One year had gone by since the murders, and then
another, and now the investigators were deep into a third. They were
working day and night, working weekends, putting off vacations, losing
weight, gaining weight, growing pale and pasty and haggard, waking at 3
a.m. with a jolt and scratching notes on pads beside their beds.
Their sergeant did not know if they would ever find
the answer. As far as he was concerned, the case was not even in their
hands.
Ultimately, he believed, it was up to God whether
they made an arrest.
A born-again Christian, the sergeant carried a Bible
in his briefcase. He had no doubt that both heaven and hell were real.
He saw good and evil not as theoretical or philosophical concepts, but
as absolute realities walking upright through the world. He believed in
the forces of light and darkness. He believed in demonic possession. He
took it as a matter of fact that Satan and his cohorts currently reigned
over the Earth.
"I believe there are demons all around us," he would
say, "just as I believe there are angels all around us."
And when he looked at the evidence from the case
before them now, studied the photos of the bodies and the ropes and the
concrete blocks, the sergeant had no doubt that he and the other
investigators were pursuing someone driven by Satanic forces.
Of course demons were real. They were hunting one now.
They were on their way to the
Magic Kingdom.
The highways were filled with them. Couples in
subcompacts, debating the wisdom of stopping at Stuckey's for a
pecan log. Tour groups in tour buses, fleecing their companions at
gin rummy and keeping an eye on their driver in case he nodded off.
Myriad configurations of moms and dads and stepmoms and stepdads
and napping toddlers and whining third-graders and sprawling
teenagers in full sulk and mothers-in-law with pursed lips and
embittered outlooks, all struggling for peaceful coexistence
inside the air-conditioned confines of their minivans.
They were pilgrims, embarked on the same passage so
many millions had made before. From every corner of the country they
came, descending through the lengths of Alabama and Georgia until at
last they reached the threshold of their destination.
Even then, they were not merely crossing state lines.
They were slipping over to the other side, entering the isle of eternal
youth, dominion of the sun, temple of the mouse who devoured the world,
paradise of glistening beaches and murmuring waves and hallucinatory
sunsets and oranges dripping with ambrosia and alligators smiling jagged
smiles and snowy-haired seniors who play shuffleboard as they wait
cheerfully for their collect call from God andintrepid astronauts who
climb aboard gleaming spaceships, launched with a roar into a heavenly
blue sky.
The '86 Oldsmobile Calais, pointed south on
Interstate 75, was the color of that sky.
Inside the car, Jo Rogers and her daughters were
making their escape. They were leaving the farm, leaving the sheriff's
deputies and the counselors and the lawyers, searching for someplace
warm and safe where they could hide and forget and find a way back to
themselves.
They had one week.
"We'll be back," Jo had told her husband.
It's easy to picture her and the girls that first day.
To see their two-door sedan climbing into the hills of southern Ohio, to
hear the drone of the tires on the pavement, to sink into the quilted
dark blue fabric of their bucket seats and gaze down the highway to the
edge of the Earth, dropping off over the horizon.
Jo, tired as usual but glad to finally be off, was at
the wheel, at least in the beginning; this much has been confirmed.
Michelle, 17, the quiet one with the constellation of rings on her left
hand, was probably up front as well, in the passenger seat. Christe, 14,
the baby of the family, her father's favorite, the cheerleader, the one
with the mane of mall hair and the trio of friendship bracelets on her
wrist, most likely would have been in the back.
They had a road atlas, and as they drove, they must
have studied it closely, plotting their path straight through the heart
of the country. They had a long way to go.
It was the afternoon of Friday, May 26, 1989. A few
hours earlier, Jo and the girls had started out from their 300-acre
dairy farm in Van Wert County, in the northwestern corner of Ohio. The
night before, Jo had worked her usual midnight shift -- she drove a
forklift and worked the assembly line at Peyton's Northern, a
distribution center for health and beauty products on the other side of
the Indiana state line -- and had come home around dawn to their double-wide
mobile home and grabbed a few hours of sleep while Michelle and Christe
finished packing. Finally, around 1 p.m., the three of them got into the
Calais, and Jo backed it up to the milk house to say goodbye to her
husband.
Hal Rogers was outside, unloading corn gluten feed,
when Jo backed around. He stopped for a moment, and Jo leaned through
the window and gave him a kiss.
"Have a good time," he said.
Hal had wanted to go with his wife and daughters. But
the spring rains had been late that year, and there was still corn and
wheat and soybeans that needed planting and 80 Holsteins waiting to be
milked every day at 5:30 a.m. and again at 3 p.m., no exceptions.
Somebody had to stay and keep it all going.
Jo and Michelle and Christe were determined to make
the best of it, even without Hal. They had been buzzing about this trip
for weeks, debating which theme parks to hit and which to avoid, logging
sessions at a local tanning salon so they would have a good base of
bronze to build on under the southern sun. They had good reason to be
excited. This was the first family trip of their lives, the first time
they had managed to free themselves from the daily rigors of the farm
and get away together. Most years, the best they could hope for was a
few days at the Van Wert County Fair.
"When you run a dairy farm," explains Colleen Etzler,
Jo's sister-in-law, "you don't get a vacation."
Early on, when they were planning the trip, Jo and
the girls had talked about visiting Gatlinburg or Gettysburg. But in the
end they had decided to be more adventurous and make the thousand-mile
journey to Florida.
The three of them wanted what every other tourist
wants from the Sunshine State. They wanted to lie on the beach and shake
Mickey's hand and throw away a few dollars on overpriced souvenirs. They
wanted to let go, to be renewed, to lose themselves inside the myth.
So off they went. That afternoon, after saying
goodbye to Hal, they turned left out of the driveway and drove into the
village of Willshire, a mile or so away from the farm, where they
stopped at the bank for some money. Then they were truly on their way.
Headed for the interstate, they turned down two-lane
county roads that stretched as straight as a ruler for miles and miles.
They drove past fields crowded with rows of young stalks -- the corn was
only up to their ankles at that point -- past windmills and silos
jutting into the Midwestern sky, past farms that had been owned by the
same families for more than a century. They went past the Riverside
Cemetery and its big, black wrought-iron gate and past the Tastee Twirl
and past the grain elevator in the little town of Rockford, with its one
and only stoplight, and through the even smaller towns of Mercer and
Neptune until finally, almost 50 miles after they left the farm, they
reached the broad ribbon of I-75.
From there, it was a straight shot all the way to
Florida.
Despite the late start, they made good time that
first day. Jo almost certainly did most of the driving -- Michelle, who
had got her license just a few months before, was intimidated by
highways -- and Jo was not known for her strict adherence to speed
limits.
"I want to get there," Jo would tell her friends.
Either way, by the time they stopped for the night, they'd made it clear
through Kentucky and Tennessee and were just across the Georgia border.
The next day they rode I-75 all the way through
Georgia and into Florida, then cut east on I-10 over to Jacksonville.
They stayed there for the evening, then checked out of their motel the
next morning and headed for the Jacksonville Zoo, apparently their first
bona fide tourist destination.
There at the zoo, they gazed up into the face of a
giraffe, saw monkeys hanging by their tails, watched lions napping in
the sun. These facts and others would eventually be learned from rolls
of film recovered with the family's belongings.
They had a camera, a Nikon One-Touch, and as they
moved through these days -- days that, in retrospect, would become
imbued with the intensity of a dream -- they took frame after frame,
leaving behind a series of snapshots that investigators would eventually
pore over, study, burn into memory.
After finishing at the zoo, they left Jacksonville
and turned south again until they reached the attraction at Silver
Springs, where they took one of the famed glass-bottom boat tours. A
great deal of investigation would eventually be devoted to the question
of how little experience the Rogers women had with boats and water. For
the girls, at least, the ride at Silver Springs was one of the few times
-- in Christe's case, perhaps the very first time -- they had ever set
foot on a boat. Neither girl was a confident swimmer, especially in
water over their heads, and their mother could not swim at all. In fact,
Jo was terrified of her face being covered by water or anything else.
"Just pull the covers over her head," says Hal, "and
you got a hell of a fight."
So what went through their minds that afternoon as
they climbed into the glass- bottom boat? Were they nervous? Did one of
them ask the guide if there were life jackets on board?
Or maybe they were calm. Maybe they surrendered to
the hushed beauty of Silver Springs and to the realization that at long
last they were truly on vacation. They were far away from everything and
everyone who had hurt them. There was nothing in this place to be afraid
of. Nothing for them to do at all, but sit in the boat and cast their
eyes to the window at their feet and stare down through the clear, pale
blue water to the thick carpet of grass, swaying hypnotically on the
bottom.
Christe thought of the cows as her pets. Sometimes,
when she was working on her cheerleading routines, she would practice
beside the barn, using the Holsteins as her audience. Hal would see her
out there, jumping up and down and waving her arms for a bunch of cows,
and he would smile. As long as the cows didn't run away, he'd say, she
must be doing something right.
Still, the grind of the farm was overwhelming. On top
of the milkings and feedings, Hal and the rest of the family had to
contend with a mountain of other tasks. There was the breeding -- they'd
owned a bull for a while, but switched to artificial insemination when
he started chasing Jo and the girls -- and delivering the calves and
cleaning the barn every day and cleaning the milking parlor every day
and keeping the machinery and equipment in good repair. They had to plow
the fields and plant the crops and harvest the crops; sometimes, during
harvest, Hal would go for three days straight without sleeping. And like
the rest of us, they had to cook and do laundry and keep track of the
bills and keep up with the usual chores of life.
They all pushed themselves. But none pushed harder
than Jo.
"She could work me under the table," says Hal.
Today, those close to Jo tend to describe her in
generalities. They say she was fun. They say she was happy. But they
struggle with details. Looking back, sorting through all the years, it's
difficult to know which bits and pieces are worth sharing, which are the
ones that would sum her up and set her apart. What are the moments that
define any of us? The odds and ends that make us real?
Her given name was Joan, but almost no one called her
that. She was thin, with brown hair that she curled sometimes and
sometimes wore straight. Like her husband, she wore shaded glasses that
partially hid her eyes. Unlike her husband, she had an outgoing nature
and could talk to anyone. Hal liked to say that she was his personality.
"She never knew a stranger," remembers Jane Dietrich,
a close friend who lived on a neighboring farm.
When she was little, growing up on a farm in the same
county, Jo used to dress the family cat in baby clothes and walk it in a
stroller. She led a sheltered childhood. She'd dated Hal in high school
and married him a few months after graduation, when she was pregnant
with Michelle.
Though their wedding was held inside a church, her
parents were so embarrassed by the pregnancy that they did not allow Jo
to wear a wedding gown or to invite her friends to the reception. For
their honeymoon, she and Hal were granted a weekend in nearby Fort Wayne,
where they stayed at a Hospitality Inn.
Somehow Jo made the best of things. She had a ringing
laugh. She loved country music, loved to dance, made a fantastic potato
soup. She and Hal owned a motorcycle, a Honda Goldwing, and she liked to
ride behind him, the wind in her face. She was independent and strong-willed
and not afraid to stand up to Hal; she listened to him and respected his
opinion, but if he said something stupid, she could silence him with a
look. She used to make him take her out to dinner, just so they could
get away from the farm and talk about something other than the corn and
the cows. She liked to tease Hal and would make fun of his woeful
attempts at singing. She wrote him cards, telling him she loved him. She
was a tough woman -- tougher than her slender frame would have led a
stranger to believe -- but underneath the toughness, friends saw an
enduring glow, a persistently optimistic outlook that had survived all
her struggles. In the months before she left for Florida, she talked
about wanting to have another baby.
"You would have liked Jo," says Vance Krick, a family
friend who lived down the road. "You really would have."
For all her spirit, though, the years had knocked
something out of Jo. She had once been beautiful -- you can see it in
her high school senior photo -- but by May of 1989 she carried with her
an unmistakable air of depletion, a sense that her life had been far too
hard for far too long. You could see it in the circles beneath her eyes,
her gaunt cheeks, the tight line of her mouth. She was 36, but looked 10
years older.
And no wonder. It wasn't just the demands of the farm
or the job at Peyton's Northern. It wasn't just her migraines, either,
or the stress of raising two teenagers, ferrying the girls to church and
softball practice and cheerleading camp.
It was everything. She seemed to exist in a state of
permanent exhaustion. She worked the midnight shift at Peyton's -- the
night trick, some people called it -- to supplement the income from the
farm and to qualify her and the rest of the family for health insurance
benefits. Early in the morning, she'd drive home from the job, and help
finish with the first milking and the chores. She'd get the girls off to
school, and then ride with Hal into Willshire for breakfast, and then go
back home and catch whatever sleep she could before the girls came home
from school and it was time for the mid-afternoon milking and for her to
make dinner. In the evenings, she would try to nap again before leaving
for the next midnight shift. But it was never enough. She would fall
asleep while driving. Sometimes, when she was on her lunch break at
Peyton's, she would sit in the din of the break room and nod off in
front of her co-workers.
"You're killing yourself," Rosemary Krick, Vance's
wife, would tell her. "You're killing me, just watching you."
Another strain, a strain that would have broken
almost anyone, was the problem with Hal's younger brother. John Rogers
was Hal's partner. They owned the farm together, and John lived in a
trailer beside the house and worked the farm along with the rest of the
family.
People around Van Wert had always thought John was a
little off -- he liked to wear Army fatigues and often talked about
taking on missions for the Secret Service and the CIA -- but no one knew
how deep the problems went until one day in March 1988, when sheriff's
deputies showed up at the farm and arrested him, charging him in the
sexual assault of a woman who lived in his trailer.
The woman had once dated John, but now they were just
sharing space. She told police that one evening she had come back to the
trailer and been attacked by a man in a mask who handcuffed and
blindfolded her and threatened her with a knife. When she reported the
assault, the woman told detectives that she thought her attacker was
John -- she'd heard his voice -- and that the rape had been videotaped.
The detectives got a warrant and searched the trailer and found, inside
a briefcase, a video of the rape.
Disturbing as this was, the worst was yet to come.
Shortly after John was taken to jail, the detectives summoned Hal and Jo
to the sheriff's department and sat them down. They had something to
tell them.
"We think Michelle's been assaulted," one of the
detectives said.
The briefcase in the trailer had not just
contained the video of the woman's assault. It also contained
pictures of Michelle, some of which showed her undressed and
blindfolded. Searching the rest of the trailer and John's car, the
detectives had also found audiotapes on which a girl who proved to
be Michelle could be heard screaming and pleading with John to leave
her alone.
When the detectives asked her about the photos and
the tapes, Michelle confirmed the worst. Her uncle, she said, had raped
her repeatedly over the previous two years, starting when she was 14.
Michelle said John had taken advantage of the times when Hal and Jo were
away from the farm, off on weekend trips or other business. She said he
had tied her hands and forced himself on her, threatening to kill her if
she told anyone.
All of this had occurred under Hal's and Jo's noses.
Both of them had noticed that Michelle seemed irritable and even nervous
around John, that she didn't like to be alone with him in the milking
parlor. Jo had tried to get Michelle to tell her what was wrong, but
Michelle wouldn't say. Hal had written it off as a personality clash.
"If I'd known what it was," says Hal, "I'd have
killed the son of a bitch to start with."
John Rogers denied everything. He said he was being
framed.
The accusations and denials ripped the family apart.
Irene Rogers, Hal's and John's mother, choose to believe her son and not
her granddaughter. Michelle was lying, she told people. Stunned that his
mother would chose to disregard the evidence, Hal cut off contact with
his parents.
Caught in the middle of it all was Michelle. Now that
John was off the farm, she wished the whole thing would just go away.
She didn't want to talk about it with her parents, wasn't particularly
interested in counseling, and had no interest in testifying against her
uncle. At one point, she even suggested she would leave town if the case
came to trial.
For his part, Hal sank into a depression in the
months after the allegations came to light. He would retreat to the
trailer John had lived in and lock himself inside, sometimes hiding
there for days. Jo would come to the door of the trailer, trying to get
her husband to open up.
"Let me in," she'd say. "Talk to me."
But Hal didn't know how to talk about what had
happened.
In the end, the whole thing went away and Michelle
was not asked to appear in court. John Rogers eventually pleaded no
contest to the rape of the first woman and was sentenced to a prison
term of 7 to 25 years. Given Michelle's reluctance to proceed further,
the charges involving her were dropped.
Most people, seeing Michelle for the first time,
would have said she was pretty. Many would have described her as
beautiful. She had wavy brown hair that fell just past her shoulders, a
cautious smile, dark eyes that were somehow both playful and haunting.
Like so many teenage girls, she was a shape-shifter. Sometimes, when she
hadn't put on all her makeup, she could pass for a middle school student;
at other moments, when she was dressed up or when she tilted her head a
certain way, she looked like a woman in her early 20s. Yet in both
incarnations, there was something removed about her, a sense that an
essential piece was kept in another room somewhere, under glass. The
events of the past two years were in that wariness; they were there,
too, in the lines already forming around her eyes.
At Crestview High, where she had just finished her
junior year, Michelle was an average student known for being both a
little shy and a little wild. She could be withdrawn around people she
did not know, but could also drop into a boy's lap and flirt
outrageously. She smoked occasionally. At parties, when others were
drinking beer, she preferred wine coolers. On the way to school, she sat
at the back of the bus with the guys from the agricultural club and
listened to their off-color jokes and laughed when they grabbed for her
rear.
The brazen exterior left Michelle with a bit of a
reputation. In keeping with the age-old traditions of high school, other
students spread whispered stories about her. Michelle knew she was a
fixture of school gossip -- she talked about it with her girlfriends --
but she did not particularly care. Or at least she pretended not to care.
The truth was, beneath the surface, there was a bruised sweetness to
Michelle, a painful vulnerability more complex than either her
reputation or the facade she presented to others.
Publicly she may have shrugged off the gossip. But
privately she scribbled notes to friends, saying she was lonely.
Sometimes, she talked about going to college and becoming a veterinarian,
swearing she would never allow herself to wind up on a farm, staring at
cows for the rest of her life. Other days, she said she wanted to get
married and raise a family on a farm. She had a schoolgirl's fascination
with rings, wearing four of them -- two gold and two silver -- on her
left hand, one on each finger. Her bedroom was decorated with pictures
of unicorns. She belonged to the 4-H Club and to the Future Farmers of
America. She chewed Bazooka bubble gum. She listened to Guns N'Roses,
U2, Madonna. On weekend nights, she liked to cruise up and down Main
Street in Van Wert. If she was going to a school dance, she made a point
of stopping by her maternal grandparents' house first so they could see
her dress. She sometimes wore wide, pink-rimmed glasses, not to correct
her eyesight but because she thought them stylish. During the summer,
when she showed cows and sheep at the Van Wert County Fair, she would
sleep in the barn with the animals.
"She was a tomboy," remembers Jeff Feasby, the boy
she was seeing when she left for Florida. "A typical farm girl."
Michelle and Jeff had gotten together a month before
the end of school, at a party after the prom. Neither had a date that
night, and so they'd been free to pursue each other; they'd talked until
the sun came up, by which point they were a couple. Although they'd
dated only a few weeks, Michelle was already growing close to Jeff and
had accepted his class ring as proof that they were going steady. The
ring was adorned with a stone of cubic zirconium and a carving of a
knight atop a horse -- in honor of the Crestview High Knights -- and
Michelle was terrified of losing it while working in the barn. Instead
of wearing it on one of her available fingers, she kept the ring in her
purse.
The two of them were a good couple. They'd known each
other since seventh grade and thought of each other first as friends.
Between them there was true affection and respect. Jeff had heard the
talk over the past year or so about something bad happening with
Michelle and her uncle. But Jeff sensed that she did not want to talk
about it and left the subject alone.
"Didn't think it was any of my business," he says.
The night before Michelle and her sister and mother
began their trip, Jeff came out to the house. The two of them stood in
the laundry room and kissed goodbye. Michelle got emotional, saying how
much she'd miss him. To others, a week's vacation to Florida would have
been nothing extraordinary. To Michelle, it must have seemed like she
was headed for the far side of the moon. She was excited about the trip
and could not wait to get started. But that night, in her boyfriend's
arms, Michelle's eyes filled with tears.
The next day was Thursday, June 1. They left the
Gateway Inn that morning shortly after 10 a.m. and turned the Calais
back onto I-4 and headed for Tampa, where they were thinking of seeing
Busch Gardens and perhaps lying on the gulf beaches.
They reached their hotel, the Days Inn at Rocky Point,
just before 12:30 p.m. They checked in, picked up a brochure on Busch
Gardens and went to their room, which was on the second floor, facing
the shoreline of Tampa Bay. Room 251 was generic, cheerfully anonymous,
drenched in teal: dark teal carpet, chairs with teal cushions, curtains
made from a floral pattern set in teal, two double beds covered with
teal quilts of a similar pattern.
Shortly after they went up to the room -- phone
records put the time at 12:37 p.m. -- Michelle placed a long-distance
call to Jeff Feasby at the Union 76 station where he worked in Van Wert.
It was Jeff's birthday, and Michelle had arranged to have flowers and
balloons sent to the gas station that morning.
"Did you get the flowers?" she asked, laughing
because she knew it would embarrass him to receive such a romantic gift
at work, in front of the other guys.
"Yeah," said Jeff, who was indeed embarrassed. The
flowers were on display atop the station's cigarette machine, but he was
already planning to move them into the back room to get them out of
sight.
A few minutes later, at 12:57, another call was
placed from the room phone, this time to the information line at Busch
Gardens. It appears unlikely that the Rogers women actually made it to
the theme park that day; the rolls of film recovered with their
belongings contained no snapshots from Busch Gardens, and no receipts or
souvenirs from Busch Gardens were found either. How the Rogers women
spent that afternoon after checking into the motel remains a mystery.
There is a picture of Michelle from that last day,
though, sitting on the floor of the motel room. She is wearing a blue
bikini top, white shorts and sandals; draped over her right arm is a
peach-colored blouse that she is either putting on or taking off. On her
left hand, her collection of rings shines in the light. Her hair appears
to be slightly wet, as though she has just taken a shower or been
swimming. Her throat and neck are red with sunburn. Her face is tilted
upward, staring directly into the camera.
She is not smiling. She is not frowning. If anything,
her expression is matter of fact, with a touch of impatience.
Photographed while changing her clothes, she is obviously in transition.
She has somewhere to go, something to do, and she is ready to get on
with it.
A businessman from Houston, staying at the Days Inn
for a conference, noticed them in the motel's restaurant. The man
arrived at the restaurant around 7. Eating his meal, he found himself
watching the woman and two teenage girls at the booth beside his table.
He did not mean to stare, he later explained, but they were directly in
his line of sight; whenever he lifted his eyes from his food, he could
not help but look their way.
The man was close enough to hear the sound of their
voices, but not their exact words. They were obviously in a good mood,
though, laughing and joking. When they finished eating and got up from
the booth, Michelle looked at him.
"Hi," she said, and then she and her sister and
mother walked out.
That Thursday evening, they shot one more photo. It
was the last snapshot on the last roll discovered in their room. Taken
from the balcony outside 251, with the camera pointed toward the bay, it
shows a cluster of palm trees silhouetted against a glowing evening sky.
Sometime after they snapped the picture, the three of
them left the Days Inn and got into the Calais and drove toward the
horizon they had just glimpsed from the balcony. They had an appointment
to keep. Jo had written the directions on a piece of paper, and now she
and the girls were on their way.
They would not see the sun again.
Hal didn't understand it. He hadn't heard from Jo or
the girls for several days, but he was sure that Jo had told him they
would be back on Saturday or Sunday at the latest. Jo was due back at
work on Monday; Michelle's summer school classes were starting.
He tried not to worry. He told himself everything was
fine.
"They're probably just dinking around someplace," he
said to a friend.
Still, it wasn't like Jo to be late. Wasn't like her
not to call if the plans had changed or if something had gone wrong.
Where were they?
All the detectives had to go on was the bodies
themselves and the clothing and jewelry they had been wearing. One of
the women, probably the oldest of the three, had long brown hair and had
been found in a black T-shirt and with a gold wedding band on the ring
finger of her left hand. Another had medium-length brown hair and was
wearing a peach-colored shirt and three cloth bracelets, braided and
decorated with pink, green and white stripes, on her left wrist.
Finally there was the young woman who had apparently
struggled hard enough to remove one of her hands from the rope. She had
wavy brown hair and wore a black tank shirt over a blue bikini top. On
her left hand, the hand that had broken free, she wore four rings. Two
gold, two silver. One on each finger.
"Not yet."
Jeff Feasby was getting impatient. Michelle was
supposed to be back by now, and he missed her. So he kept phoning the
farm, asking Hal Rogers if he'd heard from them.
Hal did not know what to say. As the days went by
without a word, he was growing increasingly panicked. He called Jo's
friends and relatives to see if she'd contacted them, called Jo's boss
at the distribution center to make sure he'd understood correctly when
she was due back on the job, checked with the Van Wert Sheriff's Office
and the Ohio Highway Patrol and reported them missing. No one had heard
a thing.
Then, one night early that week, Jeff Feasby phoned
again. He'd gotten a postcard from Michelle. The one with the girl in
the bikini and the bull gator and the words on the front that said
FUN TIMES IN FLORIDA. Hal asked him to bring it to the house. Jeff
drove right over, and Hal held the postcard, reading it over and over,
searching in vain for some hint of what might have happened.
Hal was pacing back and forth through the house,
smoking one cigarette after the other. He was sure something had gone
terribly wrong. Maybe they'd been robbed and left somewhere, he told
himself. Or maybe their car had gone off the highway into a marsh or in
some woods where no one would find them for weeks. Maybe they were still
alive, trapped somewhere, hurt, waiting to be rescued.
The images played through his mind until finally he
could not stand it anymore. Desperate to take some kind of action, he
went to the bank that Wednesday and withdrew some money. He had a plan.
He was going to get into the air and conduct a search himself. He would
find a private plane and a pilot and together they would fly over the
roads Jo and the girls had traveled between Ohio and Florida.
One way or the other, he was going to find his family.
***
It was the next morning -- Thursday, June 8 -- when the maid at the
Days Inn in Tampa spoke up about Room 251.
For days, the room had been untouched. The guests, obviously one or
more women, had checked in a week before and had made it up to the room,
leaving their suitcases on the floor and a purse on the table and other
items strewn about. From that day on, though, there had been no sign of
their returning. The beds had not been slept in. The shower and bath had
not been used. The personal items had not been disturbed.
Now, on this Thursday, the maid studied the scene before her and
decided something was wrong. Where had the guests gone?
That was how the chain began to unfold. The maid's suspicions were
passed along to the Days Inn's general manager, who called the Tampa
police and informed them that one or more of the motel's guests appeared
to be missing.
By this point the newspapers and TV news shows had been filled for
several days with reports about the three bodies found in the bay. When
officers from the Tampa police arrived at the Days Inn, it quickly
became clear that the answer to the women's identities might well be
there.
The Tampa officers sealed off Room 251 and radioed for their
superiors. Soon detectives were arriving from both Tampa and St.
Petersburg, and the room was being searched and photographed and dusted
for prints, and all the personal belongings were being inspected and
bagged and numbered. A technician quickly matched prints from the room
-- including prints taken from a tube of Oral-B Sesame Street toothpaste
on the vanity outside the bathroom -- with the prints taken from the
bodies in the bay.
"It's them," the technician announced. "This is their room."
Meanwhile, preliminary identifications were being made from the
information in the purse and on the registration form at the front desk.
Someone was going to have to call Ohio.
***
That day, Jeff Feasby phoned the Rogers house again,
hoping Michelle would be back.
Hal picked up. His voice was strange. He sounded
furious.
"Who is this?" he demanded.
Jeff told him who it was and asked if he'd heard
anything. With that, Hal broke down.
"They're not coming home," he said, his voice
trembling.
Jeff paused for a second. He didn't understand.
"What do you mean?"
So Hal told him. They were gone, he said. All of them.
The sheriff of Van Wert County, a friend of Hal's
since high school, had come out to the farm that afternoon. A little
while later, a reporter -- the first of many -- had walked onto the
property and tried to interview Hal as he came out of the barn.
It was like an explosion had gone off. The news was
all over the radio and the TV. Television crews were starting to pull up
on the road beside the farm. Michelle's and Christe's friends were
calling one another, sobbing. So were different members of the family.
"They found Jo and the girls," Jim Etzler, Jo's
brother, told his wife that day over the phone. "They're dead."
"Surely not all of them, Jim," said Colleen.
Jeff Feasby was overcome with anger. Moments after
hanging up with Hal, he went downstairs to his family's basement and
punched a hole in the door. Then he got into his pickup truck and went
tearing down the road, tires screeching.
An hour or so later, Jeff went over to the farm. Hal
was there with a friend who'd been helping him hold things together
while Jo and the girls were on vacation. Hal and the other man were
outside, taking another load of hay into the barn.
Hal was beside himself with rage and grief.
"Not all of them," he told a friend. "Why everybody?"
But he did not have the luxury of collapsing. The
cows had to be milked and fed, just like any other day.
The farm had to go on.
Tears in his eyes, Hal kept working.
That same day, two things happened in Tampa Bay.
First, the police found the Calais.
They got the make and model and tag number off the
motel registration form, and when it didn't turn up in the lot at the
Days Inn, they searched the surrounding area until someone discovered it
parked just a couple of miles away, at a boat ramp along the Courtney
Campbell Parkway.
The car appeared to have been undisturbed since Jo
and the girls had left it there a week before. The doors were locked;
the passenger seat was pushed forward, as though someone had just
climbed out of the back. Scattered within the interior was a Clearwater
Beach brochure, a deck of Uno cards, a puzzle book someone had been
working on in the back seat. On the front passenger seat was a sheet of
Days Inn stationery, marked with directions -- written in Jo's hand --
that had guided them from the motel to the boat ramp.
The directions said:
Beside these words was one more instruction:
The police were a long way from discovering who had
lured the Rogers women out onto the water. Whoever they were, though, it
was a fair bet that they owned a blue and white boat.
***
The second big lead -- and undoubtedly the most
startling -- came that same day, while one of the investigators was
talking over the phone with the chief of detectives from the Van Wert
County Sheriff's Office. The detective wanted to make sure that the
investigators working the homicides were aware of all the facts about
the Rogers family. So he told them about Michelle and her uncle John.
Even though John Rogers had been in prison at the
time of the murders, the investigators could not ignore the similarities
between what had happened to Michelle on that farm and here in Tampa
Bay. Both times, she had apparently been subjected to bondage, with her
hands tied. Both times, it appeared, she had been raped.
The investigators needed to consider the possibility
that John Rogers might have somehow orchestrated the murders from behind
bars, possibly arranging for someone with a boat to get them out on the
water. They needed to know more about the Rogers family, period. The
better they understood Jo and Michelle and Christe, the better their
chances of discovering exactly how the three of them wound up out on the
bay at night, alone with someone who wanted to hurt them.
The day after the bodies were identified, two
detectives were on a plane, headed for Ohio.
|