Part 29 (2/2)

Tom rubbed his chin. ”Did Curtis implicate anyone else in his note?”

”No one. In fact, he said the whole thing was a 'solo operation.' That he planned Andy's murder and he pulled the trigger.”

”Bulls.h.i.+t,” Tom said. ”He's covering for someone.”

”Agreed,” Hank said. ”I've known George Curtis all my life, and he was an old-school Southerner. Definitely not a rat.” Hank paused and then sucked in a quick breath. ”He knew he was about to spend the rest of his life in prison, so he took one for the team.”

Tom was nodding along with him. ”Makes sense. Helen would have seen to it that he fried for both crimes.” At his mention of her name, Tom thought back to his conversation with the prosecutor at the courthouse right before the gunfire erupted on the square. ”Is General Lewis down at the station, Deputy?”

Hank let out a low whistling sound. ”She was. But when I gave her the news about Curtis . . .” He shook his head.

Tom could only imagine. If Helen could have quickly charged George Curtis for the murders of Roosevelt Haynes and Andy Walton, she might have been able to spin her loss of Bo's murder trial into a long-term victory. Staying the course and brus.h.i.+ng herself off from defeat, General Lewis had brought the lynch mob who killed Roosevelt Haynes to justice and solved the Andy Walton murder to boot. Now . . .

”I'm sure she's pretty upset,” Tom said, knowing his words were a vast understatement.

”She blew a gasket, Professor. I've never seen the General so angry.” Hank started to say more, but the walkie-talkie clipped to his belt sounded off and he grabbed it. ”Yeah,” he blared into the handheld device. He listened for a few minutes before saying ”Ten-four” into the speaker. Then he turned back to the Professor. ”We need y'all to come down to the station to fill out statements about the shooting.” Hank paused and looked over Tom's shoulder to Rick, who had remained seated in the plastic lobby chair. ”He up for it?”

Tom walked over to Rick and kneeled down. ”Deputy Springfield needs you to write a statement about what you saw on the square. Can you do that?”

Rick blinked and then he nodded. ”Yeah, I think so.”

Tom turned back to Hank and gave the thumbs-up sign. ”We're right behind you.”

”Ten-four,” Hank said, walking toward the exit with the other deputy that came in with him right on his heels. At the doors he turned around and looked back at Tom, making the phone symbol with the thumb and pinky finger of his right hand. ”Keep trying Bo.”

84.

As the sun began to set over Walton Farm, Bo pulled into the gravel driveway leading up to the main entrance of the Big House. He pushed the buzzer out in front of the gate and waited.

Bo had spent the last two hours driving the back roads of Pulaski, thinking about what Ray Ray had said. About what it all meant.

Bo pushed the buzzer twice more and put his car in reverse. Just as he started to ease the car backward to leave the driveway, a clipped voice blared out of the speaker adjacent to the buzzer. ”Who is it?”

”Bo Haynes, ma'am.”

Silence for a good five seconds. Then a faint chuckle. ”You have a lot of nerve coming over here. What do you want?”

”To talk, ma'am. Just . . . talk.”

More silence. Then Bo was startled by another buzzing sound as the gate slowly began to creak open. Feeling a catch in his throat, Bo hesitated, knowing this was probably a bad idea. Regardless, almost without conscious thought he pressed the accelerator down and eased the vehicle forward. The compulsion to follow Ray Ray out the courthouse doors was moving him forward, and he found himself powerless to stop it. I have to know . . .

As the Sequoia wound up the hill, Bo's mind filled with images of the day his father was killed. The day that had haunted every hour of his life since. The cross in the yard. The Klansmen surrounding the house. The smell of burning wood mixed with the fear coming from his father as he kneeled next to Bo and made the boy promise to take care of his momma, to make something of himself and to not believe the reasons given for the murder. Forty-five years . . . Bo had gone to law school ultimately so that he could bring the men who killed his father to justice. He'd practiced in Pulaski these past twenty-five years for the same reason. He'd spoken with every living Klansman in the Tennessee chapter. His obsession in life had been to bring Andy Walton to justice. Andy Walton. The monster who had killed his father and made his mother disappear. ”The monster . . .”

At the top of the hill the house came into view. As with most things you remember being so huge as a child, the Big House really wasn't so big after all. Sure, it was a two-story rancher-a beautiful old relic of a day gone by-but Bo's house in town probably carried more square footage.

Bo had not been invited to be on Walton soil since he was five years old. Two weeks after the murder and a day after his mother had disappeared, he'd moved in with Aunt Mable and Uncle Booker, who lived in the parish next to Bickland Creek Baptist Church. He had never been invited back.

He opened the car door and walked toward the house, his body fueled by adrenaline. Given what he'd been through that day-the trial and then the shooting-Bo should be exhausted. But he felt nothing, his feet propelled forward by a four-decade-long obsession. I have to know . . .

As he trotted up the steps of the porch, Bo saw the note. It was a yellow sticky pressed to the front door. He tore it off and brought it close to his eyes.

”At the clearing. Walk, don't drive.”

Bo crumpled the note and swept his eyes over the farm, seeing the orange hue of the sun beginning to descend over the western horizon. It was beautiful, he had to admit, and the memory of other sunsets flooded back to him. His mother and father's house had been on the north side of the farm. ”House” was really an overstatement. It had been a two-bedroom shack. Less than a thousand square feet. But for Bo it was home. He remembered his father liked to smoke a pipe and sit in a plastic chair under a tree near the front of the house, watching the sun make its slow descent. Sometimes Bo would stand next to him, asking questions that little boys ask. ”Daddy, why does the sun rise and fall? Does it go to sleep at night too?”

Bo wiped a tear from his eye and headed north on foot toward the clearing. It had been forty-five years since he'd walked this farm, but he knew the way. He could find it blindfolded.

I have to know, he told himself. I have to know . . .

85.

The sheriff's office was a madhouse.

Between the shooting of Ray Ray Pickalew, the arrest of JimBone Wheeler, and the suicide of Dr. George Curtis, the parking lot had become ground zero for a plethora of television and print news reporters, all hoping for more information on any of these events.

Tom and Rick had piled into the back of Deputy Springfield's cruiser at the hospital so as to avoid the ha.s.sle of trying to park and wade through the cameras. Hank pulled to the front of the building and whisked them all inside. A few minutes later Rick was in an interrogation room being questioned by one of the younger deputies about what he had seen on the square.

Tom waited in the lobby and continued to try to reach Bo, with no luck. Each call went straight to voice mail. He called Jazz and Booker T., and neither had heard a word from him since just after the shooting. Where the h.e.l.l could he be? It didn't make sense for Bo to disappear. Unless . . .

Tom gave his head a quick jerk and began to limp around the lobby, his thoughts becoming more and more troubled. Andy Walton was dead. Ray Ray Pickalew was dead. George Curtis was dead. Larry Tucker was missing. Bo was missing.

The doors to the interrogation area flew open, and Deputy Springfield ushered Rick through them, his hand on the boy's arm to steady him. Once Rick was seated, Hank turned to Tom, his eyes burning with intensity. ”Any word from Bo?”

Tom shook his head. ”Nothing. What about Helen? Have you heard-?”

”No,” Hank interrupted. ”She left right after we told her about Curtis, and no one has seen her since. Not answering her phone, and not replying to texts.” Hank paused and wiped his forehead. ”She needs to be here. There's no one better in a crisis than the General.”

Tom took a deep breath and tried to calm his mind. Think, old man.

Think . . .

86.

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