This story is part of an ongoing series.
The chronological order of my stories is now listed in WifeWatchman's biography.
Feedback and
constructive
criticism is very much appreciated, and I encourage feedback for ideas.
This story contains graphic scenes, language and actions that might be extremely offensive to some people. These scenes, words and actions are used only for the literary purposes of this story. The author does not condone murder, racial language, violence, rape or violence against women, and any depictions of any of these in this story should not be construed as acceptance of the above.
Dedicated to the memory of John Denver. Gone too soon.
Part 1 - Prologue
Dawn, Wednesday, June 27th. Carole was absolutely beside herself with excitement as I put the last of the luggage into the back of our new Mercedes-Benz SUV. She was more than eager to begin this trip, and had been since we'd told her that we were going to Apple Grove, where Grandma used to live and where Daddy had grown up.
The SUV had been a gift from Dr. P. Harvey Eckhart, and it was enhanced with a few features, like bulletproof run-flat tires, bulletproof windows and sides, though not to the extent my Police SUV was armored. Laura had had some 'interesting' modifications made via the 'THEFT' light, restrictor plates, and other monitoring devices most people don't know are in their own cars. The former Deputy Director of the CIA for Science and Technology
was
well aware, and she made it so that the tracking could be turned off.
And unlike most cars that can only go about 105 mph due to
Government
-mandated restrictors on vehicles, this baby could get to 200 mph if we needed it to. We hoped we'd never need for it to, but we tested it on some farm roads between 'The Vision' in Coltrane County and the southern end of our County. Laura and I did not ride together, 'just in case', so Cindy rode with each of us, and also drove it herself... and set the speed record for the vehicle. It was also fortunate for us that Deputy Strait has a crush on Cindy, which saved her from a brutal speeding ticket.
"You ready to go, Carole?" I asked.
"Yes, Daddy!" Carole all but yelled. "I can't wait to see where you went to school!" I feared she might be disappointed, but I was also glad she was eager to start school herself in the Fall. The School System had determined that my daughter was way past Kindergarten, so she'd be starting 1st grade immediately. I'd started 1st grade when I was five, also.
"Okay, go get Grandma." I said. Carole ran to the house at breakneck speed. A moment later, Laura came out with Jim and strapped him into the child seat in the middle of the backseat. Carole's was on the left, behind the driver's side, and my mom would sit on the right side. I'd teased my mom about needing a child seat, and got a punch on the shoulder for it.
"I'm coming, dear, I'm coming." I heard my mother say. Then she and Carole appeared at the doorway. Laura went back in and set the alarm. I called the Duty Desk at Police Headquarters and told them I was officially out of here until Thursday, July 5th; they acknowledged and wished me a safe and happy trip.
"Okay, we got everything?" I asked.
"Even your swords." Laura said acerbically. Yes, they were coming with us. So was the red crowbar, my TCPD Badge, and my FBI Consultant badge... just in case. We hoped there would not be a 'just in case'.
"Why isn't Bowser coming, Daddy?" asked Carole.
"He and Buddy are guarding The Cabin and your brothers Ian and Ross." I said. "Molly, Cindy, and Callie are staying with them there, too." Indeed, the Cindy Clan and Molly's boys would require adult canine supervision, and would get it for the next few days. The dogs would get skritchins and lots of play with Ian and Ross.
We pulled out and worked our way through town, then onto the highway west to the State Line. As we crossed the State Line River, Carole began singing "Over the river and through the woods, to Grandmother's house we go..." Where had she learned that, I wondered? And not yet five years old for another month...
Part 2 - Going Home
"I hear her voice in the morning hour as she calls me, 
The radio reminds me of my home far away, 
Driving down the road I get a feeling 
That I should have been home yesterday, yesterday..."
--- John Denver, 'Country Roads'
There were smudges on the left rear window. Carole had pressed her nose to that window many times as she watched out with avid interest at what was along the roads, the same as I'd done when I was a boy... always wondering what was out there, always loving riding on interstate highways.
As we came up the highway towards the town of Rome, I felt a sense of wariness creep into me. After all, this was my first visit back to Apple Grove since I'd helped the FBI (and the military) defeat Sheriff Spaulding and his insidious plans to murder every black person in Providence Springs. Both my mother and myself had heard good reports about things up here, and one of two reasons for our trip was a by-product of that liberation of Fillmore County.
"Is this Apple Grove, Daddy?" Carole asked as we came into Rome.
"No, Carole, this is Rome." I said as I turned left onto the road to Apple Grove. "We're almost there." I'd expected a ton of 'Are we there yet?', but Carole had been surprisingly good, only speaking out when she needed to use the potty.
We passed by the Sheriff Headquarters and County Jail on the left. "Look, Daddy!" said Carole. "They have a jail, too!"
"Yes, most counties have one." I said.
"Ours is bigger at home." said Carole astutely. "Is that because you bust more bad guys, Daddy?" That got Laura's eyes bulging, and my mom chuckled.
"I don't know, honey." I said. "We just have more people to begin with."
As we rode into Apple Grove, I pointed out the Elementary School. It looked a lot smaller than I remembered as a child. Carole was impressed. Then we went by the old Apple Grove High School building. It was now the Middle School for the County. A new Fillmore County High School had been built in the last couple of years, and now students from all parts of the county went to the high school together. And FCHS had won the State Championship in football the previous Fall. I considered that to be 'very cool'.
"Grandma, was Ap-ple Grove like this when you lived here?" asked Carole.
"In some ways, dear." said my mom. "And in some ways, it's changed. It seems smaller than it used to be. Some people have moved away. The entire Douglas clan, Don, after you busted them as part of Superior Bloodlines."
"Yeah." I said quietly. Some of the 'old white money' families had not liked the changes that had come to Apple Grove, and had left. I idly wondered if I should trace where they'd gone to... who knows what mischief they were making in their new locations...
"Where are we staying, Daddy?" asked Carole.
My mother answered "My old friend Mrs. Starnes owns a small house next to hers. You remember her daughter Cheryl Starnes, Don? She was Elizabeth's age."
"Oh yes, I remember." I said. Cheryl's son Kip Starnes had figured into one of my old cases. (
Author's note: 'The Murdered Football Player'.
)
We pulled into the drive of the small, two bedroom house. Phyllis went next door, and she and Mrs. Starnes hugged and talked like parakeets. They finally moseyed over with keys to our guest house. Carole very quickly determined that the potty facilities worked while I brought in luggage and Phyllis and Laura introduced Jim to Mrs. Starnes.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Mrs. Starnes had insisted on having us for lunch, and a few of my mother's old friends also were there. There was a great amount of gossip and catching up going on, and they were agog as my mother confirmed that Carole had been the little girl that was rescued from the exploding building the Christmas before.
"Why that poor child!" exclaimed Mrs. Starnes. "How traumatic!"
"She seems to be okay, though." said Laura. "She doesn't wake up crying from bad dreams or anything."
"So fortunate." said one of the old ladies. "A real miracle of the Lord. But you're used to those miracles after what you did here a few years ago, Donny, isn't that right?"
I smiled. "Well, I don't think I've done anything at the 'miracle' level yet." I said. "But I am thankful that my daughter and my Police Officer that saved her are all right."
The parakeets continued to flutter as I took Carole to get second helpings. Old ladies usually only make enough for everyone to have one portion, and children smaller portions. Growing girls like Carole exceeded those suppositions. There weren't too many leftovers, but Carole ate a full second portion of squash and a slice of ham. It is possible that she did not partake of the stringbeans.
"Oh, the big news nowadays is that farm deal that fell through." said one of the ladies as I got back to the table. "A group of young black men from Providence Springs were putting together financing to buy the old Phillips farm and the old Taylor farm next door, from the big company that had owned the farms. But it didn't go through. Seems a professor from State A&M looked at the soil for them after old Mr. Bennett asked him to. Mr. Bennett, he's the best farmer in the State. He tells the radio station when it's going to rain and when it's going to rain ugly, and they put it out on the airwaves because he's always right."
"Anyway," she continued, "he looked at that farmland, then the professor did some soil sampling, and said whatever fertilizer they'd used wasn't good, and might have done more harm than good. The boys buying the farm were going to get some soil testing done, and the company backed out of the deal. Paid the back-out fees to the Banks, too. Very strange, if you ask me." I glanced over at my mother, and she glanced back at me.
"When did this happen, ma'am?" I asked.
"Oh, the Policeman is now interested." said one of the other ladies.
"You bet." I said.
"It was about a month ago, Donny." said Mrs. Starnes. "The week before Memorial Day."
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
My mom stayed to talk with the old ladies while I gave Laura and the kids a better tour of the area. We went through Downtown, seeing the rebuilt building with the pharmacy on the ground level, and I remembered Spaulding burning that building down after shooting Timmy Owens's dog Skippy. I wondered how Timmy and the dog I'd given him, Mr. Crowbar, were doing.
We went northeast, through streets with houses, coming up to one that was on the outskirts of town, and had rows of corn behind it and grassy space stretching to the east. A 'For Sale' sign by the front walk had an 'Under Contract' sign across it.