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Tina herself disappeared after her release from the hospital. She was the only corroborating witness, and she was gone. Hence no action was taken against Angie. Still, Angie left the profession and moved away from Acker’s Gap. The last Bell heard, she’d gotten a job somewhere in central Pennsylvania. The wound on her face was expected to heal well. It was unlikely to leave even the ghost of a scar.
Bell had promised Jess that Angie would pay for what she’d done to his son, for the extra pain she had caused him. It was a promise Bell couldn’t keep, and it haunted her; the justice system, she knew, had no way to deal with certain kinds of crimes. Subtler ones. Crimes of the soul, she sometimes referred to them in her own mind. The justice system did fine with robbery and homicide and grand theft auto—but crimes of the soul were another matter entirely.
Bell still visited Evening Street as often as she could. Lily Cupp had asked for a duty change shortly after the night that none of them would ever forget; she was reassigned to the orthopedic ward at the main hospital. So Bell had made friends with the new head nurse: a beefy, ginger-haired man in his fifties named Steve Dilfer, who’d served as a navy corpsman in the Iraq War. Bell found something infinitely touching in the sight of a giant of a man in pale blue scrubs, sitting in a rocking chair while he sang to a newborn infant. The infant almost seemed to disappear in the crease between those muscular arms. Bell would sit down in the rocking chair next to Dilfer’s, and one of the other nurses—Sue or Molly or Maribeth—would bring over a baby for her to hold, too, until it was time for the child to receive a more sophisticated form of treatment, something more substantial than a song and a warm lap.
Of Abraham, she knew only that he survived, and was placed in foster care in another county when he was ready to leave Evening Street. Bell learned that Hinkle’s sister, a woman named Patty Moncrief, at one point had petitioned for custody, but irregularities were found in her application. She’d had her own problems with the law over the years, and lied about the particulars to the social workers, and was found out, and that was that.
Sunny pulled through, too. The Reverend Cholly had a friend in Blacksburg, Virginia, a single woman who had long dreamed of adopting a child, and he was able to arrange Sunny’s placement with her. When he ran into Bell on the streets of Acker’s Gap, he’d pull out his cell and show her the pictures of Sunny that the woman texted him each week, pictures that showed a laughing, smiling little girl—a girl who was much, much too small, and who had profound challenges ahead, but who still had a kind of sunrise in her eyes, a radiance that explained her name.
But Bell couldn’t keep track of all the children. There were too many. In the years to come, she would find herself thinking about them and wondering how those early struggles affected them as they grew up. Little was known about the permanent impact on a child of a mother’s addiction to prescription medication. Other kinds of drug addiction—crack, meth, heroin—had been around long enough for such studies to be valid, but pain pills were still too new, still such an unknown frontier, when it came to long-term medical research. And medical research, moreover, could tell you only so much; there were other variables at play. Softer things. There was the child’s personality and temperament. There was nutrition. Education. Parental interest. The endlessly churning alchemy of circumstance and initiative, accident and will. All the elements that combine to make a destiny.
Bell knew only two things for sure about the children: She knew that through no fault of their own, they had been born with a shadow over their lives, and she knew that they had started out those lives in a place called Evening Street.
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Copyright © 2016 by Julia Keller
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Chapter One
“Drugs.”
Darlene Strayer nodded. “Copy that,” she said. “So what’s second?”
“Drugs.”
“And third? Fourth? Fifth?”
“Drugs. Drugs. And drugs.”
“I’m sensing a pattern here.” Darlene smiled a quick, tight smile. She picked up her shot glass and moved it around in a small level circle, making the river-brown liquid wink and shiver. The whiskey didn’t slosh; it shivered. Barely.
Darlene had no intention of finishing her drink. Bell Elkins was sure of it. She had used the technique herself on occasion: Order a drink, because not to order one was too conspicuous, especially when your invitation had been casual but specific. Hey, want to meet for a drink? Take one tiny sip. No more. You needed to keep a clear head. Use the glass as a prop, a thing to do with your fingers, to stop those fingers from fidgeting. Lift the glass, tilt it around, make the liquid move. Lower the glass. Pretend to be just about to take a second sip. But somehow, you never do.
Because this little get-together, Bell had recognized right away, had nothing whatsoever to do with alcohol. Or with friendship—the friendship between them was nonexistent. And it certainly had nothing to do with a desire to spend time in the Tie Yard Tavern in Blythesburg, West Virginia, a bar as overstuffed as a sausage casing on this Saturday night in February, filled with too many people, too much bad country music, too much loud talk, and too many peanut shells on the painted concrete floor. Annoyingly, you crunched with every step. The bar’s only virtue was its location, halfway between Acker’s Gap and wherever it was that Darlene was heading.
So what was the actual purpose of this rendezvous, which had come about as the result of Darlene’s phone call two days ago?
Bell had no idea. She was letting Darlene run things. It was her show. Her choice of venue. Bell had indulged her opening question—“What’s the number one problem that prosecutors face in this area?”—even though they both knew what Bell’s answer would be.
It was always the same. Prescription drug abuse and its following swarm of illegal activities had upended life in the hills of Appalachia, turning ordinary people into addicts, and addicts into criminals. Unlike meth, unlike heroin or cocaine or molly or all the other sexy-sounding, forbidden substances that people pictured when they heard the word “drugs,” pain pills had ushered in their very own, very special version of hell.
“Asked you the same thing the last time we talked,” Darlene said. “Four years ago, remember? You gave me the same answer.”
“Things stay pretty consistent around here.” Bell raised her own glass. “Consistently hopeless.” She smiled as if she were making a joke, which they both knew was not the case. Then she set the glass back down again, also without drinking from it. The liquid in her glass was clear: Tanqueray and tonic. The dark stuff in Darlene’s was Wild Turkey. But the differences between these two women went far beyond their choice of drinks-they-weren’t-drinking.
Bell and Darlene had been classmates at Georgetown Law. During the subsequent two decades, Darlene became a federal prosecutor based in Northern Virginia, and had handled, over the years, the kinds of major criminal cases that landed her unsmiling, this-is-business face in photographs on the front page of The New York Times alongside the equally grim mugs of the attorney general and the FBI director. Bell was the prosecuting attorney for Raythune County, West Virginia. The closest she’d ever gotten to the front page of the Times was when she managed to dig up a copy in rural West Virginia and read it over her biscuit-and-gravy breakfast.
Oddly, as Bell had found herself musing now and again over the years, anyone who’d known them back in law school would have expected each woman to fulfill the other one’s fate. Both had grown up poor in rural areas—Bell right here in Raythune County, Strayer in Barr County—and yet it was Belfa Elkins who had seemed destined for a glittering career in a big city, surrounded by tall buildings and knotted traffic and a magisterial sense of importance, while Darlene Strayer was the misfit, the shy, slightly awkward and even somewhat gauche gi
rl who was never able to shed the small-town veneer of earnestness and yearning. Her clothes were never quite right; her hairstyle was always a few years out of date. She’d talked endlessly about returning to her hometown and using her law degree to help the people there escape the poverty and hopelessness that engulfed them.
Dang. Just look at us now, Bell thought, glancing across the battered wooden booth at the woman who, once again, had lifted her glass in order to not drink out of it.
Darlene was the one in the cool black suit. The one who owned the elegant Massachusetts Avenue town house along Embassy Row and the Sanibel Island condo. The one whose life was as smooth as a fitted sheet.
Bell was the one in the jeans and turtleneck sweater. The one who lived in Acker’s Gap, West Virginia, in a crumbling stone house built more than a century and a half ago. The one whose life was as rumpled as that same sheet, after a passel of rowdy kids has used the bed as a trampoline.
It was as if, late at night just after graduation from Georgetown, they’d met in some secret location and agreed to swap ambitions. And lives.
“I suppose I thought things had improved a little bit,” Darlene said.
“Really. That’s what you thought.” Bell didn’t even try to keep the skepticism out of her tone. Darlene, she knew, had access to more and better crime statistics than any county prosecutor could ever hope to obtain. Those stats were grim and getting grimmer.
“Well, maybe it’s what I hoped,” Darlene said. “Let’s put it that way.” She started to bend her fingers around the glass one more time, preparatory to another pointless lift.
But Bell had had enough. She reached across the table and stopped her hand. “Hey,” Bell said. “Let’s cut the small talk, okay? You’re busy. I’m busy. You drove a long way in some pretty shitty weather to get here tonight. So come on—why am I here? What do you really want?”
“Fine.” Darlene slipped her fingers out from under Bell’s grip. They didn’t like each other. They never had. They were cordial, but just. Two social encounters in twenty years—one in D.C. four years ago, at a class reunion, and now this—strained the outermost limits of each woman’s politeness allocation.
“Truth is,” Darlene went on, “I need your help.”
“Forgive me, but I’m trying to imagine how a federal prosecutor who routinely takes on special assignments from the attorney general of the United States could possibly need any assistance from a small-town DA in West Virginia.”
“I’m not a federal prosecutor anymore. I resigned last month.”
“Really.”
“I’m taking a little time off, and then I’ll be heading the litigation department of a D.C. law firm.” Darlene told her the name of the firm, but she didn’t have to; it was exactly the sort of practice that Bell would’ve expected her to join. It rivaled the snooty splendor and cool exclusivity of the law firm at which Bell’s ex-husband was a partner. Darlene and Sam Elkins would be like bought-and-paid-for bookends: two very talented attorneys who spent their time massaging the egos of millionaires.
It wasn’t Bell’s idea of a satisfied life, but it didn’t have to be. Free country, she reminded herself. To each her own.
Bell waited for Darlene to say more. When she didn’t, Bell started to speak.
“Listen, I’ve got to wind this up pretty soon because—”
“Jesus, Bell. Give me a minute, okay? Just hold on.” An exasperated Darlene shook her head. Her soft dark hair was cut so stylishly short—it looked like a velvet bathing cap, Bell had thought when she first spotted her across the crowded expanse of the Tie Yard Tavern—that not a strand moved. “Jesus,” Darlene repeated.
She took a brief sip of her drink. She coughed. She shook her head. Her shoulders rose and fell. She seemed to be recalibrating herself. “Look, Bell. This is about my father. Harmon Strayer.” She coughed again. Bell remained silent. Whatever it was that her former classmate needed to say to her, she’d say it when she was good and ready.
In the back of Bell’s mind there stirred a vague recollection of a story she’d been told a few years ago by another Georgetown alum. A story about Darlene Strayer’s father, a diagnosis of Alzheimer’s, and the long, lightless road to nowhere that the disease brought about.
“He died last week,” Darlene finally said.
“Sorry to hear that. Always hard to lose a family member.”
“Yeah. Ninety-one years old. It was rough toward the end. Hell—it was rough all the way through. He was living in Thornapple Terrace. Do you know it? An Alzheimer’s-care place over in Muth County. Pretty close to his home—although why the hell that even mattered, I don’t know, because he didn’t have a friggin’ clue where he was. He’d been there about three years. Ever since it opened.”
“I think I’ve heard of it.” Bell was being polite. The name meant nothing to her. That wasn’t surprising. New eldercare facilities seemed to pop up monthly; an aging population riddled with end-of-life issues such as Alzheimer’s and dementia made such facilities the only growth area around here. Bell couldn’t keep track of them all. Typically they were christened with names like Sunnyside and Brooksdale and Willow Walk and Friendship Bay—happy, soothing, cheerful names. Names that tried to obscure the reality of what went on past the pleasant lobby and the carpeted corridors: a nosedive into decline and a ragged death. Such places were one-way roads paved with sorrow. But they were better, she supposed, than what used to happen years ago, when a deteriorating older relative was left to rot in a back bedroom with a portable commode and the blinds pulled shut.
“Thornapple Terrace,” Darlene said, “is pretty expensive. I thought I was going to have to take out a second mortgage just to keep him there. It’s supposed to be one of the best.”
“You don’t sound convinced.”
“I’ve got my reasons.” She scowled into her glass. “That’s why I’m—”
A commotion suddenly erupted in the booth next to theirs, a tangled snarl of an argument jump-started by beer and bad manners. Bell had seen the trio of twentysomethings on her way in. She couldn’t see them now—the back of the bench seat rose too high—but she got the gist of the fight based on the voices.
Two women were quarreling—shrieking, really—over whether or not the man across from them was, as one of the women had just eloquently dubbed him, a shithead, because he had been dating them simultaneously, without either one knowing about it. Until tonight. “He is too a shithead,” the woman said, and the other countered wittily, “Is not.”
This went on for a few more dreary minutes, while the man said nothing. Bell couldn’t see his face, but she imagined he was lapping up the attention, even though his evening would probably end with a Bud Light bottle smashed over his head and a lot of blood loss.
Then, as quickly as it had begun, the argument broke off. The voices dropped to inoffensive mumbles.
Darlene waited until she was sure it was over, and then spoke again. “Anyway, it’s been a challenge, emotionally as well as financially. There wasn’t anyone else to help. My mother died when I was in law school. And I was an only child.”
“I’m sure you did your best.” Bell had no idea if Darlene had done her best or not, but it seemed like the kind of thing you were supposed to say.
“You’re sure of that, are you?” Darlene shot back. Her tone was cold, belligerent.
Bell had a flash of memory about this woman, from back in their Georgetown days. Darlene Strayer hated bullshit. She brutally dismissed well-meant clichés and platitudes like a soldier waving around a saber at a batch of flies. Trying to console her was a dangerous business. You might very well come away with bloody fingers.
“From the little I know of you, Darlene,” Bell said carefully, “you’re a woman who would do right by her father. That’s all I meant.”
“Yeah. Sure.” The sarcasm in her voice was heavy and dark. She rearranged her elbows on the wooden tabletop. There was a restlessness in her movements, an ill-concealed frustration.
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“What’s really going on here?” Bell said.
Darlene didn’t look at her. Instead she dropped her eyes and studied that tabletop. It was the color of mud, and it was shiny from repeated coats of shellac, which only served to preserve the undesirable, like a fly trapped in an ice cube. The surface had been roughed up over the years by the assorted shitheads and their assorted girlfriends who had occupied this booth and used it as a scratch pad for their switchblades. It had absorbed their spilled beer and sopped up their unused dreams.
The tabletop, Bell thought as she watched her, didn’t belong anywhere near Darlene’s present life—a life defined by the sleek haircut, the elegant wool suit, the pressed white silk blouse, the necklace of tiny pearls. Yet it was still a part of her, too, still a part of her deep and abiding past. Darlene, like Bell, had tumbled out of a scuffed-up, stripped-down childhood. She had risen above all that—far, far above it, and good for her—but when she looked down at that creased and greasy tabletop, Bell guessed, it probably came back to her, all of it, just for a moment. And a moment was long enough.
“When we were in law school,” Darlene said.
Bell waited.
“When we were in law school,” Darlene repeated, needing to start again, “I didn’t like you very much. I’m sure you figured that out.” She lifted her head. She was looking at Bell now, with a solemn, unblinking stare.
Bell shrugged. “If there was one seat left in the Williams Law Library, and that seat was next to me, you’d leave the building.”
“Was I really that bad?”
“I’m exaggerating. But, yeah—I picked up on your attitude, and just steered clear.”
“We come from the same place. And I wanted to be the Appalachian success story, you know? I wanted to be that woman. I didn’t care to share any of it with you. Plus, I was jealous.”