Through a slit in the black veil, I saw Clay Burrel’s eyes.
“Isn’t it just a little early for Halloween, Clay?”
I recognized the burka from the green room closet but pretended to be more curious than alarmed by his attire. I had to admire his planning. If any witness noticed him entering or leaving the turbine, the cops would blame the Saudis for my murder.
“You’d make a dashing Lawrence of Arabia,” I continued. “But you and I both know you’re not hero material.”
“I just had one bad weekend,” he said.
“I can believe it,” I answered, trying to keep him talking until someone came looking for me. “Sometimes our entire life hinges on one bad weekend.”
I was pretty sure the weekend he was referring to was the forty-eight hours before he started working for Channel 3. On that first day on the job, he gave me lots of reasons to dislike him, but the best one—that he was a wife killer—had eluded me and everyone else.
“It wasn’t all my fault,” he said.
He went on to rationalize what happened to Jolene by attributing it to stress over the move and job change. He claimed she went farther than she should have verbally. He conceded he went farther than he should have physically.
“You’re right,” I agreed, “it wasn’t all your fault.”
I played along with the image he’d created of his spouse as a self-centered shrew, not letting on that I knew about the bruises.
“I’m glad you didn’t kill her just for ratings.” I hoped that sounded like praise. “That would have been shallow.”
“Well, little lady, I figured something good should come of her death. And if my career got a boost, so be it.”
Like most psychopaths, he showed little remorse. I tried not to think about the ghastly disfiguration of her body and couldn’t bring myself to ask how anyone could do that to someone they had once wooed and wed.
Killing me would certainly be easier for him.
“By covering the case, you always knew what the police were up to,” I said. “That was very shrewd.”
“I also kept an eye on you,” he said, “always knowing what you were up to.” That explained my growing feeling that someone was watching my house.
“You should have just kept your paws off my story,” he continued. “Then none of this would have happened.”
Actually, Clay had killed Sam before I started trying to steal his story, but blame-shifting is a common tendency of narcissistic killers. It helps them justify their motives. Hidden under a flowing robe and veil, Clay’s body language was unreadable. His eyes were the only focus of my attention, so I didn’t see the gun emerge from a fold in his clothing until he raised it to fire.
The bullet ricocheted off the steel walls and nearly hit both of us. Garnett was right. Texan or not, Clay was a terrible shot.
While he was comprehending the disadvantages of gunfire in such a confined space, I scrambled up the metal ladder—a harness being the least of my worries now. Instantly he was on my heels, literally, grabbing my ankle and trying to pull me down.
One good kick and I heard the gun fall with a clang.
Clay paused to look down, presumably weighing whether to continue to chase after me or go back for the weapon. By the time he decided to move upward and onward, I’d put a few rungs between us. I raced to the top like my life depended on it. And I suspected it might. Somewhere on that twenty-story climb I lost a shoe. That slowed me down. But the Islamic garb slowed Clay down more.
When I reached the ledge at the top, I was panting hard. Burrel was still about fifteen feet below me, lacking my incentive for speed: survival.
I figured I might have time for one phone call.
Even though cell service was blocked, I knew 911 should still work, but my call would be answered nearly twenty miles away in the county sheriff’s office. And the dispatcher wouldn’t have any idea who I was, what I was talking about, or where to send help.
Then I remembered that law enforcement numbers on the scene were cleared for cell service. So I hit send for Garnett’s number. I couldn’t tell if I was hearing his voice or his voicemail. I had to scream to be heard over the whirl of the turbine blades.
“Help! I’m in the top of the turbine and Clay Burrel is trying to kill me!”
By then Clay was very close. I tried jabbing my remaining heel in his eye. But I was off balance and he pushed past, and suddenly I was on my butt and he was hovering over me. A swirl of black fabric, laughing.
I threw my phone at him. While he ducked, I scrambled to my feet. The phone lay on the floor; Clay seemed surprised that instead of lunging for it, I kicked it down the ladder shaft. I hoped if Garnett came looking for me, he’d see my phone at the bottom and realize he’d found the right turbine.
There wasn’t much room to skirmish but I was surprised Clay and I could both stand. The upper chamber was larger than it looked from the ground. Inside, it felt like a spaceship, but with hardly any view of the outside world. The spinning blades made a loud hum, almost like jet engines.
No room to run. The only way out was the way I had just come. Down the ladder. And I’d have to get past him.
“Give it up, Clay. Help is on the way.” I said it with more confidence than I felt. But sometimes, outcome is all in the delivery.
“You’re bluffing. I know cell calls can’t go through.”
For now, I tried keeping the ladder hole between us. Without a gun, he’d have to get his hands on me to kill me. Thinking of the same strategy, Clay grabbed my sleeve and tried dragging me across the floor into the hole. But he didn’t quite have the reach to pull it off.
“No thanks,” I told him. “Long way down.”
“You have as much chance of avoiding that long way down as scratching your ear with your elbow.”
As tempted as I was to test his metaphor, I figured it was just a scheme to distract me.
“I’m no threat to you, Clay.” Arguing with a psychopath doesn’t usually yield results, but I didn’t have other options just then. “No one will believe anything I say. Your secret is safe.”
“Can’t take that chance.”
We were both yelling because of the noise from the turbine.
“Killing Jolene was an accident.”
Again, I assured him I didn’t think he meant to do it. “But if you kill me now, Clay, that’s premeditated murder. A whole different sport from simply losing your temper. I don’t think you’ve got that in you.”
He laughed at those words. “Killing you will be lots easier. Don’t have all that emotional investment complicating matters.”
He was probably right. There would be no wasted regret over my death. For Clay, killing me would be as easy as sneezing.
“This ain’t my first rodeo, little lady,” he said.
He talked like a braggart. And suddenly I realized he wasn’t just talking about Jolene, he was also talking about the murder of Sam Pierce. Out of habit, and out of curiosity, I tried getting him to put it on the record.
“Who else have you killed, Clay? Tell me.”
“You of all folks should be able to guess.”
“But Sam never printed anything bad about you.”
“And I wasn’t about to let him. He was getting too close. If that damn Yankee had kept his piercing eyes out of my life, he’d be alive today.”
“So why frame me? Why not just kill him and move on?”
Clay was the one who’d made it personal. It seemed only fair I get an answer.
“I needed somebody to pin it on, and you had a believable motive,” he said. “Besides, it’s a better story this way. Isn’t that obvious?”
“You framed me to get higher ratings?”
“And job advancement. With you out of the way, I’ll rule Channel 3 as their senior investigative reporter.”
Even under the burka, his chest seemed to puff with pride.
“You have to admit,” he said, “Sam’s murder was the perfect crime.”
I had to give him credit. It was perfect.
“Yours will be perfect, too,” he assured me. “This is better than a bullet. When police examine your broken body at the bottom of the turbine they’ll conclude you either committed suicide out of guilt or simply fell to your death trespassing.”
Either cause of death would be believable. And from reading the accident reports of all the gruesome wind turbine workplace fatalities, I knew my broken body would be in bad shape. I just hoped my father didn’t find it.
“Are you going to break the exclusive of my death?” I asked.
Clay shook his head. “Tempting as it is to land another big scoop, I called in sick today so I could follow you. I thought it best you die in another jurisdiction. Too many murders happening in Minneapolis.”
Then, faintly, I thought I heard my name being called but couldn’t be sure. Clay didn’t react, so it was probably my simple yearning for rescue.
But just in case I wasn’t hallucinating, I started screaming, “Up here!”
I saw no downside in making Clay worry that the two of us were not alone. He gave up trying to pull me across the gap; instead he jumped over to my side of the chamber and grabbed me.
“Help!” I kept yelling. “On top!” As he and I struggled, I deliberately kicked off my other shoe, sending it down the ladder hole as a final cry for help. Hoping a Prince Charming might see the slipper and search up high for his Cinderella.
Clay and I struggled. He scratched my hands and arms; I tried gouging his face. He turned my body so my back was facing the ladder hole, and I couldn’t gauge my proximity to the edge—and death. But I sensed mortality only inches away. Clay’s back faced some revolving gears, so he was in no danger of falling down the abyss.
But I was. The back of my foot could feel the edge along the drop-off.
“You’ll be long dead and I’ll be at the network,” he said, taunting me.
“The Cartoon Network,” I managed to retort, pushing at him without much luck.
This could have been the moment when my life passed before my eyes and I bid farewell to our world. Instead, I found myself grappling with the central theme of Don Quixote: is it better to die delusional and happy, or live miserably but sane?
Perhaps if I imagined I was flying, the downward spiral in the wind turbine would be less horrific. Maybe heaven was like an eternal 40 share. I tried telling myself Hugh was waiting to catch me at the bottom and carry me over a cloudy threshold to an everlasting life together.
I had to think fast, before the abyss won. I opted to fight for life, even if my last minutes were anguished, rather than succumb to the comfort of delusion.
Even though Clay wasn’t more than a few inches taller than me, he was much stronger. To change circumstances, I reached into my pocket, feeling for some kind of weapon to wield, even just a pen. My fingers touched leather and fur. Figuring rabies was the least of my troubles, I pulled out the dead bat and pressed it against Clay’s eyes.
He made a gagging sound and stepped back, dragging me with him, away from the drop-off. Not wanting to release his hold on me, he shook his head sideways to avoid the lifeless creature. I tried squishing the animal up Clay’s nose, so he couldn’t breathe, but his head covering was in the way.
I blinked when his veil flicked in my face, so I didn’t see the flowing fabric sweep backward, catching in the spinning mass of the turbine’s rotor and pulling him inside the sharp gears.
Clay dropped me to free his hands in an attempt to escape the mechanical monster.
His death was silent, it came so quickly and horribly. There was no time for either of us to scream.
Unlike his dead wife—who probably didn’t bleed much when he cut off her head—Clay bled plenty.
His heart must have continued to beat as his limbs and head were ripped from his body by the twisty machine. I dropped to the floor, trying to shield my face from the red spray. My entire body was warm and sticky. My hair felt like it had too much mousse. Most of the floor, the walls, and the top rungs of the ladder were slippery from Clay’s blood and my vomit. My gut was telling me future nightmares would be much worse than butchered chickens.
I didn’t want to stay up high with what was left of Clay. But I was too shaken to climb down. And even though I was barely a mile from the farmhouse where I grew up, I had never felt so far from home.