should have reported it sooner. Another woman had gone missing just six months prior to your mother’s departure. Both cases were strange considering that neither had taken any personal possessions with them, not even their purses. He told your father that women never go anywhere without their purse or make-up. Your father’s eyes just drifted off into the distance. Even at my age, I could see that his mind left this world for some other place. Some place that was deep inside him… he looked hopeless.”

After hearing what Scarborough had to say, Joshua’s heart softened a little toward his father, but he still could not completely forgive him, he should have had more trust in his mother instead of jumping to the conclusion that she had left of her own free will.

“I know that may not be what you wanted to hear, son, but it’s the truth. That other woman the sheriff was talking about had a husband and children too. Women don’t usually abandon their children. When they do leave their husbands, they take the young ones with them. It is their natural instinct to keep them close, to protect them. I still think the older Dixon had something to do with that, and I’ll tell you why.

You know, I told you that I worked on the Le Fleur Plantation with my father. The Dixons moved into town from Georgia or somewhere and purchased the place soon after Le Fleur passed away; it was toward the end of 1939. My father and most of the others working there lost their jobs. I did too, but was soon hired back to maintain the grounds around the main house. You know, mowing the lawn, sweeping the banana spider webs down from the outside of the house, raking leaves and burning them.

I had been working there about six months when I come up on the old man feeding the hogs. That in itself was not bad, but it was odd. He had never taken it upon himself to feed the pigs before. I was almost positive that I saw a human finger protruding from the feed trough before the old man saw me and ushered me off toward the house.

I had read several months earlier that another woman had gone missing, and that was the first thing that comes to my mind when I saw that finger.

The hog pen was a good quarter mile from the main house and close to the old quarters. In the year or so I had worked for them, I had never seen the old man venture down there before. I had seen Early Dixon there on numerous occasions. He was always messing around the animals, if you know what I mean. Anyhow, I think that was how the old man got rid of the bodies. He fed them to the pigs. What better way to get rid of the evidence. They eat it up, bones and all, and then shit it out and wallow in it.

I went to the local sheriff and told him my theory, but he thought I was crazy. He said they would follow up on it, but I could tell by the look in his eyes that he thought I belonged in over in Searcy Mental Hospital along with all the other fruit cakes.”

Joshua was at a loss as what to say; it made sense to him. Scarborough was right; feeding the body to the pigs was the perfect way to get rid of evidence.

Emma came back inside and asked if she could use the restroom. Scarborough told her of course she could. He nodded toward the hallway and said, “It’s the second door on the right.” Just before she disappeared down the hallway, Emma told Joshua that someone was calling for him on the car radio. Joshua was surprised it had taken them that long to check on his whereabouts. He thanked Scarborough for all the information he had given him and asked if he could call on him if he needed his help in the future. Scarborough replied that of course he could, and that he had enjoyed talking with him. He hinted that had more information on the Dixons if he needed it. Joshua thanked him again as he and Emma left.

27
Backtracking

As soon as Joshua got into his cruiser, he radioed the station to see why they were trying to get in touch with him. Ida Mae told him that John Metcalf was looking for him. She said they had a new development in the Train Track Killer Case. Her words surprised him. He figured he was done with that case when the killer crossed the state line into Mississippi. The last he heard, the killer was in Texas. He figured he would have already made it into Mexico by then and that he would never hear anymore about it. He told Ida Mae to tell Metcalf that he should be close to home in an hour, hour and a half at the most. They left Citronelle by way of Prine Road. In an hour and fifteen minutes, he was pulling into his front yard. Except for the songs playing on the 8-track player, they had driven the entire length in silence. Joshua had so many thoughts going on in his mind that he had not paid any attention to what
was
playing.

He hated backtracking; especially a case he thought he was done with. Once he was done with them, he tried to put them out of his mind. He had successfully done that with the Train Track Killer Case. He had put it all the way out of his mind, not just to a back burner to simmer and stew.

Many probably thought the case of the Dixons and their serial killing ways should be finished too, but it was sitting on that burner simmering away, and the more he learned about them, the thicker that stew got.

Going over the Train Track Killer’s case in his mind as he drove, caused him to see just how sick and depraved the killer was. All killers are sick and depraved to some extent, but some were definitely sicker and more depraved than others were. How these people decided what they wanted to do to people before, during, or after they killed them was beyond his imagining. Does everyone have this capability inside them, he wondered. As he thought about it, he decided that everyone had some of these tendencies; some just had more than others did. Some were pushed to it by other people, some craved it from the get go, and some discovered it by accident.

He knew of several cases where people were pushed and pushed until they fought back. The things they did were as bad as or worse than what was done to them because of the built up anger. Moreover, others had to do something they considered gross then discovered that they liked the ugliness of it and wanted more. Then some, like the younger Dixons, were born with the depravity in their blood. From the get go they were screwed; they never stood a chance. He wondered what had set the Mexican off. What had caused him to go on a nationwide killing spree? Something set him off; there was a trigger to everything. Joshua knew that as surely as he knew his own name.

John Metcalf’s car was sitting in his yard when they arrived. However, John had gotten out and was walking around exploring on his own. He was coming from toward the river when they pulled up. Joshua got out and walked to meet him. He could tell by Metcalf’s grim demeanor that the news was bad.

“Ida Mae said that you were looking for me.”

“Yes, Sheriff. Our killer has decided to head back our way. At least the FBI is sure he was the one that killed a woman in Baton Rouge, Louisiana day before yesterday.

At first, they thought it might be a copycat murder, but the details were never released to the public. Then they found his fingerprints at the scene. It was at a home near the rail yard there. The manner was a butcher knife in the kitchen while the woman prepared breakfast… This dude is an early riser, Sheriff. It seems all of his attacks are early morning while the women are in the kitchen. They don’t know if he stakes them out or if their lighted windows draw his attention to them.”

“Have they released a statement warning people that live near railroad tracks to be watchful and to keep their doors locked?”

“Not that I know of, Sheriff. They probably figure it will cause panic and a swarm of calls every time someone sees a dark-skinned man near any railroad track. That would tie up a lot of detectives and the phone lines. Most police stations don’t have the manpower to investigate every call that could come in from such an event.”

“Well, they need to do something. They need to warn people so they can protect themselves. John, you yourself know if people know something like that is happening, they will take care of him if he shows up at their doors. Most folks living in rural areas own guns and know how to use them.”

“Yeah, I know, but if people are suspicious of everyone that comes to their door, an innocent person could be killed and that would cause even more problems, especially for those in our line of work.”

“I know, but it just makes me feel inadequate to know that he slipped through our fingers and has gone on to kill more people.”

“Well, you never really had a chance to catch him, Sheriff. He was here and then he was gone before you even had time to evaluate the situation.”

Joshua knew that Metcalf was right but it did not make it any easier, especially knowing that the killer had killed since then and that he would probably kill many more times before he was caught. People like him that live on the fringe of society, easily go unnoticed by everyone, including those in law enforcement.

“Joe Barnes was the one who called. He said he just wanted to keep you apprised of the situation in case that Mexican decided to double back and backtrack his way through here. I told him we were much obliged for his call and for him to let us know of any further developments in the case. He said that he would.”

“That’s good,” Joshua replied, and then asked Metcalf if he wanted to sit down and have a drink. Metcalf told him that he would take a rain check; he needed to get on down the road. He was headed to Lucedale to eat supper with his folks. He said he wondered what girl they had invited over this time.

“They’re all the time trying to match me up with someone,” he said. “They think I need a wife to take care of me. I try to tell them to lay off about it, but my mama is relentless in her pursuit to get me married off,” he chuckled.

“You might be better off letting her pick one out for you,” Joshua chuckled. “At least it would be one that she approved of,” he said, remembering how his grandmother had warned him about Francine before he married her.


That girl is going to break your heart, Joshua. Take time to know her before you go and marry her
’ his grandmother said, but he did not listen. He was young; he
thought
he knew what he wanted.

“You might be right, Sheriff, but I am nowhere near ready to get married. To someone they approve of or not. It does not fit into my plans at this time. I enjoy my bachelorhood and not having anyone to account my time to.”

“I know exactly what you mean,” Joshua replied. Emma came out of the house, sat down in the porch swing and curled her legs under her.

“Hello, Mister Metcalf,” Emma said. She looked John in the eye and then demurely looked away. Joshua noticed that Metcalf blushed. Uh huh, he thought to himself. Maybe he is interested in a woman after all, just not one his mother knows. That would explain why he made this ‘in person’ visit.

“I was about to fix us some supper. Do you want to stay and eat with us?” Emma asked. Joshua could see that Emma’s invitation pleased Metcalf by the show of a dimple in his left cheek. He shuffled his feet and replied that he would love to, but he had done promised his mother that he would come eat supper with them. Emma acted disappointed.

Joshua came close to telling John Metcalf that he ought to take Emma with him to his parents, maybe then his mother would leave him alone. Instead, Joshua told John he would talk to him later then walked inside; he wanted to give them a moment alone. He hoped that Emma would turn her attentions to someone besides him.

He poured himself a glass of whiskey and sat down at the kitchen table to look through some more of the files he had brought home. He could hear the soft murmur of voices through the wall, but after a minute or two, no longer paid any attention to them as he became immersed in the files. Something about the young couple that had gone on a picnic and then disappearance still bothered him. He intended to go through the files again, armed with more knowledge this time than what he had the first time through.

Other books

Two Loves for Alex by Claire Thompson
Last Writes by Lowe, Sheila
Annabel Scheme by Sloan, Robin
Star One: Tycho City Survival by Weil, Raymond L.
The Long Way Home by Dickson, Daniel