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The Day Will Come
The Day Will Come Read online
The Day Will Come
The Day Will Come
Judy Clemens
www.judyclemens.com
Poisoned Pen Press
Copyright © 2007 by Judy Clemens
First Edition 2007
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 2006940929
ISBN: 978-1-59058-390-6 Hardcover
ISBN: 9781615950232 ePub
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in, or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the publisher of this book.
Poisoned Pen Press
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Scottsdale, AZ 85251
www.poisonedpenpress.com
[email protected]
Dedication
For Jim Clemens
Brother, Friend, Musician
Contents
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Epigraph
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
More from this Author
Contact Us
Acknowledgments
As always, it took many people to bring this book to life.
Todd Novak, lead singer and songwriter of The Cowlicks, regaled me with more stories than I could fit into this book. Maybe someday I can use them all. Without his knowledge and the willingness to share his experiences, the Tom Copper Band would not exist. Check out his band at www.thecowlicks.com.
Dr. Lorin Beidler offered suggestions for the medical sub-plot in the story, and Tami Forbes was generous with her time and answers to what I’m sure were unusual questions.
Investigators Chris Jackson and Toby Jenkins of the Lima Fire Department took time out of their busy schedules to answer my many questions about fire code and emergency planning.
David Wright, poet and author of A Liturgy for Stones, among other works, took a look at the Tom Copper Band’s song lyrics to make sure they didn’t stink. You can read about him at www.dwpoet.com.
Detective Randall Floyd and Officer Jim Mininger of the Telford Borough Police Department answered my questions about law enforcement with generosity and detail.
And of course the farmers helped out, as they always do. Marilyn Halteman and Paula Meabon offered anecdotes and details about spring life on a dairy farm, many of which they will see in the book.
Eileen Tague, sound technician extraordinaire, made sure I didn’t make too many gaffs in the Tom Copper Band’s sound system.
Janet “San” Powell donated to charity to become a character in this book. It is my hope that she enjoys seeing herself in print!
Thanks to all of those who read early drafts: Todd, Tami, Paula, Phil and Nancy Clemens (my parents), and Steve Smucker (my hubby).
Writing about Stella is a privilege and a whole lot of fun. Thanks to all of the folks at Poisoned Pen for continuing to make my dream come alive, as well as the booksellers who make the finished product available. I must thank my family, who make do without me while I head off to book signings, for being patient and supportive. And, of course, a huge thank you to all of the readers who are able, for some reason, to find it in their hearts to love someone as prickly as Stella Crown.
Epigraph
Darkness holds us fast this night
His teeth are bared
His knuckles white
But sometime soon the Day will come
We’ll feel Her fire
We’ll greet Her sun
The Day will come
My love, my own,
The Day will come
The Day will come
—The Tom Copper Band
Chapter One
“So who’d you see last, Stella?” the guy asked, as familiar as if we’d known each other for years instead of five minutes in the concert line. His T-shirt had the most recent Kenny Wayne Shephard tour emblazoned on it, so I figured I knew his own answer to the question.
“Haven’t gone to many shows lately,” I said. “Cash shortage. These tickets are gifts from my friends over there.” I hooked my thumb toward my live-in farmhand, Lucy, and Lenny, her fiancé and my biker buddy. “They’re getting married next Saturday, and I’m her…” I cleared my throat. “Her maid of honor.”
“Cool,” the guy said. I think his name was Fred. “So who’d you see last?”
Back to that. “Would’ve been Bad Company, I guess. When they were in New Jersey last year. Awesome concert.”
Fred nodded. “I was there, too. Can’t remember a whole lot of it, though. Too much beer.” He smiled, revealing a mouth of missing teeth. “Probably won’t remember much of this one, either, once I get inside.”
Lovely.
A breeze whipped down South Street, and I shivered, clutching my elbows to my sides. The sun wasn’t offering any help, unable to find us in the shadow of Club Independence, and for a moment I wondered why I’d left my cozy dairy farm for the cold concrete of Philadelphia. I turned to share some body warmth with my boyfriend, Nick, only to find him standing off to the side, his gaze fixed on the sidewalk.
“You all right?” I asked.
He didn’t respond, so I stepped toward him and rubbed my hands up and down his arms. He raised his head, and I frowned at the lack of color in his cheeks. “You okay? You haven’t been yourself today.” Or the two previous days, if truth be told. Usually energetic and fun, Nick had spent most of this visit popping Tylenol and drifting off in the middle of conversations.
He rubbed his eyes with a finger and thumb. “Sorry. I thought that nap this afternoon would help, but now I can’t shake my headache. And my eyes are acting funny.”
I looked into his baby blues, concerned to see how bloodshot they’d become. Slipping my hands inside his leather jacket, I pulled him close. “You want to go home?”
“No, no. I’ll be all right.” He put his arms around me and rested his cheek on the top of my head. “Besides, Lucy and Lenny paid enough for these tickets I don’t want to waste them.”
“If you’re sure.”
“I’m sure.”
A group of Harleys eased up and idled by the curb. The lead rider, an older guy in chaps and a leather skull cap, checked out the line. “This where Tom Copper’s playing?” he yelled.
“You got it,” Fred, the toothless beer drinker, yelled back.
“Where do we park?”
Fred pointed east. “End of the road. Public parking lot.”
The rider saluted and led his group off in a roar of shotgun pipes.
A man with a Club Independence Security shirt planted himself by our section of the line. “No cameras will be allowed in the building,” he said, projecting his voice. “No recording or video equipment. All such devices will be confiscated at th
e door, to be returned at the conclusion of tonight’s concert. Thank you.” He moved down the row, and began his spiel again.
“Hey, guys,” Lucy said. “Line’s moving.”
“About time,” I said.
I detached myself from Nick and followed Lucy and Lenny in the slow trek toward the front door. Not any too soon either, if the bluish tinge to Nick’s lips was any indication. I hadn’t thought it was that cold.
“Thanks again for getting these tickets, Luce,” I said. “I’d heard they were completely sold out.”
Lucy smiled. “Yeah, well, it’s a little easier when you know the sound guy.”
“And when the band’s playing at your wedding in a week,” Lenny added.
Nick tripped over something—a crack in the sidewalk, maybe—and I grabbed his hand. He grinned sheepishly, but didn’t show me his pearly whites. I didn’t smile back.
“Here’s your tickets,” Lenny said, pulling papers from his wallet.
I took them and handed one to Nick. “You’re sure you want to stay?”
He gently squeezed my fingers. “Yes. I’m sure.”
I studied his face. “Okay. I’ll stop asking.”
“Coat open, please, miss.”
I faced the security guard and unzipped my leather jacket, holding the sides out so he could see I didn’t have any explosives strapped to my stomach or a gun holstered on my belt. He impersonally scanned the rest of my body and patted my jacket pockets.
“Thank you. Next.”
I stepped aside as Nick got the same inspection, the man a little more forward with his checking of a male patron.
“Whew,” Nick said when he reached me. “I was afraid he’d confiscate my cell phone, since it can take pictures. Guess they figure if they start that they’ll have a couple hundred to deal with.”
“Just try not to take too many photos of the girls serving the beer.”
He laughed, and we stepped toward the door.
A man with a mane of jet black hair and a great arch of a Roman nose reached out to take our tickets, scanning the bar codes and handing them back to us. “Enjoy the show.” Beads of sweat shone on his forehead, and I shivered once more as the cold from the outside clashed with the lobby’s heat.
“Stella!”
I glanced around and found Lenny’s bright red hair on the far side of the foyer. He waved his beefy arm and we pushed our way through the crowd to where he and Lucy waited with a guy in a Tom Copper Band T-shirt.
“Hey, Jordan,” I said.
Jordan Granger, one of my eight “adopted” Granger brothers, was living out a childhood dream as the Tom Copper Band’s sound man. A young-looking guy in his mid-thirties, he’d told many stories of being mistaken for an intern or groupie at other concert venues. Fortunately for the band, his technical knowledge was on a much higher level. He jerked his head toward the auditorium. “Want to meet the guys?”
“Really?” I looked at Nick. “You up for it?”
“Sure. Let’s go.”
“We’ll get a place for the concert,” Lucy said. “Think you can find us?”
I hesitated. “You don’t want to meet them?”
“Already have,” Lenny said. “When we signed them up to play for our reception.”
“Right. Okay. We’ll find you somehow. Any idea where you’ll go?”
“Not on the dance level, if you don’t mind,” Nick said.
Lucy looked at me and I lifted a shoulder.
“All right,” she said. “We’ll try to find a good place a little farther from the speakers.”
Jordan bounced on the balls of his feet. “Ready?”
I gave a thumbs-up. “Let’s go.”
We walked around the edge of the lobby, exiting through a far door into a warren of hallways and weaving around until we reached another door that said Back Stage Access—Authorized Personnel Only. I guessed being with Jordan made us okay.
Swinging the door open, Jordan collided with a pair of women coming through the other way. Once they backed up I could see they each wore a Tom Copper Band T-shirt like Jordan’s, but were otherwise opposites: one was tall and dark with lots of makeup and jewelry, the other short and blonde with only a hint of mascara. In one area they were unsurprisingly alike: both, being young and female, immediately slapped their eyes on Nick, who did a good impression of a GQ model even with his bloodshot eyes.
“Get those cables taped down, Annie?” Jordan asked the blonde.
She tore her eyes from Nick. “I promise no one will be tripping over them.”
“Good. Thanks.” He gestured to us. “Come on.”
The two women stole one more look at Nick before disappearing out the stage door, and we followed Jordan.
“Got some new groupies,” I said to Nick. “And you’re not even a rock star.”
He grunted. “Too young. Besides, I like my women to have visible body art.”
I laughed, and he reached a hand up to rub the back of my neck, where my steer head tattoo sits proudly under my short hair.
Jordan led us through one more door, where the sound of animated conversation greeted us.
“So there we sit at this diner in New Orleans,” a guy was saying, waving a bottle of Red Stripe beer, “and I’m about to take the first bite of my po’ boy when Tom here grabs it out of my hand and digs into it like he hadn’t had anything to eat for two days.”
A man sitting on a sofa barked a laugh, covering his face with his hands. “Oh, Tom!”
“Well, I practically hadn’t.” Tom Copper’s long hair and goatee were familiar, the same as on the band’s album covers. “Those southerners seem to think the ultimate vegetarian meal is a grilled cheese sandwich with a side of iceberg lettuce. They were about to serve it to me again and I was desperate.”
“So I ate his stuff,” the first guy said.
Tom moaned. “And I ended up being sick for two days.”
The man on the sofa laughed again.
“Hey guys,” Jordan said. “Can I introduce you to someone real quick?”
Conversation stopped and all eyes landed on us.
“Hey, Jordan, man,” Tom said. “You know your friends are our friends.”
“Sure.” Jordan waved a hand at me. “This is Stella Crown. Practically my sister. And Nick. He’s with her. From Virginia.”
Tom walked over, his hand extended. “Howdy, Stella. Nick from Virginia. Glad you could join us.”
We shook, and he pointed around the room. “That guy, giving me grief, is our bassist, LeRoy. He might be a smartass, but he’s got good chops.”
LeRoy laughed, his teeth white against his cocoa-colored skin. “Pleased to meet you.”
“That there’s Donny, our guitarist.”
We waved at Donny, a skinny, balding man with a tattoo of a bull on his forearm. His guitar hung around his neck, and he stood in a corner where he’d been practicing when we’d walked in.
“And Genna, who does vocals for us.”
Genna, a pretty, pixie-like woman probably in her late twenties, smiled at Nick and me, not letting her eyes linger on Nick. Instead, her eyes flicked toward Jordan before she turned and snatched a baby carrot off the buffet table behind her.
“The guy on the couch,” Tom said, “is Parker, used to be our drummer.”
“I left them to find normal folks to hang around,” Parker said, grinning.
“Oh, shut up,” Tom said. “You’re the one who chose to come by tonight and get another dose of us.”
“He likes us!” LeRoy said in a high voice. “He really likes us!”
They all laughed, and Parker shook his head in mock disgust. Like the other guys, Parker looked to be in his early to mid-thirties, but while the band was dressed in carefully chosen performance clothes, Parker wore new jeans and a striped short-sleeve shirt.
“I’m a teacher now,” he said to us. “One of those respectable types.”
I no
dded, thinking they all looked respectable to me.
“Well, thanks,” Jordan said. “We’ll leave you alone to get ready.”
“We are ready,” Tom said.
“You mean you’ve done your meditation?” LeRoy asked. He closed his eyes, chanting something unintelligible.
“See what I mean?” Tom said to us. “I don’t get no respect.”
LeRoy and the rest of the guys hooted. Genna, after another quick glance at Jordan, left the room through a door on the other side.
“What’s up with her?” Tom asked Jordan.
Jordan shrugged and turned back the way we’d come. I gave one last wave to the band and followed Jordan into the hallway.
“They’re crazy, but nice,” he said.
I laughed. “They seem like fun.”
“They are.”
I wanted to ask him about the woman, but figured he’d tell me if he wanted to.
“Check this out,” he said. He took us through another door marked Stage, and suddenly we were in the wings, standing behind heavy black curtains, the noise and smoke from the dance floor drifting our way. “As long as you can’t see the audience, they can’t see you. So don’t worry.”
“Are those the cables that girl was taping?” I asked, pointing at a line of duct-taped wires. “What was her name? Annie?”
“Yeah. Somehow they got loose and Donny, the guitarist you met back there, tripped over them during sound check. Could’ve been bad.”
Urgent whispered voices drifted toward us from the other side of the black curtain, getting louder until they were directly opposite us and we could hear a low voice. “I swear to God, if you don’t cut it out I’m gonna wring your fucking neck!” A man stormed past us and out the stage door.
Jordan sucked in a quick breath, and a number of emotions washed over his face. We waited, not speaking, until whoever was on the other side of the curtain exited a different way. I looked to Jordan for an explanation of some sort, but he wasn’t giving any, his face closed and tight.
“Well, come on, then,” he finally said.
We left the stage, Jordan taking us back toward the door we’d originally entered.
“See you after?” I asked.