I didn’t want to go back to his apartment. I didn’t want to go home. But it was dangerous to stay in Virginia. How soon would his ex’s body wash up on the banks of the Dan River? How soon would the local news air video feed from traffic cameras showing us dumping the suitcase over the bridge? I hadn’t considered that possibility. How soon would Danville police track down his car?
He fell asleep at the wheel. Twice. The first time, he claimed he was only looking down at the dashboard, checking his gas levels, checking his speed, checking the time. It was almost dawn, but the sun had yet to rise. I wondered if it would ever again. We belonged in the darkness, the shadows. The light of the sun would reveal the blood on our hands, permanently stained. No soap, no water would wash it away. We’d go through our daily lives carrying our shame like a scarlet letter. Anything we’d come in contact with would spread the mark—a handshake here, a passing of papers there. It would spread like a plague until the whole of the earth was consumed. Maybe that was where original sin came from—Adam and Eve’s disobedience passed down through the generations.
When he fell asleep the second time, his foot went heavy like lead on the gas. The engine moaned as the dial on the speedometer passed ninety. I beat my fist on the steering wheel and honked the horn to jolt him back to consciousness. I wouldn’t risk a third time. As soon as we crossed the state line back into North Carolina, we would find a cheap motel and pay cash so we couldn’t be traced.
Super 8 has a first-floor room available on the back side of the motel facing a construction lot containing a dormant tractor and mounds of clay piled ten to twenty feet high. It was the perfect place to lay low. Instead of pulling up in front of the room door, he parallel parked into three spaces in an empty corner of the parking lot on the edge of the construction zone, right next to one of the taller clay mounds. With the age of his car, passersby would think it’d been parked there unnoticed for weeks, maybe months, possibly abandoned. It wouldn’t appear to belong to any guest staying at the motel, a guest police might be looking for.
Continue reading “New Beginnings | Buried Series | Part 10 (Conclusion)”