should help get it back.â
I expected him to say something like âI think youâve done quite enough already.â Instead, he leaned toward me and whispered, âPray.â
He started down the hall and I called out after him, âJust one more question, Mr. Samson! Why didnât he kill me too?â
He paused, then turned back to me, smiling that same sad smile. âTwo reasons, I think. First, it is crueler to kill your uncle and let you live. Second, there is such a thing as honor among thieves.â
He disappeared into the stairwell, followed by the two agents. Nothing he could have said would have made me feel worse than calling me a thief. I donât think he meant to hurt my feelings, though. My feelings were the least of his worries.
12
With Uncle Farrell gone, I was now a ward of the state. A couple named Horace and Betty Tuttle volunteered to take me in, pending the unlikely event of somebody adopting me.
The Tuttles lived in a tiny house on the near north side of Knoxville. Five other foster kids lived crammed into that little house. I never saw Horace Tuttle go to work, and I knew they received all sorts of checks from the state and the federal government for each kid, so I think we were how he made a living.
Horace Tuttle was a short, round little guy, always making remarks about my size, particularly my head. I think I scared him or he resented how big I was, I mean, because he was awfully small. Betty, his wife, was short and round like him, with the same conical-shaped head. They reminded me of turtles, kind of like their name, Tuttle. Maybe some people come to resemble their names, the way some people come to resemble their dogs.
I shared a bedroom with two of the other foster kids. The very first night the older one threatened to kill me in my sleep. I was feeling so low and lousy, I told him that would be fine with me.
I usually had trouble concentrating in school, but try concentrating when your uncle has just been murdered right before your eyes and you know the world is about to end. Try studying when you know World War III is about to start and itâs all your fault.
I still met with Amy Pouchard twice a week. She asked why I had missed the past couple of weeks and I told her.
âMy uncle was murdered.â
âOh, my God!â she exclaimed. âWho killed him?â
I thought about my answer. âAn agent of darkness.â
âSo they caught him?â
âTheyâre trying.â
âHey, isnât your mom dead too?â
âShe died of cancer.â
âYou must be the unluckiest person on earth,â she said, and scooted away from me a little, probably without realizing she was doing it. âI mean, your mom and now your uncle and what you did to Barry and everything.â
âIâve been trying to tell myself all those things had nothing to do with me, that Iâm okay and everything,â I said. âBut itâs getting harder and harder.â
I was Uncle Farrellâs sole heir, so I got all his things, but I only kept his TV and VCR, which I set up in my bedroom. The main thing I didnât get was the $500,000. I didnât remember Mogart leaving with the brown leather satchel, but it wasnât under Uncle Farrellâs bed where he stashed it, and the police never found it, probably because I didnât tell them about it. That cash would be hard to explain and would probably get me in more trouble than I already was in, but I started wishing I still had that money. If I did, I would have taken it and run. I didnât know where Iâd run, but anywhere seemed better than the Tuttles and the delinquents who lived with them.
Over the next couple of days, I would grab Horaceâs newspaper and take it to school and, instead of studying, I read the newspaper from front page to last, looking for anything that might give me a clue as to what was happening with Mr. Samsonâs quest. I
Kenneth Harding
Tim O’Brien
C.L. Scholey
Janet Ruth Young
Diane Greenwood Muir
Jon Sharpe
Sherri Browning Erwin
Karen Jones
Erin McCarthy
Katie Ashley