and before I can even change from the crumpled, filthy thing I used to call a dress, I gallop down the stairs and sink in front of the TV as though my life depends on it. Maybe it does. I shake my head violently to shoo away the morbid thought.
âMorning, Pumpkin,â Dad calls from the kitchen. Dishes clatter against the counter; he lets a frying pan clang on the gas stove. Of course heâs in the kitchen, concocting a meal that he thinks will bean antidote for all this trouble. Dad was raised by his nana, who was a strict believer in the cult of comfort food. She didnât believe in an ailment that couldnât be cured with her fried green tomatoes or apricot streusel. Screw you, cancer. Sheâd kill the nasty disease by adding more habaneros. Although Dad is a reasonable guyâand Nana actually did die of cancerâhis first instinct is always to run to the kitchen for solutions.
âMorning, Dad.â I turn all my attention back to the balding, overly tan newscaster. The Oompa Loompa is being broadcast from the edge of Old Savage Cemetery. The ticker on the bottom of the screen recounts short, abbreviated details from last night. With each I feel less and less hungry. Jane Doe found in cemetery. Possible connection to eleven-year-old cold case. Victim of cold case discovered body last night. Theyâre calling me a victim. Am I? Everyone always says Iâm lucky. My mouth goes dry when I think that people might be talking about me like Iâm broken. The newscaster waxes on, spewing details of Jeanie Talcottâs disappearance. There are crime scene techs in white plastic suits scurrying around in the background of the picture. It makes the cemetery look alien. Like the awfulness is happening on a different planet with astronauts. I wish.
âThe body was found yesterday evening at approximately half past eleven. The sole survivor of the Jeanie Talcott abduction made the discovery,â the newscaster drones on. I glare at him through the screen. I did not make the discovery. Tara Boden did. But I guess thatâs not the spooky coincidence theyâre after. Isnât it horrible enough? âEvents of yesterday evening unfolded during a fluke storm.â Thereporter presses his ear, listening to his radio feed. A smug smile tugs at his mouth. âMy meteorologist has just informed me that a similar summer storm occurred on the night of Jeanie Talcottâs abduction. Possibly another strange connection between the crime eleven years ago and the recovered body.â My stomach lurches, and Iâve completely lost my appetite.
Fifteen minutes later Iâm watching the same reel as Dad puts a piping-hot stack of pancakes on the coffee table in front of me. I smother my breakfast in syrup, hoping to make it irresistible. I take an unseemly bite; so big I can barely chew with my mouth shut. But thereâs no fooling my stomach. The news footage segues to clips of Savage residents reacting to last nightâs discovery. An elderly woman with a hooked nose and curlers in her hair crosses herself with her right hand over and over again. The newscaster interviewing her asks if she suspects cult involvement, since the discovery of the little girlâs body in the cemetery could be construed as religious sacrifice. The woman grabs hold of the wooden crucifix around her neck and rushes back into her house, slamming the door behind her. I nearly choke at the mention of cults.
âYou want to talk about last night, Pumpkin?â Dad asks, his own mouth full of food, and syrup staining his lips. Rather than answer, I motion for him to dab with his napkin. âJust as well.â He shrugs. âIâve seen it all on the news, and Detective Shane called last night to brief me. Speaking of Shane, heâll be here at eight thirty for your statement.â
I nod without making eye contact. Iâm relieved that Dad gets why I donât wantto rehash everything with
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