Read Bitter Harvest: A Woman's Fury, a Mother's Sacrifice Page 15


  Any normal woman would be angry and jealous. But Debora refused to recognize that her marriage was moribund before the trip to Peru, and that the entrance of Celeste had been the kiss of death to any hope of reconciliation. Because Debora was so adept at wit and sarcasm and turning a smiling face to the world when she wanted to, no one saw the first trickles of danger that were beginning to escape from her carefully dammed-up rage.

  But she did express her anger to her son. “Celeste leads your father around by his penis,” she fumed to Tim.

  However inappropriate that was as a remark from mother to teenage son, it may have been accurate; Mike and Celeste were enjoying an intense physical affair. It had been a long time since either had been so consumed and they were both running away from sorrow and depression and acrimony. Their affair was still only three months old, and Mike had been desperately ill for much of that time. But in the autumn of 1995 they were together as often as they could be. Debora was aware of that and rubbed her children’s noses in it, urging them to hate their father.

  She tried out different scenarios on Mike. She told him that he was the fool, not she. She confessed to having had two affairs herself when they were back in Cincinnati and laughed as she said that he had never suspected a thing. Another day, she told him that she had decided to become a missionary in some distant country and would not be able to take the children with her. He would have complete responsibility for them. Mike would have been glad if that were true, but he suspected it was only a ploy to keep him off balance. Indeed, the next day, Debora was back to her plans to go to Menninger’s and become a psychiatrist.

  Nevertheless, Mike asked Carolyn Stafford, his friend and Celeste’s from the Peru trip, if she would consider moving into a wing of the house on Canterbury Court. She was a teacher at Pembroke Hill and he trusted her. If Debora did decide to leave them all, Mike knew he would need someone to be with his children while he worked. Carolyn said she would consider such an arrangement.

  On Saturday, October 21, Mike attended one of Tim’s soccer matches. Tim was equally good at soccer and hockey, and Mike was proud of him. But an odd thing happened while he was watching from the sidelines. Debora walked over to him, carrying a cup of something. She smiled and said, “Here, Tim made this cappuccino for you. Be a good father and drink it.”

  Mike stared at the thermos cup she held out as if it were a snake. When Debora put it in his hand, he pushed it away. “No, you have it,” he said.

  She shook her head. “I’ve already had one.”

  Mike’s stomach churned at the very thought of eating or drinking anything Debora offered him and he watched her walk back to her Land Cruiser with the cup. Later, he cursed himself for not keeping the damn stuff and having it tested.

  All three children were to spend that night with Mike, but the older two ended up calling their mother to come get them. Mike felt discouraged sometimes, but he believed that, in time, he would be able to prove to his children that he was a good father rather than the monster Debora made him out to be. At least now their mother wasn’t screaming epithets at him in front of them. But her campaign to undermine him continued. After he went to a “Renaissance Fair” with some of the people from the Peru trip, including Celeste, Debora told the children, “You know, your father’s sleeping with three of those women.”

  It was hideous to hear her talk to his children in that vulgar way. He was sexually intimate with Celeste, but certainly not with anyone else, and the relationship was not a subject for the children’s ears. Debora didn’t care. She never censored herself in front of the children—especially if she was insulting him.

  Six-year-old Kelly was the only one of the children who didn’t have a grudge against Mike. On Saturday, October 21, she stayed at her father’s apartment after Tim and Lissa left. She knew he was upset because her brother and sister had gone home. “She understood everything,” Mike said, remembering the wisdom of a little girl who was only in the first grade. “She put her hand on my arm and said, ‘Don’t worry, Daddy. It’s going to be okay. Everything will be okay. I know that you didn’t sleep with all those women.’”

  On Sunday, Mike drove Kelly home and found the house empty. He would not have left her there alone in any case, and he had to drive back to Merriam because Kelly had forgotten some of her things. As Mike was backing his Lexus out of his driveway, Dr. Mary Forman, his next-door neighbor to the north, came running up to the car. She needed to talk to him, she said. She seemed disturbed about something, but she definitely didn’t want to discuss it in the driveway, and in front of Kelly.

  “I took her phone number,” Mike recalled, “and told her I would call her that night or the next day. Kelly and I drove back to my apartment to get her things, and then I took her back home.” When he pulled up the second time, Debora was home. He left Kelly and drove away.

  Drs. Mary and John Forman had lived next door to 7517 Canterbury Court since 1989. John Forman was a thoracic surgeon, and Mary was not currently practicing medicine because they had four children, the first aged eleven, the second nine, and eight-year-old twins. The children all went to Pembroke Hill School, as did the Jurden children, who lived on the other side of Mike and Debora’s new house. Initially, the Formans had looked forward to having another mom-and-pop doctor family right next door, but after Mike and Debora had moved in a year before, they had not socialized much with them—even though their children were almost the same ages. Somehow, their differences outweighed their commonalities.

  Mary Forman had been worried about Debora’s children for some time, but she was really disturbed by a discovery her son had made that weekend. John Forman and his son had been raking leaves on the south side of their house, and the eleven-year-old asked his father if he had read “the letter.” Forman didn’t know what he was talking about. “He took me outside,” Forman said, “and showed me one page of a letter. He was having a little trouble with words like ‘adultery.’”

  Forman soon found the rest of the letter. Its two pages had been left on a pile of leaves; they were neither damp nor soiled. It was as if someone had meant the Formans to read them. Forman found the letter as strange as anything he’d ever seen. It accused Mike Farrar and Celeste Walker of “moral indiscretion” and, in Forman’s words, “praised Debora Green as a paragon of virtue. And it dealt with some adult issues that we didn’t think he [their son] ought to be reading.”

  The Formans had no way of knowing, of course, that Mike had found a similar letter near his own front door a few weeks earlier. His suspicion that Debora had written it was confirmed when he found a handwritten draft of the letter in her purse. But Mike was used to his wife’s manipulations, and had dismissed the letter as one more game.

  That Sunday afternoon, October 22, Mary Forman told Mike about the letter someone had left on top of the leaf pile in their yard. That letter was addressed to Dr. Richard Hibschman, the headmaster of Pembroke Hill School; like the other, it listed the virtues of Debora Green and mentioned how much she had done for the school. It said it would be a shame if she and her husband should be divorced because they were a perfect couple. Mary promised to mail Mike the letter.

  In truth, several parents of Pembroke Hill students were troubled by the situation in Debora’s home. She could not hide her fumbling speech or the odor of alcohol on her breath, even though she felt fully competent, she would say later, to care for her children and drive them and their friends to school events. One neighbor had seen Kelly locked out of the house, crying, after ten at night. And Tim and Lissa had been fighting outside, long after they should have been in bed.

  Mike had seen the deterioration, too, and he begged Debora to arrange counseling for the children to help them deal with their anger. She said she would make an appointment. As for the house, he gave up on it. Their beautiful home was, he said, a “shambles.” There were food wrappers and clothes scattered all over the carpet. The dogs and the kids had free rein of the whole house, and with no one asking them to p
ick up, they didn’t. Only Tim’s room was meticulously neat, as always.

  And Debora was definitely drinking again. Mike could tell by the way she slurred her words ever so slightly. She was good at hiding it, but after living with her for sixteen years, he knew her speech patterns as well as his own.

  Mike had done quite well working short hours for the past two weeks, but he was more tired than he had expected to be, so he decided to take a week’s vacation. It began on Monday, October 23.

  That afternoon, he went to Celeste’s house; they talked for a while, then went jogging. Mike wanted to get back in shape, and this was the first time since his illness that he’d tried to exercise. “It was a terrible day to go jogging for the first time,” he recalled. “It was blustery and windy and cold.” But he made an attempt, telling himself that he would grow stronger with every day he got out and ran. Celeste could easily have run circles around him that day, but she forced herself to match his pace.

  At five, Mike went back to his apartment, showered, and changed clothes. He was due to pick Tim and Kelly up at 6:40. Tim had a hockey game, Debora had an appointment with her psychiatrist, and Lissa had ballet practice, so Mike had offered to take his oldest child and his youngest for the evening.

  He drove Tim to his hockey game; Kelly enjoyed coming along to watch. She was a happy little girl, always in a good mood despite the tension that had sizzled around her for most of her six years.

  The hockey game was over shortly before 8:30. As Mike drove Tim and Kelly home, they were all laughing and happy. Tim had played a great game. It must have been about a quarter to nine, Mike figured, when they arrived at 7517 Canterbury Court. He hesitated, wondering if he should knock or just follow his kids in. He decided to walk in behind them. Lissa and Debora were in the kitchen. Lissa was doing her homework and Debora was taking some Kentucky Fried Chicken out of the oven where she had been reheating it.

  Mike didn’t stay long, probably not more than five or ten minutes. It was awkward being there. No one asked him to sit down and Debora pretty much ignored him. He asked Lissa how ballet was going and about school, and she answered him in short, clipped phrases. “Oh, she was cool,” he remembered. “You know, she was still angry with me about things. She was cool—but not particularly rude.”

  Tim bounded up the staircase to the children’s wing to take a shower, but Kelly sat down at the table to eat dinner. Except that Mike no longer lived there, everything seemed normal. Debora often served fast food, and the children certainly didn’t mind. Kelly chewed on a drumstick and grinned at her dad.

  Mike picked up a stack of mail and shuffled through it, removing the letters and bills addressed to him.

  “And then I left….”

  In a sense, life is a series of curtains closing, shutting off the last act so smoothly and silently that we seldom realize we have moved out of one scene into another. Mike said good night and walked out the front door of his house, past the white birches near the entrance. They were bending and dancing in the wind, but he didn’t notice them. Celeste had asked him to come for dinner after he took Tim and Kelly home, so he headed toward Overland Park. It wasn’t far, only one village west of Prairie Village.

  Shortly after nine, Mike was sitting down to dinner with Celeste and her two sons. He had left his old world and entered what he thought would be his new one, although he fully expected to be a frequent visitor in both for decades.

  Mike could not help but notice how different things were at Celeste’s home. Although it was not nearly as opulent as the Canterbury Court house, it was immaculate and exquisitely decorated. Every room had some special touch that was pure Celeste. The main bathroom was black with gold leaf, a spectacular bathroom. Celeste said she’d had a lot of fun designing it.

  The dining room was homier. A huge photograph of Celeste, John, Brett, and Dan hung on one wall. Celeste never even considered taking down this portrait of what appeared to be a loving, handsome family. The boys needed to remember their father, to know that even if it was not meant to last forever, their family had mattered.

  John had been dead for only six and a half weeks, and now Mike was eating supper with his widow and sons. Celeste, a wonderful cook who enjoyed being in the kitchen, had made twice-baked potatoes and stuffed pork chops. She was as different from Debora as she could possibly be; Mike thought that someday soon all the old wounds would heal.

  After dinner, Mike and Celeste and her sons sat in the living room and watched Monday night football. Brett and Dan went up to bed later; since Celeste had to get up early to drive her sons to school the next day, Mike planned to leave for his apartment in Merriam about 10:30 or 11. But while he was still at Celeste’s, he was paged. A cardiologist was used to pages at odd times. Mike glanced at his watch and saw that it was 10:35. The number on the display read 555-7262. He recognized it, of course. It was the number at the Canterbury Court house—the main number.

  “So I called the number, and Debora answered. I said, ‘You paged. What do you want?’ And she said, ‘No, I didn’t page you.’”

  Mike said someone had called from the house. Debora suggested that one of the children might have called him, but hastened to add, “They’re all asleep. Do you want me to go wake them up?”

  “No,” he answered. “I can’t imagine that they would page me at this time of night.”

  He hung up, puzzled, then he figured that Debora just wanted to know where he was and with whom. Five minutes later, his pager beeped again, another call from the Canterbury Court number. “This time,” Mike said, “Debora told me that she had talked to her attorney and that they felt it would be fine for me to use [Norman Beal].”

  That was welcome news. Debora had promised to get back to Mike about that by Monday, and she had waited until Monday was almost over before she called him.

  “She asked me what I was doing,” Mike recalled. “I told her I was out with friends having dinner.”

  It was familiar behavior. Debora had called his pager or his phone repeatedly over the last weeks, asking him the same question. Sometimes, she called in the middle of the night, and as soon as he answered, she would hang up. He knew it was Debora: he had Caller I.D. on his phone.

  About 11:15 Mike left and headed for his apartment. It was only a ten-minute drive. He was almost home when Debora paged him again. He decided to call her back from his home phone.

  He suspected that she was drinking. The first time they had spoken, she sounded completely sober. The second time, they had a longer conversation and he detected a slight slurring in her speech. When Mike called her from his apartment at approximately 11:40, he was sure she was drinking: “She had a very typical speech pattern when she used drugs or when she drank too much alcohol.”

  He was very angry at this. They seemed to have moved away from the terrible summer just past, and now … “I basically was concerned that she was reverting to the same sort of behavior that she showed before she had gone to Menninger’s,” Mike said. “She was still seeing a psychiatrist, she was alone with the kids, and I was angry that she was drinking heavily again. She needed to take care of the kids.”

  Mike’s anger crept up from deep inside. Now he said things to his estranged wife that he had swallowed for a long time. He pointed out that it was almost midnight; he told her he knew she was drinking, she wouldn’t let him live any kind of normal life, she was calling him continually. “I told her I was angry with her,” he remembered. “That she needed to buckle down and take care of the kids. I told her that there were some parents at the school who had noticed her behavior and poor parenting and were considering calling Social Services. I told her that she needed to get her act in gear, to get all of this taken care of.”

  As he exploded into the telephone, Mike remembered that he had almost died. Debora had poisoned him deliberately, he was sure. He had meant not to say anything that would tilt her any more off center, but he continued his litany of accusations. “I told her I thought she was crazy. I told her
I thought she needed continued psychiatric care. I told her I knew she was poisoning me, and I told her I was going to try to take the kids away from her.”

  Mike was shouting by now, and Debora was furious, yelling back. Later, he didn’t remember which of them had hung up on the other.

  The apartment was quiet, but their hateful conversation still rang in his head. He stood at the table, thumbing through his mail, trying to quiet his breathing.

  Five minutes later, the phone rang again. Wearily, Mike picked it up. Debora seemed surprised to hear his voice. “Oh,” she said, “I didn’t know you were home. I thought you were still out driving around. I really did not want to talk to you. I just wanted to leave a message on the machine. And since you’re home, I’m not going to say anything.”

  She hung up.

  She was playing games again, Mike thought. It wasn’t that they had never argued before; their arguments were legendary. But Mike regretted mentioning the poison, and he really didn’t want to take the children away from her—only, Debora had to shape up. She was a forty-four-year-old woman and she was behaving like a spoiled child. He was too upset to try to sleep, so he went downstairs and began working on a TV console he had partially assembled earlier in the day.

  At about 12:30, the phone rang again, as Mike had half expected it would. Resignedly, he picked up the phone, but it wasn’t Debora. It was Dr. Mary Forman, who only yesterday had told him about Debora’s latest bizarre letter. Before Mike could speak, Mary shouted something, something that took him a moment or two to understand: “Your house is onfire! There are fire trucks everywhere! Your wife is a fuckingarsonist!”