PROLOGUE
God has failed too many on this one, thought Detective Bill Wall as he ambled, soaking wet, toward the large home with the brick façade. It was warm for an Ohio December, and the temperature meant that rain, not snow, fell from the slate-gray sky—and that was no advantage. In a bit of poor planning, Wall and his companion, Detective Steve James, had forgotten their umbrellas. Their footsteps splashed against the steps of the house belonging to Melinda Raisch, formerly known as Melinda Harmon.
They were there to investigate the unsolved murder of Melinda’s first husband, David Harmon. For almost twenty years, the case had been famously unsolved in their home state of Kansas, but Wall had a hunch this case could be wrapped up with just a turn of that front doorknob.
The players in the crime were memorialized in the depths of the collective unconscious back in Olathe: a pretty newlywed, Melinda Lambert, the one all the boys desired for her pert, all-American looks and her bright, eager eyes; a young, handsome college student, Mark Mangelsdorf, student body president and one of the most popular guys on campus; and David Harmon, Melinda’s adoring, twenty-five-year-old husband, who one dark winter evening in 1982 was bludgeoned to death in his own bed. It was a slaying so gruesome that the first responders on the scene thought the victim had been shot in the face point blank with a shotgun.
A dozen blows had fallen on David’s sleeping face, when probably three would have served to kill. His face had been rendered featureless. One eyeball was dislodged and had rolled onto the floor. His nose and cheekbones were utterly destroyed. His jaw was cracked in several places, and the killer had been in such a fervid state that he had, in his haste, delivered an errant shot to David’s neck, crushing it. Pieces of David’s brain had sprayed about the bedroom.
David’s wife Melinda and her friend Mark Mangelsdorf were the prime suspects. The brutal murder sparked dissent and division within the town: between the relatively newly arrived Church of the Nazarene, an evangelical Christian denomination of which Melinda, David, and Mark were members, and the long-established Olathe residents. Because of the church’s unusual actions after the murder, many thought it was protecting its flock, even at the risk of harboring criminals. Some thought the entire case against Mark and Melinda was character assassination and that the unsubstantiated rumors of a “Nazarene divorce” stemmed from fear of the town’s growing population of evangelicals.
Evangelicals stood in animus against farm families and their more measured attachment to Jesus. Neighbor set upon neighbor, with the naturally deferential manners of the Midwest all but lost, as if to prairie fire.
Even the vaunted Kansas Bureau of Investigation had failed to prove the identity of the murderer or murderers. No one had spent even one moment in jail for David’s murder.
And yet, the two prime suspects had a story that was so flimsy, it amounted to a whispered taunt: “Catch me if you can.” Now, approaching Melinda Raisch’s front door two decades later, Detective Wall thought the duo should have been rotting in prison all those years, not enjoying charmed lives in their respective high societies. But here Wall and James were, wading out of the investigation’s still waters. What would happen now? The investigators who had come before them—stymied by a dearth of conclusive evidence—had at one point become so desperate for clues that they had resorted to consulting a fortune teller. Did Wall and James face similar failure?
A third man was along for the ride, an Ohio detective named Eric Griffin, a local chaperone who had done some reconnaissance of the place to make sure Melinda would be alone, without children, without her successful cosmetic-dentist husband, and, most of all, without her father, an old man now who—they were not surprised to learn—lived nearby and might still be ready to proffer advice and stand nose to nose with police to protect his child, as he had done back in 1982.
Griffin was there to make sure the Kansas boys did not misuse their authority and, as tempting as it was, perform a bit of rough frontier justice. He’d let them give the rich lady a workaround, though they would pretty much have to conform to state law. He was the supervisor as long as they were in his jurisdiction. He was also there to radio for backup, in the unlikely event that this visit to a suburban mom took a dark turn.
Through the large windows of the Raisch’s stately home shone the lights of two brilliantly appointed Christmas trees. “Looks like Nordstrom’s,” Wall said to James, echoing what they viewed as the theme of this case—evil masquerading as normalcy.
It was a prime year for evil masquerading as normalcy. Just three months prior to the Ohio trip, nineteen hijackers had strolled onto four separate jet planes and in a single morning changed the face of modern history. It was now late December of 2001 and Wall and James, traveling through airports in the wake of September 11 with their guns in tow, had caused high drama, even with their badges, identification, and pale Kansan faces. Every aspect of this case seemed a lost cause, but coming from the town of Olathe, which, in the time since the murder had seen its open fields of wheat and wildflowers give way to suburban sprawl, Wall and James were used to demonstrating resilience in the face of change.
They anticipated that Melinda would be as unreceptive as she had been in 1982, when a group of high-placed evangelicals from the Church of the Nazarene cloaked her in a mantle of spiritual immunity. She was allowed to leave the city without being subjected to so much as a single formal police interview. Today, the plan was to mollify her, to make it seem as if she was not a suspect. At the same time, they would imply that they had new DNA evidence, which, depending on test results they hadn’t received yet, might or might not be true. They would flap their gums like forensic specialists in the hope that she watched too many real crime shows and would fold.
They would also threaten to blab around town about the crime. Her husband—the new one—was a well-to-do cosmetic dentist, and the pair gave heartily to local charitable organizations. The detectives would tell a few key neighbors, clients of the dental practice, fellow church members, and even the recipients of Melinda’s charitable donations if it’d help seal the deal.
Of course, it was all a bluff. If she told them to get lost or, more likely, “No, thank you,” or “I have to speak to an attorney,” they would stop themselves from calling her some choice names, then depart and head back to Kansas, fingers crossed that on their way home they weren’t arrested at the airport.
At the very least, in just catching a glimpse of Melinda in the doorway, they could take a quick measure. Her looks were an avenue of intrigue. She had been so alluring back in 1982. Had guilt exacted a toll upon that attractive face, that inviting body? From the look of her home—and current photos of Mark, her suspected partner in the bloodbath who had not aged a lick—they highly doubted it.
As the detectives reached the threshold, they affected flat gazes. James would play the sympathetic cop, Wall the more aggressive one.
In the end, it wasn’t a knock on the door, or a forceful twist of the doorknob, but a doorbell that announced their presence. Local detective Eric Griffin had done the honors.
The door opened and there was a moment’s pause all around. Melinda stood in her ornate foyer, glowing in the Christmas lights, dressed in nothing but a robe with a towel wrapped tight around her hair.
She then did something neither Wall nor James had expected during the hours they had stared bleary-eyed and hunched over that case file in the old-fashioned Olathe police station. Before they had even identified themselves, she beckoned the detectives inside.