Denny Johnson
The One That Got Away
Jeffrey Dahmer certainly went down in history.
As usual, for a few short days, the Tabloid newspapers had the
edge. The regular news media filed stories daily - the Tabs' worked on a weekly deadline.
With a story moving this fast there was no time to look back. The body count was growing
each day as police pieced together Dahmer's ten-year rampage - with the bones and flesh
that remained.
Terrified Traci Edwards was nearly the twelfth victim. Only he
escaped a hideous death at the hands of the cannibal killer Dahmer, who confessed to the
mutilation-murders of at least eleven men and boys. Traci was held prisoner in Dahmer's
apartment of horrors - an apartment littered with human skulls and body parts. Finally
after hours at the knife-edge of death, he fled half-stripped, bleeding and handcuffed
into the street, where he flagged down a passing police car.
When freelance reporter Denny Johnson was assigned to the Dahmer
story the tabloid M.O. ran true to its peculiar form. Johnson was thinking front page,
not tomorrow and local, but next week and national. To perform this magic Denny would
prospect for any small nugget the gold-rush-media-frenzy had overlooked the first day.
That nugget which would still be news seven days later. News even to the media that
covered the story from the start.
The first day after the story rocked the world, the Journal ran a
small page one article on Traci Edwards and his escape - here was Johnson's nugget. The
account of Traci's getaway was short and shallow. It was dwarfed by the huge headlines and
photos of Dahmer's arrest and victims' IDs. Other reporters pursued grim body counts,
grieving relatives and daily news conferences. There was no information about Traci's
experience inside the apartment with the murderer - no inside story. Denny's
assignment was to find the one that got away.
It would be a week before the media would turn back its
collective attention to Edwards. By then Traci was on a plane home to Texas and,
ultimately, jail. Johnson had them scooped.
The Journal article mentioned that Traci Edwards lived in the
same neighborhood that the bodies were discovered. Denny headed to a saloon in the
vicinity. He ordered a bottle of beer and lit a Marlboro. He made small talk about the
murders with the bartender and a few of the lunchtime customers from the block. He didn't
learn too much new until a man in uniform at the end of the bar, piped in his two cents
worth - the needed information. "I know where the guy lives," said the postman
on a break. And, after a few well-placed beers, the mailman agreed to deliver Denny to
Edwards's apartment.
2
The neighborhood was declining
ethnic. Bungalows mixed with apartment buildings and the occasional two-flat wood frame
house. Traci lived in one of these, a brown two-story in need of repair. Paint was
chipped, wood was peeling, and a few broken windows were visible from the street. Paint
flaked from the railing as they climbed the deteriorated front stairs of the house and the
postman pointed out Edwards's name on the rusty mailbox. He said with a slight slur,
"Edwards lives upstairs. Good luck. I deliver your magazines each week to every old
lady on my route. We'll be looking forward to your story." He winked. "I usually
read them before I deliver them."
Edwards didn't answer when Denny rang his door bell. A quick
search up the back stairs of the house and a peek through the rear windows indicated that
no one was home in his apartment. The downstairs' neighbor confirmed he hadn't seen Traci
in awhile.
Denny parked his rental car out in front of the house, switched
the ignition to accessories, tuned the radio to the local news channel - and waited.
Sitting the stakeout isn't romantic, it's cruddy. Every time a metro cop passed him by,
they eyed him suspiciously. They knew who lived there and they knew Johnson was a
reporter. He just looked like one. Denny was hot and hungry. There was no bathroom
available, and he was running out of cigarettes. The bad characters in the neighborhood
knew he was there in ten minutes. They figured he was a cop. Hours later, Traci still
wasn't home. He was obviously lying low somewhere else. But by that time, Denny was
familiar with everybody in the neighborhood, hooking, selling drugs, or beating their
wives. He noticed over time a middle-aged fellow carrying a bucket who seemed to be the
janitor at the building across the street. Denny approached him with a $50 bill
outstretched.
The man was standing in the courtyard of one of the larger red
brick buildings on the block. He wore blue jeans and a dago-t that displayed an ample beer
belly. He was nearly bald, what hair he did have was matted and dirty. He was sweating
profusely. The janitor eyed the $50 closely and told Denny that he knew Traci from around
the neighborhood. "Yeah," said the man. "And I seen you sitting over there.
I figured you was something like a reporter, or a FED maybe. I know most the local cops.
Didn't think you were a new guy - your hair's too gray."
3
Denny wondered aloud if many
reporters had been in the neighborhood. He himself had seen very little action that day
around Edwards's apartment. "Not hardly any reporters today," the janitor said,
"but you know that yesterday they was all over the place like maggots for dinner at
Jeffrey Dahmer's." He laughed; it was a nasty sound.
Johnson grinned. The black humor mill was already to work.
"Do you know if any of the reporters talked to Traci," asked Denny.
"No. The little creep was doing his best Houdini," said
the janitor. "What about that fifty?"
"Do you know Traci well?" asked Denny.
"What about that fifty?" said the janitor again, wiping
the sweat from his face with his arm. Denny handed the $50 over and the man snatched it
away and stuck it in his Levis. He wet his lips - the pump had been primed. "I'm the
maintenance engineer for this here building," the man said using his thumb to point
out the fact. "I been working here a long time. I got plenty of stories. Seen some
crazy shit around here."
"I'm sure you'd make a good book," said Denny,
"but right now I need to know where I can find Traci Edwards."
"Yeah, yeah, slow down, I'm getting to that. We all know him
around here, he's lived here a couple of years already. That's a long time in this
neighborhood. We seen his picture in the paper yesterday, and on T.V. Before he was just a
punk, now he's a big squeaking deal. Everybody's looking for him, because he almost gets
himself killed and eaten by some freak. All I can say is, Duh."
Denny promised to quote him. And another $50 bill to match if he
could get to Edwards - and let him know that he would pay $1,000 for his exclusive story.
He gave the janitor his phone number and went back to his hotel. Three hours later his
phone rang. Cash money gets everybody talking.
***
Traci agreed to meet the next morning at Denny's hotel; he wanted all the money up
front. Denny told him it would be $500 when he showed up, the remainder when the interview
was over. Traci reluctantly agreed. He was anxious to tell his story, as long as he was
well-paid.
4
Denny contacted his office and by
dawn the next day a photographer from Chicago was on the scene. He and Denny made their
plan in the early morning light over room service coffee. The story would be a
first-person account of Traci's experience. The photog would shoot candid photos of
Edwards. At 10:15 a.m. everything was ready.
Traci was about 5'5" but sturdily built - a real fireplug.
Denny guessed he might tip the scales at 160 pounds. When he showed up that morning at the
hotel he was wearing a white t-shirt, pants, Nikes, and a blue "Georgetown"
sweatshirt with matching baseball cap. He told Denny that he was 22, and an army brat. He
arrived with another young man whom he introduced as his friend Jeremy. Breakfast, packs
of Kool cigarettes and pots of coffee were perks Traci demanded for his story. On the
other side of the room, the photographer discretely snapped images of the scene with a
telephoto lens.
Edwards was well-mannered and surprisingly articulate. They sat
around the coffee table in the living room of the spacious suite the paper had provided
for the interview. The table was littered with coffee cups, half-full ashtrays, the daily
papers and a tape recorder. Another table nearby held the spent, spotless breakfast plates
that Traci and Jeremy had cleaned with their fingers and the last bit of toast. In one
corner of the room a large color TV, muted, was tuned to CNN.
Denny's tape recorder was running. He handed Traci five crisp
$100 bills. "Just start from the beginning," said Denny. "Tell us all you
can remember, and then we'll ask a few questions to clear anything up later."
***
Traci rolled the bills, stuffed them in his pants pocket and sat back nervously in his
chair. With a cigarette shaking in his hand, he closed his eyes and concentrated. The
vivid memories flooded into words. "I haven't slept in two days," he began. I
can't believe that this happened to me. There was no clue. I looked into the eyes of the
devil and saw death.
"Believe me, God delivered me from Satan. I'm still in
shock. I can't trust people. And when I do try to sleep, I wake up in a bolt, sitting
straight up in bed - wet with sweat. I'm still scared to death. I'm constantly looking
over my shoulder." Traci paused, taking a few rapid puffs off his cigarette.
5
"I was in the mall when
Jeffrey Dahmer showed up and asked if I wanted to have a party," Traci said, exhaling
a cloud of smoke. "We all knew him from around the neighborhood. There was no way to
guess he was a maniac. He was just an ordinary guy. I didn't think too much about him
either way.
"We never thought he was gay or anything out of the
ordinary, because the people on the block where he lived just never would have tolerated
him. They don't like gays in that part of town. If they had thought that he was gay the
guys in his neighborhood would have messed him up. They jump guys like that over on his
block. It's just not accepted.
"The whole area is loaded with gangs and stuff so I guess
nobody really knew that he was gay, or into that kind of lifestyle. He just couldn't have
survived if anybody knew about him," Traci emphasized that last sentence with another
nervous glance at the camera. Denny wondered if he spoke from experience.
"'Let's get some girls and all go down to the lake and have
a party,' Dahmer said, 'I got a hundred bucks, I'll buy the beer.'
"I was broke," said Traci, shrugging. "It sounded
like a fine idea to me. It was hot and sticky and a party at the lake would be good. We
walked to the liquor store and he got the beer. Dahmer said he had to stop by his
apartment to change clothes. He was still in his blue work suit with his name 'Jeffrey'
embroidered over his pocket."
The interview was interrupted momentarily when a loud knock on
the door announced room service - more pots of coffee, and another pack of Kool's.
Denny now believed Edwards was lying about his motives. He
guessed as he walked around the hotel room stretching his legs that Traci knew what was
happening when he accepted Dahmer's invitation to the apartment. At least Traci thought he
knew what was happening. He didn't know about the eleven that had proceeded him to
Dahmer's for a visit. As it turned out, Denny's instincts rang true.
At the time he met Dahmer in the mall, Traci was a street-wise
punk fleeing a Texas arrest warrant on charges of raping a teenage girl. Traci had been
around, he was aware. But that day in the mall neither of the two men knew what they were
up against. It was Cannibal Killer versus A Clockwork Orange. But at the moment Denny's
suspicion was that Traci was of the bi-sexual persuasion and that he knew full well that
Dahmer's offer of free beer and a party didn't include the company of women.
6
Settling back into his chair,
Denny eyed Traci and Jeremy as they poured themselves fresh cups of coffee, adding lots of
sugar and cream, and clinking their mugs with their spoons as they stirred. Denny
suspected that Edwards probably went to the apartment to earn or steal money - by whatever
means necessary. Knowing, or at least thinking he knew what Dahmer was up to. After all
Traci was broke and he knew Dahmer wasn't. Dahmer's M.O. was to offer his victims money so
he could take sexy photos of them. Most agreed to the bargain. And money was the major
motivator with Traci. He lived pretty much from day-to-day. Denny believed Traci went to
that apartment to play Dahmer for a sucker and, boy, was he surprised.
"It was really hot," Traci said lighting a cigarette
from the recently-delivered pack, which now nestled in the neck of his t-shirt.
"Everything seemed pretty normal, I had never seen where he lived and when we first
got there it looked like a pretty nice place. We went in the back exit of the two-story
apartment building and the stench hit me right away," said Traci.
"Damn, what's that STINK? I asked.
"Dahmer just brushed it off. He said there was a problem
with the sewer in the building. As we walked down the hall, the stench made me want to
gag." Traci wrinkled up his face. "I said let's just grab a beer and get out of
there, and he said: 'That sounds good. I can barely stand the smell myself.' He said it
was the sewer, and I've smelled some pretty raunchy sewers before, so I just assumed he
was telling the truth."
Traci leaned forward in his chair, his voice lowered
dramatically. The droning monologue was hypnotic. Denny concentrated, realized that they
were on the portal, the point of no return. The photographer had stopped taking pictures
and listened quietly from the edge of the bed. "His living room was tiny, but air
conditioned. A small unit buzzed in the window. The dark colored drapes were drawn and the
intense sun outside locked out. We sat down on his couch and popped open the beers. He had
a beautiful fish aquarium and the colors of the fish were stunning in the darkened
room." Traci let out a sigh.
7
"As I looked around and my
eyes began to adjust I could see the living room walls were covered with photos and
drawings of guys working out." Traci's demeanor suddenly changed. He became
impatient, almost brisk. "I hoped Dahmer would hurry and change his clothes and we
would get out of there. It really stunk, and it was creepy somehow. I didn't feel right.
"Dahmer told me he had all the drawings because he was a
member of a health club. He was in pretty good shape, his arms were muscular and toned; he
was wiry. We were sitting on opposite sides of the couch, but it was a fairly small couch
and there really wasn't much space between us. He said some of the fish were piranha, and
he told me how they like to eat each other. We sat there for awhile, making small talk
about when he was in the Army and stuff," Traci said, his voice falling again into
that hypnotic drone and, again, abruptly breaking off, as if he were trying to shake off a
fatal sleepiness.
"He was pretty boring and if it wasn't for that beer, I
would have beat it. In fact that's what I was thinking," Traci said, his voice angry
and hard. "But this guy was such a professional. He was way ahead of me. Before I
knew what hit me, he had a handcuff on my wrist and a big-ass machete sticking me up in my
armpit. Right up under my heart!" Traci clasped his hands over his heart and twisted
his body wildly in the chair.
"He said, 'If you don't do what I say, I'm going to kill
you.' He said, 'I've done this before. Don't make a move because I can kill you,' he
snapped his fingers, 'just like that!'
Denny was concerned for Traci's well-being. The boys breathing
was labored, his eyes watered. He noticed Traci's fingertips were stained yellow from the
tobacco, and he also noticed how his hands shook. He suggested they take a break, but
Traci waved him off with a better-to-get-this-over-with look.
"The machete was army issue - heavy and effective. Black
handled with a long silver, double-edged blade." Denny was amazed at Traci's recall
and his descriptive powers; it would make his job all the easier. "It felt as if it
had been sharpened to a point that would split hairs. I'll never forget what that blade
looked or felt like." Denny guessed he would remember, too.
8
"It was all so quick, he was
experienced, and he had practice. It was all in one motion. I had the beer in my hand, and
I'm talking about fish, and in an eyelash - boom! - the handcuff was on my wrist. And the
tip of the blade was stuck in me. I looked down and I could see through my shirt. I was
bleeding." Traci caressed the bandage under his t-shirt.
"Then his eyes changed," Traci said. "Maybe the
sight of red blood did it."
The room came to attention. Denny glanced quickly at the tape
recorder; he didn't want to miss a word of this. The photographer rose from the bed,
thinking of picture possibilities. Even Jeremy held still, looking interested.
"At first I couldn't face him," Traci said, fervently,
"but God made me look right into his eyes. It was like confronting the devil. Pure
and simple. Dahmer looked nothing like when we first met in the mall. He had changed
completely. He had transformed somehow into evil. I could tell by the look in his eyes
that he had killed.
"Damn! I knew I was in trouble. A chill ran down my spine
when I realized that the rankness in that apartment wasn't coming from any sewer - it was
the smell of death!" Traci's eyes were wide and Denny looked over his shoulder just
to make sure Dahmer wasn't standing behind him.
"He kept telling me that he was going to kill me. For an
instant I felt incredibly stupid," Traci said, spitting out the last word. "Then
I realized I had no time to retrace my steps. I knew I'd been smelling death all along.
And it was sitting right next to me.
"I've had martial arts training, and I know how to take care
of myself. I'm a strong man, but he was just as strong. It was so surreal. He couldn't
quite force me to get my other arm around so that he could handcuff me. He didn't hit me.
He kept telling me, 'C'mon, c'mon, let me get your other arm.' But I kept resisting,
wrestling it away." Traci mimicked his panicked movements, twisting and pulling his
arm close to his body. He stopped as a new, more macabre thought dawned on him.
"Dahmer was trying to sweet talk me into my own murder."
9
Two short rings on the hotel
telephone shook everyone back to the present in the hotel suite. Denny reached the phone
just as it rang a second time. It was his editor checking on the progress of the story. In
a few moments Denny briefed him on the situation, and told him that he would be filing his
story later that day. Traci and the others politely ignored the conversation.
Turning back to the group, Denny interrupted their small talk
with a question to Traci. "Through all this time, you never once yelled for help? It
was a pretty well-populated building," Denny went on, "didn't you ever consider
screaming for your life?"
Traci turned sullen. "I was already bleeding from the cuts
in my underarm," he said. "That knife seemed as sharp as a razor. They put
eighteen stitches where he cut me. There was no doubt in my mind that if I had raised my
voice he would have stuck me dead right then.
"Dahmer told me to stand up and he led me across the room by
the handcuff. The knife was firmly stuck in my armpit. I told him, 'you don't have to try
and hurt me, I'm not going to fight with you.' I tried to reason with him as he pulled me
through the door into a scary scene." Give me details, Denny prayed silently. Traci
didn't disappoint him. "The bedroom, just off the living room, was gloomy and
foreboding. The dingy gray walls were plastered with nude pictures of men in all types of
disgusting sexual poses. I'd never seen anything like it before.
"But I didn't look for very long," Traci said. "I
couldn't take my mind off of the knife. The blade felt hot as fire. Every time I'd catch a
glance of it, it was looking bigger and meaner. Meanwhile, Dahmer was going through these
wide mood swings. He'd whine a low moan over and over. One minute he'd be as cool as a
cucumber and the next minute his face was screwed into the devil's mask telling me how he
would kill me and eat me. He kept telling me that you just can't trust anybody anymore,
you can't believe people. I told him, man you can trust me. If I didn't trust you, I
wouldn't have come here with you. 'You'll never leave here,' Dahmer said. 'It won't be
long, I'll show you. I'll show you things you won't believe. You'll stay here with
me.'"
10
Traci's monologue broke off with a
cough. He sipped his coffee, grimacing at its lukewarm sweetness. Traci looked up and
Denny noticed his eyes seemed out of focus. But as long as the story is clear, he thought.
"The bedroom was dark except for a lone light in the corner
and a television set on the other end of his small single bed," Traci recited the
details. "A video tape of The Exorcist was playing on the TV. Dahmer pointed at the
television and told me, 'This was the best movie ever made.'
"I almost laughed. This guy thinks he's a movie
critic," Traci said.
"The windows of the bedroom were blocked and I could see
that he had security alarms hooked to the window sills. Nobody could get in or out of the
place without an alarm going off. I was trapped. There was no escape from this room. I
looked at the bed. There was a huge stain on the bed sheet. I guessed it was a bloodstain,
but it had turned to a tarnished brown color," Traci said, his face pale at the
memory. "I was beginning to lose it. The smell. The sounds of the T.V., and Dahmer.
It was all getting to me. I felt dizzy and disoriented.
"Then I saw it - a hand was sticking out from under the
bed." Traci's eyes were clenched shut so he didn't see the excited grin Denny aimed
at the photographer. "I could see the end of it. It was just a hand on the end of a
small piece of arm. At first I couldn't convince myself that it was real. It looked like
something you might buy in a trick shop. But it was real.
"I wanted to throw up, but I couldn't. Just a dry retch was
all I could manage. 'Don't be sick," Dahmer whispered wetly in my ear, 'I'll take
care of you.' He pushed the knife harder and cut me with the blade a little deeper. He
forced me to sit down on the dingy bed - and he sat down next to me."
All eyes were riveted on Traci. "Next to the bed Dahmer had
a small file cabinet. He reached over and pulled open one of the drawers. Inside the
drawer was a human skull."
11
"Jesus," Jeremy said. It
was the first time he'd spoken. He stubbed out his cigarette and walked across the room to
the bathroom. "I don't want to hear anymore of this."
Denny ignored him. "Go on," he urged Traci.
Traci blinked and rubbed his eyes. "Dahmer rubbed the top of
the skull while he stared into my eyes. He said that I looked a lot like the men on the
wall, but that I had a better body." This was said almost proudly. "He kept
telling me I was very beautiful, it was as if he were talking to a woman. I was freaked
out, but I kept focused on his eyes, looking for a chance to bolt out of the hellhole. I
knew the man was possessed.
"'I'll let you go if you just let me put your other hand in
the handcuff so that I can take some nude pictures of you,' Dahmer told me. 'Let me be
more in control. Let me take some nude pictures of you, then I'll let you go.' I guess I
was in shock by this time. All the while he was stroking me slowly. My legs, my back, my
head. I just kept talking - talking about anything to keep his mind off what he might have
planned. He was holding on tight to the handcuff and once in a while he'd shove that huge
knife further up into my armpit." Traci winced in memory of the blade.
"I said you've got to trust me, I'm not going to leave you,
I'm going to stay with you. I tried to reason with him, but I could see that he was going
to do what he had to do. He wasn't buying it. He said, 'you're persistent aren't you?
You're real good - but you're going to stay with me forever.'
"I knew right then this guy's going to kill me. He put the
knife right in my groin, and pushed steadily on it."
In the hotel suite, Traci started to cry. He was phony all right,
but the tears and shaking were real. He had experienced genuine terror. Even more
horrifying was the realization of what he had escaped from - how close he had come to his
own end.
"Every so often, Dahmer would open the file drawer and rub
the skull, then he'd look back into my eyes," said Traci, his voice breaking again.
"He was going through some type of ritual. He had done this before. Then he pulled
some Polaroid pictures of dead men out of the file cabinet.. The bodies in the photos were
decomposed, and Dahmer told me, 'You'll look real good this way. You'll look better than
they did.'
12
"Then he put the knife deeply
back into my armpit and ordered me to lay down on the bed. The pain was searing,"
Traci said. "I laid down on my back and he lowered himself slowly down on top of me
with his ear to my chest. He said he wanted to hear my heart beat. He told me he wanted to
see how my heart looked. Then he said that he wanted to eat it."
Denny let out a little yip which startled everyone. He could see
the headline: "Killer Wanted To Eat My Heart!"
Denny apologized and made a pretense of checking the tape. Traci
resumed. "I told Dahmer that I had to go to the bathroom. And, if he let me, I'd come
back and take off all my clothes so he could take photos. I was trying to buy time, but I
was already beginning to feel like a dead man.
"While I was going to the bathroom he stood right there with
me watching and keeping that knife in my armpit. When I finished, I unbuttoned my shirt
all the way down, you know, to make him think I was going along with him. I said, let's
have another beer. He went to the refrigerator and got two, dragging me with him by the
end of the handcuff. The kitchen was filthy. There were pots and pans with disgusting gunk
in them everywhere. He wanted to go back in the bedroom. But I said, it's cooler in the
living room, let's have the beer in there. I noticed that he wasn't sticking the knife so
close to me and I thought he might be getting drunk," Traci sounded hopeful for the
first time in his narrative. "He just kept telling me how pretty I was and how I had
such a nice body. But he never tried anything sexual with me. I guess that came later. He
told me he liked to keep bodies around. He said he liked it when they didn't move or
struggle.
"We went back to the couch and I sat down real
comfortable-like. I made him think I was right at home, but I was watching his eyes every
second," Traci said. He sat forward in the chair, his hands resting on his knees, and
talked into the tape recorder. "Dahmer said he'd soon show me things I'd never
believe. He asked me if I was drunk, and then told me he'd been drinking all day. I told
him I was woozy. Then he started weaving back and forth, not saying anything, just humming
in a low tone. It was like he was in a trance.
13
"I finally decided that this
guy was going to have to kill me. I wasn't going to give in to him. I thought to myself,
he's going to have to stab me or whatever, but I'm going to try to get out of here. I
figure I'm going to die either way.
"The fish tank was blocking the front window, and there was
no window in the bathroom. I wasn't going back in that bedroom. I couldn't see how I could
get out. I told him that I had to go to the bathroom again and this time he let me get up
from the couch by myself. I thought to myself, now's your chance. In an instant I grabbed
my bag and shot for the door. He reacted like in slow motion. I got to the door and turned
the dead bolt. It clicked open.
"Just then, Dahmer grabbed hold of my arm. I turned and hit
him flush in the face with my fist and kicked him backward. He reeled and I never looked
back. He underestimated me, and it was his undoing." Traci grinned.
"I bounded at top speed down the hallway, whizzing past a
few folks who were walking the other way. 'What's wrong?' they asked, but I never even
slowed down. I flew through the front door of that building in a flash and at last took a
deep breath of sweet, fresh air. I ran into the street with the handcuff still dangling
from my wrist and immediately spotted a police cruiser.
"There's a guy in there trying to kill me! I gasped at the
officers inside." Denny thought that was probably the first time Traci had actually
sought out the police. "They led me back in the building and we went up to Dahmer's
door. And he opened it like nothing had ever happened. Of course, after the cops took a
quick look around, well, Dahmer was history."
Anything else was anticlimactic and Denny and the photographer
fiddled impatiently with notes and film as Traci came to his conclusion.
"Later as I sat in the squad car, shaking with fear and
thanking God that he had delivered me from a human devil, the whole impact of what had
happened took me over. I started to cry and babble like a baby."
14
Traci attempted a pious mien as he
moralized. "I thank God I'm alive, and I pray for all the poor souls that visited
that apartment before me - and never left. I know that God sent me to get this guy. It was
my destiny to put him away."
Denny didn't ask many questions during or after Traci's
narrative. Sometimes you just need to let a story tell itself. Traci's retelling of the
story had immersed the hotel suite for more than two hours. For a few minutes it was quiet
in the room as each man digested what he had just heard.
Denny jotted down a few more notes and handed Traci the remaining
five one-hundred dollar bills. He was officially paid-in-full for his contribution to
journalism. Traci pocketed the money as he got up from his chair, and he and Jeremy
gathered their things to leave.
"If I were you," Denny told Traci at the door of the
suite "I would use that $1,000 and get yourself a good therapist - you're going to
need it." Denny knew he'd have trouble sleeping.
The following week, when Denny's front-page story broke, Traci's
photo was plastered over the cover of the paper. In every supermarket and drug store
across America the colorful headlines shouted for attention. And an off-duty cop in a
Texas Wall-Mart spotted Traci's face in the paper instantly. The policeman had filed rape
charges against Traci two years earlier, and had been looking for him since.
(He'd found his man in the check-out line.)
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