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A Courageous Fool: Marie Deans and Her Struggle against the Death Penalty
A Courageous Fool: Marie Deans and Her Struggle against the Death Penalty
A Courageous Fool: Marie Deans and Her Struggle against the Death Penalty
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A Courageous Fool: Marie Deans and Her Struggle against the Death Penalty

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There have been many heroes and victims in the battle to abolish the death penalty, and Marie Deans fits into both of those categories. A South Carolina native who yearned to be a fiction writer, Marie was thrust by a combination of circumstances--including the murder of her beloved mother-in-law--into a world much stranger than fiction, a world in which minorities and the poor were selected to be sacrificed to what Supreme Court Justice Harry Blackmun called the "machinery of death."

Marie found herself fighting to bring justice to the legal process and to bring humanity not only to prisoners on death row but to the guards and wardens as well. During Marie's time as a death penalty opponent in South Carolina and Virginia, she experienced the highs of helping exonerate the innocent and the lows of standing death watch in the death house with thirty-four condemned men.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateApr 30, 2021
ISBN9780826503992
A Courageous Fool: Marie Deans and Her Struggle against the Death Penalty
Author

Todd C. Peppers

Todd C. Peppers, Fowler Professor of Public Affairs at Roanoke College and Visiting Professor of Law at Washington and Lee University, is co-author of Anatomy of an Execution: The Life and Death of Douglas Christopher Thomas.

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    A Courageous Fool - Todd C. Peppers

    Introduction

    I don’t believe in the [legal] system . . . I play because I know the dice fall our way occasionally, if for no other reason than to keep the game going. I think I also play to make the record in the hope that one day that may make a difference to another generation.

    —Marie Deans, 1986

    This book is the story of one of the most remarkable and complex women I have ever met. She was a fighter, a storyteller, and a civil rights activist named Marie McFadden Deans. This book also represents a promise that I made in the fall of 2008, when I pledged to Marie that I would help her write her memoir. When that promise was made, my original intent was to serve as Marie’s co-author and research assistant. Yet Marie’s declining health and premature death from lung cancer in April of 2011 made it impossible for us to complete the task. So I honored my promise to Marie by picking up the baton and carrying on, aided by my former Roanoke College student Maggie Anderson.

    Unfortunately, Maggie never had the opportunity to meet Marie. In the year after Marie’s death, however, Maggie and I spent hours in Marie’s townhouse in Charlottesville, Virginia, crawling through her dusty attic looking for death penalty files and sitting on the floor of her living room, slowly going through box after box of Marie’s writings, speeches, and photographs. In the months following those trips to Charlottesville, Maggie spent endless hours reading and organizing the personal papers that we found in Marie’s home. And she helped me interview Marie’s former colleagues, family, and friends; watched videotapes of Marie’s public appearances; and journeyed to a maximum security prison to meet with one of Marie’s closest and oldest friends, former death row inmate Joe Giarratano. After spending hundreds of hours on this project, Maggie has had the curious experience of coming to know Marie in death more intimately than many who knew her in life.

    The death penalty has created heroes and victims, and it has caused collateral damage to families and communities throughout American history. Marie Deans fits into all three of those categories. Marie was a South Carolina native who yearned to be a fiction writer, but a combination of circumstances thrust Marie into a world which proved to be much stranger than fiction, a world in which minorities and the poor are selected in a seemingly random (if not deliberate) manner to be sacrificed to what former Supreme Court Justice Harry Blackmun called the machinery of death. In this world, Marie would find herself fighting to bring justice to the legal process, to bring humanity to death row, and to bring mercy to the death house. She would find herself struggling to survive the daily horrors to which she was exposed. As the modern death penalty (that is, the death penalty as it has been practiced since the Supreme Court allowed the resumption of state killing in 1977) slowly grinds down—abandoned less from moral outrage than the enormous costs associated with capital trials, appeals, and executions—it is time to account for the toll that the death penalty has taken on our country and on the men and women who were sucked into Justice Blackmun’s machinery of death.

    Marie’s work on death row began in South Carolina in the early 1980s, and it continued in Virginia for the next twenty years. During this time period, Marie wore many different hats: she found attorneys for men who were facing executions without legal representation; she worked to improve prison conditions and inmates’ access to lawyers and legal research materials; she acted as a surrogate mother and spiritual advisor to the men; she assisted lawyers in the drafting of appeals and motions; and she helped create the role of mitigation specialist in which she interviewed the inmates, their family members, and experts in an effort to convince the jury that the inmate’s life was worth saving.

    Starting in the mid-1990s, Marie attempted to write her story. It was an agonizing process, with Marie battling writer’s block that was triggered by reliving the terror of seeing men that she cared about being killed by the state. The struggles, however, went deeper. Mom’s problem with writing, and Mom’s problem with becoming a writer, was that . . . all the stories that she’s trying to tell are in her heart. There was so much emotion, [and] [the emotions] were such crucial parts of her, that she was unable to express in writing, explained Marie’s oldest son, Joel Mac McFadden. I myself witnessed the strain that unearthing these memories placed on Marie. Once, sitting outside of a local Charlottesville restaurant on a cool spring day, I watched as Marie’s large brown eyes filled with tears, and her hands shook so hard that she had to put her sandwich down, as she tried to talk about the execution of Morris Mason. Despite these barriers to writing, Marie refused to give up.

    Over the course of approximately fifteen years, Marie battled her demons and fought to memorialize her story. At the time of her death, she had produced roughly seventy-five pages of memories—including her tumultuous childhood, the murder of her mother-in-law, her early involvement with Amnesty International, her endless quest to find adequate representation for the condemned men, and her relationships with the men of the South Carolina and Virginia death rows. Sometimes Marie was able to capture these recollections in complete chapters, other times she scribbled fragments of her story onto pieces of notebook paper. Her memoir, however, was never completed. Even during the final weeks of her life, Marie mourned her inability to finish the project. During my last meeting with her, two weeks before her death, Marie could barely get out of bed but still asked me to bring a tape recorder so we could work on the book.

    When Marie died in the spring of 2011, I felt a deep sense of grief—not only for the loss of a friend, but for what I believed was the loss of my friend’s story. Marie was an unsung hero in the fight against the modern death penalty, and I felt that the contributions she made were forever lost with her death. After receiving permission from Marie’s youngest son, Robert Deans, to continue the project, Maggie and I began reviewing her personal papers, and we started interviewing those who knew Marie. Then, my sadness gave way to a fragile hope that maybe Marie’s remarkable story could still be told. Over the course of researching and writing this book, there have been at least a dozen occasions in which I have turned to Maggie and muttered, if only I had the chance for one more interview with Marie. And there are, unfortunately, critical moments in Marie’s work on death row, as well as her inner thoughts and opinions, that cannot be recreated through the memories of others or by reviewing reports in her personal papers.

    Nevertheless, this book represents our best effort at not only telling Marie’s story but also infusing the book with Marie’s unique style and voice. We have preserved Marie’s own words throughout the chapters and built upon this foundation with our own research, which includes interviews of her family and colleagues as well as newspaper articles, reports, speeches, and letters found in Marie’s voluminous personal papers. The goal is to present Marie the human being with all her strengths and foibles. Marie despised being called the Angel or Saint of death row, and she was neither. Marie was an incredibly bright and strong-willed woman who knew her own mind and did not suffer fools gladly. Her commitment to the cause was total, but sacrifices such as hers come with consequences. The years of stress undoubtedly shortened her life, and her unyielding fight damaged relationships with some friends and family members. Marie was aware of the price that she paid, and the consequences of those choices bore heavily on her in the last few years.

    Despite all of the available resources, Marie’s story could not be told without the insights and memories of Joe Giarratano, a former death row inmate who wrote the foreword to this book. Marie first met Joe in 1982, during a fact-finding mission on Virginia’s death row. Over the next twenty-nine years, Marie would become a teacher, a mentor, a spiritual guide, a therapist, a mother, a best friend, and a savior to Joe. Through Marie’s guidance, Joe himself would become a formidable death penalty abolitionist and prison lawyer who joined Marie’s fight for prison reform and basic civil rights for his fellow prisoners.

    The work of Marie and a band of dedicated lawyers resulted in a conditional pardon for Joe, a second chance at life which removed Joe from death row but placed him in a maximum security prison and a legal twilight zone where neither prison administrators nor state officials seemingly cared about his substantial claims of factual innocence. Because of this conditional pardon, Joe is one of the few living witnesses to the hell that was Virginia’s death row in the 1980s as well as the extraordinary work Marie performed on behalf of the condemned men. Of the thirty-four men Marie visited in the death house, he is one of only three inmates who were not ultimately executed. Through telephone calls, visits, and letters, Joe has committed hundreds of hours to this project. His experiences with Marie and his love for her are threads that run through Marie’s story.

    As Marie shopped her unfinished memoir to publishers, she drafted several different descriptions of the manuscript. In keeping with our commitment to let Marie speak for herself whenever possible, we have knitted together several of the descriptions. Collectively, they let Marie explain her vision of the incomplete memoir.

    Unimagined Voices is a non-fiction, investigative memoir that describes my personal journey from a Southern wife, mother, and writer at the scene of my mother-in-law’s murder to the death chambers of South Carolina and Virginia and the founding of a national organization for the families of murder victims. It explores the reactions to murder of a family and community that caused me to choose this path, the hardships and horrors I endured, the successes I achieved through determination and pure stubbornness and how the journey changed me.

    When my mother-in-law, Penny Deans, was murdered in 1972, our family was stunned to learn that the police believed they could comfort us by telling us they would catch the bastard and fry him. People expected murder victims’ families to prove their love for their murdered family member by seeking revenge through the death penalty. My husband recoiled at the idea that his mother should be connected in any way to an electric chair. Raised as a Lutheran, I was taught and wholly believe that I cannot justify my sins by the sins of another, and so I could never justify executions by the acts of those who kill. We needed help in dealing with our anger, pain and fear, yet we were isolated by the assumptions of others. Breaking out of that isolation meant challenging those assumptions publicly. Doing so brought us unexpected attention, and one day I found myself being escorted onto death row by a nervous warden who was desperate to stop an execution but not at all sure he should be taking a member of a murder victim’s family to meet one of his death row prisoners.

    I not only became an advocate for, and friend of, the condemned, I also came to know and understand those involved—the families of the victims and the condemned, the prosecutors and defense lawyers, the juries, the corrections officers, the death squad members, the chaplains and the governors. I saw murders and executions in their totality. As a mitigation specialist and investigator, I worked on over 300 capital cases at the trial, appellate and clemency levels, and I helped to save over 250 of those defendants. Thirty-four condemned prisoners asked me to stand their death watch with them and be present at their executions. These were dreaded, emotionally draining, horrific experiences, but I stayed with the men because of what I learned from my dying father-in-law and because of a question Dietrich Bonhoeffer puts to Christians: Would you leave Jesus alone on the cross? It was not that I believed these men Christ-like but simply that I believed them human and would not leave them to die alone. The book relates a few of these cases and executions that demonstrate the starkest reality of the death penalty and how it affects the human beings involved.

    I call my book Unimagined Voices because the public forgets or can’t imagine the people that executions affect. Would they imagine the head of the execution squad standing in front of a cell taking communion with and holding the hand of the man he would soon strap into the electric chair? Would they imagine this man, garbed in his special black uniform, sitting in the corner of the death house trying to control his tears? Would they imagine the woman whose mother had been brutally raped and murdered by one of my clients thanking me for staying with him and telling me she had prayed all night that the execution would be stopped and then for God to be with both me and this man who brought her so much pain? Would they imagine a warden who corrections people called the meanest somabitch in the business crying when I asked him what executions did to him? Would they imagine the mother who had vivid dreams every night that she is forced to plug in the electric chair her child is sitting in, or the mother with Huntington’s Chorea, which eats away the mind, who collapsed on the floor of the death house keening out the one reality she could grasp, that we were about to kill her boy?

    The timing of my experience and where I worked also make Unimagined Voices different. My work spanned the time when those doing legal defense work had no money and no resources. We did our work independently from the corners of our bedrooms, lived under the poverty level, and were forced to cover dozens of cases at a time. After a few years in South Carolina, I worked for over twenty years in Virginia, where the procedural rules always trumped evidence (even evidence of innocence), where the indigent defense system was a disgrace, where appeals were difficult to pursue, where the polls showed a higher percentage of people supported the death penalty than any state except Texas, and where the government, press, and media were extremely conservative. That work was overwhelming. Against the endless resources of the Commonwealth of Virginia, I had a desk, a typewriter, a telephone, a budget of about $1,000 a month, including my salary, and enough stubbornness not to cry uncle. Looking back on those years is like watching a Roadrunner cartoon. I, of course, was the coyote. There was never a break. There always was another victim’s family, another person being tried for capital murder, another person being sent to death row, another investigation to carry out, another clemency petition to pull together and represent before the governor, another execution, another personal or family crisis.

    Like others involved in death penalty work, I paid a financial and personal price for these years. Only now that I have stepped back to write this book am I realizing the path I walked both limited and expanded my life. I have seen things few others have even glimpsed and learned valuable lessons about life, death, redemption, forgiveness, vengeance, political expediency, close-mindedness, and unrestrained ambition. I have learned that evil does exist—that it strives to be acknowledged and to grow, but, more often than not, it is overwhelmed by the incredibly tenacious will to affirm one’s own humanity. Again and again, I watched human beings claw their way through evil and fight their way back into the light of hope. Unimagined Voices is not only an intimate and unnerving first-hand account of life on the front lines of the anti-death penalty struggle. The book also describes a personal journey in which I went from being a victim to becoming a survivor and came to believe that God is the intention to life—and that to give up on any human being is to give up on life and, therefore, on God.

    I hope this book will not be categorized as just another death penalty book. To me, the book is a personal journey of survival, reconciliation, and redemption. It is about my search for answers to the questions that my mother-in-law’s murder raised in me. I wanted to know why we were so good at violence and so poor at love, and that led me to death row. Working on death row and with victims’ families, I wanted to know why some human spirits survive and some do not. To me, survival is not simply staying alive—it is the ground that gives you the chance to survive. True survival is about stretching out to fulfill your potential. It is about affirming life, hope, and all the things that take you away from the darkness and into the light. I hope the stories in my book demonstrate how people come out of the darkness and move into the light, even under extreme circumstances.

    I am a mitigation specialist, one who documents people’s lives through their stories. When I began my work, mitigation specialists worked exclusively on capital cases; so I was working with men, women, and children who had killed, and with their families. It surprised me that not everyone could learn those stories, that so many people considered it amazing that I could learn them. If that was true, I didn’t want to analyze how I did so, as if there might be some magic I’d ignorantly stumbled into and could lose at any moment. In time, I realized what was happening. I wasn’t gifted. I had no magic. It was simply that wounded people recognize one another. Our wounds open and speak to one another.

    For years I resisted telling these stories. I wasn’t with the men in the death house, their families, or their victims’ families as a reporter. I was there simply to be with them, to believe in their humanity, to be present in their struggle to come through what they had done or what had been done to them. I thought these times too private, too intimate to tell. Even as I heard them, I knew that answers about the human spirit were in those stories. Looking back, I still hear every man who was executed telling me he hoped his execution would be the last, and I’ve come to realize there was a deeper hope and prayer in those statements. And I hear the victims’ families asking me how they can make a difference, how they can help stop the cycle of violence. They taught me so much. But the book will not be preachy. Instead, I want readers to walk this journey with me, to hear and experience these stories for themselves.

    When author Truman Capote wrote In Cold Blood, he crowed that he had invented a new form of literature, to wit, the non-fiction novel in which he drew upon reportage to accurately and objectively tell a compelling story. Capote steadfastly insisted that he did not fictionalize dialogue or occurrences in his book, referring to his work as immaculately factual.¹ Others, however, have challenged that assertion.²

    The end product of our efforts is even harder to categorize. This book is many things: an autobiography, a biography, and, to quote Marie, an investigative memoir. As explained by Gore Vidal, there is a subtle but important difference between a memoir and an autobiography: a memoir is how one remembers one’s own life, while an autobiography is history, requiring research, dates, facts double-checked.³ The materials left behind by Marie combine the genres of memoir and autobiography. While much of her writing is carefully grounded in fact, occasionally Marie focuses on a specific experience—the death of her mother-in-law, the first time she walked onto death row, the execution of Ricky Boggs—and pours out the emotions that filled her heart during these experiences. While her emotions are true and real, they cannot be fact-checked or footnoted; they are from Marie’s heart and soul, not from a database or reference source. But they provide the emotional core of the book, as Marie pulls back the curtain and shows us the pain and horror inflicted by capital punishment. As for myself, I will assume the role of a tailor who stitches together the fabric of this book by introducing important actors and issues, placing Marie’s work into the context of the death penalty in the 1980s and 1990s. Finally, in order to make the book more accessible to a general audience, we have tried to minimize citations; unless otherwise noted, Marie’s words come from her unpublished manuscript (these extracts are italicized to distinguish them from other sources), her personal papers, and our interviews and conversations. The same citation rules have been used for Joe Giarratano, who is quoted extensively in the book. All information comes from our interviews with Joe unless there is a citation to additional sources, such as newspaper articles about him.

    With apologies to Marie, we have chosen a different title for this book. Once during a visit with Marie, I asked her how she wanted to be remembered. She took a drag off her cigarette, paused for a moment, blew a cloud of smoke toward the ceiling, and responded as a courageous fool. When I pushed her to explain, Marie gave a throaty laugh and replied that she often tilted at windmills, but she was too stubborn or foolish to abandon the fight despite her fears and doubts—especially when it came to the lives of the men on death row. What follows is a requiem for that courageous fool, a complex and brave woman whose story will hopefully inspire others to take up her fallen banner and continue the good fight against our country’s shameful and bloody embrace of the death penalty.

    —Todd C. Peppers

    Salem, VA

    1

    The Murder of Penny Deans

    Every time I am about to meet a man, woman, or child on death row for the first time, I am thrown back into Penny’s murder . . . I identify so strongly with the victims and their families that I spend days calling on God to help me remember that the man or woman that I am about to meet is my brother or sister.

    —Marie Deans, date unknown

    When Marie gave a public speech about the death penalty, she would often tell the story of the murder of her mother-in-law, Evelyn Penny Deans. The story of Penny’s brutal slaying represented why Marie got involved in death penalty work. It also highlighted why Marie thought that the death penalty was ineffective and morally offensive. My mother-in-law’s killing was the crucial element, the key that motivated me to get into this work . . . I don’t want to see anyone ignored or thrown away by society, whether they’re the victims or the murderers.

    ¹

    When Marie sat down to outline her book, she decided to start it with Penny’s murder because it was the key to her work. We want to honor Marie’s wishes by presenting Penny’s story early in this book, but it is necessary to place the story in context. By the time of Penny’s death in 1972, Marie was living with her third husband, Bob Deans, in Charleston, South Carolina. Marie’s first two marriages ended in divorce. Marie had a tense relationship with her parents, but she quickly bonded with her new in-laws, Joseph Robert Jabo Deans and Penny. Marie finally had parental figures that loved and supported her. Marie remained a constant presence by Jabo’s side during his slow death from cancer in 1971.

    I’d always adored Jabo, but we’d become even closer during his two years in the hospital. I’d visited him every day after my older son left for school, taking him the collard greens, cornbread, pork roast, fried chicken, and other Southern dishes he wanted. We talked about everything from the latest Charleston gossip, to my writing, to his days as a jazz drummer, to what it was like growing up—or, in my case, spending my summers—on a Carolina tobacco farm.

    Marie’s relationship with Penny grew even stronger when Marie announced she was pregnant. I had a mother now and she would love me all her life, wrote Marie. Her love had been a precious and desperately needed gift.

    On the evening of August 20, 1972, Marie received a telephone call that changed the course of her life.

    We were lying in bed watching the news when the phone rang. Our digital alarm clock had just clicked to 11:22 p.m. We let it ring several times before Bob leaned over and picked it up. His voice quickly changed from irritation to alarm. It’s Bill. Someone broke into Mama’s house. She’s been shot. If the police had called, Bob would have told them they’d made a mistake. Penny and her six-year-old daughter, Rachel [not her real name], weren’t expected home for several days. But there was no mistake, and to this day, the phone ringing late at night is like a tripwire setting off an explosion of adrenalin in me.

    We lived around the corner and got to Penny’s house in minutes, but police officers, reporters, TV crews, and neighbors already formed a small crowd outside of the house. Bill ran to meet us. He looked like a little boy calling out to his parents in the middle of a nightmare. He grabbed me and held on tightly until Bob put his arm around him. Bill turned to Bob, and the brothers came together. I had never seen them so close and so tender with one another. Finally, Bob asked, Where’s Mama? and Bill pointed to the house.

    Wait, don’t go in there. The urgency in Bill’s voice stopped us. It’s a crime scene. They won’t let you in there.

    Bob made a so what sound, and we kept moving until Bill grabbed my shoulder. No, Marie! You cannot go in there. He looked directly at my protruding belly, then at Bob.

    Bob put his arm around my shoulder and started walking away from the house. I pulled against his arm. Wait, Bob, don’t. She can’t be left alone. We shouldn’t be out here. They don’t understand. She can’t be left alone.

    She’s not alone, Bill said. The paramedics are with her.

    Bob suddenly whirled around to face him. Rachel! Where is Rachel?

    Bill put his hand out as if to stop Bob. It’s okay. She’s okay. He told us that he had gotten Rachel out of the house and taken her to a neighbor’s before the police came.

    So Penny knows she’s all right? I asked him. Bill walked away. Bill? He kept on walking.

    I looked at Bob, and he shook his head. He didn’t hear you. He’s just more hyper than usual.

    Bill lived down the street from Penny in one of the smaller homes closer to the entrance of the subdivision. He told us that he and a friend had been driving by and saw lights on in the house and a strange car in the driveway. Knowing Penny and Rachel were supposed to be in North Carolina, they stopped to investigate.

    As they came up the walk, they heard voices. Bill’s first thought was that Penny was back and with some friend or neighbor. As he turned to go back to the car, he heard shots. He immediately went back to the door and started banging and kicking on it, trying to get in. His friend ran around to the back of the house and saw a man sprinting from the garage.

    Undated photograph of Penny Deans, whose violent murder led Marie to become a death penalty abolitionist. Personal collection of Marie Deans.

    We stood just off the wide front lawn, leaning against a police car, watching the front door. The blue lights on the police cars kept searching the neighborhood in hypnotic silvery sweeps. It should have sounded like a helicopter in a Vietnam War report. Whomp. Whomp. Whomp. Instead, there was only the squawking of the police radio.

    Each time the light illuminated the front of the house, I expected Penny to be standing there, throwing open the door. Come on in. Why are you standing out there? It was not real to be standing here. This had to be a play, a nightmare, anything but the reality that this was Penny’s house and she’d been shot. Why would anyone hurt Penny? She’d been through enough watching her husband Jabo slowly die of cancer just a year ago, feeling her life fall out from under her, feeling so afraid, and then this baby. I caressed my belly. Everything had changed for her. She was so excited about being a grandmother.

    Bodies blurred past us, moving between us and the door. I craned my neck to see around them. I didn’t want to miss her. Bill was pacing off to the side, now and then pacing over to us and stopping for a minute. Bob was still, quiet.

    A young police officer, his uniform black in the night, came over and put his hand gently on my shoulder. Don’t worry. We’ll catch the bastard and fry him.

    What? I could see the concern in his eyes, feel the gentleness of his touch. I must not have understood what he said. What I heard did not go with those eyes, that touch. Suddenly Bill was there, reaching out for the officer and practically dragging him away from us.

    What is he talking about? Bob asked. Come up and say something like that to you. What is wrong with him?

    He had said what I heard. Did he really think the idea of frying someone was supposed to make me feel better? Nothing made any sense. I want to scream until someone told me why anyone would hurt Penny. I felt my body would fly into pieces if someone didn’t tell me that Penny knew Rachel was all right. Was Penny hurting? Was she scared? Were her questions being answered? But all these people were running back and forth in front of us.

    We were there for over an hour before we realized Terry, Penny’s older daughter, knew nothing of what was happening. Bill insisted he would stay at the house, and I should go with Bob to get Terry. Bob called Terry’s fiancé, P. A., and we picked him up on the way to Terry’s apartment. She lived on James Island. We had to cross the Cooper River Bridge, the peninsula of Charleston and the Ashley River Bridge. It was Sunday night/early Monday morning. The Cooper River flashed silver streaks, but the marsh was dark and still. The streets of the city empty, the houses dark and shuttered.

    Groggy and rumpled, Terry suddenly came awake when she saw the three of us standing outside. What is it? What’s happened? P. A. put his arms around her. We couldn’t see her. We only could hear first her gasp and then her crying and asking questions none of us could answer.

    Coming back there was a blockade at the foot of the Cooper River Bridge. The policeman came over, shined his flashlight into the car, and started explaining that they were stopping all cars because they were trying to catch a man who had. . . . We know, Bob said, We are Mrs. Deans’s children. We went to get my sister. The policeman was so flustered, he couldn’t stop talking or waving his flashlight around inside the car. We waited while he told us he was sorry, but we shouldn’t worry, they would find the man.

    And then an ambulance coming off the bridge into town passed us. No warning light. For a moment, we debated following the ambulance. Then someone said maybe it’s not her, and we followed the policeman’s hands pointing up the bridge.

    When we got back to the house, Bob confronted the police. Had Penny been in the ambulance we passed? Yes, they told him. They had sent her body to the hospital for an autopsy. That’s how we learned Penny was dead. Somehow we could not or would not take that in. Bob insisted to the police officer that his brother had not told him his mother was dead, as if that was the deciding factor between her being alive or dead. Bill came up and pulled us away. How could you not know? How could you not understand? There was blood everywhere. I had to step over her body to get Rachel.

    Strangely, that memory, which was not even ours, became my most enduring memory of that night, along with another—which we also never saw—the terror on Penny’s face when she realized what was about to happen to her and might happen to Rachel.

    I wasn’t angry that night. The only feeling I had was an overwhelming sense of loss and sadness. Penny had been so lost after Jabo died. She and Jabo had married young, and she could not imagine—and was fearful of—life without him. The baby I carried had been a miracle for her. For the first time since Jabo died, Penny had begun looking forward. You could see life welling up in her. She was so excited about being a grandmother that she couldn’t contain herself. She had to go to North Carolina and tell each member of Jabo’s family in person.

    Why was her life taken now? Why are we so good at passing on violence and so poor at passing on love? The question mourned in me, becoming a mantra that kept me from wailing or crumpling to the ground. Why? Why? God, how I needed an answer.

    I don’t know how long we stood outside the house before the neighbor directly across the street came and got us. At her house, we sat bunched up on the hall stairs staring out of her open front door, facing Penny’s front door. Why did we stay there watching? Now we knew she was dead. We knew even her body was no longer there, knew she would never throw open that door and beckon us in. Yet we stayed, watching, waiting. We knew, but we still could not or would not take it in. Maybe we believed if we left, we would make it true, and Penny would really be dead. But if we stayed, kept the watch, somehow that night would go away, and we, too, would start the morning with a new beginning of our routine lives. Maybe our bodies simply had forgotten how to move.

    As the sky began turning light grey, we watched the police seal the house, watched the yellow tape go up, watched them collect up their equipment and pair off into their cars, watched as one turned around and looked at us, watched him walk toward us. Go home now. There’s nothing more you can do here. Go home. We needed someone to tell us what to do, yet his was the command we didn’t want. We couldn’t change anything.

    Terry pushed her head against mine. I put my arm around her and kissed her hair. Slowly she stood up and pulled me up. She, P. A., Bob, and I went to our house, and Bill went to the neighbors who were caring for Rachel.

    Bob went straight to our bedroom and shut the door. Terry clung to P. A. on the sofa. I sat alone in a chair facing them, listening to Terry’s questions. Why had this happened? Why was her mother dead? What had any of us done to deserve all we had been going through this past year? Terry’s face, her fear and outrage, made me feel even more helpless. She was just a girl, and I wanted so badly to give her some answer, something to help her, but all I had were more questions.

    Later in the afternoon Bob emerged from the bedroom to take Terry and P. A. home, telling me to get some sleep. As they left, Bob picked up the evening paper from the stoop and handed it to me. I watched them drive off before glancing down at the paper.

    Penny’s murder was on the front page. I stared at it, slowly beginning to realize we were in the middle of a sensational murder case. I dropped the paper on the hall table and headed for the bedroom, but I couldn’t sleep. I couldn’t even stay in bed. My mind was like Bill’s pacing.

    I got the paper and spread it on the kitchen table. At first it just wasn’t real. I’d begin to read it, then get up and stare out the window, start reading it again, then roam the house for a few minutes. Finally, I forced myself to read the entire article.

    The story stirred the first feelings of complicity in me. It posed numerous questions, like why had Penny cut short her vacation? Where and under what circumstances had she met up with the killer? How had he gotten into the house? There were interviews with neighbors who expressed intense fear when they heard the killer was on the loose. Many had left their homes and gone into Charleston to stay with friends and relatives. To me, the story said Penny was somehow responsible for bringing this violence into her life and the lives of her neighbors.

    The man who killed Penny had escaped from prison in Maine, killed another woman up there, taken her car, and headed South. It was her car in Penny’s driveway. The assumption was that he had seen Penny on the road and followed her. The police, who had told us virtually nothing, had given many details to the reporters. Now I read about the fight Penny had put up, that her fingernails had been torn and broken, where the bullets had entered her head, exactly where and in what position she had been found.

    I saw the expression on Penny’s face when she realized what was about to happen. I could feel her terror as if the gun was pointed at me. No one should die alone like that, terrified like that. No mother should have to imagine, even for a second, such a death for her child. I wanted desperately to have been with her.

    Who would do such a thing? Penny was friendly, outgoing. She always expected the best from people. Had the man seen Penny on the road in her big new station wagon and decided she must have money he could steal? Had she smiled at him at a gas station or in a restaurant, and had he decided she would provide a haven for him? Was he some sick monster who got a thrill from preying on vulnerable women? If he escaped from prison, how had he gotten a gun? Why target Penny? Of all the people who must have been driving South that night, all the people this man could have followed, in God’s name, why Penny?

    Soon our phone began ringing. Neighbors and friends from Mt. Pleasant and Charleston came with food and offers of help. We learned that one neighbor had made rounds of our house during those early morning hours to be sure we were safe. And much later we learned he may have had good reason, because the gun used to kill Penny was found in one of the yards abutting our back yard.

    Within a day or two, the sheriff came to tell us the man who murdered Penny had been caught. Wayne Northup had run all the way to Fayetteville, North Carolina, with Penny’s blood on him. He’d gone to his sister’s, and she had turned him in. The sheriff said the man’s sister had expressed her deepest sympathy for us, her sorrow at our loss and the loss of the family in Maine. The sheriff wouldn’t give us her name, just as he wouldn’t give her any information about us, but he told us she seemed devastated, and he believed she was sincere.

    I had been like most people, not really thinking about the families of murderers, but the message from this man’s sister haunted me. Before long I began trying to walk in her shoes, feeling what it must be like to have a brother or son or husband commit murder.

    Since then, every time I go to or near Fayetteville I wonder if I am close to her, if I could find her, if she is all right. I wonder if she knows that, because of her, the organization of murder victims’ families I founded several years after Penny’s death includes the families of those the state executes.

    In the next days and weeks, we tried to ignore the murder case and the sensational news coverage and to deal with our family and our grief. Terry had gotten into a spat with Penny before she left for North Carolina and felt incredible anger at the killer for cutting off any opportunity to mend that temporary rift. I tried to assure Terry that she and her mother were fine, but the only real relief for her came when an aunt told us that the reason Penny had come home early was because she missed us.

    All of us?

    Absolutely.

    Was she upset with Terry?

    No, why would she be?

    Bill kept saying if he hadn’t started back to the car, he could have gotten into the house in time to save Penny. Bob and I tried to

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