For a moment Pine thought Lineberry might faint or have a heart attack or lash out at her. There were so many emotions sweeping over his features, and his body tensed and untensed to such a degree that she grabbed his arm to make sure he didn’t slide out of the chair.
He finally put a hand to his face and quietly started to weep again.
Pine looked at Blum, who shook her head and put a hand to her lips signaling Pine just to remain quiet.
A long minute passed before Lineberry finally straightened and wiped at his eyes. Blum gave him a hand towel from a table next to the chair, while Pine poured him out a glass of water from a pitcher on the table.
He wiped his face, drank the water, and sat back in the chair, looking about a decade older than he had two minutes before. He gripped Pine’s hand.
“I am so sorry, Atlee. So sorry. This is all my fault.”
“No, it’s not, Jack. You trusted someone who abused that trust. But to be fair, I can understand her anger. You did leave her for my mother. You had two daughters with my mother.”
Lineberry passed a hand over his forehead. “I loved Linda with all my heart. Right up until the moment I met your mother. Then, for me, there was no one else. I’m not proud of what I did, but I’m just telling you the truth. If I had controlled my feelings better . . .”
“My mother was obviously attracted to you.”
Lineberry shook his head. “I was quite a bit older. I was in a position of influence over her. I was a professional who did something stunningly unprofessional. I never thought our relationship would result in pregnancy. I hated myself for having put her in that situation.”
“Did Tim know?” asked Pine.
“Please, call him your father. He was more of one to you than I ever was.”
“Okay, we sort of skirted around this issue before, but did my dad know that you were the father?”
“I never told him. And the timing of when he and your mother met was close enough that he had every reason to believe that he was the father. I don’t believe your mother ever told him differently.”
“But she loved him?”
Lineberry nodded. “She told me one night. He was her age. He was handsome and funny and just a good person. I could see why she loved him. At least now I can. But I was hurt—devastated, really.”
“If that was the case, why did you break things off with Linda? Why did you go to Andersonville? Because it was your job?”
“No, because you were my flesh and blood.” He finished his water and slowly put the glass down. “And despite what I told you earlier and how I reacted when you just now told me about Linda . . . I had suspected that the leak might well be coming from her. I knew she was smart and resourceful. I knew she might have found out about Amanda. It made me angry. And my suspicions caused me to care even less for her. And I needed to get away from her and take Amanda and her family with me, so I could watch over them. But I swear to you that I never knew Linda had found out about Andersonville.”
Pine rose and looked down at him. “I believe you, Jack.”
“Are you going to see the Atkinses?”
“We are. I have no idea if they’re still there or not. It’s been over two decades since that picture was taken. I called the police in Taliaferro, but I’ve heard nothing back.”
“Do you have the address?” asked Lineberry.
“I have the letters that Atkins sent Ito. The envelopes had a return address on them. I did a Google map search. It’s . . . remote.”
“What will you do if they are still there? And . . . Mercy is with them?”
“I’ll cross that bridge when I come to it. But if Mercy is there, and depending on what condition she’s in, I will find a way to tell her the truth, and I will bring her home.”
“Will you let me know what you find?”
“Of course I will.”
“I hope that . . . that she’s alive and well.”
“From your lips to God’s ears, Jack,” said Pine before walking out.
CHAPTER
71
THEY PULLED ONTO A GRAVEL ROAD and continued down it until the gravel disappeared and the road turned to dirt. And then the dirt turned to wild grass and weeds, and then some young trees blocked their way.
“This doesn’t seem promising,” said Blum.
Pine added, “Looks like the forest is reclaiming its land.”
They got out of the car and threaded their way through this maze, finally emerging into an open area. Next, they came upon a rusted mailbox perched on a rotted, leaning post. Pine looked inside, but it was empty. She examined the faded metal numbers someone had hammered onto the post.
“Matches the number address on the letters the Atkinses sent,” said Pine.
They cleared a small bend in the path, and in front of them was the mobile home trailer that they had seen in the photo. It had not aged well. One part of the front wall had fallen off, exposing ratty, filthy insulation. The door was off its hinges, and a section of the roof had collapsed. A large cinder block provided the steps up to the door.
“Clearly no one has lived here in a while,” noted Pine. She stepped up to the door and looked through the opening. “Shit!”
She jumped back and her feet hit dirt. She pulled her weapon but didn’t fire.
“What is it?” asked an alarmed Blum.
“Snakes,” said Pine as she slowly backed away. “Copperheads. A whole nest of them in there, all over the place.” She holstered her gun. “Well, we’re not going to search in there, not that we’d be able to find much.”
“What did Atkins do after he came back from the war?” asked Blum as they walked back to the car.
“I couldn’t find out much about him or his family. We need to check in with the local cops. They never did get back to me.”
“I wonder why,” said Blum.
“Let’s go ask them.”
They drove to the county seat in Crawfordville and entered the sheriff’s office located there. They told the woman at the front desk who they were and what they wanted. She directed them to an office down the hall, where a uniformed man in his thirties sat behind a desk. He was short and wide, his hair was neatly parted on the side, and he was freshly shaved.
Pine again explained who they were and why they were there.
“Go ahead and grab a seat,” said the man. “I’m Deputy Sheriff Tyler Wilcox, by the way. You say you contacted us?”
“I left a voice mail and sent an email.”
“Huh. Never heard it or saw the email. But we got some glitches in our system.”
“I hear you all are the biggest employer in the county,” said Pine.
Wilcox chuckled. “We’re one of the only employers in the county. I’m born and bred here. I love the place, but it’s not for everybody. Probably why our population keeps going down.”
He shuffled some papers on his desk and then leaned back in his chair. “So you want to find this fellow Leonard Atkins?”
“Yes. We went by his last known address, but it’s obviously been abandoned for a very long time. Full of snakes now, in fact.”
“Lotta places like that around here,” noted Wilcox. “I don’t know the name, Agent Pine. But I’ve only been with the sheriff’s office for ten years. From what you’re saying this goes back a lot further than that.”
“Yes, it does. The photo I have is from 1999.” She took it from her pocket and passed it over to him.
He looked it over before passing it back.
“Don’t recognize them. So the husband and his wife, and, what, their daughter, Becky?”
“We think so, yes.”
Wilcox adopted a cautious look. “Can I ask why the FBI is interested in them? I mean, is there anything I need to know from a local cop’s perspective?”
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