The wheels of the backhoe touched ground and Rose hurriedly gulped his Coke. Even with his lack of sleep, he didn’t need the caffeine, for his knees were already knocking as he went to search for his boss, Sheriff Charlie Fields.
Deputies and investigators clustered around their sheriff, who wore his trademark white Stetson.
Fields looked up at Rose and said, “I understand Mike wants to start with the wishing well?”
Rose nodded.
“I have seven deputies here now,” Fields said, “and more are on their way.”
For eighteen hours the day before, Rose had Deputy Ron Shields sitting in a car in front of this lot that held a seventy-foot-long trailer. The trailer had mysteriously burst into flames the night before last. Immediately after the fire, fire marshals had taped off the home, but that wasn’t enough to keep out anyone bent on getting inside and disrupting evidence. Or removing bodies for that matter.
Now the last rays of the afternoon sun caught the home’s front and back decks, which were laden with pots of flowers—some hanging, others clustered on the deck floor. Someone had removed all the weeds from the pots and flower beds, and apparently snipped off any tired blossoms, for only fresh blooms remained. Rose couldn’t imagine anyone having that kind of patience with flowers. He brushed by the purple petunias that spilled from a brick-and-wood wishing well in the front yard, and went to talk to police.
“Good, you’re about finished stringing the crime-scene tape,” he told an officer. “Without that, all those people in the street would be up here as soon as we started digging.”
The officer continued taping the entire yard, saying, “Like the manual says, ‘Secure the crime scene.’ We’ve got to keep the curious at bay.”
“If we find anything,” Rose said, “the curious will want to jump in the bay. When we start digging up graves, it won’t be pretty.”
Any Saturday in June at six P.M. would normally find people racing across the sparkling lake on their motor boats, water skis, or bouncing over waves on their Sea-Dos. Instead, they were watching deputies begin a search. The men had been there an hour, with the temperature still hovering at a sweat-inducing one hundred degrees. They photographed the crime scene and waited for field agent Charles Linch with the Southwestern Institute of Forensic Science. O’Brien had called him before turning over one spadeful of dirt, but it would take Linch more than an hour to drive down from Dallas to lend a scientific hand.
Finally, the young-looking, mustached Charles Linch emerged from his van and went directly to O’Brien and Rose.
“Everything ready to get started?” Linch asked.
“More than ready,” O’Brien said, and signaled the driver to climb aboard the bright yellow backhoe. He put the machine in gear and started clawing at the four-foot-square wishing well. Its ladle scraped the redbrick base, then rose to latch on to the four-foot-high top edge of the brown wooden surround. As the backhoe inched forward, nails pulled from the wood and every joint creaked. Then the whole thing fell over, crashing with a thud as dirt and plants splattered everywhere.
Even with the media’s widespread use of police scanners, the quick arrival of reporters at this out-of-the-way spot on Red Bluff Loop surprised law enforcement. A helicopter from Channel Eight in Dallas landed two lots down on the street. Reporters had flown in on another helicopter from Tyler’s Channel Seven and the Tyler Morning Telegraph. There was also a scattering of correspondents from the Athens Daily Review, the Cedar Creek Pilot, and the Dallas Morning News. The journalists had all heard the bizarre rumors, and now waited to see what would actually unfold.
Rose motioned to three gloved men to bring their shovels and follow him to the well. “Let’s be careful because we’re not sure what we’ll find. Just take off a little dirt at a time. He’s probably under the ground, but we’re not positive.”
As the men began turning the moist soil, Rose paced back and forth. All he could see was dirt. Judge Holland had a record of almost twenty years on the bench, so he didn’t have that much to lose if the search proved fruitless. But this was Rose’s first year here as a homicide investigator, and he wanted to prove he was no rookie. He had spent a total of thirteen years in law enforcement, much of it working for the district attorney in Dallas. Here in Henderson County, he had an opportunity to solve a case that had lain dormant for two years. In the three years he’d worked for the sheriff, he had arrested over two hundred drug dealers and had broken a gun burglary ring that put his reputation on the map.
Reddish-brown dirt flew from the deputies’ shovels, and perspiration dripped from their faces, while their shirts stuck to their skin. Periodically, they stopped to wipe off their faces and necks.
After digging a foot, one of the deputy’s shovels hit something hard. He jerked back his shovel, and turned to Rose. “What’s that?”
Rose squatted and brushed away dirt with his gloved hand. “Looks like wood. Get this thing cleared off and let’s see what we have.”
The deputy hurriedly scooped away the soil. Rose handed him a whisk broom and the man dusted off the remaining residue.
Then Rose tapped on a roughly cut piece of plywood, about three-feet square. “Isn’t this interesting? Where’s Ben? Has anyone seen Deputy Ashley?”
A deputy came running. “Here, sir. I was reloading my camera.”
“Good. I want you to get a picture of this. We want to show how premeditated it was. Here, get in close,” Rose said, stepping out of the way. “I want that jury to see how someone cut that piece of wood especially for the well.”
After Ashley took several photos, Rose bent over and wedged his fingers under the edge of the wood plank and pried it up. A dank, old-house mustiness floated up. Dirt had seeped under the wood and the men began gently digging with claw hammers.
The deputies removed another clump of soil, and a piece of blue canvas came into view. Momentarily, there was awestruck silence.
“Well, I’ll be damned,” Rose murmured. “He’s here. Everyone told me he was buried under the well, but we’re still inside the well’s foundation.”
Rose bent over and examined the fabric. “Two years of dirt hasn’t affected its blue color. Take your time, guys, because this is it.”
A cheer went up from the men, and the humid night became electric. With high fives and confidence, the men returned to their job, but now they didn’t stop to wipe off perspiration.
Following Rose’s orders, they tried to stem their enthusiasm, and worked slowly so they wouldn’t disturb or damage the evidence. Little by little they dug, then dusted away the loose soil. The piece of blue fabric broadened and lengthened.
Rose again motioned to Deputy Ashley. “Now we need a shot of every step. Let’s set up a progression of photos so we can show exactly how this thing looks.”
“Yes, sir,” Ashley replied, and attempted to move closer to the grave. He gingerly stepped between the other deputies, who were still digging, and steadied his camera.
For half an hour, they carefully bailed out dirt, following the contour of their discovery. Then they uncovered a brass zipper sewn into the cloth, and they realized it was a sleeping bag. The bulk of the material gave every indication that it was not empty, and the way the canvas curved suggested that the body inside had curled into a fetal position.
Now everything happened quickly. Rose remembered his earlier doubt, and it rapidly faded. He dared to believe that he had the evidence to force a jury to find the defendant guilty beyond all reasonable doubt. Then, being a realist, he reminded himself of previous cases where curious neighbors had claimed they saw someone being buried, only to have police come out and dig up a family’s