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 59
I spent most of Friday Christmas shopping. A cloud of sadness had followed me from the Boaz Walmart to the Gadsden Mall and back, smothering me with the thought that my dear daughter preferred being with Cindy and her family instead of me. Should I have refused Cullie last night when she called to request permission to continue her stay with a real family, even one without the near-perfect Steve? The low-lying fog and light rain fought hard to match my mental cloudiness. I was in Albertville before I realized I had missed my right-hand turn onto Sardis Road. Five miles too far. Five apples in a fire. After pondering this random and strange thought I finally realized it wasn’t the alarm of a fire truck but the horn of an over-sized Ford pickup blaring at me from behind as I sat at the green light halfway into the intersection of Highway 75.
I had returned home in one piece, thankfully. It was two hours later than I had anticipated since I had tried making the best of my cruise to Albertville. Ollie’s, and the other stores in Albertville’s newest shopping center, had more good junk than I had seen since the Trailer Park in New York City. Of course, Ollie’s is imitation junk, closeout merchandise and excess inventory. At the Trailer Park, you can find real stuff. Like a box of old 1920’s black and white photos. Like I did one time. Like an ancient medicinal bottle set. Like I did one time. As I sat at the kitchen bar eating my five-dollar Little Caesars Pizza, I admitted, out loud, I was a terrible mother. My life without Cullie was a pile of junk.
Then, I had thoughts of Wayne. Junk of a different type, man junk. As if my thoughts couldn’t get worse. The last thing I needed was turning my one and only real love affair into a sex thing. I was trying to climb above the figurative fog when the beautiful Wayne vibrated my phone. And me.
“Katie, is now a good time to talk?” I won’t even say it.
“Perfect. I was just thinking about your junk.” For some reason I felt like playing with words, seeing if Wayne knew any urban language.
“I know. I need to clean out the study. Way too many arrowheads.” Now I know why I love the man. He is as pure as the driven snow. If he knew the real Katie, he would flee and forever be satisfied dreaming of the perfect Karen.
“What’s up Walt?”
“This is Wayne.”
“You doofus. You know how I’m in love with the rough and ready Walt Whitmire from Netflix. Now, what’s up Wayne?”
“Nathan Johnson is singing like a bird. Well, he’s at least practicing.”
“Uh, I’m not quiet following you.”
“He says he will tell all if we cut him a deal.” Wayne said.
“About how he torched Beverly and Sammie, and the house we were all in?”
“That and a few other things, including the murders of your mother and Nathan Johnson.”
“Nathan’s twin brother. I thought they used nicknames.” I said.
“Nate and Nattie, but I still stay confused. Let’s call them Nathan L for living and Nathan D for dead. Okay?”
“That’s much better. You’re more creative than I realized.”
“He, Nathan L, a clever man, says he can help us or hurt us. Meaning, he can confuse the hell out of a jury. Quite frankly, he’s right. We can’t, Walmart can’t, no one can, except maybe Nathan L, say who purchased the gas cans used in your fire. Also, we have the same problem with which twin Barbara and Clara saw outside Raymond’s house. Finally, we don’t know which one was with Danny Ericson that morning at Ralph Williams’ pasture.”
“And, those issues are not exhaustive. Without him, Nathan L, you don’t have anyone to testify about anything remotely relevant to any of three crimes.” I said.
“We have the blood in Raymond’s house, your mother’s blood. And, the 22-caliber pistol.”
“I think the non-lawyer that I am could drop a mother-load of reasonable doubt into a jury’s head concerning those pieces of evidence.”
“Katie, I have no doubt you’re correct. Here’s what’s going on. The DA is considering offering Nathan L a deal. He, the DA, wants to talk with Raymond, Ryan, and Cynthia one more time and try to pressure them into confessing. That’s not happening fast enough. All with Raymond in the hospital and Christmas being Monday.”
“Does Ryan know this? I hope so. I want him to have a dreadful holiday.”
“He does. Mr. Abbott called him and gave the orders. Told Ryan to be in the DA’s office Tuesday morning at 9:00 a.m., and to bring Cynthia. That meeting is taking place whether Raymond has been discharged or not. I have no doubt Ryan Radford will have a very long weekend.”
Somehow, mine and Wayne’s conversation made the grand detour towards house plans and home construction. On two occasions now, I had shared my hopes of someday rebuilding Beverly’s house. He had suggested a couple of builders but had surprised me with offering to sell me his home and a few acres this side of the pond. If I didn’t know Wayne, I would have thought he was trying to keep his little playmate in the sandbox. This time, I was glad when he told me, “duty calls.”
I ate a giant bowl of Black Walnut ice-cream, watched two episodes of Grace and Frankie, and went to bed.
The call woke me at 2:30, in the deepest part of the night, two hours before I was due in The Thread.
It was Cullie. The problem was Cindy. The ambulance had just arrived and would be transporting her, listless, virtually lifeless, to Marshall-Medical Center South. “One of the med-techs said she’s in a coma.”
“I’ll meet you at the ER.” I said recognizing how serious this could be.
“Mother, if Arlon had not had a stomach ache and gone into Cindy’s room we wouldn’t have known she was so bad.” Cullie said, realizing how serious things were.
“You stay there. Let me know if you need anything. As always, lock the doors.”
They wouldn’t let me see Cindy when I arrived at the hospital. Or, for the next several hours. All a nurse would tell me was that she was critical, and that they were fighting to get her blood pressure under control. I was worried sick, mainly because Cindy and I had talked a lot about eclampsia, high blood pressure, and protein in the urine that can cause a pregnant woman to develop seizures or a coma.
By 7:30 a.m., two hours after Dr. Ireland had arrived, Cindy was in intensive care. I hoped this move was positive, but she was still in a coma. I learned when he finally talked with me. “It’s touch and go. There’s a chance she will never regain consciousness.”
“Doctor, isn’t there more you can do? What about UAB? What about any other facility? Isn’t there somewhere she could get more specialized care? I’m sorry but isn’t there someone who knows more than you? No insult intended.” I asked, willing to do anything and everything I could for my dearest friend.
“Unfortunately, no. Please know I’m consulting with two world-renowned obstetrician-gynecologists, including Dr. Steven Gabbe with the Wexner Medical Center at Ohio State University. He is the world’s expert on eclampsia. I assure you we are doing all he recommends.” I liked Dr. Ireland, and really had no choice but to trust his judgment.
After he told me to wait and pray, and pray and wait, I walked to the cafeteria for a much-needed cup of coffee. This became my day. Drinking, praying, and waiting. And, calling Cullie every three hours.
At 4:30 p.m., after looking through the glass door outside Cindy’s room in intensive care, I walked to the chapel. My new favorite spot to pray. As I opened the door, a young girl and her mother came into the hall, reminding me that I needed to call Cullie again. It had been a little over three hours and I was a little worried when no adult was around while her and Alysa cooked. As the phone rang and rang I realized I needed to brag on her, and Alysa, for trying, for being up doing something, trying to keep things in perspective. What I hadn’t liked was her ignoring my call. No doubt, the two teenagers were knee deep in flour making their favorite thing, breaded tortillas.
I tried calling one more time before going into the chapel. No answer. I went in and tried calling God. No answer. I had knelt at the altar but had gotten up when my right leg began to cramp. I had just sat down on a cushioned bench when I received a text. It was my spy app notifying me of an active transmission. I was alone, so I opened the App and pressed ‘Current,’ referring to the sounds that the device was hearing right now.
“Keep’em tied to the bed for now.”
“Go ahead and call. Ryan and Danny are on their way.”
“She’s at the hospital. What if Wayne is with her?”
“First thing you say is, ‘we have Cullie, don’t say a word to anyone or she dies.’”
I could barely breathe as I forced myself to continue listening, but I wasn’t sitting still. I was walking as fast as I could out of the hospital and to my car. The two voices were Fulton Billingsley and Justin Adams.
“Call her. Let’s get this thing over with.” The App from hell sounded, raising the eyebrows of a young Hispanic girl, causing her to stare at me as she walked into the Radiology Department.
It wasn’t ten seconds until my phone rang. I had taken it off vibrate. “Private caller” appeared on my iPhone screen. I answered, “if you hurt Cullie I will kill you and everyone in your family.”
“Katie, what’s wrong?” It was Wayne. Just checking in, as he had today, four times already.
“Wayne, they have Cullie. I know they have Cullie and I know where she is. I’m headed there now.”
“Who has Cullie?” Wayne asked.
“Fulton, Justin. All four, they’re at Club Eden.” I said.
“Club Eden?”
“Across from Aurora Quik Mart. Chert road. There’s a gate.”
“I’m leaving Scottsboro now.”
“Scottsboro?”
“I’ll dispatch my deputies; Sheriff Entrekin in Etowah County may be there before me.”
I parked along the chert road right before the last curve to the cabin. I pulled my car off the gravel road enough, hidden enough, hopefully, so that no one passing would see it. I walked a hundred feet and remembered, I still had Cindy’s green knapsack in my trunk. It had the other SR9 pistol we had used target shooting. And, its sister was hidden at the cabin, outside, on the porch, over the front door, lying along a giant wooden beam.
My phone kept ringing. I switched back to vibrate. I let it ring. It had continued to do so every few minutes as I had sped down Highway 179. I let it vibrate. As I slid into a patch of woods to my right, I caught a glimpse of the cabin up ahead. I knew this route. It leads to the back side of the tent. The statement, “Keep’em tied to the bed for now,” rang in my ears. I was glad I had listened, heard this. There was no bed in the cabin. I learned this when I planted the little spy bug in the old cast-iron coffee pot. But, there were two giant beds out back, inside the old army tent.
I crossed the creek and turned my ankle as I jumped onto the far bank. It took me several minutes before I could continue. I wish I had my boots on and not these Nike sneakers. It was a long hundred yards before I saw the back side of the tent across the creek. I could see the cabin’s lights, two outside beams pointing toward the front flap of the green tarpaulin structure. I had to wade the creek. It was deeper here. I decided against going to the front door. It was too risky. They might be looking out the cabin’s windows. I found a sharp rock and started cutting through the back wall. It was slow going. I figured the material was cotton or hemp, like they used way back in the Civil War. No doubt this was a very old tent.
Alysa saw me first. Her mouth was gagged but she could still sound out a muffled, but barbaric scream. Her and Cullie were tied to the bed frames. One girl per bed. I guess they were surprised, even shocked to see me, and to see me hold up the SR9 to my lips and breathed a near-silent “shoo.” The knots were easy enough to untie. I didn’t take time for pleasantries. They both pulled duct tape from their mouths and revealed the maxi pads that had been used as gags.
“Follow me, be quick, be silent.” I sounded like I knew what I was doing.
Twenty steps and we were at the creek. “I hear a car.” Alysa said.
“Come on, now, across the creek.” The girls were more adept than me. I was confused why they both had on their hiking boots.
As we cleared the creek, I could hear Ryan. I knew his voice from anywhere. “What the fuck? Hey idiots, they’re gone.” He had no doubt walked inside the front door of the tent.
“Back wall, it’s been cut.” That had to be Danny.
We kept walking farther north, west, a direction away from the back side of the tent, and deeper into the woods.
“There, across the creek.” Two of them said at the same time. I looked back and caught Ryan’s eyes. He and the other three, Fulton, Justin, and Danny were nearly across the creek, halfway up the slight embankment.
I half-shouted. “Come on girls. We must run. They’re coming.” Right as I turned away from the four bastards, I caught a glimpse of a blue light. Eerie, as if a flying saucer had landed and its light was penetrating the woods, announcing every one of us would be sucked up and beamed to Galatia, even the stick-peopled trees wouldn’t be spared. Maybe, it was the deputies. Then, the sounds that I had always hated. The siren. Now, it invigorated my head and gut like Heart of Courage, or The Sound of Music.
Just then I heard Cullie scream. “My ankle. I can’t walk. Mother, help, please help me.” By the time I turned and rushed back to her, I could see the hole and limb she likely had tripped over.
“Get up, we have to move. They’re closing in.” I said feeling trapped, seeing the fog closing in for its final choke.
I told Alysa to keep going, to get away the best she could.
The gunshot surprised me. Maybe it was the cracking limb above mine and Cullie’s head, just a few feet to our right.
By the time I stepped over Cullie and took a knee, the SR9 safety was off. My first shot hit Ryan. He was the largest of the three by far and it was his gun that flew out of his hand when two rounds of 147 hollow point passed through his heart.
I never considered whether the other three were armed. They stood. Frozen. I couldn’t see their hands for the descending and engulfing fog. They all looked down at what I figured was a dead or dying Ryan. Then, they started raising their hands. The fog curled up like a stage curtain. I saw their hands. “The three red apples have hands.” It was as though Cindy was right behind me, whispering in my ear. Hands armed with pistols, rifles, bazooka’s, ICBM’s.
Cullie screamed, “shoot mother shoot. They’re going to kill us.”
I emptied the SR9, all remaining fifteen rounds. Three men disappeared. I couldn’t tell if it was the fog, the fire, or both. The stage curtain rolled down, down.
It took the four Etowah County deputies another three or four minutes before they found us. They were all talking over each other. All I understood as they lifted Cullie and relieved me of my weapon was they had gone inside the cabin before they heard the first shots. Someway, the thick log walls had made them believe the sounds, the shots, were coming from the other direction, back toward the lake, ninety degrees from where the real action was taking place, where real justice was happening.
Five minutes after we reached the cabin, Wayne drove in behind three ambulances, and an unmarked Chevrolet SUV. It was Sheriff Entrekin from Etowah County. After the two sheriffs exchanged a few words, Wayne walked to me sitting in a rocker on the cabin’s front porch with Cullie and Alysa beside me in matching chairs.
“Good to see you Katie. You too girls. I got here as soon as I could. Sounds like your practice paid off. Sorry, my deputies got lost.” I guess he could tell we were okay. We were okay because we were sitting, rocking, breathing.
“Sit tight till I get back.” He said following Sheriff Entrekin down behind the cabin and across the creek to the scene. It was no doubt a crime scene. One Chekhov might have included in one of his short stories. Certainly, it would have been deeply edited after the first draft. I raised my head and could faintly see just a smidgen of the SR9 lying along the top of the wooden beam. Right where I had left it two days ago. It was right there, like it was hanging on the wall, still waiting to be taken down and shot. No, Chekhov would have said, “If in the first act you have hung a pistol on the wall, then in the following one it should be fired. Otherwise don’t put it there.”
While we waited on the two sheriffs to return, I fantasized about how I would have rewritten the scene if I had not left Cindy’s green knapsack with enclosed SR9 in the trunk of my car. No doubt, everything would have played out pretty much the same. Or, so I hoped. I would have sneaked onto the front porch, retrieved the hidden Ruger, and blasted my way into the cabin directing bullets through skin, livers, lungs, and hearts.
As Wayne walked back up the steps, I was so thankful no redrafts were needed. I just know I would have fallen out of this rocking chair as I stood on its two arms reaching for the weapon resting on the overhead beam.
At 2:00 a.m., after a long and further-exhausting trip to Etowah County and an agonizing interrogation at the Sheriff’s office, Wayne drove Cullie, Alysa, and me back to Club Eden for my car.
I would always be ashamed of me and the two brave teenage girls by my side, that we had not thought of poor Anita and Arlon until we turned onto their drive. They too had been brave, tied to their chairs locked inside the pool house. All they could say was, “they had masks and guns. They took Cullie and Alysa.”
After Maxine arrived to stay with the children, Wayne drove the two of us back to the hospital.
As we stepped inside the Intensive Care unit, I saw that the curtains were pulled across Cindy’s sliding glass door. A different nurse than the one I had seen when I last visited at 4:15 yesterday afternoon pushed through the gap created by two curtains meeting. It reminded me of the Club Eden tent and me slashing through to save Cullie and Alysa. I suddenly knew things were different. The nurse’s face, now drooped, as did her mouth, eyes, and chin. Sad, sad. “I’m so sorry. She’s gone.”
If it had not been for Wayne, I would have fallen to the floor. He caught me as I screamed, “No, no, God no.”
I have virtually no memory of the next two hours, including our trip back to Cindy’s house to tell four anxious children the most horrible news of their lives.