Gone Missing

“I just heard on the radio they found the missing Amish girl,” he says somberly. “Is that why you’re here?”

 

 

I give him points for innovation. When it comes to discussing an unpleasant topic like murder—especially with the police—most people try delay tactics. They beat around the bush. Or play dumb. That Karns got right to the point tells me he guessed we would show up.

 

“We’re assisting with the investigation,” Tomasetti tells him.

 

“May we come in?” I ask.

 

Karns takes my measure and I see a glimmer of curiosity in his eyes. “Of course.” He opens the door wider and motions us inside, a king inviting a couple of scruffy peasants into his castle. “Would you guys like some coffee? Or iced tea?”

 

“We’re fine, thanks.” Tomasetti gives him a bad imitation of a smile.

 

Karns notices, but he looks amused. With the ease of a man who has nothing to hide, he takes us through a foyer with gleaming hardwood floors and a console table that holds a striking glass vase filled with fresh-cut peonies. I smell the sweet scent of the flowers as we walk by. A set of French doors opens to a massive living room with a stone hearth and parquet floors. A wall of floor-to-ceiling windows looks out over the forest beyond.

 

While the room is beautifully appointed, it is the dozens of framed photographs on the walls that draw the eye. The majority are black-and-white shots. Stark, minimalist, dramatic and yet somehow subtle at once. Karns’s talent is undeniable.

 

I stroll to the photographs for a closer look. Most of them feature some element of Amish life: an old farmhouse with a leaning brick chimney, a buggy and young Standardbred horse trotting through the gray swirl of morning fog; two barefoot girls holding hands as they skip down an asphalt road; a harvest moon rising over a cut cornfield; an Amish cemetery as the backdrop for a procession of black buggies.

 

“You’re very talented,” I say after a moment.

 

He smiles, and I notice that his teeth are very white. “If you’re softening me up for some tough interrogation, it’s working.”

 

In the periphery of my vision, I see Tomasetti roll his eyes. Ignoring him, I stroll past the windows to the wall next to the hearth. It is there that I see the other photographs: a naked baby crawling on an Amish quilt; an Amish woman with her skirt blown up past her hips, à la Marilyn Monroe; an Amish boy standing naked on the bank of a creek, preparing to dive into the water. None of the photos are sexually explicit, but they are disconcerting. There’s a voyeuristic quality to Karns’s work. Looking at them, I feel as if I’ve interrupted a private moment, seeing something I’m not supposed to see.

 

“Did you know most Amish object to having their photos taken?” I ask conversationally.

 

“I’m aware of that.” He keeps an eye on Tomasetti as he peruses the photos on the other side of the hearth. “I strive to be as respectful as possible.”

 

“As long as you get the shot,” Tomasetti mutters.

 

“Most cite religious reasons,” I continue. “The prohibition of graven images. Some believe pictures are vain displays of pride. Some believe the snapping of a photo can actually steal one’s soul.”

 

“With all due respect to the Amish, I think that’s a little melodramatic,” he says. “Don’t you?”

 

“I think if you respected them, you wouldn’t take photos of them without their knowledge.”

 

For a moment, I think he’s going to argue. Instead, he smiles. “Stealing someone’s soul isn’t against the law.”

 

I don’t smile back.

 

After a moment, he shrugs, a diplomat conceding a point for some greater good. “Everyone is entitled to their opinion.”

 

Tomasetti stops opposite a photograph of two preteen girls standing topless in the hip-deep water of a creek, shampooing each other’s hair. “You seem to have a real penchant for photographing naked children.”

 

Karns comes up beside him and looks at the photo. “Most of these photos were taken from afar, some with a telescopic lens. I’ve found that my subjects are more … uninhibited when they don’t realize they’re being photographed. The facial muscles are more relaxed. I strive to be as unobtrusive as possible.”

 

“So they have no clue they’re being photographed,” I say.

 

“Actually, many of my subjects give me permission.”

 

“And the ones who don’t?”

 

“There are ways around that. Photographically speaking, I mean. For example, I can smudge the features so that they are unrecognizable.”

 

“The Amish aren’t exactly a litigious society,” I say.

 

He smiles, turning on the charm. “Well, I have to admit, I’ve never been sued by an Amish person.”

 

Tomasetti turns away from the photographs and gives Karns his full attention. “You have, however, been convicted of the illegal use of a minor in nudity-oriented material.”

 

“I see.” Karns grimaces, as if his tolerance has reached its limit. “And this is the point of your visit?”

 

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