Yesterday's Gone: Seasons 1-6 Complete Saga

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Yesterday's Gone: Seasons 1-6 Complete Saga Page 138

by Sean Platt


  She might have been OK with his schedule if Tom would let her get a job. It wasn’t that he forbade it. He wasn’t a misogynist. But he said they didn’t need the money, so why stick Maria in a daycare or with some nanny? He even cited studies he’d read saying how children who spend time with their mothers were better adjusted, smarter, and all the other good things you wanted for your kids. Never mind that she’d read studies that showed that kids in daycare were often smarter and more sociable entering kindergarten.

  Each time they got into the argument, she found herself feeling guilty, like a bad mother for wanting to get away from her child, for just a little each day. Guilt to the boredom: wet cement on broken ankles.

  Running kept it from drying.

  Eva didn’t need to pound an ounce from her body. If anything, her athletic frame could stand to gain a few. Her house had a small workout room, and she used it every day. Her muscle memory was fantastic, and the baby weight had practically melted from her body after Maria was born. The twice-weekly runs gave Eva the chance to bond with some of the other neighborhood women. Problem was, half the time Eva had no idea why she did it. She found most of the women boring, if not altogether insipid, except for Lacy, Donna, and Carol. Samantha, too, but only sometimes. These late-morning runs, despite the quality of their company, helped Eva feel human again, though the feeling was fleeting if it showed up at all. She considered it a sad commentary on her life that running with women she barely cared about was one of the highlights of every week.

  Eva loved nearly every moment she shared with Maria. Her daughter was the sweetest, most angelic face Eva had ever known. But Maria was only a baby, and did little to answer her mommy’s ambition. She longed for conversation, it didn’t even have to be especially deep or meaningful. Eva would settle for anything that helped her feel more alive than merely there.

  “So, are we feeling any better?” Lacy tried again.

  “Sorry,” Eva said, wondering how long her mind had been wandering on her problems. She laughed, feeling awkward. “I’m not sure where my head is. I’m better, I guess. Just tired.”

  Eva smiled at Lacy, then fixed her eyes to the road, hoping Lacy would be content to run quietly beside her. Usually hungry for conversation, there was enough happening in Eva’s head to make her hungry for quiet. Maybe she’d feel more like opening up after the first lap around the path, when the group started to scatter into smaller groups as they tended to do. Now she craved silence.

  Lacy smiled back, silent, holding her pace beside Eva.

  A few weeks back, Eva had stumbled into the first truly awful flare-up from her growing depression. There had been flickers before, but nothing like that night. It was horrible. Maria had been a terrific sleeper, ever since a few weeks into her infancy, but one night she started screaming, and then kept screaming with what sounded like night terrors for three evenings straight. Tom was clocking even more hours than usual, and Eva’s mother was being an absolute bitch, calling her and running Eva through a ringer of guilt over everything she expected and a few things Eva never saw coming. None of it was particularly catastrophic or even unusual, but somehow the sum total of everything seemed to rattle Eva from the insides. Without warning, she woke on that fourth morning and found it physically painful to get out of bed. Tom left for work, and Eva cried for hours. Maria cried in the crib beside her.

  Eva cried while changing her daughter, cried while feeding her, and cried while lying down for their afternoon nap. She cried while drinking her morning coffee, and cried during lunch. She cried while filling her cart at Whole Foods, then again while checking out. There was no sobbing or heaving or nose blowing, only an endless stream of tears that seemed to flow from a busted spigot from early dawn to the ugly shadows of dusk.

  She couldn’t say anything to Tom, of course, and while Eva would have gladly confessed her every feeling to Maria, and did, her baby daughter could do nothing to help.

  Eva’s boredom, the sentence served for being a stay-at-home mom, was slowly fermenting into resentment. Being at home was never what she wanted; it was a product of Tom’s insistence. A few years before, Eva had been looking toward a future dappled with the blooming fruits of her ambition. She wanted to be an actuary. Certainly not the coolest job in the world, as Tom often reminded her, saying it sounded almost as exciting as cardboard, but Eva was, and had always been, fascinated by risk and uncertainty. To her, being an actuary sounded fun; she would provide assessments of financial security systems, evaluating the probability of events to quantify outcomes so her clients could minimize the losses associated with uncertain undesirable events. OK, boring as cardboard, but her brain would be busy, and it was certainly better than losing years as a maid, chauffeur, short-order cook, and dishwasher.

  “So,” Lacy asked, after the near silence of clomping Nikes was finally too much. “How was last week’s doctor’s visit?”

  “They tried putting me back on the happy pills,” Eva shrugged, “but I said no thanks.”

  “There’s really no shame in taking antidepressants,” Lacy said. “Hell, all the moms are either on them, or have been.”

  “Yeah, I did them for a bit after Maria was born. Had postpartum depression, and Tom convinced me it was best.”

  “And?” Lacy said, “They helped?”

  “Yeah, at first, but after a while I felt like a zombie. I hated it. Besides, it’s normal to be down every now and then, right? That’s what’s wrong with people today,” Eva lowered her voice to keep from offending the group, “everyone thinks they have to be happy 24/7. I shouldn’t have even gone back to the doc. All he wants to do is put me on pills.”

  “So,” Lacy said, her voice low, “are you OK? Have you considered … therapy?”

  “Yeah, yeah, I’m fine,” Eva said. “And no thanks on the therapy. Been there and done that, too. They want to put me on meds, no different from the other doctors. A big no thanks to that; you guys are my therapy, just getting out of the house and being with adults, you know?”

  “Yeah,” Lacy said. “Hey, you should come to the cookie swap this Saturday. It should be fun. Supposedly, Deb’s going to make those brownies we’re not supposed to talk about.”

  “Yeah?” Eva felt herself wince. “Who’s going?”

  “Almost everyone? Didn’t you get an e-mail?”

  Eva frowned, “No, I didn’t.” She looked at Kensie, and felt a sudden flush of anger.

  Why didn’t they e-mail me?

  This wasn’t the first time the group had overlooked sending an invitation to Eva. There was a dinner a few weeks ago that she found out about only three days later. She looked around at the other women, and could feel them thinking she wasn’t good enough to be with them — as if she was the boring one. There had been five or six times (depending on how she was counting) in the past three months when Eva had been left out of something. Each time, Lacy managed to bring it up, making Eva feel like shit. She wondered if it was some sort of passive-aggressive thing and that Lacy was purposely telling Eva so she felt excluded. So she felt like a lesser.

  Lacy asked, “You OK?”

  Eva snapped, “Why are you so damned concerned about whether I’m OK all the time?”

  Lacy looked at Eva as if slapped. “What?”

  “You know what!” Eva said, running faster, wanting to flee one of her few friends before she said something worse, or something that she couldn’t take back. Like last night with Tom, Eva could feel her temper threatening to spill, and knew it would be even worse than it had been with Tom, yet she could do nothing to stop it.

  Maria started crying. Eva ran even faster, but still Lacy caught up.

  “Hey, did I do something to piss you off?”

  Eva said nothing, her mind bubbling from emotions she didn’t understand. She felt as if all the women were staring at or right through her. Someone up ahead laughed, but Eva didn’t see who. Probably that bitch Kensie.

  “Hello, Earth to Eva?” Lacy said, her voice suddenly like
a handful of broken glass.

  “What?” Eva replied, stopping with a sudden halt.

  While the world around them suddenly seemed to freeze, with all eyes from the other mothers on them, Eva felt a building pressure in her brain, and a shortness of breath. It felt like a panic attack times one hundred.

  Maria screamed, though Eva couldn’t focus on her now. She was feeling a strong desire to run — run far away. Don’t look back, just go, leave everything behind.

  “What’s your problem?” Lacy asked.

  Eva’s hands trembled as she forced them down at her sides, trying to shutter her sudden urge to swing at Lacy. She’d never hit anyone before, and didn’t know from where her feelings were stemming. She was claustrophobic, as if the bitches were closing in: pointing, whispering, laughing.

  Eva’s right hand slipped into her right pocket as if working independently from her brain, finger curled around her house key, only peripherally aware of the movement.

  “Maybe you should go on pills, Eva! You’re acting like a nut,” Lacy said, then turned and jogged ahead.

  Eva stood, shaking. Then, before she knew what she was doing, she lunged forward. Movement without thought flung her toward Lacy. Eva’s hands flew into the air with the key like a sword sticking out from her fist.

  Lacy turned, eyes wide in shock before Eva’s key found her left eye socket, then twisted the key to unlock an eruption of blood.

  Lacy’s screams were echoed by the women around them, but Eva barely noticed as she flipped Lacy over and dragged her from grass to asphalt path, and smashed her face hard into the ground, repeatedly, rending her skull into chunks of bone and meat.

  Lacy’s son, still in his stroller, screamed for his mother. Somewhere in the din, Eva heard her daughter, also crying out. But the pressure in her head swelled, and she had to find relief. Had to stop it.

  Eva turned, eyes narrowing on the 3-year-old boy, strapped tight into his stroller, unable to escape, “Shut up, shut up, shut up!”

  She leapt onto the stroller, her open mouth tearing at the child’s neck. Warm blood flooded her mouth, animal adrenaline shot through her body.

  The child’s screams were like fuel to the fire in her head. She had to silence them. She arched down to bite again, but as she moved forward, something stopped her.

  Hands were on her, pulling her from the child.

  Eva fought back: tearing, biting, painting the mommies in blood before some of the women managed to wrestle her to the ground.

  “Get off of me!” she screamed, desperate, thrashing, and lashing out.

  She had to get up, had to get away, had to silence the screaming children.

  Had to …

  And then something hit her in the head, hard, stopping the chaos, and slowing things down.

  She relaxed, feeling a dizziness overwhelm her. It was almost intoxicating in its promise to silence the din.

  As Eva’s vision clouded with smudges of darkness, all she saw was her baby girl, crying and reaching out for her.

  One

  Michael Blackmore

  Lancaster Township, New Jersey

  July 16, 2009

  When the phone woke him at 3:15 a.m., Michael Blackmore knew Amber was in trouble again: the sixth sense of a parent.

  He grabbed the phone between the second and third ring, trying to answer before it woke Margie.

  “Yes?” he asked, not bothering to look at the caller ID. No one but Amber called so late.

  He was in the middle of wondering what his daughter needed this time — a ride, money, or maybe bailout on another DUI. She was 22, and at risk of dropping out of college, and crapping her future, if she didn’t get it together. For Mike, the line between tough love and support was a high wire. At some point, you had to stand at the nest’s edge and watch your child try to stay airborne.

  It wasn’t Amber. It was Detective Lou Santori, an old friend and former colleague. “Mike?” he said. “It’s Lou.”

  “Hey Lou, what’s wrong?”

  “I don’t know how to say this.”

  Lou was never short for words.

  “What is it?” Mike asked.

  “It’s Amber … ”

  Mike felt the lump in his throat. She wasn’t just in trouble this time.

  This wasn’t a call for Daddy to come fix another problem, this was a problem no one could fix.

  Mike was at the rundown motel within 20 minutes. The Atlanta was a seedy joint known during Mike’s time on the force as a haven for prostitution and drugs. He stepped out of his SUV, into the sweltering summer night and surreal circus of flashing red lights, yellow police tape, curious onlookers, and officers avoiding eye contact. There were already news vans setting up in the parking lot: media vultures to feast on the morbid.

  His gut twisted and spilled, each second an agonizing hour until he found Lou in front of the open door of Room 113.

  Lou was talking with three other cops, and stepped forward to meet Mike, eyes urgent.

  “Before you go in there, I have to tell you, it’s bad.”

  Mike’s heart raced faster, dread in his veins. Guts churned. “How bad?”

  “The worst I’ve ever seen,” Lou said. Lou had worked homicide for 16 years. He added, “You might want not want to see this, but I couldn’t not call you.”

  “No,” Mike said, “I have to.”

  Lou ushered him past the officers outside the room. He had probably explained who Mike was — to those who didn’t already know him or hadn’t worked with him — before his arrival.

  A crime scene photographer was still snapping photos as Lou led Mike into the room.

  His daughter was in pieces.

  The impact of seeing Amber dead and mutilated like savaged livestock sent Mike to his knees as if someone had swept his feet from beneath him. He didn’t get up. Couldn’t get up.

  He could only stare, shock like dirt in his throat.

  Amber’s naked corpse was splayed on the bed. Crude blood “doodles” desecrated her flesh.

  What kind of sick fuck does this to someone?

  Her head, cut off, sat on the dresser — a prop — eyes wide, hair pulled into pigtails, lips smeared with garish red, like the Joker.

  Mike tried telling himself it wasn’t her as his mind flashed through memories that swore otherwise — starting as an infant so tiny and delicate in his arms to a little girl frightened of monsters in her closet at bedtime, staring up at her daddy like a hero who came to protect her until she fell asleep in his arms.

  But he had failed his daughter: The monster had gotten her.

  Thoughts and questions battered his brain until one rose above the others — why?

  Why my baby?

  Aug. 14, 2009

  9:18 p.m.

  Mike sat at the Lucky Puck’s wraparound bar. The NHL didn’t start until October, so the televisions lining the joint’s walls were broadcasting a blend of old Devils games and other sports to a mostly blue- collar room, interested in drinking, playing pool, and darts, in that order. The place stank of smoke, alcohol, and all the rest of the stuff that soured the air around loud rock and dance music.

  Mike feigned interest in the largest of the bar televisions while keeping an eye on the bartender: Derrick Reynolds of Apartment 215 Chauncey Lane, who was working his magic on a gaggle of women at the other end of the bar.

  Derrick, whose father, Stan, owned the place, was one of the last people to see Amber alive on the night she died. Her credit card was used at the bar four hours before she was found. Derrick had processed her order and registered her receipt for $23.59.

  Though Derrick wasn’t a suspect in Amber’s rape and murder — plenty of people saw her leave alone — he wasn’t forthcoming with police when questioned. There was something Lou hadn’t liked about the guy, so he let Mike know.

  Now Mike was paying a visit to the bar to see what he could find.

  Derrick was big at 6 foot 4 — four inches taller than Mike — and seemed around 2
40 pounds of pure muscle coiled behind a tight fitting black T-shirt and jeans. While Mike was also 240 pounds, he was soft from sitting on his ass for six years writing his popular series of Denton Cox detective novels. If things went south with Derrick, Mike would be forced into Option B, nestled in the holster under his sand-colored coat.

  Mike kept nursing his Bud until the girls at the other end of the bar abandoned their spot in favor of some guys tossing darts. He drew a photo of Amber from his inside coat pocket and slid it on the counter as Derrick approached.

  Mike said nothing, waiting to see the bartender’s eyes, hungry to see his reaction. Derrick delivered, showing Mike recognition, followed by an immediate attempt to bury a truth in his eyes.

  “What’s this?” Derrick asked, his voice instantly defensive.

  “My daughter, Amber Blackmore,” Mike said, still holding Derrick’s eyes, “You remember her?”

  “Nah, should I?” Derrick asked, pretending to wipe the bar with a dingy, gray rag, avoiding Mike’s stare.

  “So, you don’t remember her coming in here on July 15?”

  “Hey, man, no offense, but a lot of people come in here, why would I remember her?”

  “Because you were one of the last people to see her alive.”

  Derrick stopped wiping, and met Mike’s eyes. He wasn’t bright, Mike could tell, but did wear a sinister intelligence, the sort that knew how to avoid and deflect trouble or, as evidenced by his rap sheet, meet it with violence.

  “What you sayin’?” Derrick asked.

  “I’m not saying anything, I just want to know what you remember about that night — who my daughter spoke to, if maybe she left with someone?”

 

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