Tuesday, December 2, 2025

The Last Jeskey - Chapter 49

 

The Last Jeskey

By Karen Singer

 

Chapter 49

(Epilogue)

 

Freaky

 

All that was a long time ago now.  All that is ancient history.  It’s all water under the bridge.

I distinctly remember though that it seemed like an army of people were there at the farm, driving back and forth into those woods for a very long time.

Pamela came out one day to tell me that the D.A. had decided not to even think about pressing charges against me for killing Gary.  “I think he actually considers that you did the world a favor,” she told me.

“Why in the world would they arrest her?” Shantel demanded.  “He was gonna kill not just her, but all of us.”

“It’s probably best if I don’t go into that,” Pam had said.  “Just know that you’re all in the clear.  You can all get on with your lives.”

“Isn’t that what we was doin’?” Shantel had replied.

Aunt Kathy started to visit me once in a while, often bringing some of her kids with her so I could get to know more of the family, but there were other visits where the two of us just visited, going out for lunch together or getting a mani-pedi, something she seemed to enjoy quite a bit.

Pam, Natalie, and my Aunt Kathy started paying Lisa and Shantel a lot more money and they wanted to give me a big weekly allowance too, but Lisa wouldn’t let them give me more than a hundred dollars each week to spend on myself.  She said I needed to learn how to handle the money better first and a hundred dollars a week was probably too much for me already.  Money still confused me at that point, but I was starting to get the hang of it.  I did discover though that buying things was fun!

Shortly after I had killed Gary, all three of us became even happier when they came and installed a new washing machine and dryer for us.  Although I still hung most of my clothes on the clothesline behind the house because I simply liked the way it made my clothes smell.

And then there was the day about a year later when Pam, Natalie, and Aunt Kathy came back to see me again.  They sat down with all of us at the table and laid things out for me.  I thought I knew a lot about money by then.  I thought I knew a lot about a lot of things, but I was only just then beginning to realize how much there really was to learn.

“There was a lot of money that was found under that hidden space in the closet,” Pam told us.  “Fifty-thousand dollars.  That’s the money you’ve all been living on so far.  And then they pulled two million six hundred and fifty thousand dollars out of that place under the old water pump.”

“Million!” Lisa had exclaimed.

“Two million,” Pam had confirmed.  “And when they got that safe open that they found in the woods, it contained four million, eight hundred thousand dollars.”

“Four!” Shantel exclaimed.

“And now,” Pam had continued, “the legal battles over the land that you should have inherited from your father and grandfather have finally been settled.  There are several Knoxville area councilmen who are now in very big trouble for the dealings they made with the land developer who bought it, and one former police chief as well who decided to simply have you declared dead long before he should have in order to receive a cut of the proceeds.  Not to mention that one of those politicians is in big trouble for seizing all of your father’s money from the bank in the name of the area council and having it transferred directly into the council’s budget, then taking it out the same day to pay a company that he owned for a contracted job he simply made up, essentially laundering the money so there would be almost no trace of it.”

I had been told about the investigations going on shortly after I killed Gary, but at the time I hadn’t understood any of it.  Several months later, Pam had told us of the court proceedings that were taking place about what was found.  I didn’t really understand any of that either, but I was trying.

“Because there was so much money mishandling going on,” Pam told us.  “The courts had to look into it all and come to a conclusion as to how much, if anything, you should be awarded from it.  Since it should have been all your money to begin with, we were pushing hard for you to get every last penny you should have been owed.  Unfortunately, the courts only partially agreed with us.  I think giving you everything that everyone made off that money would simply have caused too many problems down the line for a lot of different places and people, not just the ones who are probably going to wind up in jail.  However, we think the court was fairly generous towards you.  While you didn’t get as much of a settlement as we had hoped, they still awarded you fifteen million dollars.  As I said, the rest would have simply hurt the local area economy too much.”

“Fifteen million?” Lisa exclaimed in disbelief.

“Yes,” Pam said.  “The money the developer made off of those two large farms was more than anyone imagined.  Well over a hundred million dollars.  Your fifteen million cut is actually nothing but a drop in the bucket.  All totaled, between that and the money that was illegally seized from the bank, and the money that was found around here, that’s a little shy of twenty-three million dollars.  And since Bo, Ben, Steve, Dave, and Gary are all dead, the only remaining heir for it all is you.”

“Damn!” Shantel exclaimed  “Twenty-three million dollars!”  She looked over at me.  “Girl, you ain’t just rich, you is filthy rich.”  The truth though was that it meant nothing to me.

“We’re going to have to sort the taxes out still,” Pam had told us.  “Plus, there’s our fee that we’ll take.  But you’re still going to be left with quite a lot.”

Taxes was a subject I was currently trying to struggle with.  Lisa had told me that pretty much everyone else struggled with it too.  But as much money as that was, I didn’t really care.  I was happy and content living just the way I was in that house with my two best friends at my side.

Lisa filed for divorce and soon no longer worried about whether she loved her abusive husband or not.  Shantel simply told her it was about damn time!  Of course, Shantel was getting busier and busier as she started going to different churches with the reverend to give concerts.  A few years later, she finally married her beloved reverend.  Despite that, she still comes out to the farm, day after day, to help out where she can…whenever she isn’t touring somewhere with her music.  But Lisa stayed with me, having no interest at all in finding another man.  The two of us are simply happy living here together.

I eventually got my high school diploma, and later did a few years at the local collage, but I never got a degree.  I wasn’t interested.  I had other things to occupy my mind.  Important things.

Eight years after I killed Gary, we broke ground on a new building at the farm.  A very large building that was designed to have everything we thought we could possibly need.  It took over two years to finish that building, but when it was done, the Jeskey Women’s Shelter was born, with Lisa and I both running it together.  That was what we had decided to do with our time and my money.  Money that I was now fully in charge of, and I felt like I actually understood.

But as far as I was concerned, killing Gary was the real end of it all.  There was just one other little thing that happened that kind of put the period at the end of the sentence of it all for me.  And that something happened back shortly after Gary had died.

Shantel was sitting and playing her new guitar and singing for us again like she did most nights.  At the end of one of the songs, I said, “Shantel, I never really thanked you for saving my life when you hit Gary with your guitar.  Thank you.”

Shantel had just looked at me, then had gotten up and came over to stand right in front of me.  “Honey Pie,” she said.  “You have given me my life back.  I can never thank you enough for that.  I got a decent place to live, and I got the music back in my life, and most of all I got God back on my side.  I owe you my life child.  I owe you and God everything I have, everything I am, and everything I ever will be.  You need something, you just ask, ‘cause I’m all yours.  I love you to death Baby Doll.”  With that, she hugged me tightly.

When she sat back down though, there was something important that was still on my mind.  “Nobody seems to like my name,” I told both Shantel and Lisa.

“Honey Pie,” Shantel said, “If’n you like it, that’s all that matters!  And to hell with what anyone else thinks.”

“Yes,” Lisa had said.  “All that matters is what you want.”

I considered that for a moment then said.  “I’m wondering if I may have lied a bit,” I told them. 

“About what?” Lisa asked.

“I do sort of remember a man and a woman when I was real young.  But like I told everyone, I really don’t know who they were.  They’re just images.  But when my…grandfather was here that day, and he asked me if I remember being Brian, I told him no, I didn’t.  Which was pretty much true at the time.  I didn’t really remember it at all.  But what he said kind of brought something back to me.  Something that used to be kind of a nightmare for me.  I started remembering Bo taking me somewhere once, and being tied down to a table, and some woman doing something to me between my legs.  I remember hurting a lot for a while, but it’s all so vague now that I really can’t tell you anything about it.  But because of that, and what my grandfather asked, I’m thinking that maybe when I was real young, maybe I was a boy…somehow.  And maybe back then, my name really was Brian.”

“Honey Pie,” Shantel said.  “Leese and me knew there was things that was wrong with you from the time we had you in that shower back at that women’s shelter.”

“Natalie also told me a bit about what the doctor said that one time you had been examined after they first found you,” Lisa told me.  “Shantel and I both know you can’t have sex like a normal woman, but as far as we’re both concerned, since it’s not hurting you, then there’s no sense in worrying about it.  According to Natalie though, you just need to keep taking those vitamin pills you take every day.  In your case, they’re actually good for you.”

“If you was a boy back then,” Shantel said.  “You for sure ain’t one now.”

I nodded.  “Thanks,” I said.  Then I pressed on, trying to get to what I really wanted to talk about.  “Back then,” I said.  “Back when all that started, Bo never actually gave me a name that I know of.  They all only ever called me the freak.  And that’s what kind of stuck.  So I’m wondering if maybe a better name would be a good thing for me now.”

“You want a better name?” Lisa asked.  “Freaky is fine, but as you said, people do look at you funny when they hear it.”

“What did you have in mind?” Shantel asked.

“I don’t know,” I told them.  “Something…nicer that people won’t look at me strangely for.”

Lisa and Shantel started throwing out names, making suggestions.  A lot of those names we all actually liked.  And then Lisa suggested another name.  A name that kind of struck something in me.  A name that I knew instantly was the one.  It was a name that I finally chose because it would forever remind me of who I was, and where I had come from.  A name that was…me.

As I said though, all that was a long time ago.  And so at the urging of Lisa and Shantel, I’ve written this story in the hopes that this little slice of my life can inspire others who have been downtrodden to find the courage to overcome their circumstances, as I truly believe they can.

Yes, I know that the first thing you’re going to say is that I had money.  But it wasn’t the money that made the difference.  In fact, Lisa and I still live in that same old house on the farm where we’ve always lived, and other than fixing it up to make it more comfortable and look better, the house is basically the same as it was.

But the truth is, the money had nothing to do with helping me.  What it took was time, determination, hard work, and mostly the help of some very good friends who were also my teachers.  As Shantel often says, “It took all three of us, to pull all three of us, out of our own individual hell holes.”

And that idea is the driving force behind my women’s shelter.  All the women helping each other to overcome whatever hell hole they’ve gotten themselves stuck in.  Yes, we have a couple of psychologists on staff, but the real work is done by the women themselves, helping each other.

So that’s my tale.  That’s a little bit of the story of my life.  I came from the worst circumstances possible, and I built a place where I could help others find the courage to move on from whatever problems they have.

I’ve made arrangements so that the women’s shelter will live on long after me.  The name of the shelter will eventually be the last reminder of my family name and who I was.  Hopefully it will be a place that people will associate the name of Jeskey with something good instead of the horrors of Bo Jeskey.

I am the last of the Jeskey line.  There will never be another Jeskey of my line after me.

With that I’ll simply say, love to you all.

Brianna – the last Jeskey.

 

The End

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