Ashes to Ashes
A short murder mystery story by
Phil Ruby
I, being an ordinary man with ordinary dreams and liking a
simple, peaceful life, am often startled by the occasional unveiling of human
nature’s darkest side. It comes without warning from some of the least suspect
people. I enjoy writing short stories as a hobby. I usually stay clear of the
horror genre, but the story I am about to share has given me nightmares and
cause to doubt even the most trustworthy people. It is a true story about
something that happened to me and a few of my friends. It has changed me
forever. I’m Calvin Waters. Everyone just calls me Cal. In spite of my desire
for a life of peace and simple tranquility, my reality has been somewhat
chaotic. It seems the longer I seek peace, the harder turmoil seeks me. This
event was pretty much the culmination of that pattern.
I met Jay through a mutual friend. Actually, the lady I was
dating, Jane, was best friends with the woman, Penny, who was dating Jay. I
will leave out last names for the sake of, well, let us say my own safety. The
four of us came together one evening to play cards in my lady friend’s
townhouse. There was wine, chips and salsa, and lively conversation. Jay was a
smiling, friendly and soft spoken man. He was obviously intelligent, as
demonstrated by his eloquent use of language and his knowledge of many
subjects. We talked about books, music, relationships, technology, and science
topics. Jay would often toss something out just to get a reaction.
“Cal ,”
Jay said, and then paused until he had my full attention, “Do you believe in
reincarnation?”
That came out of the blue. “I don’t have enough information
to believe or disbelieve in that,” I answered in my usual skeptical manner.
“Ah…insufficient data.”
“Yes. Do you believe in reincarnation?” I turned the
question around, also in my usual manner.
“I’ll tell you in a minute,” Jay said, then turned to the
girls, one at a time. “How about you, Jane?” he asked.
“Yes. I do,” Jane said smiling. Jane was always smiling, and
always accepting of just about any belief. Her philosophy was that all things
exist together in a sort of cosmic harmony.
“Penny?” Jay asked.
Penny was a different sort from Jane. She was giddy,
excitable, and indecisive. “I never really thought about it much,” Penny said,
then broke into a giggle.
“That brings it back to you, Jay,” I said, not about to let
him off the hook.
Jay’s answer sort of set the tone for my impression of him
from then on. It was dark, shrouded in mystery, and intended to provoke more
questions, rather than provide answers. “I believe in the ubiquity of time,
space and the physical realm,” he began, “All things past, present and future
coexist simultaneously. Therefore there is truly no past.”
I gazed at Jay with a sort of half smile…more of a smirk,
really. He picked up on the fact that I knew it was all doubletalk. “Okay,” I
said, “So, all that bullshit aside, what do you really believe?” Then I broke
into a full grin.
Jay laughed. “I do believe I have been here before. I
believe I am here now, and I am here in the future,” he said, “This life is
only one of many existences we all experience.”
“There,” I said, “That wasn’t so hard, was it?”
I was satisfied for the moment that I had gotten the answer;
then I realized I still did not, really.
I am not a highly educated man, but have learned just enough
to know when someone is truly knowledgeable and when someone is full of bull.
Jay was not so much full of bull as a little showy in his way of letting us
know that he was above average in intelligence. He was not afraid to spread a
little manure in getting to his point.
After several evenings of card games, then a few more
outings together with the girls, I felt I was beginning to know Jay pretty
well. We laughed and enjoyed many things as a foursome. We played pool, darts,
drank beer, and many other diversions.
Jay was an entrepreneur of sorts. His main line of work was
in IT. He also was teaching business classes in connection with a state funded
business development organization. After talking more, I learned that Jay also
had a great interest in ceramics. He studied at a University in West Virginia to learn
pottery and ceramics. He owned a couple of large kilns in a building near the
school. It had been shut down for some time, because of Jay’s other interests.
He just did not have time to do everything. I did notice that he seemed so self-involved
that he never even asked what I did for a living. That was fine, since my own
occupation as a wedding photographer and freelance writer would probably bore
him anyway.
One evening at dinner, Jay, Jane, Penny and I were talking
about literature, and what books we each liked to read. I have always leaned
toward the fantasy and science fiction books. My favorite is Tolkien’s “Lord of
the Rings” trilogy. Penny was not much of a reader. Jane preferred murder
mysteries. Jay talked more about an idea he had for a book that he dreamed of
writing himself. He briefly mentioned it at first, only saying that he had an
idea for the perfect murder mystery. Jane’s ears perked up as she questioned
him incessantly about it. He would not say much.
Finally, the ladies went to the women’s restroom and Jay
leaned over to me.
“I will tell you my idea,” he whispered. “I don’t think the
girls would like it very much. They may think it’s too morbid.”
I told Jay that I doubted that Jane would find anything too
morbid after hearing about some of the books she had read. Nonetheless, Jay
would not tell anyone but me. I am not sure why. I think he felt that I, being
a freelance writer, may write his story for him.
As Jay dribbled bits and pieces of his tale to me, I became
a little more than intrigued.
“I have a kiln, as I told you,” Jay began. “I have studied
many techniques in making ceramics and pottery. One of the techniques I am
interested in is called ‘ash glazing’. Have you ever heard of that?
“No, I am afraid I have not,” I answered. “Tell me about
it.”
I knew that he would, anyway, so I may as well sound
interested.
“When you make ceramics,” he continued, “you start with bisque
of the shape you want. You fire it in the kiln, and then add a glaze, and fire
it again. The glaze can be a number of things. It can have metal dust, such as
copper, or some sort of ash from different kinds of woods included. These added
ingredients cause different colorings in the glaze. The color is never the
same. It is always unique to each piece. Therefore, each well made piece can be
a valuable work. Are you with me so far?”
“Yes,” I said, “So how does this lead to the perfect
murder?”
At that time the women were returning from the bathroom. I
expected Jay to become quiet, but instead, he continued. He was on a roll and
did not want to leave the subject, so he decided to go ahead and include the
ladies in the conversation. He turned to Jane, whom he knew was the most
interested in such things.
“Jane, I have do have an idea for a perfect murder, and I
want your take on it.”
Jane nodded like a school child about to get a candy bar.
She grinned from ear to ear, and pleaded, “Yes, tell me about it. I can’t
wait.”
As Jay continued on, he dropped hints here and there. He
would ask along the way if anyone was onto the plot yet. None of us had a clue
until nearly the end of his story. We were all hitting buckets of beer pretty
hard, which may have slowed our perception just a little.
“That’s what I wanted to know,” Jay said. “You people are
pretty smart. If you didn’t figure it out quickly, then chances are no one else
will, either, and it will make a good book.”
As Jay talked of his ideas, he started by talking more about
the glazing technique. He told about the kilns: their size and the operating
temperatures. He talked of how many pieces of ceramics or pottery you can get
into one of his large devices.
“A pottery kiln is heated to a temperature of around 1800
degrees Fahrenheit,” Jay said, “while a crematorium is only heated to around
1200 degrees, at most. When something is burned in a kiln, such as wood, paper,
or anything organic, it breaks down to a finer ash, leaving nothing. Even DNA is
destroyed.”
The mention of DNA gave me a clue where Jay was going. They
always talk about DNA as a clue to a murder on those crime investigation type
TV shows. It was not until he began talking about ancient China , and the
use of human remains in the ashes, that I really got it. His murder mystery
involved disposing of a body by burning it in the kiln, then using the ashes in
the pottery and glaze.
Jay’s eyes almost seemed to burn with the fires of the kiln
as he spoke of the changing colors of the glaze as the ashes and all the
elemental compounds contained in the human body gave a unique look to each
piece of ceramics. He spoke of the way the glaze drizzles down the sides of the
article leaving burnt reds, oranges, greens, blues and other hues to the color
of the vase, plate or other piece. His hands moved as if they were gliding
along the surface of a magnificent vase.
Frankly, it was a little eerie. I was beginning to get the
feeling that Jay has seen this first hand. I felt that possibly he would rather
create the vase than write the book about it, meaning that he could conceivably
actually put a human body into his kiln for the sake of the art. I did not know
Jay well enough to assume this, nor did I know him well enough to discount it.
The beer and the time caught up with us that evening, and
the discussion sort of faded into barely intelligible murmurings. We were all
tired, sleepy, and half drunk. It was time to go. It was a very good thing that
we were all close to home, and none of us had to drive but a mile or two.
For the next several days, I could not get Jay’s story out
of my mind. He had said he was thinking of writing a book about it. I felt a
little foolish for considering that Jay might actually commit such a heinous
act. I laughed at myself. If he would have done something like that, he would
certainly not write a book about it. Knowing a little about Jay told me that he
probably intentionally wanted us all to wonder. He loved to keep people
guessing, especially about him. It was sort of a way to keep the center of
attention on him. This was a mildly annoying, but tolerable characteristic. For
the most part, I found Jay fascinating, and entertaining.
One day after work, I came home, made myself a snack of
peanut butter and crackers, and sat down at my computer to check my email.
“One from Jane,” I thought, “I’ll read the rest of them, or
toss out all the junk emails, then get back to that, so I can focus on hers.
Ah! There’s a joke from Dannie!”
Dannie was a friend of mine who always sent good jokes. He
rarely ever sent a personal email. He only forwarded funny stuff, usually with
some sexual humor. Dannie was a bit of a pervert, but a harmless one.
After chuckling over the picture of the girl with three
boobs, I went on down the list, deleting all the crap email about Viagra,
mortgage loans and so called “free” offers, which never are free, and get you
on a list so you get even more junk email.
“Hmmm. There’s one from Jay,” I said aloud. It read:
“Hey, Cal ,
How’s it going? You
know, talking about my idea for the murder mystery the other night got me
really interested in completing it. I know you write, and pretty well, from
what I have read of your stories. Do you think you are interested in working
with me on the book? I think it is a home run. It could be a best seller.
I’m not much of a
writer, myself. I can’t stay focused long enough. I’m more of an idea man. Let
me know.
Oh, by the way, great
fun the other night. The four of us should get together again soon.
Thanks
J.”
I had been pretty sure that he would ask me to write for
him. The idea did seem appealing. I don’t read much in the way of murder
mysteries, and had never tried to write one before, but this did seem like the
makings of a good plot. What if it did go to press, and become a best seller?
It would be great to have my name on it. I decided to answer Jay’s email with a
simple statement:
“I’m interested, Jay.
Let’s talk more about it.”
That was all it took. Jay became obsessed with his story. He
bombarded me with emails and phone calls when he had a new idea for something
to add. His thoughts were very disorganized and chronologically mixed up. It
would take months just to sort them all out and put them in some kind of
intelligent order. I learned that we could add “ADD” and “OCD” to his alphabet
soup of personality traits. Jay’s entire mood changed then. He became decidedly
more serious.
The email from Jane was to ask me to come to her townhouse
for another card game with Penny and Jay.
“Cal , please call me when you get this. Penny
and I want to have another night of cards on Friday. I have wine, and I’m
making that taco dip you like. You can pick up the chips and anything else you
want to bring.”
I replied:
“I’ll be there!”
I was ready for something to take my mind off life.
All evening at the card table, Jay talked about his mystery.
The girls would divert the conversation to another topic, but Jay would
eventually bring it back up.
“Euchre!” Jane shouted. We had won the hand, and I was
barely paying attention. Apparently she was.
“So this boy meets a girl,” Jay continued with his thoughts.
“Then they go to college together, studying ceramics. The boy develops this ash
glaze that everyone thinks is wonderful. It wins him awards, scholarships, the
attention of art lovers, etc.”
“Sounds interesting so far,” I said. I kept thinking that
the interest and attention this character was receiving was something Jay
wanted for himself.
“What no one knows is that he is using the remains of
animals, burned in his kiln, to make the ash glaze. That’s what gives it its
unique coloring and appeal.” Jay’s eyes lit up as he talked about it.
“Wait till the PETA people get hold of this one,” I quipped.
“So, where does the murder come into play?”
“Ah! The girlfriend breaks up with him. It seems he’s been
so tied up in his ceramics that he has not been paying much attention to her.
She had started to go out with another guy. Late one night, she comes back to
his studio where he is working. She has decided that no matter what, she really
wants to be with him.
When the girl appears at the door, another figure appears
right behind her. She did not know that the other boy she was dating had
followed her. There is an argument. The other boy is furious that the girl has
gone back to the ceramics boy.”
“It would be easier, maybe, if we give them names,” I said,
“So I can follow your story better.”
“Names,” Jay muttered. “I’ll leave that up to you. I don’t
really care what their names are. This is about the story. You are the writer…you
give them names.”
Jay did not care about names because the story was really
about him. That was my conclusion. He continued his rather derailed train of
thought:
“The boy had been abused by his father, growing up. He had
been burned with cigars many times. He was all messed up in the head because of
this, but most of his life it didn’t show. Every time he peeped into the kiln
he would imagine his father inside there, burning, screaming for help, then
falling into a pile of ashes like the squirrel, or other road kill he used in
his ash glaze.”
As Jay talked about being burned with cigars, I remembered
seeing a couple of scars on his arm once when he wore a short sleeved shirt,
which he did not wear often.
“So let’s get back to the girlfriend,” I said, trying to
keep him on track enough to write notes.
“Jay must have been
the boy whose father abused him,” I thought to myself.
I looked around to see that the girls were no longer at the
table with us. I guess the card game was over. They were in the living room
drinking wine and listening to music.
“Yeah,” Jay continued, “The girl and her other boyfriend are
arguing, and Jay is just standing there wondering why they are even at his
studio. The other boy hits the door with his fist and stomps away angry. She says
she wants to talk to the ceramics boy and is starting to tell him she wants to
rekindle their relationship. Our boy is angry at her, too, and doesn’t give her
much of a chance to talk. He screams at her to just go back to sleeping with
other guys. They argue, and our boy picks up a piece of his ceramics to throw
against the wall in anger. The girl moves just at the wrong moment, and the
piece catches her right in the side of the head. She dies instantly.”
“Wow,” I said, “I didn’t see that coming. I thought the
other boy would get it.”
“Okay, no, it was the girl.” Jay was on a roll, “So our boy
is frantic. He can’t believe what just happened. Without even giving it much
thought, in a state of panic, he puts the girl’s body, the bloody ceramic
piece, and everything around that may have blood on it into the kiln and turns
up the heat. He spends the night in the studio, going from crying to panicking,
to falling asleep. He wakes up with a jerk and a feeling of panic again. He is
not dealing with it well at all.
But then sometime in the morning, he just becomes numb. He
mechanically removes the ashes from the kiln and begins making his glaze, just
as though it was a dead dog in there. His face is expressionless. He has no
emotion. He is totally numb, and has blocked the whole thing out.”
“There will be an investigation because of the missing
girl,” I said.
“Yes,” Jay agreed, “And the other boy will be suspected,
because people saw them fighting outside the studio, and saw the other boy
stomp away.”
We were interrupted by Penny and Jane coming back into the
kitchen, where the card table was now covered with my notes.
“It’s time for you to go now,” Jane said, “I’m tired, and I
have to work tomorrow for a while.”
“I’m tired, too,” Penny added. “Let’s go, Jay. You haven’t
said two words to me since you started working on that story of yours.”
For the next few weeks, the four of us would get together
off and on, but the girls made us promise not to work on the book while we were
visiting. That was fine with me. I was getting a little too much of it at once
myself. Jay and I would work on the book through emails and phone calls in
between our outings. It was clear, however, that there was something different
about the relationship between Jay and Penny. Obviously, Jay was not happy that
he could not indulge himself in his obsession over the book all the time. There
were comments. Penny often dropped hints that there was very little sex, and
that Jay didn’t seem interested in her as much anymore.
“He’s been going down to his ceramics studio all the time,
getting more ideas for his damn book,” Penny complained. She shot me a glance
of disapproval for helping him with it.
Jay would roll his eyes and scowl at Penny every time she
made such a remark. I would have given them about a month more before that
relationship ended. As it turns out, I was right. I never would have guessed,
however, just how it would end.
“I thought you had that studio shut down,” I said.
“I’m doing research,” Jay mumbled, glaring at Penny.
For the next few nights I could barely sleep. When I did
fall asleep I would awaken in a cold sweat after having a short dream about
Jay. Sometimes the dream would be of him as a child being burned by his father.
Other times I would dream of Jay killing someone and shoving them in his kiln.
Was this the disturbed man I was beginning to believe he was? Was his story
about him? Could he really do such a thing? Maybe he just wanted to get back at
his father, so he was playing the scenes out in his book idea. Either way, I
was more and more convinced that Jay, as intelligent as he was, was not right
in the head.
When Jay did contact me again, he seemed a little down. He
called me on the phone one Friday evening, and his voice was weak and almost
monotone.
“What’s up, Jay?” I asked, “You seem pretty low tonight.”
“I think Penny’s breaking up with me,” he said sadly.
“Why?” I asked.
“Because I am obsessed with this book, and my ceramics. I
get that way. I am more than a little OCD,” Jay paused, and I did not have an
answer.
After a long pause, I finally broke the silence. “Well, I’m
sure you can work it out, Jay. Just take a break and spend some time with her.”
“That’s probably a good idea,” Jay agreed. “Let’s play cards
tomorrow evening. I’ll talk to Penny about it, and you talk to Jane.”
“Sure,” I said, “…but let’s not talk about the book or
anything. That could be a bad idea.”
“All right.” Jay sounded a little more optimistic.
We did get together, and we did play cards. It was light and
friendly. Jane seemed a little nervous, but I was not sure why, and I had
learned not to ask. She would tell me if and when she felt like it.
After Jay and Penny left, Jane immediately told me what was
bothering her. “Penny is breaking up with Jay tonight,” she said.
“He told me she might,” I answered, “but I suggested
spending some time with her, like tonight. I thought it may help.”
“It didn’t help,” Jane said emphatically. “There’s more to
it than his not spending time with her. She’s freaking about this whole book
idea, because it seems to her he is talking about himself. He was abused as a
child. The whole fantasy is too much like what Jay’s going through. Frankly,
she’s a little afraid of him now.”
“Has he ever gotten violent with her,” I asked. I was
getting shaky. The adrenalin was coursing through me. I was having the same
feelings and doubts about Jay.
“He has never even spoken harshly to her,” Jane said. “Even
when they argue, he’s always calm and never raises his voice. He has never
touched her in any way but lovingly.”
“So….” I was confused.
“So he’s a little too controlled,” Jane said. “It’s like he
doesn’t have any real emotions. Like the character in his book…kind of
mechanical.”
“Well, I have seen emotion,” I disagreed, “…but only when
he’s talking about the book.” My own words reinforced her thoughts, in a way.
Neither Jane nor I heard from Penny or Jay for a week. We
both began to worry about how the breakup went. It was unusual for Penny not to
call Jane for more than a day or two. I had come to expect Jay’s calls and
emails about the book. There had been no communication since the card night.
“Jay said that he had re-opened the pottery studio where he
had been making ceramics before,” Jane said, “He said it was for research. I
ignored it, because we had agreed not to talk about the book.”
“I know,” I said, thinking deeply.
I’m sure that both Jane and I were thinking along the same
lines. Could Jay have been so upset over the breakup that he would do something
to Penny? I wouldn’t say it, and neither would she. It was an unspoken
communication between us.
That Friday evening, Jane called me in a frantic voice,
saying, “Come over here, please, Cal! Something’s happened!”
“What is it?” I probed.
“I’ll tell you when you get here. Please hurry!” and she
hung up the phone.
When I arrived at Jane’s townhouse, she opened the door
before I got up the steps and motioned me inside. She began to tell me about a
phone call she had just gotten from Penny.
“I was glad to see her number pop up. I was so worried about
her!” Jane began, “She started to say something, then I heard a crash, like
something heavy broke. She screamed! Then the connection was lost!”
“That doesn’t sound good at all,” I said, already turning to
go back out. “I’m going to see what’s going on!
“Where are you going? Where would you look?” Jane asked
hysterically now.
Jay’s got a pottery studio near the school. I’m going to
find it. There may be something there to see.
“I’ll go with you!” Jane started to follow.
“Absolutely not!” I shouted, scaring Jane a bit. I realized
how I’d sounded and softened my voice, “Too dangerous. You stay by your phone
in case I need you to call 911.” Jane didn’t argue, and I left.
I found Jay’s studio
from the bits and pieces of information he had given me about its location. I
arrived at the back door, where he had said he usually went in, just after
dark. There was a light on inside. There was a little smoke coming from the flu
above what I assumed was a kiln. I got out of my car and approached the door,
which had a little peep window in it. It was a little smoky and dingy, but I
could see a little. I kept moving my head around to see more of the room.
On the floor was a pair of women’s pumps. That’s shoes, to
most guys. I happened to know because Jane and Penny were always talking about
shoes. I looked up on a small work bench and saw what looked like the handle of
a purse. Just past the handle, there were a couple of small, sparkling things.
“They must be earrings,” I thought to myself.
I looked back at the shoes, then my eyes were drawn to some
pieces of something scattered over the floor at the end of the kiln. They
looked like pieces of some sort of pottery. Then I saw the thing that truly
horrified me. Just under the end of the kiln, almost too dark to make it out,
was a white rag. It had dark stains on it.
“Blood!” I almost screamed, but stifled the urge so it just
came out as a coarse whisper. “He’s done it! What do I do now?” I was frantic,
and shaking. “I have to do something.”
I tried the door handle. It turned. I slowly opened the
door, and peeked around the edge of it to view the entire room. My mind was
racing back through the events of the previous months, then the phone call from
Penny to Jane, the scream, now this! My suspicions were confirmed. I wondered
if he’d done this before. “Of course he has!” I thought.
There was no one in the room as I crept forward. I had to
find out. Could I see into the kiln, or was it sealed off? As I moved closer, I
could see a tiny hole with some thick glass in it. The hole was just big enough
to peer through if you get just the right angle. I leaned toward it.
“What are you doing?” Jay had silently appeared at a door on
the other side of the room.
I knew the look on my face clued him as to what I was thinking.
All I could say was, “Blood. The broken pottery….Penny’s purse and shoes….and
earrings.”
Jay got a quizzical look on his face and tilted his head to
one side. He looked as though he was surprised that I figured it out. “It’s
just like a scene from the book, isn’t it?” he said calmly and in the
emotionless tone that had become more and more noticeable lately. I just stared
at him in horror.
Jay spoke again, “You don’t think….you do! You think I
killed Penny and put her in the kiln?” He laughed out loud; it was the first
laughter I had heard from him in months.
“Didn’t you?” I confronted him.
“Look, it’s a misunderstanding,” he said. His hand reached
for a drawer as he spoke.
“He’s reaching for a gun!” I thought, “Maybe it’s a knife.
He’s going to kill me too.” The fight or flight response took over my entire
body. Out of the corner of my eye, I saw a large vase. As I reached for it, a
morbid thought crossed my mind. “Is that glaze on it made from human remains?”
I swung the vase hard, lunging toward him as it struck the
side of his head, which bounced off it and lay over to the side. I could hear
his neck breaking as his head moved. I had both crushed his skull in and broken
his neck with one blow. Jay hit the floor like a ton of firebricks.
I stood there in shock at what had just happened. So many
thoughts raced through my mind almost simultaneously. “He killed Penny. Now
I’ve killed him. He was going to kill me, too. Poor Penny! What will I tell Jane?”
Too many thoughts whirled around in my head. I felt dizzy, nauseous, shaky, and
scared at once.
“Oh my God!” a voice screamed behind me. “What have you
done?!”
I turned around. It was Penny. “How? What? You are alive!”
“Of course I am!” Penny screamed at me, “What have you done?!”
She ran over and fell on her knees by Jay’s side, shaking him. “Wake up!” she
screamed. “Jay! Wake up!”
I looked over the whole scene, trying to figure out what
just happened, and why. Penny was barefoot. She had another towel in her hand,
with blood on it. I looked at her left foot, which seemed to have blood on it,
too. There was a cut on her foot. I looked up at Jay. He had something in his
right hand. Was it the gun he was reaching for in the drawer?
What Jay had in his hand was an adhesive bandage.
In the courtroom, the horrible truth unfolded as I told my
story, Penny told hers, Jane spoke about each of us and our association, and
Jay – Jay was dead.
During the time Jay and Penny went missing, they had had an
argument as Penny had told him she had decided to break up. Jay eventually
admitted that he was spending too much thought and time on his book idea. He
was obsessive, and he realized this bout obsession was going to cause him to
lose the perfect person for him. They made up. The two of them had gone away
for a weekend, to a secluded spot in the mountains where there was no phone
service, cellular or otherwise. As they returned, Jay had told Penny he had a
surprise for her. He took her to the pottery studio, where he fired up the kiln
and was preparing to place in it a beautiful vase he had made for her, for the
glazing. It was just a normal glaze. There were no human remains involved. She
leaned toward him to get a closer look as he moved the item. At the same time
she was dialing her cell phone to tell Jane the news about the makeup, the
trip, and the beautiful vase, when she leaned too close, and caught his arm.
The vase fell and broke. Pieces shattered, one hitting her on the foot, causing
it to bleed. She screamed. She didn’t think the connection had been made yet,
so she ended the call. Penny ran to the bathroom to clean up her foot, and Jay
had followed her just as I was “breaking” into his studio. Penny had kicked off
her shoes. She had already put down her purse and removed her earrings and laid
them beside the purse. I was trying to peek inside the kiln just at the moment
Jay came out to find her a bandage. He kept them in the drawer because
accidents were often happening in the studio, leaving little cuts and scrapes.
There had been no murder…yet. Now I have killed Jay.
I began this story by saying that I am often startled by the
occasional unveiling of human nature’s darkest side. That side of human nature
is full of paranoia, mistrust, and violence. It is the side that surfaced in
me, the night I killed a man simply because I let my own imagination run wild.
That night changed me forever.
Penny hasn’t contacted Jane now for four years. She seems to
have vanished without a trace. Me? I spent those four years in prison for
manslaughter. The judge believed my story, that I was convinced I was stopping
a murder, and not committing a premeditated one. I bought the pottery studio
soon after that, out of a sense of guilt, I suppose.I studied all Jay’s books
that were lying around the studio and learned to make some nice pieces. They
all have the most beautiful glaze on them…ash glaze. They sell like crazy. You
might say I’m making a killing in the business.
End
