Devil House

“But the lawyers weren’t having it,” he says. “And they were right. No smoke, no fire.”

But there was a little smoke, I suggest, knowing from experience that you can’t miss these small moments when an opening appears. The scene itself, I mean, the writing and the arrangements and the decorations: that was you.

“Yeah, but I didn’t—”

He appears to be sizing me up anew, trying to get a different angle on me. Am I a tabloid reporter disguised as a guy who writes real books?

But he smiles again, a smile he’s very fortunate to have been born with, I think. “You saw the crime scene photos, though, I know. Seth told me.

“You already know none of us could have actually done that.”



* * *



I HAVE, IN FACT, SEEN THE CRIME SCENE PHOTOS, probably several more of them than Derrick has. I’ve exhumed more evidence connected to the crimes at Devil House than had been previously supposed to exist: relics and primary texts, case notes and bagged exhibits. I know where people in town pointed the finger at first, projecting their unease over the ever-present prospect of Silicon Valley sprawl onto the site of the unspeakable—there were those, at first, who’d said that this is what happens when homeless people from neighboring cities get word that there are places to sleep nearby where the night patrols don’t reach. There were those, as there still are, who suspected that, whatever the real story was, they were only hearing a part of it. And then there were the voices that were easiest to amplify, because their ranges were familiar from similar stories around the country. The kids are out of control. They grow up faster and bigger than they did in our day. They lack the moral grounding of generations past.

“Yeah, yeah, ‘the moral grounding,’” Derrick says; his smile holds, but we’re out on the open water now. “People looked at me like I had demons inside me, and I was grateful for how my mother’d always coached me to hold my tongue if I didn’t have anything useful to say. But when you have your neighbors thinking you’re a monster, you know, a demon from hell—I’ll be honest, there was a part of me, and there will always be a part of me, that sort of carries this, that would feel a stranger’s eye on me and want to call them on it to their faces. To just say to somebody: You, there. Staring at me. I see you! You don’t know anything about me! Everything you think you know about me is a lie!”

What stopped you? I ask.

He pauses, and I see him returning to the familiar ground of himself: the person who’s still alive, and reasonably happy— on the worst day, still content with the way things turned out for him.

“People already know what they want to believe,” he offers, returning wholly to his comfort zone; I feel almost like I’m watching a ghost reenter a body. “I see this even in my daily errands here, when it’s busy. People want me to tell them about pirates, but I know that if I told them what pirates were really like, it would ruin their day.”

I don’t quite follow you, I say.

“Well, you know, Treasure Island,” he says. “Long John Silver with a parrot on his shoulder, the push and pull of good and evil, the romance of the high seas. The integrity of the thief, all that stuff. Whereas if there were even one photograph of the aftermath of a real pirate raid on a ship, you know, it’d turn your stomach. There’s a reason they hung pirates without a trial.”

The sun is setting into the Beaufort Sound; I don’t want to wear out my welcome. Derrick’s been very generous with his time.

“They didn’t see me, and you don’t see me, and nobody’s ever going to see me except the people who actually know me outside of that whole story,” he concludes—there’s no rancor in his voice, no anger. He’s just laying out the facts on the ground for me, making his case. “Unless you were actually inside, any story you end up telling will be some distortion along the lines of, Four teenagers killed a property developer and a landlord with a sword, then disposed of the weapon and deflected attention from themselves onto the new kid in town until the case went cold.”

People do end up pretty invested in the stories they tell to explain how, and why, some awful thing happened in their community, I offer.

“That they do.” He laughs. “But I feel like they settle on whichever story eases the burden a little.”

The burden?

“The burden of the story they don’t want to tell.”





ALEX


I didn’t find Alex.

I asked Angela, and I asked Seth, and I asked Derrick, and I even sent follow-ups to Angela and Derrick—I hadn’t gained Seth’s trust; there was nothing tangible on the other side of any further communication between us—and I parsed their responses for hints that they might be hiding something from me, trying to protect their friend. I liked this story, because Alex had means, motive, and opportunity, and that’s the trifecta. If there were people trying to keep others from picking up the scent, from following the trail that led to Alex, that alone would have drawn me nearer to the horizon-line of all cases, the place where we begin to state our conclusions.

But they weren’t lying. I meet a lot of liars in my line of work, and I do a lot of lying to get the information I need. Most people consider themselves good judges of character, but for me it’s a job requirement. Angela didn’t know where Alex was. Derrick told me directly that he’d shield Alex from scrutiny if he had to, but it wasn’t necessary. Alex belonged to the wind.

One of the first rules of detective work, especially the historical kind, is that nobody really disappears without a trace. The term is empty poetry. Everybody leaves traces. There is no lost colony; the bones of every pilot downed over the Bermuda Triangle rest peacefully under silt at the bottom of the ocean; every city that ever was can be excavated if you have the right tools, and time, and patience. If you come up empty-handed, it only means you were digging in the wrong place.

I talked to Joey Macias. That was as close as I could get, and it wasn’t close at all. He worked as an orderly on the night shift at a shelter in San Jose during a span of time that overlapped with the Devil House days; he runs a treatment center for drug addiction now. I found his name, without any further identifying notes, in a police log from the investigation. My call to Joey was the last cold call I made to anyone regarding the murders at Monster Adult X.

“That was twenty years ago,” he said.

Right, I said, they never made a collar.

“They called the shelter and I took the call,” he said. “Asked me if anybody showed up who looked like he was on the run from something.”

And?

He laughed. “All my guys were on the run from something,” he said. “Don’t get me wrong, every one of them had his own story, and some of them it would break your heart to hear it, it just gets harder when you realize how many of them there are. In cities everywhere. It hurts your head to imagine it.”

I waited; if you stay quiet sometimes, you get something.

“The shelter was a safe place,” he said. “If I’d seen anything I wouldn’t have told them, but I didn’t see anything. Which doesn’t mean anything, I guess. Nobody likes to talk about it, but a lot of these guys, they just disappear. It’s sad. It’s really sad. But they just stop showing up to the places they used to show up and—”

“Yeah,” I said, and I thanked him for his time, and wondered what to make of Alex, how to give a decent burial to a man whose body had never been found.





6

The White Witch





1.

John Darnielle's books