Since returning Thursday from my trip to Kentucky --
where I went to
cover the investigation of Census worker Bill Sparkman's
death -- I've been catching up on sleep and working on a
very long article about the trip:
So
here I was alone, looking at the locked gate across Hoskins
Cemetery Road. I wrote down the time in my notebook, got out of
the car and took a few photos of the bridge and gate with my
small Kodak digital camera. It was actually a lovely scene. The
large hardwood trees lining the banks of the stream were still
summer green in late September. The afternoon was cool and
breezy, the sky was overcast with heavy clouds, and the only
sounds were the wind in the trees and the quiet burbling of the
little brook flowing east, parallel to Arnetts Fork Road.
Just then, I heard the sound of a car approaching from the
direction of Big Double Creek Road. Standing by the roadside, I
flagged down the blue sedan and approached the driver's side
window. The driver looked to be in her early 30s, and there was a
child's car seat in the back, but no child.
"Excuse me, ma'am," I said to the lady, trying to smile as
friendly as I could. "I'm a reporter, covering the murder y'all
had up here."
She nodded in recognition - obviously, the locals knew all about
the case - and I continued.
"I'm up here to see the place where they found that fellow's body
and get a few pictures and, frankly, it's kind of scary,
y'know?"
She nodded again and said, "Yeah, I know."
"So what I was wondering," I said, "was whether you wouldn't mind
just waiting here for a few minutes, while I walk up to the
cemetery - just wait here, to make sure I get back."
She shook her head. "Well, I don't think so, but I'll tell you
what. My husband's up at the house" - she gestured westward up
the hill - "and I can send him back down here, if you
want."
"Could you?" I asked. "About how long would it take him to get
here?"
"About five minutes."
So it was agreed, and I felt much better about my situation. No
doubt her husband was a stout, hearty soul who would accompany me
to the graveyard and assure my safety. Unless, that is, the
lady's husband was some hillbilly meth-cooker, a dangerously
violent ex-con with deep hostility toward nosy outsiders and, for
all I knew, the same guy who'd killed Sparkman.
Crazy fears like that crop up in a man's mind when he's short on
sleep, hyped on coffee, far from home, and standing at the scene
of a notorious crime in the Appalachian backwoods. But I'd wait
for the lady's husband to come back. He was probably a
mild-mannered, clean-cut Baptist church deacon, and I was just
being paranoid.
On the other hand, these woods were reportedly crawling with
marijuana growers who plant their crops in isolated forest
clearings, and late September is harvest time for these outlaw
agriculturalists. Maybe there was some weeder, dressed in
camouflage, rifle at the ready, guarding his crop planted nearby.
Maybe, even at that very moment, I was a target in the crosshairs
of a scope on a high-powered rifle held by a mountaineer
marksman. One squeeze on the trigger and - boom! - that would be
it for me.
Honestly, you think about things like that at such a moment, in
such a place.
"Be careful," my wife had told me before I left on this trip,
which I'd undertaken against her advice. I reminded her I'd
survived my 10-day excursion to Africa in February 2008. "If they
didn't kill me in Kampala, I think I'll be all right in Clay
County, Kentucky." . . .
That's about 600 words.
The whole article is nearly 4,000 words -- and that's
only Part One.