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CHAPTER I

Three children recently checked out of the Hartman Catholic Group Home in unspeakable ways. Their murders are amongst the worst ever committed on Long Island. I haven’t blamed God for not protecting them, but I am coming to believe His ways are as mysterious as they are malicious.

* * *

Kim Reidy was the first to die. Five weeks ago, she disappeared from the playground behind our church following mass. One child later said Kim followed a voice into the woods, but the alleged source was never seen. A daylong search in the nearby vicinity came up empty. Later that night, the police found Kim’s body in a weeded lot past a dead-end street two miles from our home. Only minor details regarding her cause of death were relayed to the media, but a witness leaked a cell phone photo showing her corpse. Blood was smeared across the white unicorn of her pink shirt and her left eye was missing.

* * *

My social worker, a stiff woman named Clara, grumbles as she navigates her Buick Regal over a deep pothole. She hasn’t said a word to me during the ordeal of peddling me to a new family. I doubt she even knows my name, since she constantly refers me to others as the “older female subject.” Her job is to take me from the group home, deliver me to a charitable family, and go about her business with the two other surviving kids. I feel as though I’m a task to her, and not a cause for concern.

* * *

Eleven days after Kim’s body was found, Bryan Nabatova went missing from his bedroom sometime between his eight o’clock bedtime and dawn. The sliced screen on his ground floor window suggested an intruder with specific intentions. Detectives found his carcass, dressed in his favorite fire truck pajamas, stuffed in the steel base of a train trestle and partially covered with lava rocks. As with Kim, clues to the killer’s identity were either unknown or withheld. The police informed the public that they were dealing with someone who had a personal investment in the crimes, as suggested by their high levels of violence. One particular trait tied them to the same culprit; Bryan’s left eye had also been extracted.

* * *

My social worker pulls up before my temporary house so abruptly the tires vibrate. The place is white with green shutters. I close my eyes, grasp the gold crucifix charm that hangs from my neck, and whisper a prayer for strength. I assume the door will open for me, and Clara will escort me to my new lodgings, but when I open my eyes I find her standing outside checking her watch.

I reluctantly step out with my red suitcase, from crisp air conditioning to savage humidity. The butterflies in my stomach are waging war on each other. Clara hurries onto a blacktop driveway that branches off to a concrete stoop. I walk behind her at a much slower pace, happy to notice my right shoelace coming undone. “One second, please,” I say, to which Clara heaves a sigh. I kneel to tie my sneaker and pray for the will to carry on.

* * *

The third death that led to the group home’s sudden evacuation occurred within the house itself. Chris Myrow was claimed during the night. I had the displeasure of finding him while rounding up the kids for breakfast. He was hog tied with the same blue jump rope he often got in trouble for using indoors. A Nerf football was stuffed down his mouth and exposed through a slit in his throat. The sheet beneath him, once colorful with blue and orange triangles, had turned various shades of black and red. On the wall beside him, under a tacked up poster of Spider-Man, were the white-jelly remnants of his smeared left eye.

Once news of Chris’ murder broke, our already tense group home became increasingly hectic. The phone never stopped ringing, spectators hung around on the street day and night, and news reporters set up camp on a neighbor’s lawn to film our home around the clock. Police frequently stopped in to check on us, and even arrested someone who refused to stop taking pictures from the property line.

Instead of relocating the three survivors to another Catholic group home, our director decided to transfer us to separate foster homes across Long Island. We were picked up with relative ease. Married couples came and went, interacting with us under the watchful eyes of lawyers and social workers. Peter Heffernan and Amanda Czark were chosen on the first day, while I had to wait until the following afternoon. At fifteen, by far the oldest, I didn’t warrant the sympathy showered upon those deemed too young to defend themselves.

While out in the backyard throwing a baseball against a pitch back, Sister Alice, wearing an old-fashioned skirt suit, called me in to meet a couple who’d come to see me. In the living room, my social worker and a suited lawyer were sitting on our three-cushioned couch. Across from them, on a much smaller love seat, sat Barry and Lori Grantham. Barry looked as though he was smuggling pillows under his shirt and down the legs of his slacks. Lori, on the other hand, was splinter thin. She sat compressed in the tight groove between her husband and the arm of the couch wearing a look of complete displeasure.

Barry’s face, shrunken in the midst of his cheeks, beamed when he offered his hand to me and said, “You must be Robin.”

I accepted his damp palm and replied, “Yes, sir. I’m pleased to meet you.”

He shook my hand a little too hard, which strained my shoulder socket, and tilted his head while staring into my eyes. “Are those contacts? No eyes are that blue.”

“They’re all mine.”

I recovered my hand from Barry and offered it to Lori. She touched my palm with the tips of her fingers. Her eyes never rose above the button of my jeans. I uneasily backed into Sister Alice as the lawyer said to her, “We’ll need a moment with you in private, Sister.”

Sister Alice turned me to the back door and whispered, “I’ll put in some good words.”

She came outside twenty minutes later and explained that the couple had taken an interest in my high grades and good behavior, but said I shouldn’t get my hopes up since the blessed don’t always get what they deserve. A phone call later that day indicated they had decided to take me in after all. Sister Alice and I packed as much as we could into my meager suitcase, making sure to include my prized possessions: my Bible, wooden crucifix, and baseball mitt.

* * *

I rise from tying my sneaker and find Clara twirling her hand to speed me up. When I approach the front door, she steps aside and gives me the nerve-wracking honor of introducing myself to whomever might answer. I walk up the three steps and press a glowing doorbell to summon the first player in my new and remorseless life.

Angel of the Underground

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