Bad Moon (Kat Campbell Mysteries)

Home > Other > Bad Moon (Kat Campbell Mysteries) > Page 29
Bad Moon (Kat Campbell Mysteries) Page 29

by Ritter, Todd


  Nick closed his eyes and clutched his stomach. The thought of a little boy—a ten-year-old, for Christ’s sake—purposely trying to kill his infant brother repulsed him. When his sister was murdered, it felt like a part of him had died with her. He couldn’t imagine someone intentionally causing such pain.

  “I asked him why he did it,” Ken said. “Charlie told me it was because Maggie and I wanted to get rid of him.”

  “And did you?” Nick asked.

  “Of course not. I loved Charlie with all my heart. But pointing that flashlight at his blank face, I didn’t feel any of it. Instead, I felt anger and guilt and fear. Especially fear. I looked into Charlie’s eyes and I saw nothing. No remorse. No emotion at all. It felt like I was looking at a monster. He had tried to drown Eric twice. I have no idea why. I didn’t back then and I don’t now. But I knew he would try again. I was certain of it.”

  According to Ken, he climbed out of the bomb shelter, leaving Charlie below. Taking the baby from Craig’s arms, he told him what Charlie had said and how he had looked. Ken admitted that he was afraid of him. It sounded absurd. A grown man terrified of his son. But Ken was deeply terrified. And he didn’t know what to do.

  “I couldn’t call the police. Not after Charlie had learned that me and Maggie weren’t his real parents. They’d charge us with kidnapping and possibly take Eric away from us, too. But I couldn’t take Charlie back home and hope it never happened again. That’s when Craig said he would take him.”

  “Where?”

  “To live with him,” Ken replied. “He said he’d be able to whip Charlie into shape. Just like he did with the boys at the detention center. Just like he planned to do at the camp he was going to build.”

  Out his window, Nick saw a sign telling them they were leaving Mercerville. It went by in a blur. They were now back within Perry Hollow’s borders.

  “I didn’t like the idea,” Ken continued. “I knew Maggie would like it even less. She was fiercely devoted to Charlie, even though she often didn’t show it. I remembered how tender she had been with him in the hours after his birth, how she treated him like he was her own. She had never stopped. In her mind, Charlie was her son. But he wasn’t. Eric was our real son. Charlie was just a baby we had taken in out of pity. A favor for friends. Now one of those friends was offering to take him back.”

  “So you accepted?” Nick said.

  “It hurt to do it. It hurt so bad. But I needed to think of Eric. I needed to keep him safe. And giving Charlie to Craig seemed like the best option.”

  “But you knew Maggie would try to find him if you did.”

  Eyes still fixed on the road, Ken gave a little nod. “The only way she’d let Charlie go, is if she thought he was dead.”

  “So you went back to the house and got Charlie’s bike?”

  “I did,” Ken said. “I carried it to the bridge and tossed it into the creek. I was hoping the police would see it and assume Charlie had fallen in and gone over the falls.”

  For the most part, his plan had worked. But the lack of tire tracks didn’t go unnoticed by Deputy Owen Peale, who later told Maggie Olmstead. That, in turn, set off decades of searching for a son who was never really missing in the first place.

  “Once the bike was in the water,” Ken continued, “Craig climbed into the bomb shelter and introduced himself to Charlie. I took Eric back to the house. I never saw Charlie again.”

  “When they were gone, that’s when you called the police?” Nick asked.

  “I told them Charlie was missing. Then I woke Mort and Ruth Clark to help with the search. No one suspected a thing. At that moment, Charlie was officially gone.”

  Ken sobbed. It rose from the depths of his chest and left his body in a burst of anguish. “And I killed him. I killed one of my sons to save the other.”

  “You did the right thing by getting Charlie away from Eric,” Nick said. “But you should have told the police the truth.”

  Because Charlie was indeed a monster. Although he was whisked away from his baby brother, he had tried to kill again. And he succeeded. With Dennis Kepner, who lived four doors down from him. With Noah Pierce, whom he most likely lured into an abandoned mill using Dennis’s toy rocket. With Dwight Halsey, his cabin mate at Camp Crescent. With Frankie Pulaski and Bucky Mason, when he lived next to the Mason family in Centralia.

  Charlie Olmstead, later known as Kevin Brewster, had killed them all.

  Nick looked out his window and saw the glistening expanse of Lake Squall up ahead. They’d be in town soon, speeding through the streets on the way to the cul-de-sac. He hoped it wasn’t too late.

  THIRTY-SIX

  Kat stepped onto the bridge, not knowing if it could hold all three of them. She moved cautiously, trying to see if she could get a good shot at Charlie without putting Eric at risk. It was impossible. Charlie still had him in a choke hold as he leaned against the railing. Eric struggled, using both hands in a vain attempt to pry the arm from around his neck. It did no good. Charlie was bigger and stronger. And, Kat knew, he was serious about throwing Eric into the water.

  He had done it before.

  Glenn Stewart saw it happen from the widow’s walk on the roof of his house. Charlie sneaking through his backyard with a wailing infant Eric in his arms. Charlie cutting through the trees on his way to the creek. Charlie standing on the bridge. Holding his baby brother over the water. Letting go and watching the splash. Glenn saw it all.

  Eric would have died if his neighbor hadn’t been there. But Glenn told Kat he acted quickly. Running down the bank, he had just enough time to see Charlie scurry away. Then he was at the water’s edge, taking a deep breath and diving in.

  Glenn said he then hurried to the Olmstead house after pulling Eric from the creek. Pressing the drenched infant into his father’s arms, he recounted all that he had seen. Then he went home and remained silent, even when Maggie Olmstead knocked on his door to tell him Charlie was missing. The next day, when Kat’s father and Deputy Peale came by, he lied and said he was asleep. During the news stories and search parties, he didn’t say a word. And decades after that, when the story of Charlie Olmstead passed into Perry Hollow legend, he kept quiet.

  “But did you know what really happened to Charlie?” Kat had asked him.

  “No,” Glenn replied. “I didn’t care. All I knew was that he was gone, and that all of us were better off because of it.”

  Kat took a second step onto the bridge. It responded with an ominous groan rising from beneath her.

  “Let him go, Charlie. He’s not the one you want to hurt. Not now and certainly not back then.”

  “I didn’t want to do it,” Charlie said as he tightened his grip around Eric’s neck. “But I had to. They were going to get rid of me.”

  “Did your father tell you that?”

  “No. But I could sense it. They didn’t need me anymore. Not with Eric around.”

  Kat took another step, heard another groan of the bridge.

  “So you thought that if you got rid of Eric, the Olmsteads would keep you?”

  Charlie peered at her from over Eric’s shoulder. His eyes were like currants, dark and emotionless. “Yes.”

  Kat’s fourth step set off another round of bridge noises. It wasn’t going to hold them much longer. A few feet ahead of her was the gap she fell through on Wednesday. She remembered the feel of the surrounding boards as she slipped between them, the coldness on her foot as it hit the water.

  “What about the other boys?” she asked Charlie. “Why did you kill them?”

  “I didn’t plan to kill Dennis. It just happened.”

  “How?”

  “He had a model rocket,” Charlie said, as if that explained everything. “He showed it off at school the day Apollo 12 landed. I wanted it. We met in the park after school and I took it.”

  A quick shiver rushed up Kat’s spine as she thought of James, safe and sound in Glenn Stewart’s house. Her son had done the same thing, only over something a
s silly as a school lunch. She recalled Jocelyn Miller’s words: Kids don’t understand the consequences of their actions.

  “He followed me home,” Charlie continued. “He kept demanding the rocket back. We fought in the backyard. I hit him with it. Hard. I didn’t want to kill him. I just wanted him to let me keep the rocket.”

  “And the others?” Kat asked. “Were they accidents?”

  “They were in the wrong place at the wrong time. Except for Dwight. He had it coming.”

  Kat didn’t ask why he only killed during moon landings. The answer was clear. He chose them because the first moon landing was the moment when Charlie Olmstead died and Kevin Brewster was born. Each Apollo mission after that was a chance for him to re-create that night, to kill off another child just as he had been killed.

  “Did you know Eric was still alive?”

  “I assumed he was,” Charlie said. “I just didn’t know where to find him.”

  “But when you found out he was in Perry Hollow, you needed to come back and finish what you started in 1969?”

  Charlie offered a cruel smile. “Something like that, yeah.”

  “I’m not going to let that happen.”

  Kat took another step. Charlie reacted by tightening his arm around Eric’s neck and slamming him against the railing. The wood there broke free, snapping like a twig. Chunks of it fell into the creek and began their quick slide toward the top of Sunset Falls.

  All that movement made the bridge tilt noticeably, its support beams creaking under the strain. Eric and Charlie remained standing, although barely. Clutching each other, they teetered on the edge of the bridge, bodies swaying to keep their balance.

  Kat ran toward them, gun still raised. When she reached the gap in the bridge, she leaped over it, landing hard on the plank next to it.

  It broke immediately upon impact.

  She yelped, a blast of surprise that echoed off the trees on the other end of the bridge. Her arms flew outward as she dropped through the newly expanded gap. The Glock escaped her grip, landing on the bridge, and sliding in Charlie’s direction.

  Kat caught herself midfall, legs dangling beneath the bridge, feet once again swishing through the water. From her new vantage point, she could see the gun sitting a few feet away. Then she saw a pair of hands pick it up and point it at her head.

  The hands belonged to Charlie. He now had her Glock. And he was going to kill her.

  *

  Eric saw everything and understood none of it. The action appeared to him in quick flashes that left no time for comprehension. First there was the railing, splintering apart at his hips. Then water, viewed from above, rushing under the bridge. When Charlie’s arm left his neck and traveled to his shoulder, it left Eric not knowing if he was trying to toss him into the drink or keep him out of it. He saw Kat running. Then she was falling, letting go of the gun. Soon Charlie was scooping it up, aiming it at her, trigger finger twitching.

  Now Eric needed to stop him. It was the only thing he understood.

  “Don’t hurt her!” he yelled. “I’m the one you want.”

  Charlie whipped the gun away from Kat and aimed it at his chest. Eric raised his hands.

  “You want to kill me? Fine. But let her go. Please.”

  He didn’t think about what he was saying. There was no noticeable transmission from brain to tongue. Eric just wanted to keep Kat safe, and the only way he knew how was to use the very things he made his living with—words.

  “She’s done nothing to you,” he said. “She was only helping me try to find you. That’s all.”

  Charlie looked at him with a mix of panic and despair. Eric imagined he had the same look on his face when he realized Dennis Kepner was dead. Maybe after he killed all of the boys.

  “I just want things to be the way they were,” he said. “When I lived here. Before you were born. I was so happy then.”

  “You still can be,” Eric told him. “You can live here with Dad. I’ll go away. It will be like I was never born. You just need to let Kat go.”

  He prayed that Charlie would believe him. That he wouldn’t realize there would be no happy ending once they stepped off that bridge.

  If that ever happened. Eric wasn’t sure it would. Charlie seemed torn, moving the gun between him and Kat, who still clung to the bridge in an attempt to keep herself from slipping into the water.

  “Let me help her up,” Eric said. “I’ll help her up, put her on land, and then it’ll be just you and me. Then you can finish what you started all those years ago. I’ll be gone and you’ll be happy.”

  Charlie thought it over, still aiming the gun at Kat. Then Eric. Then back again. Finally, he settled on Eric, pointing the Glock at his heart. Eric knew he was too close to miss. The bullet would tear through his chest like a rocket. If he was lucky, he’d die instantly. If he wasn’t, then he’d go slowly, bleeding out on this godforsaken bridge.

  Eric pleaded with him. “Let her go first. If you’re going to do it, let Kat go.”

  As he spoke, a deep rumble rose to his left. It came from the cul-de-sac, the sound of an engine cutting through the wall of trees along the creek. Eric knew the sound. It was his dad’s rig, roaring toward them. Charlie heard it, too, and faced the noise.

  Eric took advantage of the distraction and ran forward, tackling Charlie. Caught by surprise, Charlie flew backward, gun spiraling from his fingers and skittering across the bridge. Then they tumbled together, falling to the bridge’s surface.

  Their landing jarred the entire span, which seemed to spring to life, shaking in all directions. Lying on top of Charlie, Eric felt the bridge tilt wildly to the left. Then it listed right, making them slide with it.

  Beneath them, a support beam buckled under the pressure. Eric heard it snap—a panic-inducing crack that briefly blocked out all other sounds. The truck. The falls. Kat’s labored breathing as she managed to climb back onto the bridge.

  Then, just as Eric feared it would, the bridge began to collapse all around them.

  THIRTY-SEVEN

  Nick held on tight as the truck made a left turn onto the cul-de-sac. They were going so fast and Ken had jerked the wheel so sharply that Nick thought the truck would tip over. He felt his side of the vehicle lift off the road, rising with the turn. But they made it through unscathed, the truck settling back down on all tires. Once out of the turn, Ken jacked up the speed again, shooting like a bullet down the cul-de-sac.

  Looking out the windows, Nick saw they were zipping past Ken’s old house. In front of Glenn Stewart’s place, he spotted James standing next to a man with a smooth patch of skin where an eye should have been.

  Seeing the rig, the man pointed to the path at the end of the cul-de-sac. Ken nodded and stepped on the gas pedal.

  “Brace yourself,” he said.

  Nick shrank in his seat, covering his face with his arms. Even then, he could see they were approaching the wall of trees at a furious pace. The only clear spot was the meager path that led to the bridge and the stream. That’s what Ken was aiming for, and Nick had no clue if they were going to make it.

  The bounce over the curb threw him up from his seat. He hovered a fraction of a second before being yanked back by the seat belt. In front of him, branches slapped the windshield as the truck rushed through the trees. One—as thick and strong as a Louisville Slugger—shattered the glass, splintering it until it resembled a spiderweb made of ice. To Nick’s right, a tree took out the side mirror before scraping along the door.

  Ken slammed on the brakes as the trees cleared. The truck skidded forward, knocking against one tree and then another, before coming to a stop at the edge of the bridge.

  Only the bridge, Nick saw, was gone.

  What remained of it was now breaking apart in the creek. He saw Kat on her hands and knees, holding on as the bridge floor rocked on the water’s surface. Just beyond her, Eric and Charlie Olmstead lay next to each other, trying to do the same.

  Charlie managed to stand, somehow
keeping his balance. Eric couldn’t. He tried to get up, reaching out to his brother for balance. Charlie shrugged him off before pushing him away. Eric rolled across the bridge and fell off the side that faced the falls. Then he vanished, disappearing under the water.

  “Eric! No!”

  Ken unsnapped his seat belt, threw open the door, and jumped out. Nick did the same, climbing out as fast as he could. When he was on land, he saw Ken run to the edge of the creek, about to dive in.

  Someone else beat him to it.

  Glenn Stewart had skipped the path and headed straight through the trees. As he moved, he shouted instructions to Ken.

  “Find something for us to grab on to. Form a chain and stretch it out over the water. I’ll get Eric.”

  Then, once he reached the water’s edge, he dove in.

  *

  Tumbling underwater, Eric knew he was about to die. He tried to fight the current and break the surface, but the water was too strong. The pull of the falls kept him under, tugging him along the bottom of the creek. Somersaulting in the depths, he felt rocks scrape his back, his face, his hands.

  He saw the remnants of the bridge drifting away from him. Pilings crisscrossed in the water. Beams jutted out of it. Then they were gone, torn from his vision as he was flipped over once again.

  He shut his eyes before feeling another impact with the creek bed. The force of the blow knocked the air out of him and snapped his mouth open. Water filled his throat, choking him. The pressure in his lungs was immediate, like a pair of hands inside his chest pushing outward.

  I’m dying, he thought.

  He knew it without a doubt. If drowning didn’t kill him, the drop over the falls would. He couldn’t decide which was worse.

  Just when he had settled on the plummet from the falls—it was quicker, he reasoned, with less agony—something entered the water to his right.

  Or his left.

  He was so confused he couldn’t tell.

  Eric also didn’t know what the thing sinking next to him was. When he opened his eyes, he saw only pebbles studding the bottom of the creek. Then the bridge, now even farther away. Then a face.

 

‹ Prev