Mama Pursues Murderous Shadows (16 page)

BOOK: Mama Pursues Murderous Shadows
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“So, when she told Abe that Herman had spent the night with her at the Otis Motel, she was telling the truth?” Cliff asked.

“Yes,” Mama told him. “If Herman wasn’t in that room that night, Betty Jo would have said so!”

“So, her death has no effect on Herman’s alibi?” I asked.

“I don’t think so,” Mama said. “I really don’t think so.”

Sarah Jenkins opened her front door dressed in a beige two-piece suit, a silk scarf, and a pair of pink slippers; brown one-inch-heel pumps were sitting just inside the door frame.

“Come on in, ladies,” she said, ushering me and Mama toward the back of the house. We followed her through the living room, the dining room, and into a short hall that led into a large bedroom. The room had a king-sized white wrought-iron bed in the middle of the floor. A multicolored bedspread covered the bed. On top of it were stacks of old
Otis County Guardian
newspapers.

“I got up this morning determined to go to Sunday school,” she told us. “I’m still weak but this is something I begged the good Lord to help me do. It came to me right in the middle of the lesson.” She
picked up a newspaper from the top of the stack. It was faded yellow. She handed it to Mama, who read the front page silently, then passed it to me.

OTIS COUNTY GUARDIAN
June 10, 1985

OTIS SHOOTING DEATH BEING INVESTIGATED

The Otis Sheriff Department and Otis County Coroner are investigating a shooting death. Coroner Rhoden Black said Laura Manning, 50, of Otis County, died from a self-inflicted single gunshot wound to the head. Manning had last been contacted by telephone by a friend around 10:30
P.M.
the night before.

No final ruling has been made in the death but officials do not suspect foul play. Manning’s body has been sent to Charleston for autopsy.

Sarah’s mouth was set the way it is when she feels she’s absolutely correct. “See, Candi,” she said, “it’s happened before, right here in Otis.” She pointed at the newspaper.

Mama looked at Sarah in bewilderment. “I don’t understand what you’re getting at, Sarah.”

Sarah took a breath, then let it out dramatically. “Abe thought Laura Manning killed herself too. But it wasn’t so and I was the one who proved it.”

Now there was a look of intense interest on Mama’s face.

“It was about twenty years ago,” Sarah began. “Laura Manning, Annie Mae, Carrie, and I were members of the same chapter of the Eastern Stars. Laura was a widow woman, a fine mother who had raised three children. She worked hard at the church, helped raise money for the youth group’s field trip to the Six Flags amusement park in Atlanta.

“Early one morning before daylight a man slipped into Laura’s house, threw a blanket over her head, and raped her. Laura reported it to Abe, who did what he could to find the man. Telling Abe about her ordeal wasn’t all that Laura did. She talked about it to anybody who’d listen to her. She told the story over so many times that folks started saying she made them feel like they were in that bed of torment with her.

“Three weeks after Laura was raped, the county fair opened in Avondale. Annie Mae, Carrie, and I were taking our time strolling through the fairgrounds, looking at the exhibitions, when we ran into Laura. Like always, Laura started telling us about being raped in her own bed. Then out of the blue she said to us, ‘I think I know who raped me!’ I
tell you, Candi, the look on that woman’s face was real strange: like a bolt of understanding had struck her. I’ve got to find Abe and tell him something,’ she said, and she hurried away from us without another word.

“The next morning,” she added grimly, “I found Laura’s body.”

“You were the friend the newspaper mentioned,” Mama said.

Sarah nodded. “I’d called Laura after I got home from the fair to ask to borrow one of her pans. Laura always kept such nice baking pans. She mentioned to me that she hadn’t been able to locate Abe, but first thing the next morning she was going to his office. She said she was sure she had a strong idea of who had crawled through her window.”

“And right after that, she supposedly killed herself, is that right?” Mama asked.

“Like I told you, I found her body the next morning when I went to pick up her pan.”

“Did Laura Manning leave a note?” I asked before Mama could respond.

“She sure did,” Sarah told me. “In Laura’s own handwriting were the words
I can’t go on
!”

“That’s all the note said?” I asked, surprised at its brevity.

“That’s it,” Sarah said firmly. “Carrie, Annie Mae, and I told Abe what Laura had told us that day at the fair, but it didn’t do any good. The coroner ruled that Laura killed herself. He said he based his decision on
the fact the gun was in her hand, she had written a note, and she’d been obviously upset over the rape because she wouldn’t stop talking about it.

“But now look at this here,” Sarah said, handing Mama another newspaper clipping.

OTIS COUNTY GUARDIAN
November 9
,
1985

BURNS IS FOUND GUILTY OF MURDER

An Otis County man, Freddy Burns, 38, was found guilty Wednesday of the June 9, 1985, murder of Laura Manning.

The Otis County jury deliberated only four hours before convicting Burns. The trial has now entered the penalty phase, and the jury will decide whether Burns should be put to death or serve a life prison term. Assistant District Attorney John Everritt told jurors Tuesday that Burns should be executed.

Mama’s eyes shone with interest. “Tell me about it.”

Sarah looked pleased that she had Mama’s ear.
“Laura Manning knew Freddy Burns all of her life. When Freddy was a boy, he used to come to their place and help her father clean out his hog pens. But Laura didn’t like Freddy. She called him ‘trash’ in front of his face and behind his back.

“Out of pure spite, Freddy crawled into her window and raped her. He thought that by throwing a blanket over Laura’s head, she wouldn’t have known who he was. And for a while, she didn’t. The way the prosecutor figured it was, as we were standing by the livestock exhibit at the county fair, a particular smell stirred Laura’s memory. It probably was the smell of that prize hog she was looking at. I testified at the trial that I saw Freddy Burns standing nearby while Laura was talking to us. I think he must have overheard some of our conversation.

“Laura left the fair but she wasn’t able to get ahold of Abe. Sometime during the night, Freddy Burns slipped into Laura’s bedroom. He made her write that note. The scoundrel shot Laura in the head, then put the gun in her hand to make it look like she’d killed herself.”

“And he almost got away with it?” Mama asked, looking down at the paper in her hand.

“Yes. And he would have if it wasn’t for Laura’s ballpoint pen.”

“Go on,” Mama said.

“Laura had a gold ballpoint pen that had a tiny angel on the top of the cap. She loved that pen. She’d picked it up on a visit to her sister in New Jersey. She was particularly proud that nobody in Otis
owned one like it. Now, Candi, you know I’ve got an eye for seeing things that ain’t quite right. You can imagine my surprise when, two weeks later, I saw Freddy Burns using Laura’s pretty little gold pen with the tiny angel on its cap to write out a money order at the post office.”

“What did you do?” Mama asked.

“I hurried to Annie Mae and Carrie and told them exactly what I’d seen. Together the three of us we went straight to Abe. At first he didn’t want to pay us any attention. But we wouldn’t let him alone until he looked into how Freddy got ahold of Laura’s ballpoint pen. Abe got a warrant and searched Freddy’s house. He found a pair of Freddy’s shoes that matched prints that were found under Laura’s window where her killer had been standing.

Mama stared as if Sarah had just given her an electric shock.

“What’s wrong?” Sarah asked, touching her own face, her throat.

Mama didn’t answer.

I understood. My mother’s mind was working, things were beginning to make sense, pieces were falling into place. “What do you know that I don’t know?” I asked, ignoring Sarah’s apparent confusion.

Mama stood, nodded good-bye to Sarah, and headed for the door.

I followed.

Once we were seated in the Honda, she told me, “I see the face of the shadow.”

CHAPTER
TWENTY

S
unday afternoon in Otis County feels like the region is posing for a talented artist whose giant hand sketches its portrait. The stillness affects everything, including the animals, who move so slowly you’d think they know it’s the Sabbath. The quiet is so profound, it’s almost hypnotic. Nobody ever thinks of disturbing it.

Today, however, Mama was out of step with Otis’s rhythm. She moved not like the turtle, but like the proverbial hare. It was clear that she’d spotted something.

We left Sarah Jenkins’s house a little before one o’clock. Mama was enthusiastic. “Simone, I know who killed Ruby, but I’ve got to get evidence to prove it. Let’s go see Jeff Golick. I need to talk to him before I can go any further.”

Our drive to Avondale took us along the same deserted
road where we’d almost gotten killed. This trip was infinitely less threatening and yet my mother didn’t talk to me. I understood what was going on inside her head so I wasn’t upset. Instead, I used the time to search my own memory.

Ruby’s murder, Betty Jo’s untimely death, the rapist Honey Man—they were all pieces of a puzzle. Try as I might, however, I couldn’t recollect anything to help me understand it.

Jeff Golick was in his office. Mama knocked gently and he invited us in. He was sitting in a swivel chair behind a desk stacked with what looked like receipts. When he looked up, impatience settled in his face. “I can’t believe you’ve come back to bother me again. What do you want now?”

“I’m sorry to disturb you,” Mama explained calmly, as if she didn’t see his annoyance, “but I must have a description of the scarf Ruby wore around her neck the last Friday night she checked into the Inn. Can you make me a drawing of it?”

The expression on the manager’s face altered to one of disbelief. Then he started to look obstinate, but finally he cleared his throat and sighed in resignation. He found a clean sheet of paper among those on his desk and gave the drawing his best shot. When he’d finished, he handed what he’d done to my mother.

Mama’s face brightened. “This is wonderful! Thank you! And once again I’m sorry to have bothered you,” she told him, as she signaled me to leave.

Jeff Golick’s eyes rolled toward the ceiling as his wave dismissed us.

Once we were outside of his office, Mama’s gaze lingered on the design for what seemed like a long time.

I looked over her shoulder. “What do you see in that kindergarten drawing?” I asked, since the sketch didn’t look like anything to me.

“I see what confirms my suspicion, but before I can be completely sure, I need to make two phone calls.”

“There are telephones down the street, near the McDonald’s.”

We drove to where Mama made her calls. I sat in the car with my window rolled down. Mama talked on the phone.

Out of a corner of my eye, I saw Inez Moore and the big fella who I’d seen her with previously. Neither saw me. They were on their way to the drive-thru. When Inez’s eyes did lock with mine, they sent me a dagger of a message: she’d love to fight me just as she’d fought Ruby in the factory’s parking lot.

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