He glanced at the burial marker of the girl who had died on that other January 23. The girl’s gravestone had no name on it, because she had never been identified. It held only the year of her death, and an epitaph: Peace Be Unto You.
When the minister finally let them go, Rex took note of the number of people who just happened to pass by the grave of the murdered girl, and touch it. Abby’s prediction had been right-he’d heard more than one person say something like, “Well, you know why Nadine Newquist was out in the cemetery, don’t you? She was trying to get cured of her Alzheimer’s, poor thing. In her mind, she probably thought that if she could drag herself to the cemetery, she’d get a miracle.”
Around town, they not only attributed healing powers to her, they called her the Virgin.
The first thing wrong with that theory, in Rex’s opinion, was that she hadn’t died a virgin. Rex would never forget his father’s voice stating she had been raped. He would never forget the blood frozen on her legs. Of course, nobody outside of his family knew about that because his father had forbidden them to talk about it. But a cockamamie rumor had gone around that when Doc Reynolds examined her, he had pronounced that prior to the attack she was pure as the driven snow. Rex supposed that appealed to people’s love of melodrama. She couldn’t just be an unfortunate girl who got killed, she had to be a virgin, to boot.
The second thing wrong with that theory was that Doc couldn’t necessarily have proved such a thing, even if he had wanted to. And a third thing wrong with it was that Quentin Reynolds would have sliced himself open with his own scalpel before he would have spoken a cliché like “pure as the driven snow.”
I’ll show you a miracle, Rex thought, as sunlight cut through the clouds and lit up the plains. He looked at his boots, which were standing in cold slush. This snow is finally starting to melt.
On his way out of the cemetery Rex made a point of walking up to a heavyset woman he recognized as one of Nadine Newquist’s hired nurses.
“Mrs. Kolb,” he said to her. “Have you got a minute?”
When she indicated she did, Rex drew her off to the side, away from other people leaving the service. “You’ve heard how Mrs. Newquist got outside that day?” he asked her, looking straight into her brown eyes.
“Somebody left the door open,” she said, with a raised eyebrow and a judgmental air.
Rex could be blunt when it suited him. “The judge says one of you nurses did it.”
“Well, then, he’s a lying bastard!” the woman exclaimed in a voice loud enough to draw startled glances from the people closest to them. She saw the reaction and lowered her voice to a furious whisper. “I was the last one on duty, as I’m sure you know or you wouldn’t be talking to me about it, and I will swear to you on any stack of Bibles, up to any height you want me to swear, that I never…never… left that door open. It was worth our jobs to leave that house unlocked! That was the first rule of the house-always make sure the outside doors are locked. If he said that, then he’s just trying to make other people take the blame for what is surely, as Christ is my witness, his own damned fault.”
Rex scratched his chin with the gloved forefinger of his left hand. “You think he left the door open?”
“Oh, not him, he’d never make a mistake like that,” she said bitterly. “But if he wasn’t watching her close enough…”
She let the implication hover between them.
Rex made sure he understood. “If the judge didn’t watch over his wife closely enough she might have opened the door herself?”
“Could have. Or…”
Rex raised his eyebrows inquisitively.
“She wasn’t the only one in that house without a sensible thought in her head,” the nurse said, in the same tart tone in which she had spoken of the judge.
Rex looked over her head at the departing widower and his teenage son. Just as he did so, both of the Newquist men happened to look over to where Rex stood talking to their former nurse.
Jeff Newquist reminded Rex a little bit of Mitch around that age, although there wasn’t any genetic reason he should. But he had picked up certain Newquist mannerisms just from living with them that gave the illusion that he actually looked like them. He had a confident-in Jeff’s case, cocky-way of walking that mimicked Tom’s, and an amused squint of the eyes that came straight from Nadine. His posture wasn’t as good as Tom’s, though; he slumped a bit about the shoulders. He wasn’t as good looking as the “real” Newquist men. He was tall, but a lot skinnier, and nothing like the athlete that either Tom or Mitch had been. His eyes were a color that no Newquist had ever had, and his complexion was paler, blotchier than theirs. That there were different genes at work in him was obvious, but only if you looked past the walk, the height, and the look in the eyes.
Rex looked back at Mrs. Kolb. “You think Jeff left it open?”
“Well, he left his clothes on the furniture and his towels on the floor and his dirty dishes any place he happened to be.”
“What about doors, did he leave them open or unlocked, too?”
“Well,” she said, sounding reluctant, “I never saw him do it.”
Rex nodded, and released her with a smile. “Thanks.”
As he watched her walk off, he wasn’t sure why he was pursuing the matter. Somebody accidentally, or unthinkingly, left a door open and a mentally deranged woman had walked out of it to her death. It was a human, if unadmirable, thing to do. It could have been a nurse, despite what this one had claimed; it could have been the judge, or Jeffrey, or even Rex’s own mother, who had visited her old friend Nadine the previous day. It could have been Rex’s own father, who had stopped by to see Tom the night before, or any one of a number of people who might have visited, as people did in small towns every day, with gifts of flowers or food, or just to hold a senile woman’s hand for a few minutes. What it wasn’t was criminal, unless there had been some conscious intention to speed a suffering and inconvenient woman to her death.
She was dead. That seemed more of a blessing than not, to Rex.
She was dead and he was the sheriff. And he didn’t know what, if anything, he was going to do about the uncomfortable juxtaposition of those two facts.
Mitch Newquist didn’t come back for his mother’s funeral, but an idealized ghost of him did, albeit a ghost who stirred up resentment on the day of Nadine’s burial. Rex heard it in the whispers at the judge’s house, at the reception afterward. When Rex walked in he noticed the house had a cigar smell, which Nadine would never have tolerated. He also wondered what she would have thought of the homemade catering by the church ladies. Too many casseroles, she might have sniffed. Rex headed straight for them, the macaroni and cheese, the green beans with fried onion rings on top, the apple pies.
“You’d think a son could come home for his own mother’s funeral!” he overheard.
But then he also heard the turnaround to sympathy. “It’s sad, really, when a man can’t even come back to his own mother’s funeral.”
This last was said with a sidelong glance at Abby, a glance that burned Rex up.
Good grief, people, he wanted to snap at them, it’s ancient history! Let it go!
And now, unfortunately, the idea that Abby might have saved Nadine, if only her truck hadn’t wrecked, was feeding the lie of Abby’s Fault. It was Abby’s fault that Mitch left town. Abby’s fault that nobody got to Nadine in time. “Did you have your seat belt on?” Rex’s father asked her. “You sure that truck isn’t too much for you, Abby?” her own father asked. “You can’t just slam on the brakes, you have to turn into the skid,” another old codger informed her, as if she’d grown up in Miami. “You’d better trade in that old truck-bucket for one with air bags,” somebody else opined.