The Widows of Braxton County

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The Widows of Braxton County Page 24

by Jess McConkey


  A few minutes later, Kate found herself sitting before the magistrate with Mr. Brown at her side. She listened as he went back and forth with the county attorney concerning her bail and release. She had the same sense of aloofness as she had experienced sitting in her cell. Her thoughts returned to Hannah.

  Hannah had been torn from her child. Kate couldn’t imagine the pain that had caused her. She remembered the vow she’d made to Trudy—history wouldn’t repeat itself. But here she was, just like Hannah. A need to learn what really happened between Hannah and Jacob took root.

  Mr. Brown’s light touch on her arm drew her away from her thoughts. He gave a slight nod toward the magistrate.

  Kate forced herself to focus.

  “We keep going over the same ground,” the magistrate said impatiently, directing his words to the county attorney. “Are you charging her with first-degree murder or not?”

  “Not at this time.”

  “Then all I have before me at this time is a weapons charge. Not a gun or a switchblade. A common kitchen knife, is that correct?”

  “Yes, but—”

  “No ‘buts.’ Given that this could be part of a larger investigation, I’ll take that into consideration in setting bail. The defendant is released on a five-thousand-dollar bond.”

  A couple hours later, dressed in her own clothes, Kate was free. When she saw Will and Rose waiting for her outside the jail, she collapsed with relief into Rose’s arms.

  “Rose, I can’t thank you enough,” Kate said, taking a step back.

  Rose draped her arm over Kate’s shoulder. “It’s okay. Will’s car is parked over here. Let’s get you home.”

  After Will had Kate settled in the backseat, they started toward Dutton.

  “What happened?” Will asked with a quick glance at Kate in the rearview mirror.

  Kate quickly explained.

  “What did the knife look like?” Will asked.

  “A kitchen knife. A long thin blade with a black handle.”

  Rose turned in her seat to face Kate. “A boning knife?”

  “I guess,” Kate said with a shake of her head. “All I know is that I’ve never seen it before and have no idea how it got in the Jeep.”

  Will glanced in the mirror again. “They’re easily acquired. The store probably carries five different brands of cutlery that would match that description. Did it have any distinguishing marks?”

  “It was just a knife,” Kate answered disjointedly. “Either someone is playing a cruel trick, or they’re trying to implicate me in Joe’s death. I guess I’ll know which when the DNA results are in.”

  Rose turned her attention to Will. “Who would do something like this?” she asked, aghast.

  “If we knew that, Rose,” Will answered gently, “we’d know who killed Joe.”

  Kate leaned her head against the window. “I do know this—my fingerprints aren’t on it.”

  “Then the only thing they have linking you to the knife is where it was found,” Will reasoned.

  “Right, and all Mr. Brown has to do is convince a jury that I’m telling the truth and knew nothing about it.”

  Kate thought back to the article about Hannah. Not only had Hannah been tried in front of a jury, she’d also been tried in the court of public opinion. Gazing out the window at the passing scenery, Kate wondered if the same fate awaited her. Of course it did. The parallels between now and then were frightening. She leaned forward.

  “Rose, I have to know what happened to Hannah,” Kate pleaded.

  Slowly, Rose began to shake her head. Kate jerked forward and placed her hand on the back of the front seat.

  “Wait before you answer,” Kate begged. “Don’t you see? History is repeating itself.”

  “No, it’s not,” Will interjected. “Hannah’s story has no relationship to what’s happening to you.”

  Kate fell back against the seat. “How do you know?”

  She caught Will looking at her in the mirror.

  “It can’t, Kate,” he said in a soft voice. “Your stress is making you grasp at straws.”

  “I don’t care what you think,” she shot back defiantly. “There’s some kind of connection. It’s too big of a coincidence.”

  Will sighed. “Becoming obsessed with an old murder can’t be healthy for you.”

  “I’m not crazy,” she mumbled.

  She caught the look Rose gave to Will, but let it pass.

  “Let it go,” Will said after a moment. “Let’s concentrate on clearing your name.”

  Chapter 39

  Fall 2012, the Krause family farm

  As soon as Will’s car pulled in the driveway, Agnes Forsyth came running out of the house and headed toward her car.

  Kate caught the fearful glance Agnes had cast toward Will’s vehicle. Wonderful. Agnes would have the gossip mill churning before nightfall, and she’d be judged just as Hannah had been.

  “I’d better not go in,” Will said over his shoulder as Kate exited the car. “I don’t want to upset Trudy.”

  “No. According to Joe’s will, the house is mine, at least for now. And I’m tired of worrying about who’s allowed in and who isn’t. We’re friends and Trudy needs to learn how to deal with it,” Kate insisted.

  Reluctantly, Will followed Kate and Rose into the house. Inside, Trudy took one look at him and, waving a finger in his direction, whirled on Kate.

  “What’s he doing here?” she bellowed.

  “As of today, the feud is over,” Kate said wearily. “Will is a friend and as long as I live here, he’s welcome.”

  Trudy’s lips thinned into a straight line. “Joseph Krause is rolling in his grave,” she declared, then flew over to the music box and grasped it in her hands. “If you’ve come for this, you can’t have it. Joe’s grandfather gave it to me. It stays here.”

  “I don’t want your music box,” Will said calmly. “I don’t want anything that belongs to you.”

  “Liar,” she cried out. “Hannah gave Joseph the farm and your family has never gotten over it.”

  Will shook his head. “Not true. I think we’ve been better off without it. I can’t see where all this land has brought your family much happiness.”

  Rose placed a hand on Will’s arm. “Maybe you were right, Will. We’re upsetting Trudy. We’d better go.” She walked over to Kate and gave her a hug. “You get some rest. And if you need anything, call.”

  “I will,” she replied with a hesitant nod.

  Saddened, Kate watched Will’s car slowly pull out of the drive, leaving her alone with Trudy. She heard her come up behind her.

  “The sheriff was here,” she said brusquely.

  “I know,” Kate replied, continuing to watch out the window.

  “They searched the house.”

  “Know that, too, Trudy.”

  “They think you killed Joe,” she said with a malicious note in her voice.

  Kate whirled and faced her. “Well, I didn’t,” she said, moving past her. As she headed for the stairs, she heard Trudy muttering.

  “Just like Hannah.”

  Unwilling to tolerate Trudy’s glaring presence or listen to any of her nonsense about curses or Will and Rose, or how Kate might be a murder suspect, she hid out in the back bedroom. She tried to rest as Rose had recommended, but Hannah’s story kept buzzing through her mind.

  What happened in this house? she thought as she stared up at the ceiling. Will was right—owning this land hadn’t brought Joe’s family much happiness. Their history was littered with tragedy—almost as if a judgment had been rendered against them.

  Sounds from downstairs caught her attention. Trudy was playing that stupid music box again. Her son was dead, but it seemed that all she cared about was that music box.

  Kate swung her legs over the side of the bed and tried to ignore the music. The way the tune skipped a note was driving her insane. If it weren’t so valuable, she’d steal it away from Trudy and smash the damn thing. At least have it fixe
d so it plays properly.

  She stood and paced to the window. Pulling back the curtain, she stared out over the farm. Whether or not she’d be arrested again was out of her hands. She’d told the truth and it was going to be up to Mr. Brown to build her defense.

  Turning away, she looked at the boxes stacked in the corner and the empty storage containers sitting next to them. She couldn’t do anything about the present, but she could try and make sense of the past.

  She picked up a nail file lying on the dresser, then knelt beside the box containing the photo albums. Carefully, she went through each album, running the file under each picture. She hoped to discover another article or maybe a note—something that would shed light on Hannah’s mystery.

  Finally, she’d finished the last of the albums and found nothing. Only the shoe box containing the portrait of Jacob and Hannah remained. Reluctantly, she picked it up, took off the lid, and began to remove the pictures.

  Once that box was empty and all the portraits were stacked on the floor, she noticed something. The one of Jacob and Hannah had disappeared. She peeked into the larger box. It was empty, too.

  When she’d entered the room earlier, she’d noticed that the room had been searched and had assumed her bedroom was listed on the warrant, but that picture wouldn’t be considered evidence in a murder trial. She sat back and looked around the room but didn’t see it lying about.

  She hated that picture. Handling it spooked her, so she should be relieved it was missing.

  What next? Her attention wandered the room. The attic. She’d never been up there.

  Once she’d climbed the narrow stairs and stood in the dust-covered room, she wondered about the wisdom of her idea. The area was packed with stuff. Boxes were stacked haphazardly in the corners; old trunks sat in the middle of the room. She spied a moth-eaten dressmaker’s dummy leaning precariously against a chair, its stuffing sticking out in puffs.

  With a sigh, she crossed to the first trunk and began her quest.

  Two hours later, all she had to show for her trouble was a lot of sweat and a lot of dirt.

  The Krause family had thrown nothing away in the 140 years that they had lived in this house. The trunks and boxes were full of nothing but junk—broken dishes and toys; books with the covers gnawed by mice; pieces of material that fell apart when touched.

  Kate stood and shoved her hands on her hips while she thought about where she could search next. She snapped her fingers. The old cabin.

  After washing the dirt from her face, Kate went to the kitchen. Trudy stood at the sink peeling potatoes.

  Kate walked over to the key rack and began to thumb through the various key rings hanging there.

  “Which one is the key to the padlock on the old cabin?” Kate asked.

  “It’s empty,” Trudy replied, tossing a potato into a pan. “Nobody ever goes in there.”

  “Which key?” Kate repeated.

  “The one with the red tag,” she answered in a disgruntled voice.

  Kate grabbed it and headed out of the house. When she reached the cabin, she inserted the key and unlocked the padlock. She pushed the door open and stepped inside.

  The pale light shining through dirty windows revealed an empty room. Cobwebs hung in swaths from the beamed ceiling while dust obscured the wide plank floor. A fireplace was at one end and a long work counter at the other. Stairs to the left of the fireplace led to a loft. The air was cold yet at the same time musty, and if Kate wasn’t mistaken, it also smelled of dead rodents.

  Wrinkling her nose, Kate eyed the stairs. While she was there, she might as well check out the loft. Mindful of any skittering creatures that lurked in the corners, Kate crept toward the stairs and gingerly tried the first step. It stayed solid under her weight. Step by step, she climbed until she was in the loft.

  Because it was chillier here than the floor below, Kate shivered as she swatted at cobwebs in front of her. Squinting, she spied a tarp covering something in the corner. Again she tested the strength of the old boards, and once she was convinced that she wouldn’t tumble through the floor, she crossed to the tarp. She grabbed it and tossed it to the side.

  Another trunk—much older than the ones in the attic. A name had been scrawled on the side, but the spidery handwriting was too faint for Kate to read.

  She knelt and opened the lid. A blackened set of cutlery lay on top. Next she found a stack of books. She opened a cover and, holding it up to the light, saw the copyright listed as 1850. With a shake of her head she carefully laid the book on the dusty floor. One by one, she gently removed the objects from the old trunk and placed them next to the book. She discovered a graceful figure of a shepherdess, a fragile blue vase, a box of buttons. These things really should be in a museum.

  When she’d reached the bottom of the trunk, only one more item remained. Another book—only it was in sad condition. Kate ran her fingers over the cover. Deep gouges obliterated the title and its author. Flipping it open, she saw that both the title page and copyright page had been ripped out. She slowly turned the pages, scanning them as she went. The book was a series of essays, but without the two missing pages, she couldn’t tell when it had been written. She abruptly stopped when one chapter title caught her eye.

  “The Sins of the Father.”

  Kate quickly read the first paragraph. The author was making a point about how, in families, violence can perpetuate violence. Immediately her thoughts flew to Joe and the revelations he had made about his childhood. She anxiously turned the page.

  Nothing.

  The rest of the chapter had been ripped from the book. She could still see the ragged edges sticking out from the binding.

  Wanting to make a closer examination of the book, she quickly replaced the rest of the objects back in the trunk and stood. She had taken one step when she heard a noise from the main room of the cabin. Not the scraping of mice running across the floor, but the clump of heavy boots.

  Alarmed, she clasped the book to her chest and held her breath. When she heard the sound of the door slamming shut, a lungful of air came out in a whoosh. She tore out of the loft and down the stairs, still clinging to the book. She pushed at the door.

  It didn’t budge. She was trapped in the old cabin.

  Chapter 40

  Kate ran over to the window and tried to force it open. It was stuck tight. Outside the cabin, the shadows of the trees were creeping across the ground. Soon it’d be nightfall, and the last thing she wanted was to spend the night locked in this old cabin. She placed the book on the floor and pushed at the window frame with both hands. It still wouldn’t move. If I could just pry it open. She remembered the box of cutlery.

  She went to the loft, then returned with a couple of the old knives. Taking one, she carefully jammed its blade between the sill and the frame and ran it along the width of the window, cutting through the layers of paint. She repeated the procedure on each side and along the top. Placing both hands at the top of the frame, she pushed again.

  The window moved a centimeter. She repeated the procedure again. The window frame raised a little more. She scraped again and again as the shadows grew longer and the room colder. The hair on the back of her neck prickled, and a thin sheen of sweat gathered on her top lip. She felt a rising sense of panic and urgency.

  She gave the window another try, and if it didn’t work this time, she’d break the glass. She had to get out of the cabin. Finally, the window slid far enough for her to wedge her body through and to toss a leg over the sill. Then she lost her balance and tumbled to the ground, landing flat on her back. Winded, she stared up at the sky and let relief flow through her. She was free.

  The book. After scrambling to her feet, she went to the door. The latch had fallen back into place, but the padlock still lay on the ground where she’d left it. She pulled hard, expecting it to be stuck, then stumbled backward as the door opened easily. Perplexed, she propped it open with a nearby rock and went to retrieve the book.

  Ka
te returned to the house and heard Trudy’s TV playing loudly as she went up to her room, where she set the book down. She showered quickly, then dressed in a pair of sweats and sat cross-legged on the bed, skimming the book’s pages one by one.

  It was a series of essays, specifically about family life and the role of women. Based on the way the subject matter was discussed, Kate deduced that the book had to have been written before women had the right to vote.

  As she read, she thought of the things she had always taken for granted. She could vote, run for a political office, receive an education, hold a job outside of the home. She had choices that the women of the early 1900s were never given. This was the world Hannah had lived in?

  She closed the book and stared at it thoughtfully. If this book was published in the early 1900s, as she suspected, the author must have caused quite a stir. Running her hands over the front of the book, Kate began thinking—whichever Krause had acquired this hadn’t been a fan, as witnessed by the gouged cover and the torn-out pages. Without a publication date or a title, she had no way of discovering who had been the author, and she knew nothing of twentieth-century women’s literature.

  But Rose did.

  After shoving her feet into a pair of tennis shoes, she grabbed the book and headed out of the house.

  Rose answered her door with a look of surprise. “You’re supposed to be home resting,” she said as she motioned Kate into the house.

  “I know, and if it’s too late to talk, I can come back tomorrow,” Kate answered in a rush.

  “It’s fine.” She eyed the book in Kate’s hand. “What have you been up to?” she asked with a note of suspicion in her voice.

  “I went through the attic and the old cabin,” Kate said, following Rose into the kitchen.

  Rose shot a look over her shoulder. “You’re not still focused on Hannah, are you?”

  Kate pulled out a chair and plopped down at the table, placing the book in front of her. “Can’t you see the similarities?” she asked. “Both men were stabbed and their wives were arrested.”

 

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