Hands — short story

Warning: violence against humans and animals (not gratuitous). Bleakest story I’ve ever written.

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Grzegorz Koslowski felt the tension in the streets as a tightness in his lanky frame even as he walked home, guitar slung over his shoulder. At sixteen, the guerilla battles of the streets of Krakow seemed an inconvenience, a discussion around the family’s dinner table as they took in one artist or another until things cooled off, an admonition to be careful when he went out with his friends or busked in the Stare Miasto, another long-haired kid with a guitar among the historical buildings of the Stare.

When the fire trucks sped past him, he wondered idly if one of the factions – and there were so many – had bombed a bus or a newsstand. Unconsciously, he walked faster down the side street and the townhouse his family occupied, close to the theatre district. His family, generations of actors, thrived in their world of art and artifice.

Turning the corner, he saw the fire engines at the end of his street and started to run. The jagged, flaming maw in the line of houses barely registered as his legs pumped, as his heart pounded, as he ran to meet with his family, to seek assurance. The fire burned brighter than the streetside trees that had just started turning with the cooler weather.

Someone caught him as he tried to break through the crowd that ringed the scene of what was surely an explosion. “No, Grzesiek, you must not go in! It isn’t safe!”  He struggled out of the grasp and turned to see his neighbor, Piotr Nowak, tears running down his face.

“My family!” he stammered, fighting the man as the arms came around him again to restrain him. Greasy black smoke roiled; the stench permeated his lungs.

“Składam wyrazy szczerego współczucia,” Piotr said, the old Polish formula for grief. I offer you my deepest condolences on this dark day. We will search for them when it is safe,” Piotr, his lined face grey, assured Grzegorz. “They likely never knew what hit them.”

Grzegorz clung to a lamppost, crying. A hand reached out to soothe him. It wasn’t his mother’s hand, which had brushed back his red hair as a child and even as the gangly adolescent he’d become.
She would never brush back his hair again.
He clung to the lamppost as the others in the crowd left him to his grief. After forever, or no time at all, a voice, a woman’s voice whispered in his ear: “We can help you find them.”

“Find who?” Grzegorz sobbed. “My family is dead.”

“The ones who did this to your family.” Grzegorz turned around and saw a stranger, a woman almost his height, as slender as he was, with porcelain skin and black hair and dark eyes. Older than he, if he read her assured carriage right.

“Come with me. You have no place to go. I’m Dominika Wojcik, and I can help you.” She took his hand and led him away from the flames he would have thrown himself into.

Grzegorz couldn’t remember the route they had taken, the trams and buses. He could remember the last time he spoke to his mother in crystal clear detail, the triviality of telling her he’d be back for dinner. His father had teased him about being a hippie with his long hair and his guitar, and his younger sister Liliana had laughed along. On his walk to the corner he preferred for busking, he had considered where he would fit in the family business after going to college for the arts:  performance – acting or music? Technical work backstage? His future, at that moment, had been totally open.
His future now? He saw none. His family lay at the crater that had been his home before the bomb hit it. Mother and father, sister and the two brothers, Jakub and Antoni, one older and one younger, who had been arguing over the design of a dragon prop.

“This is our stop,” Dominika said, taking his hand like a baby, walking him out the front of the bus as if he had lost all volition. As he had.

They walked up to a shabby two-story house in a neighborhood pocked with burned out and boarded up buildings. This house had only a few windows not boarded up, and a large black X had been spray-painted on its front.

Dominika led him inside and into the living room, lit only by a battery-operated lantern, the remaining window shrouded with blackout curtain, where a decrepit couch shared space with a couple bedrolls – and a rack with two semi-automatic weapons by the door.

“What is this place?” Grzegorz asked, looking around at scuffed walls. A portion of the ceiling had fallen, exposing lathe. A person in one of the bedrolls stirred and stared at him.

“This is your home now,” Dominika assured him. A place to live – he hadn’t considered that. He had no clothes, no bed, no food to his name, but here he would be taken care of. “Let me introduce you to someone, Grzes.”

Through the haze that had settled into his mind, he felt his shoulders tense up as if responding to a blow. He ignored it, as it didn’t seem pressing in the state of grey that cocooned him.
Dominika walked him to the kitchen, a room with greasy walls, to a man who cooked a large pot of zurek, bread soup, over a camping stove. Grzegorz sat down in a chair at Dominika’s bidding, although the sour smell of the soup turned his stomach.

“You’re Grzegorz Koslowski,” the man said, turning to him. “I’m Aleksey.” He stepped over to where Grzegorz sat. The man looked to be in his late thirties, with blond hair cut short in a military style cut. He wore black and close-fitting clothes. 

The tenseness of Grzegorz’s shoulders returned. “How do you know my name?”

“We know – knew – of your family. I’m sorry to hear about them. Their involvement in the Resistance was admirable.”

“What’s this Resistance?” Grzegorz muttered. “My family were theatre people. They didn’t do politics.”

“Did you ever notice your family’s guests around the dinner table?” Aleksey gestured with the spoon. “Educated people, well-spoken people.”

“Theatre people,” Grzegorz reiterated, feeling tears threaten as he thought of conversations at the dinner table. “Intellectuals. Poets. Nothing more than that.”

“Members of the intelligentsia,” Aleksey responded. “People against the current order of things. Against government oppression.”

“Was my family killed for this?” Grzegorz demanded.

“No,” Dominika said, taking Grzegorz’s hand. “Your family were killed because of you.”

Grzegorz stood up, flinging Dominika’s hand away. “How can you say that? There’s no reason why my family should be killed for me,” he shouted. He felt the threatened tears break, and he dropped back into his chair, hiding his face in his hands, pulling himself together.

“Grzes,” Dominika said softly, her hand on his shoulder, bending down to his ear, “I know it’s hard to hear. But you have a secret, a gift, a very important and dangerous talent that they wanted to stop. You were supposed to have been in that building when it was bombed.”

“A gift?” Grzegorz muttered. “I have no gift. I’m the least talented in my family, maybe good for running the lights; that’s it. Any one of my family – my father is gifted with words …” Was, he remembered. No longer. He felt himself turn inside out, his grief as his skin – no, not now, not here – he pulled himself back into the present, where he would not feel.

“Grzegorz,” Aleksey commanded, “come with me. The soup will wait.” Alexsey fished out a soup bone from the pot, ran cold water over it, and threw it into a bowl from the dish drainer. Grzegorz, knowing nothing else to do, obediently followed Alexsey out the back door of the grimy kitchen, Dominika trailing behind them.
Outside, a dog rummaged in the garbage. “He’s nobody’s dog. Always here begging from us,” Alexsey established as he whistled for the cur. The nondescript black dog loped over, ribs showing, tongue lolling. As he arrived, Alexsey placed the bone on the ground. As the dog started gnawing on the bone, Alexsey took a blade from his belt and slit its throat. Blood flowed as the dog collapsed and twitched in its death throes.

“Heal it,” Alexsey commanded.

“What the hell do you mean?” Grzegorz yelled back, his stomach roiling.

“Lay your damned hands on it and wish it alive!” Aleskey snapped.
Grzegorz stared at the dog as he lay hands on it, willing it alive, like his parents weren’t. Nothing happened for a moment, two. Then the dog began to breathe in gasps, then wriggle upward, the gash on its throat healed.

“I did not do that,” Grzegorz stammered.

“You did that,” Aleksey countered, grabbing Grzegorz’ shirt and leaving a bloody handprint on it. “That is your talent.”
Dominika looked at him wide-eyed, like he had performed a miracle. Which he had.

The dog pushed at Grzegorz’s hand with his muzzle, and Grzegorz petted him absentmindedly, slumping into himself.
Grzegorz and Dominika sat on the bedroll that Blazej, a taciturn young man barely older than Grzegorz, had spread out for Grzegorz in a room with two other bedrolls, currently unoccupied. Grzegorz had shed the clothes that the dog had bled on, and someone had tossed him a faded t-shirt and sweats, both black, that smelled slightly of smoke. Grzegorz shuddered.

“Did my parents know I had this talent?” Grzegorz demanded of Dominika after Alexsey wandered off to some unknown night mission with a couple men Grzegorz hadn’t met.

“How demanding you are!” Dominika chuckled, a disturbing sound to Grzegorz’ ears. “Of course, they knew. It’s a family thing. Apparently, it hadn’t shown up in a few generations. They knew you might have it, anyhow.”

Grzegorz thought. He thought of his aunts and uncles, scattered across the world; his remaining grandmother in England. Had she fled to escape rumors? He had no way of knowing. “How did you find out?”

“We know these things,” Dominika said, putting her arm around Grzegorz’s shoulder. It felt strange, but good. Comforting. “We research families for these talents. There’s more than just you, you know.” She kicked her shoes off. “I have my own talent.”

“What is your talent?” Grzegorz queried.

“I start fires.” Dominika looked at her hands.

Grzegorz closed his eyes and saw the burning home that entombed his parents. “You didn’t kill my parents, did you?”

“The people who killed your parents wanted you dead, I told you. We need you alive.” Dominika squeezed his shoulder.

“Need me? For what?”

“Go to sleep, Grzes. You have had a rough day. We can talk in the morning.”

Dominika left Grzegorz alone, but the other occupants of the room soon came back, smelling of sweat and burnt gunpowder.
He would not cry with others in the room. He was a man; they were men.

Before dawn, Aleksey and Blazej and a brown-haired man named Jan dragged Grzegorz out of his bedroll where he had lay staring at the ceiling, recalling the fiery chasm that was his family’s resting place. They took him to the front porch and offered him a hunk of bread. “Sorry about the food, but it is what it is. We live a hard life,” Jan snorted.

“Pardon me for asking,” Grzegorz inquired, “but who are you? You seem to know an awful lot about who I am.”

“We’re patriots,” Aleksey said, gesturing with a hunk of bread. “We want to restore Poland to its old glory. None of this fighting in the streets; we want the country to be the pride of all Europe, safe for families and the mother of all.”

Grzegorz winced; he had no mother. “And how do you propose to restore this country to whatever heights you believe it has lost?”

“We defend it against its enemies. All the street fighting you see here? It’s because our government is weak and cannot protect the country.” Aleksey shrugged. “We thirst for a stronger government, one which will not permit this turmoil to happen.”

“Which government?” Grzegorz inquired. “Which faction?”

“Czerwona Przyszłość,” Blasej broke in. “Red Future.”

“The Communists?” There were Communists in government already, Grzegorz mused; they didn’t need to fight in the streets.

“Yes and no,” Aleksey noted. “Those Communists are weak and will never see their ideas brought forth in the government. No, Red Future has money and power on its side, and vision.  They want to create peace and get rid of all these street riots.”

That sounded like a good idea. Then maybe people wouldn’t have to die. He thought about his family again, who had died for – what? Were they randomly targeted? Were they the important people Aleksey said they were? Were they killed because of him?
He closed his eyes and took another bite of bread.

By that afternoon, Grzegorz’s mind was full of Red Future’s aims: To stop the street fighting. To unite the country under Red Future’s cause – legally, of course; they would never overthrow the government. To make the country great again – “

“Isn’t the country great now?” he had asked; Poland had come out of its Communist years with one of the fastest growing economies in Europe.

“Economically, yes. But look at these attacks we’ve been facing from various factions. Look at your family. Street battles started by anarchists and foreigners. Is that our way of life? We have our church, and our families we need to protect.” Aleksey passed the bottle of clear liquid to Grzegorz; Grzegorz took a swig and the potent bimber, moonshine, seared his throat. The pain of his family’s deaths retreated in the haze of camaraderie built with the passing of the bottle.

Later, as the afternoon paled at the edges of the blackout curtains, Grzegorz lay in his bedroll, alone in the room; the men had gone on another mission. Alone, he thought, he could mourn, but try as he would, he felt too numb to react. We are men, he thought, remembering the boasts and toasts he had shared with Aleksey and Jan.

He heard someone slip through the open door.” It’s just me,” Dominika whispered as she sat down beside his head. ” Are you doing okay?”

“I guess,” he grunted, feeling impolite. “No, really,” he reiterated.” I’m okay.”

“I just don’t think you should be alone,” Dominika soothed. “But I’m here for you.” She lay down beside him and put her arm around him. “Is that better?”

It was, a little. “Yes,” he said.

Then she leaned in and kissed him, pulling back the blanket, exposing his borrowed black sweats. Her mouth, her hands bruised him, but he did not fight, because he felt powerless, because the act kept the dull ache from him for those few moments.

Soon after Dominika left, or a hundred years later, the sun, through a crack in the shades, diminished and then faded. Dinnertime passed, and he remembered that he hadn’t eaten since the bread that morning.

Finally steps ascended the stairs and clambered into his room.
“You,” Jan called out. “Grzesiek ,wakeup. We have need of you.”
“What for ?” Grzegorz sat up. Aleksey stood in the doorway; Jan stood just outside.

“We have found the man who killed your family. We know where he goes to drink. You can take your revenge on him, right in that tavern, and no one will know the better.”

“You know it’s him?” Grzegorz asked.

“Of course, we do. We have been following him these two nights.” Aleksey sounded certain, more certain than Grzegorz felt.
“Don’t you want to get yours back?” Dominika chided. “Be a man.”

Grzegorz felt a rage rise in him, a rage without words. “Take me to him ,” Grzegorz decided, feeling power replace the lassitude that had overwhelmed him.

The three, Aleksey, Jan, and Grzegorz stood in the doorway of a noisy, working class tavern while Dominika stood as lookout. One man sat at the bar next to an empty seat, too well-dressed for the place, occasionally looking toward the door as if he waited for someone. “That’s him,” Aleksey whispered. “Go in there. All it would take is for you to lay hands on him and — “

Grzegorz hesitated.” I will not kill him in plain sight in a room full of people,” he mumbled under his breath, feeling his knees weaken.
“Go to the alley. We will bring him to you ” Jan instructed.

Grzegorz fled for the alley, walking past Dominika, and waited. He stared at the wall as if he could memorize every brick, every crudely scrawled piece of graffiti. He was a man. Aleksey and Jan had said so, hadn’t they? And men did what they had to to protect, to serve a higher ideal.

He heard a scuffle at the entry to the alley and looked up from his hands. Jan held the man with arms pinned behind him while Aleksey punched him again and again in the face and stomach.  The man soon slumped in defeat.

Grzegorz tensed as they brought the man toward him. He thought to flee for just a moment, but —

“Grzegorz,” Aleksey demanded, “Do it now. “

“Do what?” Gzegorz stammered, knowing well what Aleksey asked.

” Kill the man,” Dominika shrieked. “He killed your family.”

The man mumbled, pale: “I didn’t kill your family. I don’t even know who your family is.”

“Grzesiek !” Aleksey commanded.

The rage returned, cutting through the confusion. Grzegorz touched the man’s arm, feeling the stickiness of blood. He thought of his parents, lying in the rubble of his house, of his sister Liliana, only ten, who had been a light in his life, dead with his parents. He felt their deaths and transferred that ice into the body of the man in front of him. He felt the man slump between the two who restrained him, dead weight. Dead.

His heart did not surge from revolutionary zeal nor did the ache in his heart lessen. Grzegorz’s family were still dead. The pain in his chest, the constant feeling of the tears about to break now mingled with the breath-stopping horror of being damned.

“Look how powerful you are!” Dominika cooed, patting his shoulder. “We need you .”

They needed him. To be their killer. Because guns were obvious and could be guarded against. He could have killed the man in the tavern, and everyone would have seen it as a heart attack. In his mind, he saw himself lay hands on the mayor, the police, even the Prime Minister, Over and over people slumped at his touch. ceased to breathe.
“No,” he cried out. He reached toward the man, the stranger, to touch him, to raise him back to life —

Aleksey and Jan dropped the body and grabbed for him . He twisted from their grasp and fled.

Grzegorz knew not how far he had run, nor where he ended up, until he looked at the sodden ruin of his family home, surrounded by red tape. “Mama i Tata,” he murmured. “Mother, father.” He whispered the names of his siblings: “Liliana, Antoni, Jakub.” Then he prayed: O mój Jezu, przebacz nam nasze grzechy. O my Jesus, forgive us our sins …

“There is never a sin so big that it can’t be forgiven,” a man’s voice said. Grzegorz turned to see a stout, greying man standing behind him. A grandfather, no doubt.

“How about murder?” Grzegorz stammered, feeling himself torn inside out, with his grief as his skin.

“Under duress? After your family dies and someone takes advantage of your grief?”

“How do you know who I am?” Grzegorz slumped back against the light pole.

“I knew your parents. I don’t know if you remember me, but I have eaten with your family once in a great while.”

Grzegorz squinted and saw a slightly familiar face, a man who would come in the evenings and talk with his parents while he himself strummed in the basement. “Mr. Przybyszewski, right?”

“Call me Przymyslaw, ok?” Przymeslaw nodded, looking benignant, like a Santa Claus in training. “Would you have brought him back if you could?”

Grzegorz considered, the trembling starting in his shoulders and overtaking his body. He had killed. “How do you know about this?”

“The truth? I pay attention to things around me. For example, Red Future, who present themselves as the hand of a Communist renaissance instead of the tool of a Russian oligarch.” Przemyslaw made a dismissive gesture.

“Who are you with?” Grzegorz demanded. “How do you know this?”

“I’m just a storyteller, but I have friends in the elected government. I believe that we should keep or change our government by straightforward means – elections and, of course, the time-honored peaceful protest. But,” Przemyslaw sobered, “the question is ‘Who are you with?’”

“I’m with nobody. Dominika said that my family was killed because of me.”

“They were,” Przemyslaw said, shaking his head, “but do you think it’s strange they never spoke of who killed them?”

The knowledge hit Grzegorz with a sickening jolt. Dominika with her fire talent, looking at her hands. The black sweats he wore, smelling of smoke. Dominika’s convenient placement at the burning house. The fact that Aleksey and Dominika knew who he was …

The trembling became too much and he collapsed to the ground, weeping, naked except for his grief.

“What now?” Grzegorz asked as he sat in Przemyslaw’s cozy and cluttered living room, after a bath and clean clothes and as much stew as he could manage to eat.”

“You could go back to Red Future,” Przemyslaw ventured. “You could go out on your own, where your open nature will make you a victim of some other faction. You no doubt go with whichever uncle had your guardianship. Or you could come live with me until you come of age. I think that whoever has been assigned as your guardian would relinquish that to me if I put forth that I’ll apprentice you.”

“What would you have me do for you?” Grzegorz growled, sensing that his open nature was a relic of his earlier life, the one where he was a child and his family still lived.

“I would have you finish your schooling. And mourn your family. And develop some way to deal with your gift.”

“Gift? More like a curse! Grzegorz muttered.

“It is a gift,” Pyemyslaw corrected. “You’re not the only one thus gifted, if the stories are correct. The gifts are usually carried from generation to generation, but some arise spontaneously.”

“Do you have a gift?”

“I don’t believe so, unless the ability to memorize people’s lives is a talent beyond ordinary ability. I am a storyteller, is all.”

“I highly doubt that, given your penchant for, um, storytelling. Just don’t do me dirty. I’ll – God, no,” Grzegorz stammered as he saw Przemyslaw’s face turn pale. “Never that, not for as long as I live.”
Przemyslaw exhaled loudly, and the tension bled from the room. 

“Now for you to get some sleep. Tomorrow, we will call your relatives and put your family to rest.”

Grzegorz took a deep breath. There would be time, plenty of time to mourn, he thought. But for the moment, he was tired, so tired.

Statute of Limitations — a Story

This is a story I once posted on Facebook, because not all my readers are friends on Facebook, and some of my Facebook friends may not have seen this.

Note: There are references to sexual assault/rape in this story. If this will cause PTSD, I understand if you don’t read it.

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In a small town in the Missouri Ozarks, Chief Hayes took the call – a B & E at the high school. He met Superintendent Reeves at the back door, and they walked through the whole three floors and annex of the building. Hayes observed no signs of entry, no footprints, nothing missing. Signs of breaking –that was another story entirely. Almost every window down the glass corridor that led from the main building to the gymnasium was shattered. A cracked baseball bat lay discarded at the foot of the building, and one glass pane remained unbroken and with a smudge of blood across it.

“Can you get a print on that?”

“What the hell do you think we are – CSI?” Hayes found his voice reverting back to the local accent out of aggravation, the one where “hell” was pronounced in two syllables. He hated that accent, because he felt it made him sound like a stereotypical hick cop on TV.  “That’s likely as not an arm print, smeared,and no, I am NOT going to run a DNA check on a vandalism case.”

“Not breaking and entering?” The chief thought Reeves always sounded like he wore his tighty whities too tight.

“I see breaking. I don’t see entering. Breaking without entering is called ‘vandalism’, and that’s what we’ll investigate. That should feed your persecution complex well enough.” And Hayes left the superintendent gaping like a snagged bluegill.

As he wrote up the report in a room otherwise occupied only by the night dispatch, Chief Hayes pondered: Who would break the windows out at the high school? Teen vandals were always the obvious culprits – a few teens go out drinking and then break into the high school, where the security cameras record them kicking in lockers and raiding the cafeteria. But there was no entering, as he had pointed out, only breaking. Not business as usual.  What else wasn’t business as usual? He couldn’t think of anything except the 20th reunion of Mays Corner High School class of 1994 –

Long shot, he thought, but possible. It would be easy enough to find them, he thought. He was having breakfast with his high school class reunion tomorrow morning. And if one of them was stitched up, there was his culprit.

No one sported a gashed arm or hand the next morning at Mary’s Diner, but several sported hangovers. If they awarded degrees in heavy drinking, he knew some likely candidates sitting at the table. Most of the survivors of the 20th reunion were locals, though, and he highly doubted that paunchy, middle-aged locals were smashing windows at the high school.

“Where were you last night, Hayes?” A man with a ravaged joker’s face waved from the far end of the long table. The half-dozen or so survivors of the reunion watched avidly, probably looking for a fight. “Losing your virginity?”

“To your mom, Saunders.” Hayes often fought the urge to kill Brent Saunders, but the latter was doing a good enough job on his own, mixing booze with diabetes. “I’m on duty, so no remarks about my sex life. But please tell me you bashed some windows at the high school with a baseball bat so I can feel free to arrest you.”

“No, SIR,” Saunders shot back with a mock salute. “I was here at the party all night. Obviously.” Bleary laughter greeted his revelation.
“Who wasn’t at the party last night who should have been?”

Jane Trevino Goodin, halfway across the table, jumped in with her nasal voice. “Well, Dave Winston was doing emergency room duty. He doesn’t hang with us hill rats anyhow, ever since he got that MD. And I think I saw a car with an out-of-state plate at the Reszniks’ place. Maybe Crystal came home, but she wasn’t at the reunion.”

On a hunch, Hayes had watched Saunders rather than Jane, and at the mention of Crystal Resznik, he thought he saw a flash of almost suppressed fear. Interesting.

If Crystal Resznik was in town last night, would she have bashed in the high school windows? She was an odd one back in high school, Chief Hayes thought. Honor student, brilliant even, but a bit — different, almost like what they called Asperger’s now. Nicest girl in the world, but – the only politically correct word he could come up with was different. He hadn’t seen her in twenty years, because she’d gone off to college and didn’t seem to want to be seen. Different for sure, but certainly nothing to inspire that look of fear on Saunders’ face.

He drove up to the Resznik’s house and noticed that there was no out-of-state car in the parking lot. Her father’s car was in the drive,so he parked his ride and knocked on the door. Mr. Resznik answered the door in a sweatshirt and jeans with a polite but wary expression.

“You would be Todd Resznik? Mr. Resznik, I’m Police Chief Hayes. I expect you know this.”

“Is there anything wrong?” Polite but wary.

“Not that I know of, but I would like to ask you a few questions.” He paused, more for effect than anything. Resznik did not invite him in, but that wasn’t unusual. “I saw a car with an out-of-state license in your driveway last night. Was your daughter Crystal here to visit?”
“Yes.” Resznik’s chin tilted up slightly. “She left this morning.”

“Was she here for the reunion?” Innocuous beginning, after which he would follow up with the standard whereabouts questions.
“She’d just as soon see you all burn in Hell first,” Resznik responded, his voice suggesting he preferred an icy Hell.”Starting with Winston and Saunders.”

Resznik’s response caught him off guard. “What do you mean by that?”

“It’s not my story to tell. You might ask Winston and Saunders.” With that, Resznik closed the door, and Chief Hayes felt so disoriented that he momentarily forgot about vandalism, broken glass, or blood.

A different mystery was developing than the one he was trying to solve, Chief Hayes suspected, and it gave him a headache. Something was hinky here – Saunders looking scared about something to do with Crystal Resznik, who had been in town but had not gone to the reunion. Todd Resznik implying an unsettling connection between Crystal and Brent Saunders and Dave Winston. Winston was a respected doctor, although he always was a bit of a mommy’s boy, and Saunders was – well, disreputable. Never got caught doing anything illegal enough to lock him away, but that didn’t mean he didn’t do anything illegal. What was the connection?

It didn’t make sense. What bugged him most was that he fel tthe whole situation – situations? – were getting away from him. Obviously, though,Winston was the guy he needed to talk to, because he had been the ER doc on duty last night, and because his name kept coming up, sometimes with sinister implications. He might be able to take care of both mysteries with one visit.

Dave Winston lived in one of the few McMansions in Mays Corner. Chief Hayes felt intimidated walking up the front porch stairs and facing the front door, which had a knocker, for God’s sake. He comforted himself with the reminder that the house reportedly was as shoddy as it was ostentatious.

Dave’s wife, a gracefully aging former cheerleader, answered the door. “Chief Hayes!” she exclaimed in that high-pitched coo that sounded like she hadn’t quite made it past age 7. “What brings you here?”

“Is your husband in, Mrs. Winston?”

“He hasn’t done anything wrong, has he?” In the distance, a dog barked.

“Not that I know of
. “ A common reassurance, but in this case no more than the truth. “May I speak to him?”

“I’ll go get him. You come right in and make yourself comfortable.” A few minutes, and a feminine but very unchildlike “Ginger, DOWN!” later, and Dave Winston, clad in sweats and a t-shirt, stepped into the living room.  “Would you like something to drink?”

“No thanks.”  Hayes’ first impression of Dr. Dave Winston was that the man didn’t look well. Twenty years before, Winston was a track star, tanned skin and sun highlights in his hair. Now he looked pale, mouth pinched. He looked thin – no, attenuated,stretched taut.  Hayes settled for a moment on the too-soft couch and gathered his thoughts. He knew that there were better ways to get information from doctors than asking direct questions whose answers would violate HIPPA. “We had some vandalism at the high school last night.”

“Really?” No tells, no clicks, just puzzlement. “You’re telling me this for a reason, right?”

“Maybe. Nearly every window in the first floor hallway of the high school had been busted in by a baseball bat. The last window wasn’t busted because they broke the bat. And it looks like they cut themselves up pretty good. Would you have stitched up any gash type wounds last night?”

Dr. Winston pulled himself upright, “I am not permitted to give you that information under HIPAA rules. If you have a specific suspect in mind — “

“I can file the appropriate paperwork,” Hayes finished. “Let me ask you a totally unrelated question. When was the last time you saw Crystal Resznik?”

The effect of the question was like shaking up a can of beer and then pulling the tab. “I hadn’t seen her since high school, honest,and then she was in the ER last night and she stared me down and told me I owed her one –“
“Owed her for what?”

But Winston shook his head. “I can’t talk about it. Christ, it was over twenty years ago. I didn’t do anything. The statute of limitations –“
Hayes figured that if he pursued the line of questioning further, Winston was going to start talking lawyers. “Here’s my card, and if you can get around to remembering what it was you did or didn’t do over twenty years ago that I might care about, give me a call.”

As he pulled into Brent Saunders’ driveway, he noticed two things: Saunders was sitting in the driveway sobbing, and his pet project, the maroon ’74  Mustang Fastback, looked like it had been beaten with a baseball bat. All the windows were shattered and the body had broken out into fist-sized dents.

“Are you drunk, Saunders?” Hayes gave the man a hand up and set him on a nearby lawn chair, then pulled up another. “Does this have anything to do with Crystal Resznik?”

“Resznik? She’s such a bitch …” Saunders trailed off into his near stupor, and Hayes hoped the man wouldn’t up and die on him.

“Why is Crystal Resznik a bitch?”

“She was so much smarter’n the rest of us. Nothing we did to her ever bothered her. You’d call her nasty names and she’d give you this look like you was a bug. I had to do sumthin’ to get in good with the guys…”

“What. Did. You. Do.” Chief Hayes bit out, fearing that the anger that was greying his vision would break out as violence.

“I got me a piece of Crystal after school freshman year,” Saunders chortled.

“Jesus CHRIST!” Hayes stood up abruptly, spilling his lawn chair backward. “Do you mean to tell me you sexually assaulted Crystal Resznik in high school? Why the HELL would you possibly think this was okay?”

“Because she thought she was too good. Because someone had to bring her down to our level,” Saunders sniveled – there was no other word for it.

“Was Dave Winston involved?”

“Pretty boy? Hell, no. He walked in on it and ran out. I was always afraid he was gonna call the cops or sumthin’ but he never did. Prolly afraid his parents’d worry about their reputation.” Hayes began to understand, but in a way that made his stomach burn.

“You bastard. I don’t think Crystal Resznik did enough damage. I think she should have taken that baseball bat to your balls.”  Chief Hayes slammed his foot into the side of the battered Mustang and stalked off.

On his way back to the Resznik residence, Chief Hayes put together the pieces, and more. Brent Saunders raped Crystal Resznik in high school because she was “too good”. The reputable, law-abiding Dave Winston didn’t report the violent crime — to protect his reputation? It was entirely possible that other classmates knew about it even back then but didn’t report it — why? Because somebody had to bring Crystal down to their level.Saunders became a hero, in other words, because he raped Crystal Resznik.

Hayes parked the cop car at a small neighborhood park, opened the door, and vomited on the curb. Wiping his mouth with a handkerchief, heglimpsed the heart of the bucolic town he had come back to and made his own. The comforting exterior, the rotten bleeding heart.
Why had he never heard the rumors? Why had he never seen this? He cast the net of his memory back twenty years, and saw himself standing somewhat separate from the others. He heard Saunders singing an unfunny ditty:”Marty Hayes sucks brass donkey dicks … He bites their balls…” Hayes had ignored it.

That, of course, was the answer: He had ignored the rumors,ignored the hints, ignored the times when Saunders openly harassed Crystal Resznik and others (yes, there were others) between classes. Just as he had ignored anything that would disrupt his peace.
Too late for arrests; let him make his peace the only way he could.

He pulled up to the Resznik’s battered little house at the bottom of the hill. Some called it a shack, but it was plenty safe against the elements. Mrs. Resznik had died years ago, when Crystal was in fifth grade; Mr.Resznik and his daughter were a tight family. He would have to proceed cautiously.

“Mr. Resznik, may I come in? I need to speak to you about Crystal.” He flashed his badge, all official.
Todd Resznik glared as he opened the door and indicated  a seat at the kitchen table. “If you’ve come to accuse her of the vandalism at the high school, you have the wrong culprit.” He held his arm up, where a two-inch gash sported stitches. “I think this is the smoking gun you’ve been looking for.”

“Then why was Crystal at the emergency room last night?”

“You don’t think I could drive with this, do you? If you check my truck, you’ll find a rolled-up shirt with blood on it I’ve been meaning to throw away. I could barely drive home, and then Crystal drove me to the ER.” Resznik’s words fit the remaining pieces together, but Hayes saw no reward for himself.

“But why the hell did you do it?” Hayes shouted.

“Do you know what it’s like to have a daughter who tries to fit in, but she’s just a little bit different? Not retarded, so she feels and understands every slight delivered to her, but just different? She finally has some guy paying attention to her, and she believes he wants to go out with her, but instead he uses her trust — ” Resznik clenched his fists and did not continue.

“Saunders,” Hayes offered.

“Yeah, Saunders. And the rest of that school who knew about it, including Superintendant Reeves, who told me it was his word against hers and since she was a little different anyhow, she was unreliable.”

“I’m so sorry. I’m so, so sorry.” Hayes wasn’t sure he felt sorry. He wasn’t sure he felt anything.

“Damn it, I’m not the one who needs the apology. Where were you to apologize when she just wanted to fit in?” Hayes couldn’t remember.

“I could apologize now –” The words fell like lead
in the small kitchen.

“It’s too damned late. Arrest me or get out of here.” Resznik crossed his arms. End of discussion.

Statute of limitations, Chief Hayes thought as he stood in front of the high school.  What’s the use of justice if all that’s needed to derail it was a statute of limitations? Too late to arrest Saunders. Too late to make amends.

This damn town is a caramel-covered rotten apple, he thought.Candy on the outside, worms on the inside. The worms wear the names of the seven sins — Greed, Avarice, Envy. And I’m one of those damn worms —  only I’m wearing a uniform. My name is Sloth.

Hayes took his truncheon and busted out the last of the windows that had started the whole damn thing. “Hell,” he said, pronouncing it as two syllables. “Now I can arrest me for it.” He walked off, but part of him could never leave the scene of the crime.