Rachel Wolcott, Fact & Fiction

June 7, 2010

WAG 25 Shenandoah

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , — admin @ 11:36 pm

WAG 25 Crimes and Misdemeanors

Sheriff Kendra is already dealing with too many crimes, so this week, I’m going to put my mind to another storyline lingering in the back of my mind. I don’t know if there is a crime here, but there certainly is a kind of crime scene and a minor misdemeanor. [more about WAG here.]
* * * *
This kitchen. She spent almost her entire childhood in this room. Eating all her meals at the table, the family didn’t have a dining room, watching her mother cook or do the washing up. When she was old enough, she helped too, peeling potatoes and carrots, making cups of tea, doing chores for her mother. She loved making cakes for Sunday lunch and had mastered the Victoria sponge by the time she started primary school. The same curtains, speckled with tiny red flowers, hung at the window above the sink and on the side of the cupboard where the mugs lived, was the corn dolly her mother had pinned there 25 years ago. Bought at the Tendring Country Show from another farmer’s wife, it kept them safe, brought them a gentle prosperity. Her mother kept the radio on Classic FM these days, loved the Flower Duet and Bryn Terfyl. She’s almost in tears when he sings Shenandoah. These are the sounds Jenny hears the kitchen, the music comes out of the oven, the taps and rises into the rafters with the kettle’s steam.

Two steps beyond the kitchen door what was a small patch of lawn has been churned into thick mud by tractors and lorries crossing the yard. Sunday afternoon there was a break in the weather and in the sunshine and a convoy of lorries arrived and men wearing white coveralls and face masks, enormous black Wellington boots. They loaded the dairy herd, 109 Jerseys lowing and struggling up the muddy ramps. Each lorry was sprayed down with disinfectant before leaving the farm. Her father, now 67, watched them roll into the lane, turning left towards St Osyth to an abattoir within the infection zone where the herd would be slaughtered and incinerated.

Foot and mouth had been confirmed two farms away on a Tuesday and the January gales off the North Sea pushed it across the fields, hopping from blade of grass to flinty pebble then onto a stray leaf, which landed in the milking parlor. But Rookery Farm had been in lock down before the disease landed on the peninsula. They started using the word biosecurity at the breakfast table. Between milkings her father watched the twenty-four hour news channel, watched pyres built from sheep and cattle burn. When her mother told him to turn it off, watch the darts, he sat and shook his head. He picked up the phone and called around to his neighbors, men he’d usually chat to at the Whalebone. They were panicking and waiting for the all clear that wouldn’t come.

Her mother was passive by nature and easily upset. Like many women of her generation she was very much a domestic. Her rounds of cleaning, airing, baking, preparing, scrubbing and mending were ongoing. She sewed up one hole only to find a stray button that needed reattaching. She arranged flowers at the church and prayed for the forgotten. On occasion she had helped with the cows, but preferred her vegetable garden. She was the type of person whose produce was widely discussed by fellow horticulturalists.

When the cows left, Jenny and her mother pulled on their boots and walked through the silent parlor, the empty cowshed. Their mournful stroll ended at the garden. A few Brussels sprouts clung to a thick stalk and the leeks were almost ready to pick. Jenny wasn’t sure if either of her parents had slept much since she’d been home and worried as her mother teetered along in front of her, inspecting the winter crop. Her mother sat herself daintily atop an upturned bucket and pulled her husband’s silver flask from her pocket. She struggled to unscrew the cap, but when she managed it, took a hefty pull before handing it to her daughter. The whisky burned her throat and its vapor rose into her sinuses. She passed it back to her mother who took another two swigs before bursting into tears.

May 28, 2010

More Sheriff Kendra–WAG 24

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — admin @ 1:58 pm

More on Sheriff Kendra. I like her, I’m going to work with her some more. Turns out she knows about the character from WAG 22—I’ve changed his name to Nelson Arnold. Here’s my take on the unexpected.

Paperwork, piles of it, formed precarious towers on her desk. So finely balanced, an unusually heavy fly, like one of those fat green ones, might send papers floating across the office if it landed on a sunny white spot to rest its wings and rub together its tiny black arms. There were quite a few flies around and Kendra noticed they were curiously large. She sipped a mug of sugary coffee and flipped through crime scene files related to the Arnold case, looking for something she might have missed the first time around. There was the trooper shooting, home and business break ins, a gun story robbery. Arnold was a one man crime wave and the more she looked at the photos, blood drops, broken windows, the trooper’s lifeless body, the more she believed it was going to take a bit of luck to catch him. He wasn’t a master criminal, but he was on the move and he knew the backwoods of Seneca County. He had friends and family all over. Kendra was certain they were helping him hide.

Nelson Arnold had been on the run since April when he broke out of jail in the next county over. Now it was mid-August and every cop in Western New York still was looking for him, but there were no real leads. Lots of reports came into the switchboard, but they were as credible as Sasquatch sightings—tall bearded creatures roaming through cornfields or disappearing into the woods. One farmer brought her into the middle of his soybean field to examine some footprints he believed to be Arnold’s. When Kendra looked down at his boots, they were about the same size. Turned out the farmer really wanted to talk. He was worried Arnold would steal his shotguns.

On this warm Saturday morning the Arnold crisis felt less immediate than it had in the days since the trooper was shot. Three days of rain had slowed the manhunt. A team of tracker dogs followed a trail down from the trooper crime scene through the gorge towards Westville, but they lost the scent near Lake Seneca. Arnold may have been a few steps in front of the pack, but no one saw him and he managed to slip away, if he’d really been there in the first place. It was impossible to know. Kendra tended the scratches and bruises she’d suffered during the chase through the undergrowth. There were countless insect bites on her legs and a poison ivy rash grew on her left hand and arm.

The weekend receptionist hollered back to Kendra, which she didn’t like, to let her know she had a visitor. Before she could stand up to see who it was, a large woman, bursting out of her tank top and blue jeans barged into Kendra’s office. It was Arnold’s daughter, by whom she wasn’t sure. Dealing with irate family members was usually easily done with a lot of shouting and threatening arrest. Taylor-Ann Phillips came at her in a rage not pausing to give Kendra the chance to deploy her usual tactics. Within seconds she was on top of the Sheriff pummelling her and screaming.

“You bitch!” Taylor-Ann’s sweat dripped into Kendra’s eyes. “You bitch. Gimme back my kids!”

By the time two deputies dragged the woman off to the cells, Kendra was in tears. She crawled behind her desk, opened the bottom drawer and searched for the ibuprofen.

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