Part 19 (1/2)
”My folks are going to kill me,” one of the girls whined.
”Yeah, my old man will ground me for the rest of my life,” the frightened redhead said.
”Ah, shut up p.i.s.sing and moaning,” said a stocky boy with a long, dark ponytail.
”You shut up,” a tattooed girl with jet black hair and heavy purple eye shadow told him. ”You're the reason we're in this mess. You promised that n.o.body would know if we slipped away for a while, just to smoke and drink a few beers. We didn't know you meant smoke marijuana.”
Jack called out, ”What have we here?”
”A bunch of stupid kids. The ones that were reported missing, the ones the police have been looking for,” Deputy Dryer replied. ”They didn't think anybody would miss them when they left the youth rally over at the community center. They were wrong.”
”We just happened to find them a block away in the Piggly Wiggly parking lot,” Gipson said. ”They had three six-packs of beer that apparently one of them had stashed there earlier, and a couple of them were smoking pot.”
”Miss Dagger Tattoo and Mr. Tough Guy were the two smoking,” Dryer added.
”We didn't know it was marijuana,” the tattooed girl said. ”I swear we didn't.”
Gipson rolled his eyes. ”Yeah, sure, sure.”
A tall, lanky boy with brown hair turned from where he'd been s.h.i.+elding one of the girls with his body. When Jack got a good look at the boy, he sucked in a startled breath.
Son of a b.i.t.c.h. There stood Cathy's son, Seth, a nervous yet defiant expression on his face. And the girl he'd been trying to protect was none other than Brother Hovater's daughter.
Chapter Fourteen
She woke to the smell of smoke and the realization that a hand covered her mouth. Acting purely on instinct, she tried to scream, but the sound came out a m.u.f.fled whimper as her eyes flew open and she looked up into her mother's face.
”Stay calm,” her mother told her. ”Don't panic.” She eased her hand away from Ruth Ann's mouth. ”Get out of bed right now. The house is on fire, and we have to hurry before we're trapped.”
Sleep-groggy, she jerked into a sitting position, her mind barely comprehending what she'd been told.
Her mother grabbed her arm and yanked her out of the bed. ”If we run, we can make it out through the back door. The fire started in my bedroom, but it's spreading fast.” She all but dragged Ruth Ann out of her room and into the smoky hallway. ”We don't have much time.”
Barefoot and wearing only a cotton gown, she glanced back over her shoulder as she ran with her mother down the hall and into the kitchen. Dark, heavy smoke followed them, allowing her only a glimpse of the fire quickly consuming their house. When they reached the back door, Ruth Ann hesitated half a second. Her mother screamed at her, jogging her into immediate action. They raced down the back steps and into the yard, stopping only when they were in the driveway, both of them slightly winded.
”What about Daddy?” Ruth Ann asked.
”It's too late for your father,” Faye said.
She stared into her mother's cold, dead eyes and knew the truth. Oh G.o.d in heaven. Oh G.o.d in heaven.
”We can't just let him die, can we?” Ruth Ann grabbed her mother's hands and squeezed them tightly. ”It would be murder.”
Faye pulled loose from Ruth Ann's fierce grasp and focused her gaze on the burning house. ”No, it's not murder. It's retribution.”
She didn't say anything else, not for a long while. Not when the neighbors came out of their homes to offer them solace and to watch the parsonage burn. And not even when the fire trucks arrived, along with the police and an ambulance. The paramedics p.r.o.nounced that she was in shock, but she knew better. Stunned, perhaps. Feeling horribly guilty. Afraid to speak for fear she would say the wrong thing.
Tonight, she and her mother had killed her father. This secret would bind them together forever.
Ruth Ann woke suddenly and realized she had been dreaming again, dreaming about the night her father died. Turning over, she searched in the darkness for John Earl but found his side of the bed empty. Whenever she had one of her horrific dreams, he would always comfort her. She had come to rely on his steadfast love and kindness. If G.o.d had cursed her with a monster for a father, he had equally blessed her ten times over with a husband like John Earl.
She tossed back the covers, slid out of bed and slipped on her house shoes. Looking at the bedside clock, she saw that it was after four. Where on earth was John Earl?
When she opened the bedroom door and walked into the hall, she heard the soft murmur of a voice coming from the kitchen. The girls were at the all-night youth rally at the community center, leaving only John Earl, her mother and her in the house. Since her mother took a sleeping pill every night, she a.s.sumed the voice belonged to John Earl. Undoubtedly, he was on the telephone because there was some type of emergency with a paris.h.i.+oner. But why hadn't she heard the phone ring? Had she been that deeply asleep?
Pausing outside the kitchen, she listened for a couple of minutes.
”Yes, I understand, and I certainly appreciate your willingness to handle things this way,” John Earl said. ”Ruth Ann and I will be there as soon as possible.”
With her heart hammering in her chest, she entered the kitchen. ”What is it? What's wrong?”
John Earl, wearing only his pajama bottoms, snapped around and stared at her, his eyes blank. He shook his head, hung up the phone and then faced her. ”First of all, both Charity and Felicity are all right. But they're in a bit of trouble. Especially Felicity. We need to get dressed and go to the sheriff's office right away.”
”Lord have mercy, what's happened?”
”It seems that our girls, along with several other kids, slipped away from the youth rally tonight.”
”What? Why would they-?”
”I don't know the answer to that,” John Earl told her as he walked over and grasped her gently by the shoulders. ”A couple of deputies found the kids in the Piggly Wiggly parking lot. They had beer with them, and one of the boys and Felicity were smoking pot.”
”Oh G.o.d, no!”
He gripped her shoulders a little tighter. ”It's going to be all right. That was Mike Birkett on the phone. Charity called me a few minutes ago. I thought for sure the phone would wake you, but it didn't. I came in here and called Mike back immediately. He's being very understanding about the situation. He says that we can pick up both girls tonight. Charity isn't being charged with anything. And the charges against Felicity-”
”What charges? Oh G.o.d, John Earl, will she have to go to jail?”
”No. Mike told me to contact a lawyer in the morning. Felicity will have to appear in juvenile court, but more than likely the sentence will entail a fine and community service.”
Tears gathered in Ruth Ann's eyes. ”I've failed her as a mother, haven't I? Where did I go wrong? Charity has never given us a moment's trouble, but Felicity...Oh dear. The whole town will know about this by the time Sunday school starts. How will this look-the minister's daughter arrested for underage drinking and smoking marijuana?”
”I'm not concerned about how this will look.” He ran his open palms down her arms and grasped her hands in his. ”People will either understand or they won't. Our only concern should be Felicity.”
”Yes, I know. And poor Charity. I'm sure the only reason she was involved was because she was trying to look after her sister.”
”Let's get dressed.” He turned her toward the stairs and slipped his arm around her waist. ”Our daughters need us to present a united front. We're in agreement that Charity will need rea.s.surance that we don't blame her for any of this. And Felicity will need our love and support, but we have to make her understand how serious the situation is.”
”Yes, of course, we're in total agreement. And we will certainly present a united front.”
Jack had called Mike and explained that Deputies Dryer and Gipson had brought in seven teenagers, all but two under the age of eighteen. Six of the seven had slipped away from the Christian youth rally at the community center and been reported missing by the chaperones in charge. Both the local police and sheriff's department had been looking for them when two deputies had found the kids with several six-packs. And two of the seven were smoking pot.
”The nineteen-year-old is the real culprit,” Jack had said. ”My guess is he provided the beer and the marijuana. I'd nail his c.o.c.ky a.s.s to the wall. The others are probably good kids who got caught in a bad situation.”