into.
âSorry Iâm late,â Mary Nell said, as she took a chair. âI had some things I had to do at home. My mom is so paranoid.â
âShe lost your brother,â I said. âIâm sure thatâs made her more protective.â I wouldnât have thought even a self-absorbed teenager could have missed that point.
The girl flushed deep red. âOf course,â she said stiffly. âI just mean, she doesnât seem to know how old I am.â Sheâd dressed with care, in new low riders with a tight green T-shirt. She wore a soft fuzzy cardigan sweater and boots.
âThatâs a common thing with mothers,â I said. My own mother had forgotten how old I was, after sheâd started chasing the drugs with alcohol. Sheâd decided I was much older and needed a boyfriend. She picked a doping buddy of hers who was willing to give her free samples for the privilege of being my first âdate.â Tolliver had gone off to college by then, and Iâd had to spend a day locked in my room. I had known that eventually theyâd go to sleep and Iâd be able to get out of the house, but I was hungry and thirsty and had no access to a bathroom. After that, I kept bottled water and a box of crackers and an old cooking pot in my room.
âHave you lived in Sarne all your life?â Tolliver asked Mary Nell.
She flushed when he spoke directly to her. âYes,â shesaid. âMy dadâs parents were born here, too. Dad died just before Dell.â I was startled. When Edwards had told me Sybil was a recent widow, I hadnât realized how recent. âDell, he really missed Dad. . . . He was closer to Dad than me.â She sounded vaguely resentful.
âI want to ask you a question, Mary Nell,â I said. âI donât want to upset you any more than I have to, but when you were talking to us the other night, you paused after you said one sentence. You said something like, âI knew he wouldnât kill Teenie and . . .â and then you stopped. What were you going to say?â
Mary Nell eyed me. You could tell her feelings were conflicted. âPlease tell us, Nell,â Tolliver said, and she crumbled when she looked into his dark brown eyes. Heâd called her something special.
âOkay,â she said, leaning across the table to share her big secret. âDell told me, the week before he and Teenie . . . the week before they died, that Teenie was gonna have a baby.â Her heavily made-up eyes were as big and round as a raccoonâs. The girl was clearly shocked that her brother had been having sex with his girlfriend, and she just as clearly considered the pregnancy top-secret knowledge.
âNo one knew?â
âHe sure didnât tell my mom. She wouldâve killed him.â Then, as she realized what sheâd said, Mary Nell turned red as a brick, and tears filled her eyes.
âThatâs okay,â I said hastily, âwe know your mom wouldnât really do that.â
âWell, Mom never has liked Teenieâs mom too much. I donât know why. Miss Helen used to work for us a few years ago, and I thought she was great. Always singing.â
And I could tell that she suddenly remembered that Helen Hopkins had been murdered, too. There was a look on her face, a lost look, like she was drowning.
âIf Iâd killed everyone I didnât like, Iâd be able to dress in their scalps,â Tolliver said.
Mary Nell gave a startled giggle and covered her mouth with her small hand.
After all this time, could an autopsy establish Teenieâs pregnancy?
âDell didnât tell anyone but you?â I asked.
âNo one knew but me,â Mary Nell said proudly.
Mary Nell was sure her brother hadnât told anyone about the baby, but what about Teenie? Had she told someone? Her mother, maybe?
Her mother, who was . . . gee, let me
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