I have a meanness inside me, real as an organ. It's the day blood, something's wrong with it. I was seven when the murders happened, when my mother and two sisters were brutally slaughtered in our farmhouse in Kinnakee, Kansas. I fled into the freezing January night, losing fingers and toes to the frostbite, but I survived. And my testimony, delivered by a terrified little girl, put my fifteen-year-old brother, Ben, behind bars for life.
Twenty-five years later, the well-wisher fund that kept me afloat has dwindled to nothing, leaving me a directionless, cynical adult, still haunted by that night. My life is a series of petty thefts and a profound inability to connect with anyone. Then, a strange offer arrives: a group of true-crime enthusiasts, calling themselves the Kill Club, wants me to revisit the massacre. They believe Ben is innocent, and they're willing to pay me to investigate, to talk to the people I haven't seen in decades. Desperate for cash, I reluctantly agree, even though the thought of dredging up the past makes my skin crawl.
My journey takes me back to the desolate landscape of my childhood, a place steeped in poverty and forgotten dreams. I track down my estranged, homeless father, Runner, who only ever asks for money. I find Krissi Cates, a stripper who once accused Ben of molesting her, and Trey Teepano, a former acquaintance from Ben's troubled past, rumored to be involved in Satanic rituals that swept through rural America in the 80s. Each encounter chips away at the carefully constructed version of events I've held onto for so long, forcing me to question the very foundation of my memories.
The narrative shifts, flashing back to the grim days leading up to the murders in 1985. My mother, Patty, a single parent struggling desperately to save our failing farm, is consumed by debt and despair, unable to offer her children the affection they crave. My brother, Ben, a misfit teenager alienated from his family and the small, judgmental town, finds solace in heavy metal music and a dangerous crowd, including his brooding girlfriend, Diondra Wertzner. These glimpses into their lives reveal a family on the brink, suffocating under the weight of financial hardship and unspoken resentments.
As I delve deeper into the past, the Kill Club's theories begin to gain an unsettling traction. Ben's involvement with Diondra and her brother, Calvin, exposed him to a dark world of drugs and petty crime, far more sinister than the teenage rebellion I'd imagined. The town's hysteria over alleged Satanic cults further complicates the picture, painting Ben as an easy scapegoat. The truth, I realize, is far more convoluted and horrifying than a simple case of a brother killing his family.
The pieces of the puzzle slowly begin to fit together, revealing a shocking conspiracy. It wasn't Ben alone, if it was Ben at all. I uncover a horrifying truth about Diondra and Calvin's involvement, a desperate act rooted in a hidden pregnancy and a desire to escape their bleak lives. The night of the murders was a chaotic, tragic confluence of desperation, manipulation, and violence, far removed from the clear-cut narrative I had provided.
Ultimately, the true architect of a significant part of the tragedy is revealed to be Calvin Diehl, a man who, for a fee, helped people stage their deaths for insurance money. My mother, desperate and overwhelmed, had sought his services, leading to a botched plan that spiraled into the massacre. My sister Debby walked in on the murder of my mother, and Calvin killed her too. The realization shatters my world, exposing the depths of my mother's desperation and the cruel irony of my own testimony. With these revelations, Ben is finally freed, and I am left to grapple with the devastating weight of a truth that has been buried for decades, forever altering my understanding of family, loyalty, and the dark places within us all.