been forwarded there.'
Sara pressed her lips together. 'Sounds like she knows what she's doing.'
'We're coordinating with the credit card company. They're mailing it out tomorrow. It should be in the box in a couple of days.' He shrugged. 'From there, we just sit and wait. She shouldn't take long to get it. I'm sure she needs the money to set up shop, wherever she is.'
'You think that's what she's doing?'
He gave her a sad smile. 'The guy at the post office says there's another card from a different company in the box right now.'
'What's with all the cooperation?' Sara asked. She knew better than anyone that people were reluctant to assist the police these days. 'Didn't they ask for a subpoena?'
'No,' Jeffrey told her. 'It's amazing how helpful people are when you tell them that children are involved.'
'So,' Sara began. 'What next?'
'We're going to have to coordinate with the school, find out how many kids were involved in this thing.'
'I want to check every file at the clinic.'
'Will Molly help you?'
Sara nodded. 'I already talked with her. We need to be careful about this. The hard part is going to be dealing with the hysterics whose kids never had contact with Dave Fine or Dottie or Grace.'
'You think people will do that?'
'Yes,' Sara answered. 'You can't blame them, but we're going to have to find a way to screen out the real cases from the bogus ones. We're lucky in a way that this was happening to older kids who can talk about what happened.'
'They didn't look that old in the pictures.'
'The FBI will have someone assign ages to the kids. They'll use the Tanner scale. There are certain markers that tell you how old a kid is.'
'I hate that there's even such a thing.'
'Do you want me to go to the school with you?'
Jeffrey sighed, thinking about how hard the next few days were going to be. Of course, it wasn't her job to talk to Lacey Patterson, either. He said, 'I know you don't have to, Sara, but do you mind?'
'No,' she told him. 'Of course not.'
'What I want to know is why do the kids protect these people?' Jeffrey asked, because that was the one thing that he could not understand. 'Why didn't Lacey or Jenny talk to one of their teachers, or go to you?'
'It's hard for them,' Sara explained. 'Their parents are all they have, all they know. It's not like they can move out and get jobs. A lot of times parents convince them that it's normal, or that they don't have an alternative.'
'Like Stockholm syndrome,' he said. 'Where the victim falls in love with the abductor.'
'That's a good analogy,' Sara told him. 'Their parents set up this pattern where they abuse them, then buy them ice cream. Or they guilt them into doing what they want, or trick them. Kids don't know that it's not supposed to be that way.' Sara sighed. 'And the fact is, the kids love their parents. They want to please them. They don't want to get their parents in trouble. They want the behavior to stop, but they don't want to lose their mother and father.' She paused. 'There's a real dependency there. The parents cause the pain, but they're also the ones who take it away.'
She continued, 'I've also been thinking about the baby.'
He didn't look at her, but said, 'Yeah?'
'Grace's baby was a girl. Maybe Jenny thought she was protecting the baby. Maybe that's why she helped Grace get rid of the baby.'
He thought it over, thinking that Jenny was so afraid of Grace she would've done anything to avoid her wrath. Jeffrey finally said, 'It's possible.'
'I really think that's why she did it,' Sara said with conviction. 'I think Grace made her help kill the baby and Jenny was so upset all she could think to do was kill Mark, the father.' She sounded so sure of herself that Jeffrey looked up at her. He could see how this was eating her up inside as much as it was him.
Jeffrey stood and stretched his arms up to the sky. He did not want to think about this anymore. He did not want to know that there were other kids like Jenny and Mark out there, being abused by their parents. He did not want to think about Dottie Weaver holding on to Lacey Patterson so she could exploit the child. Something had to give. Jeffrey did not think he could go on knowing that Dottie Weaver was out there doing whatever she wanted to children. He did not want to think about her preying on another small town somewhere.
He said, 'It's almost cool out here.'
'Isn't the breeze nice? I'd forgotten what it was like.'
'It doesn't bother you to be out here in the dark?'
'Why would it?' she asked.
He looked at her. 'Sometimes I think you're the strongest person I know.'
She smiled, indicating that he should sit beside her.
He sat in the chair with a groan. Jeffrey had not realized until that moment just how tired he was. He leaned his head back, looking up at the night sky. Clouds obscured the stars, and it looked like August was releasing its stranglehold on the thermometer. Fall would come soon, and the leaves would drop from the trees and the air would turn colder and Jenny Weaver would still be dead.
Jeffrey asked, 'Did you release the body?'
'Yes,' she answered.
'What about the baby?'
'I talked to Brock. He's donating the service. There's a plot in the Roanoke Cemetery.'
'I'll pay for it.'
'I already took care of it,' she said. 'Will you go to the service with me?'
'Yeah,' he answered, feeling it was the least he could do.
'Paul Jennings said to tell you to remember what he said.'
Jeffrey was silent.
'What did he say?'
'That I shouldn't blame myself for what happened,' he told her. 'That I shouldn't make myself live with that guilt.'
She reached over and squeezed his arm. 'He's right.'
'He said I should blame Dottie.'
'Maybe you should.'
'Dave Fine blames Dottie, too.'
'It's not the same thing,' she told him, sitting up in her chair. 'Jeffrey, look at me…' She waited until he did. 'You did what you had to do.'
'I stopped Jenny from killing Mark so that he could turn around and hang himself,' Jeffrey told her. 'He still hasn't regained consciousness. He might never.'
'And that's your fault?' she asked him. 'I never knew you were so powerful, Jeffrey.' She listed things out: 'You made Jenny Weaver point a gun at Mark, you made Mark hang