Novel Excerpts–The Boaz Schoolteacher, Chapter 31

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 31

I had never missed an entire week of school.  I had also never missed a week of writing, at least since I began, in earnest, after taking my first teaching job in Los Angeles.  This wet and foggy Monday morning my classroom looked like it had been frozen in time since I was last here Friday afternoon over a week ago.  I placed the bologna sandwich that Cindy had made me in my refrigerator and walked to my little office and sat down.  I reviewed my To-Do list, now quite stale, and noticed the third item from the bottom.

It read, “take Nanny to the Fall Festival.”  The tears came unannounced.  I wasn’t one to cry so easily.  For over two weeks before her death, Nanny kept reminding me she wanted to go to this once per year celebration of sorts.  It was Liberty Baptist Church’s long-standing event to praise God for an abundant harvest.  It was rooted in long-ago times where farming was most everyone’s livelihood.  The church, Papa and Nanny’s church since they married, felt obligated to continue this tradition.  Nanny had missed last year’s event because of a bout with the shingles, and I was determined to take her this year.  What was making me so sad was how I had contemplated asking Sammie to take her.  What a selfish woman I was.  Now, I would never have the chance to see the joy spread across Nanny’s face.  She was dead, and she had died a most horrible death, and in a sense, it was all my fault.  If I had only handled things differently.  If I hadn’t been such a smart ass and practically told Pastor Warren I had the videotape, Nanny might still be alive.  Furthermore, I’m now positive, the Faking Five found out about my visit with Ralph Williams.

“You in there?”  I heard Cindy’s voice blaring.

“Back here.”  I wiped my eyes and opened my literature teacher’s guide.

“Sorry, I missed you this morning.  You must have left early.  Cullie’s in my classroom with Alysa.”  Since I hadn’t written this morning, nor for the previous eight days, I had gotten dressed early and driven out to the home place on Bruce Road.  I hadn’t been but once since the fire over a week ago.  I think my need to see the past before engaging the future was why I went.  As a writer, transitions were important.  It was like I was both writing a story and living as the main character. 

“Thanks for bringing her to school.  I didn’t want her with me as I strolled around a war zone.”  Even though the house was destroyed, it had maintained a semblance of its former glory.  All the outer walls on the first floor were still standing.  I should thank the Boaz and Sardis City fire departments for all their valiant efforts.  Even though the upper floor had fallen in, I sensed the surviving walls were a testimony to Nanny and her resilience over the years.  It was like they were pointing upwards praising God in the bad times just as they had done during the many good and bad times for going on seventy years.

“I just wanted to see you for just a minute before our first classes and wish you godspeed.”

“Thanks Cindy, you are the best.  I hope you know how much I love you and how much I’m grateful for all you, Steve, and your family have done for Cullie and me, especially since the fire.”  I said trying to remember when I had told another teacher that I loved her.  I hadn’t even told Ellen Fink that.

“I love you too.  And, I hope you know you do not have to move out.  Why don’t you stay a while longer?  I’m still a little uneasy about you moving in with Sheriff Waldrup.”

“That’s not happening.  I told you he is going to be staying in his little cabin on the back side of his property.”  I said, recalling mine and Cullie’s visit yesterday afternoon and how we both fell in love with his home, a ranch nearly as large as Steve and Cindy’s.

“Why do I sense a little romance in your future.  Wayne, you’ll need to call him Wayne, is a mighty handsome man.  Even if he is ten years older than you.  That’s what you said, right?”

“He is but at best all I’m interested in is a platonic relationship.”

“Oh, so you are thinking about a relationship.  Good.  You silly teacher, don’t you know that all romances start out being platonic?”  I didn’t know why on earth Cindy was being so humorous.  Maybe she thought I needed it.  My eyes were probably red from crying.

“Get out of here.  I have things to do.”

“So, hurry up.  I’ll be back at 10:30, if that’s okay.  I’ve got an idea.”  Cindy said walking out and not even asking me permission to crash my planning period.

Over the next thirty minutes I realized that my week off had been productive.  At least from the standpoint of the Real Justice novel writing project.  All during the week I had received multiple emails from each of the five Creative Writing teams.  Everyone had shared their condolences and asked how I was doing.  They even told me how much they missed me.  I was proud of how hard they were working, and I was impressed with their almost-completed character sketches and with their first chapter drafts.  Who says high school students don’t have initiative?

After scanning the wave of emails from yesterday and Saturday, I noticed that the five teams were coalescing around the story’s inciting incident and key event.  Every novel, the experts say, needs to follow a structure.  All of them contend writers should follow a three-act structure, and in act one, two things need to occur.  The first thing is the inciting incident.  This is a plot point that begins a story’s problem.  The key event is the time when the main character, the protagonist, becomes connected or engaged by the inciting incident.  I like the example that expert K.M. Weiland (her name is Katie!) uses to illustrate these two terms: “In most detective stories, the inciting event (the crime) takes place apart from the main character, who doesn’t become involved with it until the key event, when he takes on the case.”  I wish I was half as smart as this Katie.  She is a master at word pictures: “the key event is the glue that sticks the character to the impetus of the inciting event.”

I shouldn’t have been so surprised that my five Real Justice teams had decided that our five antagonists (Mason Campbell, Noah Fletcher, Aiden Walker, Jackson Burke, and Daniel Taylor) were all part of a secret club that thrived off sinister games, including sexual exploitation and murder.  The five teams were a little vague in their email description, I think intentionally, but I gathered that the five antagonists were involved with the disappearance of a high school girl whose father is an outspoken blogger.  Stella received an anonymous tip that triggered her interest and investigation.  Thus, the tip is the glue that stuck Stella to the inciting event, what appeared to be an abduction of a teenage girl by a club known as Jaybird. The only meaning I could ascribe to the club’s name was ‘naked as a jaybird.’  I think the phrase had originated nearly a century ago.  At the time it was simply ‘J-bird,’ and meant jailbird.  It referred to prisoners brought in from a bus and after taking a shower they had to walk naked from one end of the prison to the other.  As I walked to the auditorium and my first period class, all I could think about was how the Faking Five still imagined me ‘naked as a jaybird.’  No doubt, I was still in prison.

My first three classes were easy.  I didn’t resist letting each class talk.  The first two had been as active as my official Real Justice students although these outliers were contemplating the five Ellijay antagonists individually preying on Stella Gibson.  She became glued to the story’s problem because she herself was the independent focus, for sexual gratification I might add, of the Mayor, the Bank President, the Pastor, the business owner, and the Judge. 

The third class, my senior English class, was content discussing Ernest Hemmingway’s Hills Like White Elephants, a story about the end of a relationship.  The class discussion quickly moved from one of the story’s main themes, the difficulty of dealing with an unplanned pregnancy, and onto abortion.  It was clear most of the guys were for it and the girls were not, at least if it didn’t concern them.

Cindy was sitting in my room when I returned at 10:30. Sometimes, I almost wished we hadn’t exchanged classroom keys.  At least she had waited until I arrived to enter my private little office behind my classroom.

“You look tired.  Difficult classes?  Here, I brought you a Red Bull.”  I took the can, thanked her, and walked into my office.  Cindy was right on my heels and her voice, both high pitch and rapid, revealed she may have been literally full of Bull.  “Let’s start with Pastor Warren.  He seems to be closer friends with Wilkins than the other four members of your Faking Five.”

“Start with?  Explain.”  I almost regretted having shared with Cindy my anger and my comparing myself to a Mama Bear protecting her cubs.

“Burn their asses.”  Cindy said sitting across from me.

“Wow, I’m beginning to think you were in the Navy.  Lately, you’ve been cussing like a sailor.

“Who says revenge is Victorian?”  Cindy said, no doubt referring to Victorian England when women were thought to be shy and virtually perfect in dress, manner, and especially speech.

“I’m listening.”  I may not have said it so bluntly as Cindy did but I hadn’t changed my mind.  I was ready to teach six men a lesson.  I was ready for Six Red Apples.  Although, I hadn’t thought about burning them at the stake.

“If Pastor Warren and criminal asshole Wilkins are as good friends as we think they are, then they do things together; they spend time talking.  Maybe they play golf every Thursday afternoon.  I don’t know but we must find out.  Once we learn their routine we can begin planning how to burn their asses.”

“You’re liking that phrase.  I can tell.”

The remainder of my planning period, until 11:25, Cindy described how she had already been conducting a little surveillance on Danny Ericson and Fulton Billingsley.  She wanted to stay on during my lunch period, but I persuaded her I had a ton of work I needed to do since being away for over a week.

After school, Cullie and I ran by Walmart to buy a few groceries, mainly cold items.  Yesterday afternoon Wayne had suggested this since the only thing in his refrigerator was a half-empty gallon of three-day expired milk, a large bag of wilted salad mix, and the remainder of a green bean casserole that his sister had left last Tuesday.  What he lacked in the refrigerator he made up for in his pantry.  It was stocked with every imaginable type of canned soup and vegetables, and at least four kinds of cereals.  I was thankful Cullie and I had spent Saturday shopping for clothes.  I was content with Walmart selections but, not wanting to drive to Gadsden, Cullie had been surprisingly pleased with what she had found at Goodies and Factory Connections.  I was also thankful we had left all our furniture in storage after moving to Boaz from New York City.  Although we didn’t need furniture now that we were at Wayne’s, we would in a few months after we built a house at Nanny’s.

A little before 7:30 p.m., right after I had cleaned off mine and Cullie’s soup bowls from the table in the breakfast nook, I heard a knock at the back door.  I looked and saw Wayne.  I hadn’t closed the blinds on the door.  He had his hands around a large cardboard box.  I walked over and opened the door.

“Hi Katie.  I promise I’m not going to be a pest but I need to apologize.”  I motioned him in and noticed the box contained several Walmart shopping bags.

“Why do you need to apologize?”  I said, not having a clue what he was talking about.

“I invite you to stay here and don’t even give you a house-warming gift.  Here’s a few things I hope you and Cullie enjoy.”  He set the box on a kitchen counter and started pulling out packs of steak, pork chops, and chicken.

“You didn’t need to do this.  Letting us stay here is gift enough.  By the way, I’m going to pay you rent, no matter what you’ve said.”

“Oh no.  Forget that.  Again, I’m sorry I didn’t clean out the refrigerator.”

Cullie had walked in from the den where she was watching TV.  After she smiled at Wayne and inventoried all the good meats he had brought, she thanked him and returned to the opposite side of the great room and kitchen combination.  “I suspect you are tired and wanting to go home.  Sorry, you are home.  I meant your new home.”  I said.

“But, you would like to know if I have learned anything new?”  I guess Wayne was a mind-reader or I had a big question mark carved into my forehead.

“Yes, do you mind?”

“Not at all.  That’s another reason I came by.  Late this afternoon I received word from Montgomery that Nathan Johnson’s DNA was on the Lone Star Candy Bar wrapper you gave me from Ralph’s.”

“How did they match it?  How did they have Johnson’s DNA?”  I said.

“I thought I had told you.  When Cliff Thomas, Johnson’s lawyer from Texas, arrived a week ago, he gave us permission to swab his client’s mouth.  That was before he knew we had any tangible evidence other than the gun.  I guess he already knew from talking with his client that Nathan’s fingerprints would have to be on the 22-pistol since we had him on camera at Joe’s Pawn Shop trying to hock it.  Again, we kind of conned him by not disclosing the candy bar wrapper.”

“So, that shows Johnson was at the murder scene?”  I asked.

For a minute, Wayne didn’t responsd.  He rolled his head around like he was unsure what to say.  “Probably, but not definitively.  The DNA match proves Nathan had handled the candy bar wrapper.  Mr. Thomas might argue that his client had left the wrapper in Danny Ericson’s truck but was not with him that morning at Ralph Williams’ place.  But, with what Ralph told you about the passenger he saw in Ericson’s truck, it seems likely that Johnson was there.”

“What about Ralph being dead?  Obviously, he cannot testify.  Isn’t my word hearsay?”

“You’re correct.  I’m sorry the law and criminal cases can be so complicated.”

“I already knew that.  I’ve watched enough Law and Order and CSI and those type shows to realize Darla’s case wasn’t going to be easy to resolve.”

Wayne looked at his watch.  I was still amazed by people who still wore watches.  Now that smartphones hang on nearly every belt.  “I’ve got a few calls to make so I must go.  Do you need any help putting up these groceries?”

“No.  I think I can handle that.”  I said looking up at the tall and handsome Wayne Waldrup.  His blue eyes met mine and lingered about two seconds longer than he probably meant to.  He smiled and said, “Remember, you promised me you would tell me if I became a bother.”

“I promised that.  Yes.  I will honor that promise.  You better believe.”

“Let me know if you need anything.  Oh, one other thing.  I nearly forgot.  The gas cans seized at the fire.  The perpetrators either wiped them clean or they used gloves.  There were no fingerprints on them.”

“I’m sorry to hear that.  I was hoping we might get a break.”

“The closest to that right now is that all six of the cans were the same brand.  Locally sold only by Walmart and Radford Hardware and Building Supply.”

“If they were new cans couldn’t we, you, investigate the sales at both locations?”  I said feeling like I wanted to write a detective series.

“Already on it.  It’s a long shot but at least it’s a lead of sorts.  I’ll keep you posted.  Sorry, I’m running late but I have to go.”

“When do you ever rest?  I’m sure you have more than the fire and Darla’s cases to deal with.”  I said, feeling sorry for him.

“I rest all the time.  I’ve been here, what fifteen minutes?  It has been like an afternoon at DeSoto Falls, just talking with you.  Sorry, that didn’t come out just right.  What I meant is I find it peaceful and satisfying talking with you.  You are so kind and respectful.”

“I take that as an extreme compliment.  Thanks.  I enjoy you too. Talking with you.  I appreciate all your help.  I’m sorry we had to meet under these circumstances but I’m still enjoying getting to know you.”

“Take care Katie and get some rest yourself.  You’ve been through a lot.  Tell Cullie goodnight.”

“I will.”  He left, and I watched him open the door of an older looking Ford Bronco.  It didn’t have a Sheriff Department insignia on it.  I figured it was a personal vehicle.  I smiled as I thought Wayne Waldrup was a spitting image of Walt Longmire, the only man I had let into my heart since that horrible night in 2002.

Novel Excerpts–The Boaz Schoolteacher, Chapter 30

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 30

I may have slept for a week but for Cindy.  At first, I thought I was dreaming.  I kept hearing, “oh Father, touch her, oh Father, show her your mighty power, oh Father, give her your peace, the peace that surpasses all understanding.  Oh Father, let her know we love her and that she can stay here but give her just the right home whereever that is.”  What scared me was the part where I was falling down an elevator shaft, the elevator was speeding just ahead of me and it was on fire.  The red flames were licking my face but not burning me.  A soft and gentle hand reached up and touched my face.  I awoke to Cindy’s flaming red hair and her adorable smile.  Our eyes met just as she completed her prayer.  I felt, or believed I felt, an electricity rush through my body.  Had God been so quick to answer Cindy’s prayer?

“I’m sorry to wake you but I was getting worried.  You’ve been asleep nearly twelve hours.  It’s six o’clock and I have supper ready.”  Cindy said, standing and pulling back a heavy quilt and blanket leaving me covered with only a sheet.  “Steve is an enigma.  He’s hot natured and can swim in the pool with snow on the ground but can’t go to sleep without a pile of covers.”

It was then I realized I must be in her and Steve’s bed.  Yet, the bed seemed small.  “I pictured you having a giant king-sized bed.”  I said.

“We used to until his mother gave him this bed.  He grew up sleeping in this oak oasis as he calls it.  I’ve gotten used to it and to sleeping in his arms.  He’s one who loves cuddling.  At first it wasn’t easy, I’m such a light sleeper.  The Ambien helps.”

I laughed to myself.  “You’re one lucky woman.  He worships you.”  For the first time in nearly fifteen years I wanted a man, not just any man, but one who would love me like Steve loved Cindy.  After the rape, I couldn’t stand the thoughts of being touched.  This revulsion had destroyed mine and Colton’s relationship.  We had remained friends, but no couple can survive without intimacy.

“Katie, I know you know this, but I have to say it.  I am so sorry for what happened.  I know how much you loved Nanny, and Sammie for that matter.  I can’t imagine what you are going through.”

“Actually, I haven’t been feeling much of anything.  Did you say I’ve been here for twelve hours?”

“Yes, no doubt it was the Valium.”

“What?  Valium?  You drugged me?”  I asked.

“No.  Dr. Landers did.  Don’t you remember going to the Sand Mountain Clinic?”

“No.”

“He is one of Steve’s fishing buddies.  On our drive back from your house, after the fire, Steve called and asked him if he would see you and Cullie.  Both of you were in shock or something like it.  Dr. Landers met us and examined both of you.  He said ya’ll needed to sleep so he prescribed one Valium each.  Yours worked better than Cullie’s.  She’s been up since noon.”

“How is she?”  I couldn’t believe I had lain in Cindy’s bed for half-a-day and not been taking care of Cullie.  She had just lost her great-grandmother and no doubt had to be reeling.

“She’s thankful to be alive.  She told us about Midnight.”

“Oh my gosh.  Midnight.  Did he make it out of the house?”  I hadn’t even thought about the beautiful black-as-night kitten that had touched Cullie so much she was dreaming about starting an animal shelter.

“No.  I’m sorry.  I guess we could say he sacrificed his life so you two could live.”

“I’m not following you.”

“Don’t you know?  Cullie said if it hadn’t been for Midnight she would have never woken up.  And, you probably wouldn’t be here right now.  Another few minutes and you two would have been overcome by the smoke.”

“Life sure is held together by a slender thread.  A stray kitten is adopted by a teenage girl who happened to stop at one of a dozen gas stations.  The kitten goes on to save its new owner and her mother from a raging fire.”

“A fire that was intentionally set.”  Cindy said, giving me a look that was at least a cousin to the one when confronted by Wilkins in his office.  “Katie, my dearest friend in the whole world.  Early this morning, someone tried to kill you and Cullie.  They succeeded in killing Nanny and Sammie.  And, Midnight.  How does that make you feel?  Or, are you still in so much shock you can’t feel anything?”

“My feelings are a jumbled mess right now, but my mind just woke up.  I know, and you know who did this.  There is no doubt in my mind it was the Faking Five.  They are the only ones who have any motive.  This changes everything.  I can take a lot of abuse, but they stepped across the last line when they attacked my family.  The idiots, they should know you don’t go fucking around with a mother bear when her cubs are around.”

“This is really not the time to ask but I know our friendship is strong.  Do you think you are ready for Six Red Apples?”  Cindy asked, pouring her green eyes into me, not cracking a smile.

“Hell yes.  Mama Bear is angry.”

Cullie and I stayed a week with Cindy and Steve and their family.  They helped us more than we could ever repay.  I think Cullie would have stayed forever.  She witnessed what a real father was all about.  Steve loved his wife and his three children.  He worked hard all day at his job but when he was off he invested full time talking, walking, playing, and fishing with the Barker tribe as he called them. 

Wednesday, after Nanny’s memorial service, Steve took Alysa and Cullie fishing in Guntersville.  I liked how he was a take-charge guy.  He had seen how distraught Cullie was at the funeral home.  It was something about not being able to see Nanny in her casket that had shaken Cullie to her core.  I think it was the fact that the State hadn’t been able to perform an autopsy.  She had overheard me talking on the phone with Dr. Vincent.  I had made the mistake of having him on speaker, not realizing that Cullie was listening from the hallway outside Steve and Cindy’s bedroom.  Dr. Vincent had said, “her body was too badly burned for us to conduct an autopsy.”   After the service, Steve had held her in his arms, told her he loved her, and said, “you need a change of scenery.  Alysa and I know just the spot.”  I will forever be grateful for the miracle he performed that afternoon.

Saturday night, almost a week after the fire, I sat out back on Steve and Cindy’s patio.  They had tried to get me to go with them to the Gadsden Mall, something to do I suppose to get out of the house that was growing smaller by the day, even though it was a sprawling ranch, with four bedrooms and a giant great-room/kitchen combination.  Cullie loved the idea and tried to persuade me to join them.  I couldn’t.  That place was too tied to the horrible memories of the worst night of my life.  I knew if I went all I would think would be, “I’m watching American Assassin and in six hours I will be nearly burning alive.”

After twenty minutes or so of wondering how, when, and where I would ever get back to writing, my iPhone vibrated in my pocket.  It was Sheriff Waldrup.  After his wife had given me his cell number I had entered it into my Contacts.

“Hello Sheriff.”

“Katie, can we talk?”  It was the second time I had talked to him since the fire.  Cindy had said that he had called Sunday afternoon, but she had told him I was in another world and needed to stay there.  Monday morning, after breakfast, he had called just to check on me and Cullie and to tell me how sorry he was for our loss.  That call had lasted just a couple of minutes.

“Yes.”

“Have you and Cullie made any plans about where you will be living?”

“We’ve been talking about it.  Cullie wants to stay here with Alysa.  Cindy and Steve are wonderful and said we could stay as long as we wanted but I can’t do that to them.  They have a large family and need their space.  I’m afraid of how us staying could eventually affect mine and Cindy’s relationship.”

“I have an idea, and please don’t think ill of me.”

“I doubt that will happen.”  I said, always thinking of Sheriff Walt Longmire every time I talked with Sheriff Waldrup.

“I have a place you can live until you decide what to do.  It’s in Smith’s Institute, right past Sardis City.”

“That’s very generous of you but we couldn’t do that to you and your wife.”  I said almost shocked that Walt, Wayne, would be so caring and generous to someone he barely knew.

“Uh, I’m not married.”

“That’s odd.  I talked to your wife last Friday night.  She told me you were in Atlanta.  She also gave me your cell number and said it had been hacked or something.”

“That was my sister.  She always comes and babysits my house when I’m out of town.  She lives in Rainbow City.”

“Oh, I’m sorry.  I just figured the very nice lady had to be your wife.”

“She is nice.  As was my dear wife.  Karen died five years ago.  Breast cancer.”

“I’m so sorry.  Sheriff, I do appreciate your offer but, quite frankly, it doesn’t seem right.”  I couldn’t quite figure out what to say or how to say it.  I couldn’t move in with a man, even a very nice man.  I had never even met him in person.  It would not be what Cullie needed. 

“It would seem wrong?  Is that what you’re trying to say?”

“Yes.”

“Let me see if I can be clearer.  You and Cullie could live in my house.  I wouldn’t be living there.  My two boys, both grown and gone, built a log cabin on the back side of our property when they were in high school.  It became their hangout.  It’s about a half-mile from mine and Karen’s house.  Way past the pond.  Quite frankly, I’d love living there for a while.  I’m rarely home and don’t need all this room.”

“We’ll take it.  Your house.  Under one condition.”  I said, not believing I had made such a big decision so quickly but feeling like Cullie and I had squatted at Cindy’s exactly the right amount of time.

“Okay, let me hear it.”

“You promise you will be honest with me, completely honest, and tell me if things are not working out.  Cullie and I do need a place to live for a few months.  We have pretty much decided to rebuild.  I simply cannot see buying or building anywhere else.”

“I promise to be completely honest.  Now, when do you want to see my place.  Don’t commit fully until you come to kick the tires.  You may not like it.  Please know you are not under any obligation to take it.”

“I expect it will be just fine.  For some reason, I have a feeling that you’re not a slob.”

“Thanks for the compliment but if it weren’t for my sister you might change your mind.  Ever since Karen died in 2012, my one and only sister has come to check on me at least once per week.  She is a perfectionist when it comes to housekeeping.”

“I promise to take care of your house.  Your sister can maintain your cabin.”

“Her name is Rhea. Rhea Armstrong.  You remind me of her.”

“How old is she.  Forty-six.  She’s ten years younger than me.”

“Thanks again for the offer Wayne, Sheriff.”  I said embarrassed that I had called him by his first name.

“Call me Wayne.  Now, when do you want to take a tour?”

“How about tomorrow afternoon after church, say 2:00 o’clock?”

“Sounds good.  If something comes up, I’ll call you.  The address is 8853 Sardis Road.  If you come to Leeth Gap Road you’ve come too far.  My place is the last one on the left before Leeth Gap.  It’s a one-story ranch with a red windmill in the pasture in front of the house.  You can’t miss it.”

“Cullie and I will see you at 2:00.  Thanks so much.”

“Sounds great. Bye.”

I walked around Cindy and Steve’s swimming pool three times after my call ended with Wayne.  All I could think of was Cindy’s prayer late Sunday afternoon.   She had asked God to give me, Cullie and me, just the right home.  Now, here I was with an offer of a place to live, a totally unsuspected offer.  Was it God’s will?  Had He answered Cindy’s prayer?  It sure looked like God was at work.  What else could it be?

Novel Excerpts–The Boaz Schoolteacher, Chapter 29

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 29

Saturday, I stayed in the basement until early afternoon, coming upstairs only one time for Sammie’s glorious pancakes at 8:00 a.m.  I was thankful Papa had included a small bathroom downstairs.  I recall Nanny saying more than once during one of her regular strolls down memory lane that she had told him it was his bathroom and he had to keep it clean since he was the only one who needed a complete floor to house his hobby.  As far as I knew, other than my writing, the basement had never been used for anything other than storing junk.

I binge-wrote about once every six months.  I loved it and I hated it.  When I walked down the stairs a little after 4:30 this morning I hadn’t intended on staying more than a couple of hours, which was at least thirty minutes longer than I ever did during the school week.  It was something about the look on Cindy’s face when Wilkins caught her in his office.  He may not have noticed it, but I had.  For a split second, even from where I stood, I could see the animal that lies buried deep inside every human.  Technically, we are animals, just like chimpanzees and kittens.  Fortunately, millions of years of evolution has allowed us to realize survival depends on playing well together.  The old fight or flight gene lies dormant deep inside our psyche.  It stays that way until its owner’s back is against the wall.  It was something about Cindy’s stance and the look in her eye, for that split second, that I thought Wilkins was about to lose his own eyes.  For whatever reason, just as I suppose she acted when he had raped her, she had chosen to suppress the violence that is endemic in every human, given the right conditions.  That split-second visual had prompted me to delve deeper into my own protagonist’s willingness to confront her rapist with fire and venom.

By 3:30 p.m., Cindy and I were watching another movie at the Premiere Cinema 16 in the Gadsden Mall.  Cullie and Alysa were shopping.  I had wanted to see “Wilde Wedding,” but I was outvoted or overpowered by the cunning Cindy. She kept repeating American Assassin’s tagline, ‘Assassins aren’t born, they’re made.’  The thriller starred Michael Keaton, and Dylan O’Brien as Mitch Rapp, a young CIA black ops recruit.  His job was to assist a Cold War veteran in stopping the detonation of a rogue nuclear weapon. I thought the plot was rather mundane, clichéd, and missed several great opportunities to provide the audience with a few thrills, but it intrigued me enough to purchase novelist Vince Flynn’s book of the same name.  I had heard of this best-selling author but had never read a single book in his Mitch Rapp counter-terrorism thriller series.   Towards the end of the movie and after at least the tenth time Cindy had whispered ‘Assassins aren’t born, they’re made,’ she added, “you know Vince Flynn died of prostate cancer at the age of 47?”  Off and on for the rest of the movie and during our time eating and shopping at the Mall, all I could think was, ‘in two years I will be 47.’

After Cindy dropped Cullie and me off at home, she spent an hour modeling her new clothes for Nanny and Sammie.  I was surprised that Nanny had allowed Sammie to pause The Walton’s.  Last month’s Saturday shopping adventure in Gadsden had spawned an exciting and engaging look in Nanny’s eyes.  She had stood and talked with Cullie as she modeled jeans, blouses, tee-shirts, and boots.  I was surprised tonight that Cullie felt comfortable and confident enough to undress down to her bra and panties right in the den.  This thrilled Nanny and made Sammie fetch a few things from her bedroom that the two of them had purchased at Walmart a week ago today.  I don’t think I have ever laughed so much as Nanny and Cullie, pant-less and both with pink blouses strolled around the den.  Sammie whispered to me, “Nanny is reliving her youth.  This is the happiest I think I have ever seen her.”

At midnight I had to make Cullie pick up her scattered clothes and go to her bedroom.  I knew this adventure would turn into an all-nighter for Nanny who needed to stay on a strict schedule.  Midnight was already two hours past her routine bedtime.  Ten minutes after Cullie went upstairs and Sammie and I had restored the den from a modeling studio I visited Cullie as I often did, always hoping for a goodnight hug, maybe even a quick kiss.  “I want to do this every week, even if I don’t have new clothes.  I had no idea Nanny was so much fun.”  I went to bed thankful that Cullie was connecting with the woman I knew as a teenager and who had inspired me to reach for the stars.  I hated clichés but sometimes they were perfect.

At 2:45 a.m., I awoke to pounding on my bedroom door and a feeling I was suffocating.  I opened my eyes and could see my room was filled with smoke.  It was like a heavy fog had enveloped my room as I looked across to a bright light streaming in along the edge of my closed blinds.  “Mother, mother, get up, open the door, the house is on fire.”  Cullie screamed over and over.  At first, I thought I was dreaming, then the choking began.  I stood up and gasped.  I got down on the floor and crawled to the door.  I don’t know why it was locked.  I opened the door and Cullie was squatted down with a cloth over her mouth.  Here, she handed me a wet bath cloth.  “We have to get to Nanny and Sammie.”  I said.

“We’ll have to crawl to the top of the stairs.”  Cullie said.  I could barely see her but caught a glimpse of her hand motioning me to follow.   It seemed we were crawling on a reverse escalator.  The further we crawled the faster it seemed to slide us back in the opposite direction.  Finally, at the top of the stairs, we turned around and went down feet first with each of us using one hand to hold onto the hand-rail.  Cullie was the first one to the bottom.  I was still halfway up the stairs when she yelled.  “Hurry, we have to get outside, the kitchen is an inferno.”

Then, it hit me.  We are going to die.  If by some miracle Nanny and Sammie weren’t already outside there was no way to get to them.  Their suite was at the back of the house, down a long hallway from the kitchen, and there is no other route.  In the few seconds it took to reach the first floor, I also realized that something else was going on.  Just after Cullie and I had moved in at the end of July, I had bought six smoke detectors and installed two on each floor including the basement.  I had instructed Sammie to test them at least once per week.  As I turned towards the back of the house I didn’t hear the shrill sound of a single detector, but only the creaking, groaning, and popping of an old house that was being consumed by flames.  As Cullie was tugging on me and telling me we had to go out the front door, my attention was drawn to a single light coming from the door right outside the kitchen less than twenty feet away.  I started to crawl towards it and halfway there I was met with two things I will never forget.  The heat from the fire was what one feels when she’s stood too long in front of a fireplace and has almost caught her jeans on fire, and the second was the faint outline of a hand around the light-end of the flashlight.  It was either Sammie or Nanny, more likely Sammie.  She had tried to get out, tried to get help.  The kitchen was as far as she had gotten.  Then she collapsed.  The heat stopped me, and I retreated.  Cullie was already outside having had no choice but to exit the house. 

It took the firetruck another twenty minutes to reach us.  By that time the house had been completely engulfed in flames for nearly as long, ever since Cullie and I had escaped and retreated halfway to Bruce Road avoiding the heat.  It was the most helpless I had ever felt.  While waiting, Cullie and I had walked around the house, staying at least a hundred feet from the raging flames.  There had been no way to get to Nanny and Sammie, no door availed us.  Every entrance spewed fire like a dragon.

By daylight the firemen had the fire extinguished, neighbors had brought Cullie and me a set of clothes to cover our smoky and singed nightgowns, and I had given a statement to Troy Logan, the Boaz fire chief.  His final statement before Cindy and Steve took us home with them was, “I’ll be calling the District Attorney when I return to the Station, this appears to be arson.  We found empty gas cans throughout the first floor.”

I was glad our neighbor, Charles Fordham, had let me borrow his cell phone.  I had called Cindy and told her about half of what had happened, just enough for her to realize I was distraught.  I rarely cry but this morning I did.  It was so bad I couldn’t finish our conversation.  Within fifteen minutes her and Steve showed up.  They stayed with Cullie and me until the firemen recovered the bodies of the two dearest women I had ever known.  After the ambulance left and with the firemen promising to stay all day if it took it to ‘cold the fire’ as they put it, Cullie and I held hands in the back seat of Cindy’s Nissan Altima, with her crying and repeatedly asking me, “What are we going to do?  Where are we going to live?”  In between my times of trying to reassure her that we would be okay, maybe even rebuild, the only non-suffocating thought I could muster was a feeling of satisfaction for having rented a safety deposit box at Wells Fargo Bank the Friday before Labor Day and storing one horrible videotape and one copy of Darla’s two diaries that I still had not finished reading.

Novel Excerpts–The Boaz Schoolteacher, Chapter 28

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 28

After Cindy’s screen-saver fiasco during lunch on Wednesday, I was encouraged.  Since she was caught red-handed in Wilkins’ office I felt sure she would abandon her Six Red Apples project.  I couldn’t have been more wrong.

We had decided the first phase of the mission would take place during lunch.  Cindy’s surveillance revealed that Wilkins and Greta Vickers, the school’s bookkeeper, typically stayed at their table in the lunchroom an extra five or ten minutes after the bell rang.  I had stood watch in the school’s office as Cindy entered Wilkins’ office.  We had guessed that he didn’t lock his office other than when he was assaulting Cindy or some other attractive female.  She had retrieved a set of keys from his desk and was about to insert the thumb-drive containing a photograph of a naked woman with the words set to scroll across his computer screen, ‘Run, run.  If you are a woman.  Or, I will rape you.’  At that second Wilkins had exited Principal Harrison’s office with Kathy McRae, who had recently begun volunteering.  Principal Harrison was in Montgomery at some conference for three days and Cindy and I hadn’t considered any interruption or obstacle from that source. Wilkins had seen Cindy standing behind his desk and questioned what she was doing.  Her quick thinking saved her, since I had been powerless to help.  Cindy told him she was about to write him a note about the recent Sunday School book order.  Something about wanting to order an extra fifty copies for the Young-But-Maturing department.  At least by the end of the day I had persuaded Cindy to abandon the second phase of our mission, which was Wilkins’ computer in his church office.  It seemed we were ill-prepared to begin our criminal career.  However, this hadn’t stopped her from telling me as we walked across the parking lot to our cars at the end of the school day, “we learned a valuable lesson today.  Pranks are for amateurs.”

Thursday morning classes were consumed discussing Homecoming Night. It was a short-story I had assigned to my first three classes two days before the Labor Day weekend.  Each student was to write a story that took place in a town of their choosing during the local high school’s homecoming.  I didn’t say or imply that it should be centered around a football game.  The focus of the assignment was the precariousness of life and particularly, how some innocent and fun activity could go horribly wrong.

It shouldn’t have come as a big surprise.  Most students in my first two classes had written about Ellijay, Georgia and Gilmer High School’s Friday night halftime activities celebrating homecoming during the Bobcats football game.  No doubt, the unofficial Facebook groups for the tenth and eleventh grade English classes were alive and well, feeding voraciously from the morsels that my five Creative Writing teams were disclosing as they had been developing the five assigned antagonistic characters.

One thing that impressed me was that each class had selected one of the five antagonists to write about.  The tenth grade English class had chosen Noah Fletcher.  The ninth, Daniel Taylor.  No doubt, Brent Davidson and Sonya Peters were exerting their leadership in guiding the two ragtag classes forward in their quest not to be outdone by my twenty Creative Writing students.

 The almost universal plot for each of the seventy-five tenth grade stories was that South Citizens Bank and Trust was the bank for Stella Gibson’s newspaper, the Times Courier, and that she and the Bank’s president, Noah Fletcher, were bitter enemies.  The reasons varied broadly but most of the students used a multi-generational hatred that was grounded in one ancestor killing another.  Homecoming night, Fletcher was scheduled to crown the new Miss Gilmer High during halftime ceremonies but was told at the last minute that Stella Gibson had offered to do so in exchange for a generous donation to the high school.  The focus was the heated conversation after the game between Stella and Noah, semi-alone in the parking lot with one of them being taken by ambulance to a local Emergency Room for an apparent heart attack.  A nice angle for the story was the reader was kept in the dark until the end as to what had happened and who was the patient.

The eleventh graders pursued a similar structure.  In the main.  Daniel Taylor and Stella Gibson had just begun an affair two weeks earlier.  Unfortunately, Daniel and his wife Rachel wound up sitting in front of Stella Gibson in the stadium at the football game.  The friendly conversations between Stella and Rachel became tense when she noticed Daniel leaning back into Stella’s knees three times before the end of the first half.  By the end of the story Rachel had thrown a cup of hot coffee on Stella and she had, later to her regret, made the remark, “I don’t need heating up, you’re the one out in the cold.”  At midnight, Rachel, with acrowbar in hand, was attempting to break into Stella’s apartment.

By Friday afternoon, it was becoming clear that the Real Justice novel project would include an unhealthy dose of sex.  Not explicit sexual language but inferential overtones, rather yet, undertones.  It seemed my twenty Creative Writing students all were heavily leaning towards using the male ego and sexual desire to develop sexual tension and competition between the story’s five antagonists.  I was both pleased and disappointed.  My own personal novel project no doubt involved sex, heck it was pretty much a mirror image of my own life’s story, particularly the gang-rape by the Faking Five.  I shouldn’t have been surprised that seventeen and eighteen-year-old teenagers were choosing to include the one characteristic common to every human.  However, I had hoped the twenty highly imaginative students would have pursued something more intellectual than sex.

Friday night I was once again watching several episodes of The Walton’s with Nanny and Sammie.  Cullie, as usual, was at Alysa’s.  However, tonight I was multitasking, something I had promised myself I wouldn’t do when I was with Nanny.  I didn’t normally scroll my Newsfeed on Facebook.  I used the program as a teaching tool and thought it otherwise a waste of time.  By the time John Walton found his daughter, Elizabeth, locked inside a trunk at a haunted house, I saw where Rhonda Hudgins, our ninth grade English teacher, had posted a prayer request for Glenda Williams.  Reading four of the comments to her post revealed that Ralph Williams, Glenda’s husband, had died in an accident.  It was the last comment that had turned my grief into outrage.  Glenda had found Ralph’s body in their barn underneath the rear axle of his tractor.  It seemed he had been attempting to remove both rear wheels when the tractor had fallen on him.  The world might never know, but my gut was telling me that Ralph Williams had been murdered.  

While Sammie and Nanny were eating popcorn, and immersed in their third episode of the night, I stepped out of the den and called Sheriff Waldrup.  I only reached his voicemail.  I walked in the kitchen and looked up his home number in the most recent phone book Nanny kept in a drawer under the landline phone on the wall.  There was no listing for Wayne Waldrup.  I was rewarded for checking the 2012 edition.  This was before he was elected Sheriff.  I was thankful Nanny had kept such an old phone book.  I reached his wife on the third ring and was told he was in Atlanta on business until Monday.  She offered to help me if it were an emergency, saying she would get word to him if it was urgent.  After I told her I had left a voicemail message she told me his cell phone account had been hacked or something and that I probably would have difficulty reaching him.  I thanked her and asked her to have him call me when he got back into town.

I went to bed early and didn’t awake until a few minutes before my 4:30 a.m. alarm went off.  My dream had startled me awake.  The noise wound up being Midnight scratching on my bedroom door.  My subconscious had thought it was Cullie and me locked in my car and the sound was our fingernails scraping across the inside top of my trunk lid.

Novel Excerpts–The Boaz Schoolteacher, Chapter 27

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 27

“I have a god-awful prediction unless we do the hell something.”  Ryan said as he walked into Pastor Warren’s man-cave after Prayer Meeting Wednesday night.

“Sounds like you Radford, always wanting to stir something up so we can have more of these damn meetings.”  Justin Adams said standing and gazing into a double-doored closet that contained Warren’s media collection, much of which he acquired from his father and grandfather, both former residents of the Church’s parsonage.  The only thing Warren had added was 200 porn movies.

“Adams, you apparently haven’t heard.  Your monthly head-in-the-sand trips to the beach keeps you behind.  I said a good one, your behind is exposed when you’re so disconnected.”  Ryan and Justin were best of friends but loved giving each other hell.

“Their quarterly, not monthly trips.  You guys would benefit from a few days of uninterrupted silence.”  Justin said opening a CD case and inserting “A Fun Day at the Water Park” into Warren’s DVD player.

“Not yet Adams, maybe when we finish.”  Danny Ericson said as he joined Warren, Fulton, and Ryan at the big round table by the windows.  “Ryan, tell Justin what triggered our little investigation and what we learned.

“Yesterday afternoon I picked up Riley at Kay-La’s Gymnastics.  I was running a few minutes late and she was standing outside with Cullie Sims and Cindy Barker’s daughter, Alysa.  Riley said the three of them are not friends and so she wasn’t paying them much attention but was close enough to hear Alysa ask Cullie why her mother had to go see Mr. Williams.  Cullie had responded, ‘Mother’s still tore up over losing my grandmother and just wanted to see what Mr. Williams had seen.’”

“Here’s what Ralph told me this afternoon.”  Danny pulled a notepad from his shirt pocket and laid it in front of him on the table.  ‘I told her I saw you (Ralph is speaking of me) and a man that at first I thought was Dale Joiner, but now I’m not sure that’s who you had in your truck.’  That’s exactly what he said.  I wrote it down after driving away from Ralph’s house.”

“I take it you went to see Williams after Ryan passed along what his daughter Riley told him?”  Justin asked, still trying to catch up on the full story.

Danny continued.  “I went under the ruse that Dale might entertain a much lower offer than his asking price for his pasture.  Ralph really wants that forty acres.  I slipped into our conversation that I had heard that Katie had come to see him.  I acted as though the Church was very concerned about her and wanted to support her in any way we could.  I’m sure he bought into my slurp slop story of how Raymond thought the moon rose and set with Darla.”

“I think it’s the sun and not the moon.”  Fulton added.

“Either way, Ralph didn’t have a clue that he was being interrogated.  I left there believing he had admitted to Katie that Nathan Johnson could have been in the truck with me.”

“What?  How would he know anything about Johnson?”  Justin asked, scrolling through Facebook on his iPhone.

“That’s not what I meant.  I only meant that he was doubtful about my passenger being Dale Joiner.  This opens the door to a lot of questioning if Sheriff Waldrup hears this and wants to know who was with me.  Hell, Williams originally didn’t even tell the Sheriff about seeing me.”  Danny said flipping his notepad to another page.  “Here it is, ‘All I told Waldrup was I didn’t see anything out of the ordinary.’  Williams confirmed this a second time when I asked him again in a slightly different way.”

“What else did Ralph say he and Katie talked about?”  Fulton asked.

“That’s it.  Oh, he did mention Katie being interested in some dumb candy wrapper he had found that morning along the road.”  Justin said, closing his notepad and returning it to his shirt pocket.  “I didn’t write it down.”

“Write what down?”  Justin and Ryan both asked at the same time.

“The name of the candy bar.  What the hell was that?”  Danny said, standing and walking towards the bar.

“You never know what can become an investigator’s dream?”  Fulton said.  “Bring me a beer Danny, and a candy bar if you have one.”  The first laugh of the night finally appeared from everyone present, except Fulton.  “I didn’t mean that to be funny.”

“Lonely Star Chocolate or something like that.”  Danny said, returning to the table with two Bud Lights, handing one to Fulton.

“That’s just piss perfect.”  Fulton said slamming his beer can down on the table and glaring at Danny.

“What the fuck is wrong with you?”  Danny said pushing his chair back from the table.

“You idiot.  Lone Star refers to Texas.  Did your twin idiot passenger throw out his litter after you too deposited Darla’s body by Ralph’s pond?”  Fulton’s intelligence had kept the five of them out of trouble on more than one occasion.

“Hey, I’m not my brother’s keeper.”  Danny now was clearly upset, and his face was red hot.

“Let’s settle down guys.  For sure, we are our brother’s keeper.”  Pastor Warren said, standing and leaning against the floor-to-ceiling windows.  “Danny, look at that moon.”  Warren turned and pointed outside, up toward a full moon, whose light was making its way through the thick cover of leaves on the trees surrounding the patio and rear entrance to his man-cave.  “The moon simply reflects the sun’s light and we have to be willing to serve our brothers.  That’s what you did when Ryan and Justin called you after discovering the missing videotape and silencing Darla.  It was a mere coincidence that Nathan was in town and with you that morning.  I do wish he hadn’t been so sloppy.”

“And, not been so dumb to steal the 22 pistol.”  Justin added.

“Here’s the deal my moon brothers.”  Fulton said looking at Warren as though making fun of the Pastor.  “Katie is even more of a problem than we ever dreamed.  No doubt she has proof we raped her back in 2002, thanks to Ryan and the missing videotape.  And, now, she has information we likely were involved in her mother’s death.”

Ryan interrupted Fulton, “I think, even before she went to see Williams, she was suspicious.  Later that morning I checked the caller ID on her and Raymond’s land line.  Darla had called Beverly Sims.  Her home number.  I checked it with the phone book.  Also, Beverly’s caretaker, Sammie, showed up that morning around 7:45 looking for Darla.  To me, that means Katie knew her mother was okay shortly before 6:00 a.m., that’s the time of the call to the Sims residence.  I bet Darla told them that Justin and I were there in the house.  Yes, no doubt, Katie, even before her little trip to see Ralph, had real suspicions that we were involved in Darla’s death.”

“We’ve got to take care of her.  I know it’s not a good choice.  But, for me, I’d rather the videotape be disclosed than to be charged with murder.  I’ve consulted with an attorney, don’t worry, it was one out of state.  We can’t be prosecuted for the rape.  The worst thing from a legal standpoint is a civil lawsuit.  Release of the videotape showing the five of us raping Katie would destroy us but at least we would still have our freedom.  If we can get to Katie before she communicates the findings she gathered from Williams, then Darla’s death can’t be linked back to us.”  Pastor Warren said.

“You’re being a little star-eyed.”  Fulton said, standing and walking to Warren, still gazing through the windows.  “Moon-eyed maybe.  Williams himself is also a problem.  He needs to be silenced.  As does Katie.”

Over the next hour, the five of them, the five referred to by Katie as the Faking Five, brainstormed the best way for the inquisitive Katie and the white-bearded Williams to meet their maker.  At 10:00 p.m., plan in head and hand, the five settled comfortably onto leather couches and chairs around Warren’s one-hundred inch flat-screen TV and spent an hour enjoying “A Fun Day at the Water Park.”

Novel Excerpts–The Boaz Schoolteacher, Chapter 26

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 26

Tuesday was the first day Cindy had come to my room during my planning period since before Labor Day.  She stayed until the end of my lunch break, a few minutes before noon.  It was not vocabulary words, short stories, or sentence and paragraph structures she wanted to talk about.  It was her idea of how to set up Patrick Wilkins.

“Ever since Saturday night’s church social all I have thought about is how to balance the scales with that sexual pervert known around here as the Assistant Principal.  I can’t stand even saying his name.”  Cindy said, sitting her book bag on one of the two chairs across from my desk in my little office.

“What got you so riled up.  He wasn’t even there.”

“Oh yes he was.  After you left, Steve helped Lane move the tables back to the storage room and arrange the chairs for Jared Insley’s Sunday School class.  Kathy, Lane’s wife, and I were standing inside the Fellowship Hall towards the back door talking and waiting on the men to finish when the asshole walked in.”

“You’re beginning to remind me of myself.  However, I would say he is horribly worse than that.  He is a criminal asshole.”  I added.

“I almost attacked him when he said, ‘good evening ladies, where are our lucky men.’  Of all things to say, especially at church.  That man apparently thinks of sex all the time.”  Cindy said sitting in the chair by her bag covered with giant sunflowers embroidered on both the front and back.

“That’s exactly what he deserves, even worse.  But, I’m not sure that’s the smartest way of dealing with him.  I want to be as open and direct as I can my dear friend.  Don’t make the same mistake I made when the Faking Five raped me.  That was nearly fifteen years ago.  Now, it’s too late for them to be criminally charged in Alabama since the statute of limitations is only ten years for rape unless DNA evidence can identify a suspect.  You are not so constrained.  I still believe you should report what happened to you, what the criminal asshole did to you.”  Right now, there was nothing I wanted more than for Cindy to report the crime.

“Katie, I know you believe you are looking out for my best interest.  I know you care for me and are trying to help but it’s impossible for you to know, really know, how complaining to the police and all that would naturally follow from doing so, how my life as I know it, would be over.  You don’t know Steve the way I do.  And, you certainly didn’t know him back in his younger years.  I’m certain my horrible news would throw him into a tailspin and he would get his revenge.  Katie, Steve would literally gut bastard Wilkins, and that would be after he had already cut his balls off.  I couldn’t live if Steve went to prison.”

“Aren’t you considering doing the same thing?  How would Steve fare if you went to prison?”  I had to make Cindy see she was being irrational.

“You’re not seeing the one major difference.  Steve would act impulsively, simply go kill Wilkins almost immediately after I told him, or he heard the news.  My idea is to plot and plan, like I do with my writing.  In that sense, Steve is more like you and your writing.  He is a seat-of-the-pants type revenge seeker.”

“In my opinion, either way can lead to the same destination.  Your way may be slower but if Wilkins turns up dead there will be an investigation.”  I said, losing interest and patience in mine and Cindy’s conversation.

“Who said I want to kill my rapist?”  Cindy said as she pulled a standard three-subject, wire-ringed, hole-punched, college-ruled notebook from her book bag.  Here, look at this.”

She flipped it open to the first page.  On the top half was a rudimentary, penciled drawing.  At the bottom I could see a numbered list of items under the heading, ‘Action Steps.’  “I can already see the Prosecutor’s first Exhibit at your murder trial.”

“You keep forgetting, I’m not interested in that.  Not right now at least.  Phase one is innocuous.  It’s simply a prank.  I do admit it is an embarrassing prank.  For Wilkins that is.”

“I might as well ask you to tell me about your little prank.  You’re not going to brainstorm with me how best to present The Snows of Kilimanjaro to my tenth graders unless I do.”  If Cindy was one thing, she was determined.

“I call it Operation Screen-Saver.  I want to install one on both his school and church computers.”  She flipped a page in her notebook and I saw another drawing and another set of ‘Action Steps.’  The operation will be successful if we get only one installed.”

“What streaming words do you have in mind for the world to see as they scroll across a Wilkins computer?”

“I’m not exactly sure, but ‘Women, run, run.  I’m a rapist,’ comes to mind as the front-runner phrase.”  Cindy said looking at me with a sly grin and a curled lip.

“A second ago, did I hear you say ‘we’?”  I was not liking this at all.  Cindy had simply assumed I would be a co-conspirator.

“Yes, I can’t do it without you.  I assumed from our earlier discussion that we had agreed our project, Six Red Apples, was going to be a team effort.  I help you get back at the Faking Five, by the way, I love that label, and you help me destroy asshole Wilkins.”  Cindy wasn’t wrong in her interpretation of that conversation.

“I guess I have to admit you are right.  I confess I did agree, but I never agreed to commit a crime.”

“This isn’t a crime.  Surely.”

The only thing we accomplished from 10:30 until nearly noon was review and banter about both lists of action steps and how they related to geographic locations on Cindy’s rudimentary but impressive drawings.  We also devoured our lunches.  It seemed taking the first innocent steps towards a life of crime triggered an aggressive appetite.

After school, I dropped Cullie and Alysa off at Kay-La’s Gymnastics & Cheerleading on Mill Avenue.  Both girls had recently decided they wanted to go out for cheerleader at the end of the school year.  I hated to tell them but, to me, neither one had the physical skills, flexibility, and coordination for such a sport.  I kept my mouth shut.  Instead, as they exited the car I said, “I’m proud of you two girls.  Both of you sure have the brains for learning the routines.”

At 3:30 p.m., I pulled to a stop at the end of Ralph Williams driveway, next to a giant screened-in porch nestled beside an over-sized garage.  A tall and thin man with at least a week’s worth of snow-white whiskers walked down the porch steps when I stood outside my car.

“May I help you?”

“Are you Ralph Williams?”  I said knowing it had to be him but as far as I knew I had never seen the man.  It could have been his father or brother or just a visiting neighbor.

“I am.  I hope I’m not in trouble.  You look like you are either a social worker or better yet, a prize-giver with Publishing Clearing House.”  He said as a short and stocky woman opened the screen-door and stood on the top step.  I thought she might be marking her ground, like she was telling me, ‘he’s my man, don’t you get any ideas.’  I almost laughed out loud.

“I’m Katie Sims.  We’ve been talking online, and I just wanted to meet you.”  I hadn’t planned that at all.  Usually, my smart-ass remarks didn’t set well, they often returned like a boomerang.  I was surprised to hear Ralph’s response.

“I was hoping today would be the day.  You are even more gorgeous than I imagined.  The naked pictures you sent do not do you justice.”  He said with a big grin alternating looking at me and then at the woman, I assumed his wife, standing, not smiling, now on the second step.

“I’m sorry.  I shouldn’t have said that.  I’m not sure why I did.”

“It’s certainly not every day that a young, nice-looking woman comes by and flirts with my Ralph.  You too are a match.  He is the best comedian in Boaz.”  The bottle brunette said, now smiling and opening the screen-door and motioning me to come inside.

“I guess laughter is good medicine as I’ve heard all my life.  Let’s start over.  I’m Katie Sims.  You found my mother dead in your pasture.”

“Oh dear, I’m so very sorry for your loss and especially for how she died.”  I could tell Ralph was a real gentleman, even though the white beard someway didn’t seem to fit.  “Please come in.  Glenda will fetch us some lemonade.”

“Thank you.”  I said and accepted the couple’s invitation to go inside.  After he instructed me to sit where I wanted he repeated his condolences concerning Darla.  Glenda rejoined us with fresh-squeezed lemonade and was about to sit down when I heard their phone ring.  She disappeared once again.

“I’ve been meaning to come see you.  I hope you don’t mind me asking you a few questions.”  I said, not wanting to linger any longer without gaining some information.  I did have two teenage girls to pick up by 4:45.

“Not at all.  Ask anything you want.  I’ve been expecting you.”

“According to Sheriff Waldrup, that morning you didn’t see anybody here and about the neighborhood before you discovered Darla, my mother’s body.  Right?”

“No, that’s not exactly right.  The Sheriff’s question was, have you seen anyone or anything out of the ordinary?  To that I told him no.”

“So, that doesn’t mean you didn’t see anyone, you might have seen something you considered ordinary?  Or, am I confused?  I get that way fairly often.”  I said, wanting to be careful with the facts.

“Now you’re correct.”  Ralph said, scratching his beard.

“I take it you don’t normally have a beard?  Sorry, that’s none of my business.”

“You are quite unique.  I like your style.  The beard.  I’m getting a head start for Christmas.  I play Santa Claus in a little skit our church puts on every year.”

“Which church?”  I asked.

“Pleasant Hill Baptist Church, just up the road.”

“I’m sure you are an excellent actor.  I’ve seen you at work.”

“No compliment needed.  I just try to be myself and love on the kids.”

“Back to ordinary vs out of the ordinary.  Can you tell me everyone, everything, you saw that morning before you found my mother?”

“That’s easy, I saw Danny Ericson driving his gray Chevrolet Silverado.  He was going that way.”  Ralph pointed toward the south, away from Boaz.

“And, I assume you are saying that wasn’t out of the ordinary?”

“Not at all, at least it was recently ordinary? 

“I’m not sure I follow.”

“Come here, let me show you.”  He led me off the porch and back outside onto his driveway.  We stood beside my car.  “See that big pasture across the road?”  Ralph pointed, now eastward and straight across the road from his and Glenda’s house.

“Yes.”  I saw it and saw an Ericson Real Estate sign beside a gate leading into the pasture.

“Danny was driving slow that morning.  He had someone with him.  I think it was Dale Joiner.  He owns that pasture.”

“I seem to remember that someone, maybe it was Sheriff Waldrup, said something about you wanting to buy that land.”  I was beginning to get a little excited.  Maybe these two saw something.  Oh my gosh, I didn’t look forward to having to talk with Danny Ericson.

“For a while I did.  Before Danny listed it for Dale, he dropped by and asked me if I would be interested.  I guess he had already talked with Dale and he hadn’t committed to listing with Ericson Real Estate.  It was, I suspect, Danny’s way of manipulating a commission out of the sale.

“You decided against it I assume.  It looks like it’s still for sale.”

“Right.  It’s priced way too rich for my blood.”

“Back to that morning.  Let me restate what I’m hearing you say.  You said you saw Danny’s truck.  Sorry, did you say where you were when you saw him?”

“I don’t think I did.  It was early for me and Glenda.  Since I retired from Goodyear we don’t get up at 4:00 a.m. anymore.  I think it was around 7:15, but it might have been a little later.  I was pouring a cup of coffee, standing at that window.”  Ralph said pointing to a double window I assumed was from the kitchen.

“Just looking out your kitchen window?”  I said.

“Yes.  As I said, Danny was driving slowly, almost like he had been stopped, or maybe had turned around.  Not going anywhere near the speed limit, thirty-five I think.  When I first saw Danny, I couldn’t make out who was with him.  Course, I couldn’t make out Danny either, but I knew it was his truck.  I could see that god-awful Crimson Tide tag on his front bumper.”

“And, he just drove on by?”  I asked.

“He did, but I got a better look when I walked into the living room as they were passing.  At first, I thought it was Dale Joiner as Danny’s passenger, sitting by the window closest to our house.  I must tell you, now that I’m really thinking about it, I may have lied, unintentionally, to Sheriff Waldrup.  I’m thinking now there had been something out of the ordinary that morning.  Dale Joiner, if that’s who Danny’s passenger was, looked awfully, oh, what’s the word, part of it sounds like a shovel?”

“Disheveled?”  I asked.

“Yes, I think that’s the right word.”

“It means the person is untidy, disordered, speaking of their hair, clothes, or appearance.”  I said, having used the word in my early morning writing just a day or two ago.

“Definitely, that’s right.  Dale didn’t look like himself.  He’s usually neat, well-dressed, and is downright a fanatic about his hair.  Hell, sorry.  Now, I’m thinking about something else.  I don’t ever remember Dale having a beard.”

“Could it be that you aren’t sure it was Dale Joiner?”  I asked.

“Now that we’ve had this little discussion, I sure wouldn’t bet on it.  It seems my mind just automatically filled in that name, the information that I am now unsure of.”

“Our minds do that.  It could have been that when you saw Danny Ericson’s truck and recalled your dealings with him over the pasture across the road, along with Dale Joiner as owner of that land, that your mind offered you a picture of what was going on.  Danny was out with Dale Joiner driving by the land he had just listed.”  I tried to make sense of what had happened to Ralph, a man who, to me, could be a spitting image of the type of man I envisioned Sheriff Wayne Waldrup to be.

“That makes sense now.  Come to think of it, I think it was just the day before that Danny’s real estate sign went up on Dale’s pasture.”

“I’m really thankful you’ve taken the time to talk with me.  One other question if that’s okay.”

“Sure, I’ve got until 5:00.  That’s when I must be seated for supper.  Glenda is pretty particular about meal times.”

“Can you think of anything else that happened that morning, whether it seemed odd or not?”

“Not really because I’m more forgetful than I used to be.  After I discovered your mother’s body and came back to the house to call 911, I walked down the road to the gate, my gate, there, you see?”

Ralph pointed to a gate that ran parallel to Pleasant Hill Cut-Off road, that led into his pasture and on toward his pond.

He continued, “when I reached the gate I noticed my chain was backwards.  I always loop it a certain way.  If we were down there I’d show you.  I’d also show you the lock I added since that day.”

“So, you believe someone else had tampered with your chain and maybe, possibly, had opened and closed your gate?”

“Yes, but I didn’t see any strange tire tracks when I walked on down to the pond.  I’ve got several neighbors I let fish, so they come in on their own and drive their truck or whatever down closer.”

“Thanks again.  It’s been nice meeting you.”  I said.

“Same to you Miss Sims.  I see you don’t have a ring.”

“No, I’m single.  Are you looking?”  I probably needed to be on some type medication.  I was certainly headed for trouble with my smart-ass mouth.”

“Not yet, but who knows what tomorrow will bring.  Seriously, Glenda and I would love to get to know you and your daughter.”

“Daughter?  How did you know I had a daughter?”

“I figured only a girl would have a pink book bag.  I saw it in the backseat of your car.”

“You are too much.  Cullie and I just might come see you, maybe go fishing.”

“Anytime.”

“I have to run; my daughter is waiting.”  By now I was standing beside my car with the driver’s door open.  “Take care.”  I sat down and just before I closed the door Ralph motioned me to stop.

“One other thing, probably nothing but you did ask.  Give me just a minute.”  He walked to the garage and inside.  Within a few seconds he reappeared and returned to my car.  I was standing now.  “That morning, I found this, just inside the gate.”  He handed me a yellow and gold wrapper with blue and red lettering across the front.  It read ‘Lone Star Candy Bar.’  “I don’t think I’ve ever seen this brand.  Have you?”

I looked at both sides of the wrapper and noticed an address, 254 E Main, Fredericksburg, Texas 78624, along with a phone number, (830)990-9100.  “No, I’m pretty sure I haven’t.”

“It’s amazing what type of litter I find along this road.  You would think people could find a trash can.”

I felt bold.  “Do you mind if I keep this?”

“No, not at all.  It’s just garbage.  I wouldn’t still have it, but I don’t empty the garage garbage-can but once per month.”

“I have to run.  See you soon I hope.”  I backed out of his driveway waving at Ralph the whole way.  He was a genuine man.  He reminded me so much of Papa.  It wouldn’t do for Nanny to ever be around this tall and thin man with a wicked sense of humor.  She would declare Papa had come back to life.

I tucked the Lone Star Candy Bar wrapper inside my book bag and made it to Kay-La’s Gymnastics at 4:50 p.m.  I was greeted by four eyes standing alone outside a locked building, visually shouting, ‘where on earth have you been?’

Novel Excerpts–The Boaz Schoolteacher, Chapter 25

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 25

It’s Monday morning, September 11th, sixteen years after the event now known simply as 9/11.  That early Tuesday morning in 2001, the Islamic terrorist group al-Qaeda crashed two hijacked commercial airplanes into the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center in New York City.  Less than two hours later, both buildings themselves crashed to the ground in a pile of rubble.  After my writing time this morning in the basement I was glad I had changed my mind on altering today’s lesson plans to focus on such a tragedy.  But, I would give each class an opportunity to have a moment of silence to remember all the victims from the event that changed the world forever.  I was feeling guilty over not doing more for the victims but ultimately realized I didn’t have a day to spare if I wanted to give my students the hand-holding attention they would need to complete a novel by the end of the year.  Most mornings I regretted considering such an audacious idea.

This morning, showering and getting dressed for school, I was happy I had only watched one episode of The Walton’s with Nanny and Sammie last night.  With Cullie at Alysa’s working on an American History project I had returned to my room and spent three hours sitting at my desk working on today’s presentation for my Creative Writing class.  A few days earlier I had the thought for the first time that I had to refine the novel writing project.  It had been ridiculous that I had first stated that my twenty students, broken up into five groups of four, would produce five books, each with four authors.  At best, we might be able to produce one novel.  Thus, my change of mind demanded I inform the class that their groups would remain intact, but their focus would change.  Each group would focus on one of the five antagonists.  I myself would be primarily responsible for drafting scenes dealing with Stella, our protagonist, when she wasn’t dealing directly with an antagonist. 

Today, I would also introduce character sketching.  I suspected the students were more interested in creating a scene, for the novel that is, than engaging in the prewriting phase.  However, novel writing is anything but glamorous.  It is tediously hard work.  And, like most things in life, is better accomplished with a plan.

At my little desk last night, I had determined that my twenty students and I would begin with Mason Campbell, the Mayor of Ellijay, Georgia.  My purpose in relaying my own character sketch was not to dictate to Group 1 (the Mason Campbell group) who he was to be in the book, but simply to give them an idea of the method to use in building and describing their assigned character.

To be completely honest, I really did not like the prewriting phase.  I personally was a seat-of-the-pants type writer, versus what novel writing experts referred to as plotters or planners.  But, I also realized that most writers, especially brand-new fiction writers, didn’t have a developed enough imagination nor a sufficient knowledge of the necessary components of a modern story to simply sit down and start writing.  They needed an outline and an outline needed fully-developed characters.  Those experts typically argued that, “you need to know everything possible about your character, his eye and hair color, his height, weight, and build, his hobbies,” and on and on, including “his fatal flaw.” 

That final little thing was the big thing according to the experts.  “Every protagonist has a flaw that defines him, something that has happened in his life, usually some traumatic physical or emotional experience that has so affected him that he now believes a lie.”  One example that is often used is the one where Billy’s fiancé died in a robbery where he was present, and he couldn’t save her.  After it happened and even now, some five years later, he believes he is unworthy of a woman’s love.  This is the lie he believes, and it is causing him major problems with every woman he encounters and later tries to date.  For Billy to have a positive character arc (he is positively transformed by the end of the novel) he must deal with this lie.

For Mason Campbell, I would offer him to the class and primarily to Group 1 as an arrogant, ex-football star who returned to Ellijay after winning a national championship with the Georgia Bulldogs.  Mason’s father was a former mayor and was still well respected.  Mason was used to getting his way in every area of life, especially with the ladies.  The lie that Mason believed was that no matter what trouble he got into, there was a way out, one that was, at most, slightly painful.  He believed this lie because that’s the way it had been all his life, but the focus experience was in college when he was accused of raping a cheerleader.  The short of it was Mason’s father came, once again, to his rescue.  This time, with the behind the scenes disappearance of the victim.

At 2:40 p.m., I was satisfied.  My day had been virtually perfect.  Every class seemed unusually attentive, focused, self-policing even.  My Creative Writing class that had just ended was the best prepared and engaged of any day so far.  They critiqued my Mason Campbell character sketch in ways I did not anticipate, even made me see it for its shallowness and the likelihood it would produce a story that was tired and boring.  I knew this day had to be a complete aberration, but I accepted it as a gift from God. 

When Cullie came into my room after the last bell, I knew instantly something was wrong.  Her eyes were red and puffy.  The mascara above her left eye had transformed into what appeared a horribly black birthmark that encircled the eye like a giant C.  No doubt she had been crying.

“Baby, what’s wrong?” 

“I hate school and I hate my life.”  Cullie said, throwing her book bag onto the floor halfway before she reached my desk at the head of the classroom.

“You want to talk about it?”  I said.

“No, I just wish Daddy were here.  In English class we were working in small groups on interpreting a silly little poem about a family of birds.  Riley Radford, the queen bee of all ninth-grade queen bees, who seems to hate me, said, ‘what type of name is Cullie?  Sounds like you are a cull.  That’s more a boy’s name, like Cullen.  Is your dad named Cullen?  You probably don’t even know who your dad is, kinda like your mom.’  She just kept on.  I told her my dad was Colton and he was coming during Christmas.  I hate her.”

How in the hell had this happened?  Mine and Cullie’s history center stage in her ninth grade English class, albeit in a small group?  I knew of Riley Radford, it was Ryan and Karla Radford’s oldest daughter.  Come to think of it, her and Cullie could almost pass for twins.  What if?  Hell no, I couldn’t dare think that. 

“Honey now is a good time to thicken your skin.  Kids can be horribly mean, even hateful.”  I said, not knowing exactly what to say.

“If Daddy were here, he would tell me to burn Riley’s locker or sneak into her house and cut off a foot of her long and silky red hair.”

“He would do no such thing.  If he did say that he wouldn’t be serious.”  I wanted to lay my head down on my desk or run out into the hall screaming.  Colton Lee Brunner was not Cullie’s father, but she certainly didn’t know that.  He was a scapegoat, the man I was dating, seriously, in 2002 when I was raped.  One decision had altered my life.  At the last minute he had to change our plans.  He and I had already purchased our tickets to fly from Los Angeles to Birmingham and drive on up to Boaz.  That was Christmas 2002 when his estranged brother was murdered.  Colton stayed to support his mother.  I had flown, by myself, home for the holidays.  But for that random, drive-by shooting and Colton’s decision to forfeit his ticket and remain in Los Angeles, I would not be having to lie to Cullie about her father.  Then, I was once again reminded of the horribly wonderful truth.  But for Colton staying in Los Angeles, there would be no Cullie.  He would have been with me when I had visited old downtown Boaz and its dilapidated Fountain, and I would never have been gang-raped. The gang-rape that had produced my darling daughter was also my traumatic, life-changing event, my fatal flaw.  The lie that it had spawned was that I too, like Billy in my Creative Writing class example, believed I was unworthy of love.  But, that wasn’t the only lie it spawned.  I had lied to Cullie about her father.  In truth, I did not know who her father was.  Did Riley Radford’s statement to Cullie, the daughter of Ryan Radford, portend the discovery and revelation by Cullie of this lie?

I felt Cullie shaking my arm.  “Earth to Katie.  Listen to me, one thing is for sure, Daddy would tell me something, give me some real tangible advice.  That’s more than you could ever hear from your father.  You never could even talk to him since you never knew who he was.”  I now regret having told Cullie about how I came to be.  Sometimes the truth is too dangerous and needs to be altered.  I now wish I had, along with Darla’s help, created a story, a beautiful love story that had ended tragically in the sudden, unexpected death of Darla’s Romeo, but only after I had been conceived.  I hadn’t done that. 

I had chosen truth over comfort.  As I leaned back against my desk looking over at the back of Cullie’s head and her curly black hair while she stared into an open refrigerator in the corner behind my bookshelves, my gut felt like it had been jerked into a thousand knots.  How was this going to play out?  Was it time to tell Cullie about how she had come to be?  Was it time to tell her the truth?  She deserved to know the truth.  She deserved to know her real father.  I almost laughed out loud.  I didn’t even know which one of five men had given me the best gift of my life.  Truth for sure, was always stranger than fiction.

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?

Novel Excerpts–The Boaz Schoolteacher, Chapter 23

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 23 (sorry for formatting issue)

The school week after Labor Day was the longest of the year so far, even though it was only four days.  Time spent in my classes and in office visits with students was what I lived for, other than Cullie and Nanny of course.  Almost that time or stay after school.  Cullie made the choice for me.  By 3:00 immediately after announcing the Real Justice novel project, I had little choice but to share my thirty-minute lunch break from 11:25 to 11:55. It was either answer questions from inquisitive team leaders during p.m. every day, she was ready to go home to Nanny, and the barn loft.  The true reason the week slowed more and more as each day passed was what happened during my 10:30 to 11:25 break and planning period.

Cindy, before her declaration late Labor Day night that she had been raped, normally popped into my room a few minutes before lunch.  Beginning Tuesday, she was waiting for me in my classroom when I returned at 10:30 from my twelfth-grade English class in the Auditorium.  The only thing she wanted to talk about was her Six Red Apples project that she kept assuming I had agreed to help her construct and execute.  If by Friday this wasn’t bad enough, Cindy’s lunchtime prayer (before students arrived) was causing similar discomfort.  I didn’t know why.  A quick ‘thank-you for our food’ might be okay, even nice, but a multi-minute exploration of the problem of evil, God the mysterious, and a too-long final verbal paragraph confessing ‘your will, not mine,’ was teasing out my long-abandoned condescending attitude.  I had developed it in college because of a dorm roommate’s continuous and arrogant assertions she knew the mind of God.  I had been pleased that the wonderful and dedicated, not to mention, humble, Catholic nuns and teachers at Marymount Catholic High School in Los Angeles had dissuaded me from believing all Christians were like my sweet-from-a-distance dorm-mate.  By the end of today’s prayer, Cindy’s ‘your-will’ phrase sparked the unwanted memory and unhealthy regret, I had agreed to go with her to the Sunday School Department’s quarterly social at church on Saturday night.

 

The only thing I ever wanted to be late to was my funeral.  Tonight, there was a close second vying for the number one spot.  It was the Sunday School social.  And I was late.  On our way to our cars yesterday afternoon after the last bell rang, Cindy reminded me to be in the church’s Fellowship Hall no later than 6:20 p.m.  She had said that Lane McRae, the Department Head, was a stickler for promptness.  Cindy said these events were always crowded and Lane had a peculiar way of assigning seats.

At 5:55 p.m., Saturday evening, just as I was walking out the back door to the garage to leave, I heard Sammie scream, “Nanny’s gone. I can’t find her.”  I raced inside and down the hallway to where Sammie stood semi-frozen and screaming.  “Calm down, when did you last see her?”  I asked.

“Two minutes ago, three at the most.  She was brushing her teeth in her bathroom.  I had to go myself, so I ran to the half-bath beside the kitchen.  When I returned to her room, she was gone.”

“Grab the flashlight from the pantry and go outside.  I’ll fetch Cullie upstairs and join you.”  I said, almost ashamed of myself for thinking this would be a good excuse not to attend the social.

Cullie wasn’t in her room.  I descended the stairs three steps at a time.  As soon as I was beyond the garage, I saw a light at the front of the barn.  It was two lights.  I walked the fifty yards or so and saw Sammie and Nanny shining their lights into the opened hayloft door where Cullie was sitting with her feet dangling, with her eyes closed.  Fear and trepidation sprouted for two seconds until I noticed her ear buds and the white cables to her iPhone in her left hand.  She was simply listening to her music and was in what she called, ‘the zone.’

By the time I got Cullie’s attention with the toss of two pea-sized gravels and learned that Nanny had told Sammie she had come out to check on Cullie, my own iPhone vibrated in my pocket.  It was Cindy.  “Where are you.  We’re about to start.”

“Nanny caused a stir.  I’m on my way.”  I said but did not say.  It must have been Cindy’s praying that prompted me to create such an orderly arrangement of words.  Otherwise, I would have stayed at home.

I was glad that when I arrived, Robert Miller, the youth pastor, was standing at the entrance to the Fellowship Hall.  He led me to Cindy’s table.  to I sat beside her.  She leaned over and whispered to me, “so glad you came.  Lane’s still introducing visitors.  You’ve not missed anything.  We’re about eat.” 

After Lane led a rather short prayer of thanksgiving, mainly for the food, Cindy introduced me to Tiffany Tillman (Pastor Tillman’s wife), and Karla Radford (Ryan Radford’s wife).  I knew both enough when I saw them but had never been formally introduced.

When the four of us returned to our table after going through the food-laden buffet, I noticed the empty chair beside Cindy and the absence of Steve.  “Where’s Steve?”  I whispered to Cindy as Tiffany and Karla were critiquing a green-bean casserole.

“He’s at the front, see?”  She pointed towards the head table along the outside wall of the Hall behind the podium and where Lane had stood earlier.  “Tonight, is Steve’s turn.”  Cindy wasn’t making any sense.

“Turn?  For what?”  I asked.

“Lane rotates through the four Outreach Directors in our Department.  There are four Sunday School classes.  It’s Steve’s turn.”  Cindy said using her fingers to pull apart the largest fried chicken breast I’d ever seen.

“Once again, Steve’s turn for what?”  Cindy was normally much clearer in her language.

“Oh sorry.  He shares what he and his outreach team have been doing and the results of this past quarter’s visitations.  He will introduce anyone who is here because of outreach efforts.  He also must, it’s kind of a tradition, share a personal story about his own home life.  Listen carefully, you may hear how a real husband treats his woman.  I hope he doesn’t get too intimate.”

The meal was excellent.  It brought memories from my youth and how Pastor Walter, Warren’s grandfather, once per year, had encouraged all young people to bring a friend or two to the annual picnic that took place at the Boaz Recreation Center and attached Park.  He always made sure there was enough food there to feed everyone in Marshall County.  My thoughts of Walter spawned thoughts of Wade, his son and Warren’s father, who was in jail awaiting trial for murder.  I simply couldn’t get my mind around the idea that Wade, also a pastor here for decades, could have murdered his wife Gina, a close friend during high school of my own mother.

Tiffany and Karla were both likable.  To an extent.  When they were not talking among themselves about the food (apparently, they both were expert chefs in their own kitchens), they were ribbing Cindy a little about what they could expect from Steve.  The three of them, from what I could gather by reading a little between the lines, had rather vigorous sex lives with their darling husbands.  The statement directed my way, the one that made me swear to not return next quarter, or the following three hundred, was Karla’s.  “Katie, we are so pleased you have returned to Boaz and are so interested in teaching our teenagers to write.  Fictionalized stories are fun to read, especially those steamy Harlequins, but having real romance at home is irreplaceable.  I hope you can find a real man here in Boaz, one who is as kind, generous, and loving as Ryan.”  If this weren’t enough, she continued, looking at Cindy and Tiffany, “oh, sorry, and for these fine ladies, Steve and Warren.”  I almost got up and left.

Steve’s talk revealed a side of him I didn’t know.  He was serious about Sunday School and Outreach.  He introduced four couples who were present, who all stood and briefly shared how irresistible Steve and his teammates had been in encouraging them to give the ‘Young but Maturing’ Sunday School Department a try.  I was glad Steve was short-winded on the personal and intimate portion of his speech.  His, “many of you know I was a hellion until I met Cindy.  I don’t blame my prior behavior on growing up on the wrong side of the tracks.  I made a lot of bad decisions as a teenager and young man.  But, I do blame the pretty lady sitting beside Katie Sims, for all of my good behavior and decisions since we had our first date in 1999.”  That was a good place to stop, even though I’m sure my face was red from the embarrassing feeling that was crawling out of my gut after Steve mentioned my name.

Just as Steve had stood at the podium after being introduced by Lane McRae, I had spotted all members of the Faking Five.  Warren had come in late and had sat at the back, over beside the main entrance.  Justin and Ryan had apparently been in the kitchen and were now putting lids on food containers all down the buffet.  Fulton and Danny were sitting with who I suspected were their wives.  The same ladies I had seen them with the Sunday’s I had attended the worship service.  I was hoping Steve was as terse as Cindy said he normally was.  I was ready to get out of here.  I needed some fresh air.

“If it weren’t for the vasectomy my beautiful Cindy made me get in 2009 we would probably have ten more kids.  I’m thankful our God instructed us to be fruitful and multiply.  Cindy, my baby, I see your smile, you know I love you a boatload more than fishing.  Thanks baby for knowing how to push my buttons.”  Steve’s little personal statement had the crowd roaring.  One thing I could give Steve, he knew how to speak directly and without confusion.  For a lineman for Marshall-Dekalb Electric Coop, he understood language.  He seemed to be a master of sex talk, the type that is absent of sex words but clearly points the mind and urges toward the bedroom.

Before I closed my eyes to deafen my ears, I looked at Cindy who was as red as our tablecloth.  Our eyes met, and she leaned over and whispered.  “See why I can never tell Steve the truth.”  I nodded as though she was referring to something as innocent as having to confess to Steve that she had surprised Patrick Wilkins in his school office when he was telling a semi off-color joke to coach Haney.  Oh, if it were only that simple. 

It was when I was walking to my car parked at the far side of a crowded parking lot that I realized I had not seen Patrick Wilkins all night.  I guess he was smarter than he appeared.  At least he had the sense to stay away on the night Steve would be talking about him and Cindy.  I drove home interested in learning more about the former Steve, the one who had grown up on the wrong side of the tracks.  My literary mind told me that Patrick Wilkins would be a dead man if Steve Barker ever found-out Wilkins had lain naked next to and inside his darling wife.

Novel Excerpts–The Boaz Schoolteacher, Chapter 22

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 22

Wednesday night after Prayer Meeting, Ryan, Fulton, Danny, and Justin joined Warren in his man-cave in the basement of the parsonage, entering through an exterior door that was located down a flight of ten steps, all hidden behind an L-shaped row of giant Blue Princess Hollies.  It was at least a once-per-month custom for the five to meet.  Sometimes for beer and relaxation.  Other times for a boring update on Club Eden’s business and two hours of sparring egos.  They all preferred the darkness to avoid attention.  They also preferred Warren’s man-cave with its surround-sound stereos, one-hundred-inch custom made flat-screen TV, and his multi-volume private collection of digital porn.  Tonight, the TV screen was dark and silent.  As was the visitor the four men saw when they walked in and their eyes adjusted to the low-light.

“Hello fellas, please join Patrick and me.”  The two of them were seated at a large round oak table nestled in a corner next to a row of floor to ceiling windows that faced a small below-ground patio that contained firewood and an overflowing garbage can of cardboard beer containers.

The four spoke or gave Patrick a half-smile as they pulled out chairs and sat at the table they had each won and lost thousands of dollars over the years in games of Texas Hold’em and Blackjack, usually drunk and horny from the beer and digital broads.

“Patrick has gotten himself into a little trouble.  He’s asked me for advice.”  Warren said, puffing on a giant Cuban cigar.

“What type of trouble?”  Fulton said.  It was as natural as the sunlight each morning.  He was the most intellectual and, by default, the unelected spokesperson for the four.  His connections and those of Warren’s gave the two the floor to speak first and to guide the group’s overall conversations.

“He let his ego and his animal urges leap himself into the wrong tree.  To put it plainly, our friend and rising community star had a roll in the hay with Cindy Barker.  Cindy didn’t choose to be in the hay.”  Warren said, now sipping his customary Bourbon.

“You mean he raped Cindy Barker?”  Danny asked, standing, and walking behind the bar to a hidden refrigerator for a can of Bud Light.

“It wasn’t like that.  I didn’t really force her.”  Patrick responded, looking only at Warren.

“There’s different types of force, physical and psychological.  If she didn’t consent to having sex with you then you raped her.”  Fulton as usual attempted to bring clarity and avoid lazy and ignorant thinking.

“There’s something else you four need to know.  Patrick and Cindy’s interactions took place at Club Eden.”  Warren said, pouring more Bourbon and acting as though he would continue speaking.

“What the fuck?”  Ryan’s voice rose to overpower the stereo, even though it was not on.

“I take full responsibility.  You could say I’ve been grooming Patrick for nearly a year.  I promise you I’ve followed every rule and protocol our fathers established after the Micaden Tanner debacle.”

Micaden Lewis Tanner was a high school classmate of the fathers of the men present, excluding Patrick.  Their fathers, known as the Flaming Five because of their star basketball-playing reputation, had agreed Micaden could become a member.  He was the first and only member outside the five families: the Tillman’s, the Adams’, the Ericson’s, the Radford’s, and the Billingsley’s.  The Club was still reeling from the aftermath of that decision.  The deaths of two teenagers during the Flaming Five’s high school graduation party in 1972 had ignited a firestorm in the gut of Micaden Tanner.  For almost forty years, Tanner, an attorney, had haunted the Flaming Five.  Now, the entire group was fighting State and Federal criminal indictments.

“Looks like you’ve done a really good job.  You’re not-yet-honorary Club member not only had access to the Club’s secret hide-a-way but used it to commit a crime.”  That is just what we need, especially with a missing videotape that was nowhere to be found at Raymond’s house.”  Justin declared lighting up one of Warren’s cigars.

“Out of order.”  Fulton almost shouted.  He knew Justin had said something no one in the world should hear and now someone had, a someone who was not a member of Club Eden.

“Hell, we might as well talk about anything we want.  Seems to me Patrick is now, by default, one of us.  Warren, I don’t like these type surprises.”  Ryan said realizing he had opened himself up for ridicule.

“You’re one to call the kettle black my friend.”  Danny said, returning from the bar with five beers.

“I move we are open for business.”  Warren said, referring to the Club’s official rule and its purpose to place every issue on the table when the majority present approve the motion.

Fulton, Danny, and Justin all raised their hands.  Ryan abstained.

“Motion carries.  First, let’s go back to our first order of business.  Patrick’s situation.  You may not have put it together, but we have an even worse problem.  Patrick says Cindy is very good friends with Katie Sims, yes, our Katie, as though I had to be so redundant.”  Warren was simply doing his duty.  He was the Club’s President for another three years.  Long ago the Club had decided the top leadership term would coincide with that of the U.S. President.

“I assume you believe Cindy will tell Katie and then all hell is going to break loose.  Correct?”  Fulton said.

“Absolutely.”  Warren said, looking over at Patrick and nodding as though directing him to speak.

Patrick complied.  “I honestly don’t think Cindy will go public.  On the drive back from Club Eden to her car parked at the church, I told her I was sorry and that I would never bother her again.  I also told her she should keep quiet, that if she spilled the beans her and Steve’s relationship and that of her family would be destroyed.”

“How did she respond?”  Fulton asked.

“She didn’t really say anything, but when I looked over at her, I’m sure she nodded her head in agreement.”  Patrick said.

“That’s reassuring.  What more could we want?”  Ryan said, the most sarcastic son of the Flaming Five.  “What if the two lovely ladies have a little accident?  Wouldn’t that solve our problem?” 

Justin quoted his oft-repeated claim: “he’s not the sharpest knife in the drawer.”

“I kind of wish it were that simple.  Here’s a note our dear Katie gave me a couple of Sunday’s ago when she was passing through the end-of-service hand-shaking line.  It reads, ‘Videotape quality is amazing.  Perched like an assassin.’”  Warren said, placing the small note in the middle of the table to allow everyone an opportunity to read.

“Sounds like a literature teacher.  Rule one, there is deep meaning within the words.  First, the obvious.  Katie has the tape, has watched it, and has found it provides clear-cut evidence that could sink every one of our ships.  Maybe not so obvious, but for the trained reader, ‘perched like an assassin,’ likely means the videotape itself is a separate and distinct entity from her, and that it, by itself, is ready with deadly force.  Here’s the bottom line, getting rid of Katie, or Katie and Cindy, will probably trigger deadly shots to your heads and mine.”  Fulton said looking at and pausing a long ten seconds at each man at the table other than Patrick Wilkins.  “Patrick, if Cindy tells Katie what you did to her then don’t think for a second that Katie’s little assassin won’t turn its rifle towards you.”

For another two hours the six men batted the ‘what should we do?’ ball around the table.  At midnight, Patrick asked if he could be excused.  All agreed and each son of the Flaming Five was thankful it was the honorary member who had made the request.

After everyone left Warren’s man-cave, he turned down the light-dimmer, poured another glass of Bourbon, and looked through the glass windows onto the patio.  The stack of last year’s unused firewood loomed large.  As he grew sleepy, he repeated to himself: ‘we six are no better off than a stack of seasoned wood.  No doubt, only one match-strike from going up in flames.’