Novel Excerpts–The Boaz Schoolteacher, Chapter 24

The primary aim of the "Novel Excerpts" blog category is to showcase my creative writing, specifically from the novels I've written. Hopefully, these posts will provide a glimpse into my storytelling style, themes, and narrative skills. It's an opportunity to share my artistic expressions and the worlds I've created through my novels.
The Boaz Schoolteacher, written in 2018, is my fifth novel. I'll post a chapter a day over the next few weeks.

Book Blurb

In the summer of 2017, Katie Sims and her daughter Cullie, moved from New York City to Katie’s hometown of Boaz, Alabama for her to teach English and for Cullie to attend Boaz High School .  Fifteen years earlier, during the Christmas holidays, five men from prominent local families sexually assaulted Katie.  Nine months later, Katie’s only daughter was born.

Almost from the beginning of the new school year, as Katie and fellow-teacher Cindy Barker shared English, Literature, and Creative Writing duties for more than 300 students, they became lifelong friends.  

For weeks, Katie and Cindy endured the almost constant sexual harassment at the hands of the assistant principal.  In mid-October, after Cindy suffered an attack similar to Katie’s from fifteen years earlier, the two teachers designed a unique method to teach the six predators a lesson they would never forget.  Katie and Cindy dubbed their plan, Six Red Apples.

Read this mystery-thriller to experience the dilemma the two teachers created for themselves, and to learn the true meaning of real justice.  And, eternal friendship. 

Chapter 24

Sunday afternoon after church I was laying in my bed dozing after having read over a hundred Facebook comments, most all concerning the Real Justice project, when Sheriff Waldrup called.

After two rounds of pleasantries, he said, “we got him.  The man who pawned the murder weapon.  From the camera at Joe’s Pawn Shop.  I’m sorry I didn’t call last night but wanted to have a more complete picture.”

“That’s good news.  Where did you find him?”

“Floyd County Sheriff’s Department in Rome, Georgia arrested him late yesterday afternoon.  They received an anonymous tip and it was a good one.  Deputies arrested our man at an old roach-infested motel in south Rome next to the long-abandoned railroad line from Piedmont to Atlanta.  They arrested him without incident.”

“Who is he?”  I asked.

“His name is Nathan Johnson.  He’s a thirty-seven-year-old, ex-con.  He looks twice his age.  From what we’ve been able to gather he’s a drifter from Texas.”

“You said, ‘our man.’  I assume he has confessed?”  This was all sounding too good to be true.  You know how that usually winds up.  My gut was trying to tell me something, but I tried to suppress the feelings.  I usually screwed up when following my gut.

“No. Sorry. He’s not saying much at all, certainly hasn’t confessed.  I shouldn’t have used those words.  I only meant we got the man we were looking for.  Our prime suspect.”  The more I talked with Sheriff Waldrup the more I liked him.  He was a true gentleman and genuine with his openness.  When he was unclear he admitted it.  I liked a man who, unpretentious, was the same on the outside and the inside.

“If I had to bet right now I would say there is much more to this story than simply an ex-con drifter passing through Boaz who happened upon a lost and wandering Darla secluded next to a pond and shot her for no reason in the back of the head with a gun that he was brilliant enough to try and pawn one community over.”  I said.

“I had a feeling you were not the average bear.  No insult intended.  Katie, I feel the same way and it’s not just a feeling.  I have something else to tell you, but this must remain between us.  I hope you know I always try to keep the victim’s family fully informed but there are times I must withhold information for the benefit of the overall investigation.  My gut and my head both tell me I can trust you to keep a secret until told it’s okay.”

“Thank you for your confidence.  I agree to your terms.”

“Early this morning I received a call from Rachel Alford.  She reported that her mother’s 22 pistol was missing.  You might want to be sitting down for what I’m about to say.”  The polite and compassionate Walrup had to be an aberration in law enforcement or the crime novels I’d read needed a new slant.  “I’m taking it you don’t know Rachel Alford?”

“No.  That name doesn’t ring any bells.”

“She is the daughter of Raymond Radford.”

“Rachel Radford.  Now, that’s a name I’ve heard.  Her mother would be Cynthia Radford.  Doesn’t she live in old Country Club?”  I said.

“Correct.  I’m sure you are more familiar with the story than me.  See if I have it right.  Okay?”

“Okay.”

“Raymond and Cynthia married, probably in the early 1950s.  They had two children, Randall and Rachel.  Randall was the star child because of his basketball skills.  He was popular and went on to play college ball at Auburn.  Unfortunately, he’s disappeared.  Rachel was the oldest child, the studious one who also went to Auburn, but on an academic scholarship.  During the family breakup, and from what I’ve heard, she has sided with her mother.  Raymond and Cynthia divorced in 1972 or 1973 and shortly thereafter Raymond married your mother.  Rachel married after college and has lived in Birmingham working as a pharmacist.  She retired about a year ago and lost her husband a few months later, an accident of some sort.  She’s been coming to see Cynthia more over the last few months.  It seems she never forgave her father for what he did to her mother.  Cynthia wasn’t much of one to forgive either, from what I’ve heard.”

“Your account is pretty accurate.  What about the gun, the missing gun?”  I asked, growing tired of reliving the past and afraid Sheriff Waldrup was about to bring my illegitimate birth onto center stage.

“Rachel was here in Boaz on her weekly visit.  She was straightening up in her mother’s room.  She opened the drawer to the nightstand beside her mother’s bed to put up some paper and pencils when she noticed the pistol was missing.  Rachel told me that her father had given the 22 to Cynthia when she and Randall were young.  Raymond apparently traveled out of town quite a bit and wanted the children safe.  Cynthia apparently had kept the pistol in her nightstand beside her bed for all these years.  Now, we know this is the weapon that killed your mother.  Cynthia had kept the box the gun came in, along with the paperwork from a gun store in Fort Payne where Raymond had purchased it in 1958.  The serial number was typed on the invoice.  It matches the gun we recovered at Joe’s Pawn Shop.”

“Let me see if I’m understanding you correctly.  You are wondering whether Cynthia Radford killed my mother?”  I asked, this making much more sense.

“More particularly, I’m thinking there is good reason to investigate whether Cynthia, or Rachel herself, hired Nathan Johnson to kill your mother.”

“Seems odd that Rachel would call you if she was involved, but I suppose stranger things have happened.”  I said, not putting much stock toward an investigation into Rachel or Cynthia.  I’ve heard she has Parkinson’s disease.

“I see where you’re coming from, but you might be shocked to hear a few stories I could share, but I’ll refrain for now.”  I was growing more intrigued by the gentle giant of a man named Wayne Waldrup.  This is the way it has happened for years.  A future character in one of my stories was birthed from some encounter in life.  After Darla’s death is resolved I may have to interview the kind and sensitive Waldrup, maybe watch him and listen as he describes a few of his shocking experiences.

“What keeps getting me is the timing.  It seemed it all happened so fast and without plan or design.  I bet if I wrote about this I would have a hundred questions, one being, how would Cynthia, Rachel, or Mr. Johnson, know that Darla would be wandering about?  If one of them did have the opportunity to kill her it seems to me it is one of the most fantastical coincidences ever.”

“A few things we are not considering.  Someone stole the gun from Cynthia and he or she killed your mother.  Whoever shot Darla disposed of the gun and Nathan Johnson someway discovered it.  His only crime, albeit arguably no crime at all, is involved with the pawning.  And, further, we haven’t considered the possibility Rachel herself is involved.”

“You said Mr. Johnson wasn’t talking.  Correct?”

“That’s right.  He says he will talk after he meets with his lawyer.  Two of my deputies went to Rome to pick up Mr. Johnson and transport him back to our jail.  It was late when they returned.  DA Abbott instructed me to wait until tomorrow to see if Johnson has a lawyer.  My bet is he’s stalling.  It doesn’t seem to fit that a loner, a drifter like him, would have a lawyer on call, even though most ex-cons would have encountered a lawyer or two in their past.”

“I agree.  There’s no way Johnson would have easy access to a Texas lawyer, one who would be ripe and ready to respond to an ex-con’s call from an Alabama jail.  Sorry, I guess I assumed the lawyer would be from Texas.”  I said.

“Katie, I’ll call you as soon as I learn something new.  Again, please don’t mention anything about the pistol.”

“I won’t.  Thanks for keeping me informed.”

After our call ended, I lay back and stared at the ceiling fan that was slowly turning clockwise.  My imagination sprang to life.  There were five paddles on the fan.  They each were chasing the one in front of them.  They were all moving but going nowhere, just spinning in a circle.  It was like a dog chasing its tail.  I couldn’t quite get my mind around how all the Faking Five were involved with Darla’s murder but one thing I was certain.  Someone named Radford was involved.  My least favorite was Raymond.  I honestly believed he had loved my mother.  But I also recognize that money is a powerful force.  Raymond Radford himself could have had an awakening of sorts while sitting in jail.  Men love to build things and pass them on to their sons.  With his son Randall missing, probably dead, Raymond could easily want his wealth to wind up in grandson Ryan’s hands.  Thus, Ryan could have simply been carrying out granddad’s orders, or doing some plotting on his own, independent of granddad.

On the other hand, there was Cynthia.  The famous quote came to mind, ‘Hell Hath No Fury Like A Woman Scorned.’  I had long known this wasn’t from Shakespeare but was taken from the play ‘Love for Love,’ by an English poet/playwright by the name of William Congreve in 1695.  The actual words were: “Heaven has no rage like love to hatred turned, nor hell a fury like a woman scorned.”  I recalled a conversation or two I had with Darla when I was maybe 15 or so.  She had told me how for the first few years with Raymond she feared Cynthia.  “She lost everything and hated Raymond with a passion, hated me even more.”  Two questions were rolling around in my head when Cullie called me to supper.  Had Cynthia known about Raymond and Darla’s prenuptial agreement?  And, had she held on to her hatred for Darla, for her stealing Raymond and her cushy life, for nearly half a century?

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Author: Richard L. Fricks

Writer. Observer. Builder. I write from a life shaped by attention, simplicity, and living without a script—through reflective essays, long-form inquiry, and fiction rooted in ordinary lives. I live in rural Alabama, where writing, walking, and building small, intentional spaces are part of the same practice.

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