“What happened to her after that?”
“She stayed on with the people, finished high school, got a job. Met a guy and married him. There were more kids-four, that I know of-and I couldn’t even congratulate her or send them presents.”
“Why not?”
“She would never give me her address. She was afraid that her rapist would find her and ruin her life all over again.”
“But he was in prison-”
Another laugh-harsh, this time. “Bud Smith never touched my sister. But his younger brother, Davey, sure did.”
“You know this for sure?”
“She told me the night before she ran off. Davey did it, but for a long time afterwards she was so wrecked she couldn’t remember, and then she was afraid to tell the truth. I mean, that girl was so bad off she didn’t even speak for months. And by the time she could, Bud was convicted and we’d moved to Yerington. After she ran away, I never heard anything from her but an occasional postcard and those birth announcements.”
“Do you remember the postmarks?”
“Someplace in California that I’d never heard of. I forget.”
“Did you save any?”
“I did for a while, but when I moved here to Seattle I threw away everything I didn’t absolutely need. Sorry.”
Me too.
A pregnant thirteen-year-old rape victim who has no money runs away from home in Nevada to a friend in Sacramento, where she’s never been before. The friend introduces her to a family who takes her in, and she lives with them until she meets a man who marries her and gives her at least four more children.
Moccasin telegraph wasn’t going to answer the questions raised by that scenario.
Who did I know who might have some insight into the problem? Dana Ivins?
I called her and, because our last conversation had been less than harmonious, she hesitated before agreeing to allow me to buy her lunch at Zelda’s. She was waiting outside when I arrived in Vernon, her cheeks pink from the chill wind off the lake. The temperatures had cooled in the last few days; it would be an early winter in the high desert.
We took a table beside the large rear windows in the dining room and ordered sandwiches. Like me, she didn’t have to consult the menu; since Zelda’s was by far the best restaurant in town, we’d both come there often enough to have it memorized.
As we waited for the food, I explained the Isabel Darkmoon story. When I finished, Dana stared out the window at the lake, where birds huddled against the wind on the offshore islands.
“There’s one way she could have managed her escape,” she finally said.
“How?”
“Let me ask you this first: was her family abusive to her?”
“I doubt it, but I can’t say for sure.”
“But they were probably embarrassed by the rape and pregnancy, as evidenced by them moving away from Hawthorne. And they may have taken it out on her in hurtful ways.”
“The sisters I spoke with didn’t say, but that’s entirely possible.”
Ivins sighed. “Can you keep this confidential?”
“That depends. I don’t have a client; I’ve simply agreed to help the sheriff’s department and the Perez family. I don’t even know for sure if the Darkmoon girl figures in the case.”
“Well, I don’t suppose it matters anyway. The organization’s no longer active, and they never kept records. If the authorities contacted any of its members, they’d claim ignorance. I know I would.”
“You were involved in this… organization?”
“Loose organization.” She paused while the waitress deposited our plates and withdrew. “About fifty activist women in California and Nevada. We provided money for girls to escape abusive family situations and sent them to homes where they could begin new lives. Many of them, like Isabel Darkmoon, had been impregnated by rapists, often family members.”
“Could she have found out about the organization in Yerington?”
“Yes. We had a member there. This would have been before I joined; I was young and still mired down in confusion about which way my life was going to go.”
“Is there any way I could get in touch with this member?”
Ivins hesitated, considering. “If this… lead of yours turns out to have something to do with the rash of murders we’ve been having, her identity would come out in court. As you said, you haven’t a client, so confidentiality doesn’t apply. She’s a highly respected attorney-”
“There you have it. I’ll ask her to hire me-for a dollar-to find out what happened to Isabel Darkmoon. Any work I do for her falls under the umbrella of attorney-client privilege.”
By four that afternoon I was back in Carson City, this time in the offices of Elizabeth Long, attorney-at-law. The firm was situated only a few blocks from John Pearl’s building, but mega-miles away in luxury.
Dana Ivins had called and explained the situation, and Elizabeth Long and I were both prepared. After we sat down in her office, she slid a dollar bill across the desk to me and I presented her with one of the agency’s contracts-with the lowest retainer fee we’d ever charged inked in. Once she signed it, we were in business.
Ivins had said Long was a highly respected attorney and she certainly looked the part: beautifully styled blonde hair, expensive black suit, heavy gold jewelry. A face with thin lips, a long nose, and eyes that I was sure could stare down any judge or jury when she was making her case for her clients. She specialized in criminal law.
“Isabel Darkmoon,” she said. “She was thirteen, pregnant, and desperate to get away from her family.”
“They were abusive?”
“Psychologically. Everyone except for one sister shunned her. That seems like an old-fashioned word, but they were religious in the extreme and literally would have nothing to do with her. She wasn’t allowed to eat at the same table, though she could have scraps from the kitchen. No one spoke a word to her, except the one sister who could only whisper in the night after everyone else had gone to sleep. Isabel had shamed them by being in the wrong place at the wrong time.”
“Blame it on the victim.”
“Yes.” Long leaned back in her chair, eyes narrowed- assessing how much information she could trust me with.
“This is all confidential, Ms. Long.”
“Of course.” She picked up an oddly coiled paper clip from a shallow container, and began toying with it. Picked up another and linked the two together.
“How did Isabel come to you?” I asked.
“She saw a notice on the bulletin board in the grocery store. We had to be so cryptic in those days: Nevada was not like California. I think it said something like ‘In trouble? We can help.’ And it gave an unlisted number to call-which was mine. I met her at a drive-in restaurant. Bought her a meal and told her what we could do for her. She needed help badly; she was very undernourished for a pregnant woman and severely depressed. But she wanted the baby.”
“Why, if she’d been raped?”
“Because no one loved her and she thought the baby would.”
“Bad reasoning, wouldn’t you say?”
“Immature reasoning, yes. But by then it was too late for her to abort. And she was very determined for such a young woman. I thought she might be persuaded to put her baby up for adoption, so I sent her to a family in our network who had adopted a number of children.”
“And then?”
“I heard nothing. That was the rule of our organization: no further contact, because it might jeopardize the person we’d helped.”
Long’s eyes had shifted from mine, toward the linked paper clips she was toying with. She was lying, or at least not telling the whole truth.
“No contact ever?” I asked.
She looked at the copy of the contract she’d signed. “No contact until last Monday. She came here, said she’d hitchhiked from Bridgeport and she needed help.”
She paused. I waited. It was one of those moments when I sensed a major connection was about to be made.