Downstream: A Witherston Murder Mystery
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Reviews for Downstream
3 ratings1 review
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Francis Hearty Withers assumed that everyone in the town of Witherston would be more than delighted when he announced his plans at his 100th birthday for the town and how his will was laid out. His plan was to build a Senextra pharmaceutical factory. Senextra had been the drug responsible for his health and longevity. In his will, one billion was to go to the municipality of Witherston and another billion would be divided equally to the present legal residents of Witherston. The truth of the matter hit Mr. Withers hard when he realized many people – environmentalists and others – were decidedly opposed to the factory being built within their town causing the destruction of acres of forestry. Many carried banners; some said KEEP NATURE NATURAL. Mr. Withers was appalled at the response and threatened to change his will, revoking the billion for the residents. One of the townspeople, Mev Arroyo (Detective Emma Evelyn Arroyo), told her husband that Mr. Withers would be dead before Monday when he could legally change his will. She was right.As a reality check, the will of old man Withers, as presented within this story, wasn’t well written. To me, it wasn’t clear on the recipients of one billion dollars. There was no consideration given for the age of the recipients or a family as opposed to each individual within the town. The header dates of the chapters were confusing. For example, May 22, 2015, was referenced as Labor Day. However, with that said, it was a very intriguing mystery. I liked the characters, especially Mev, her husband, and their children. Many characters were introduced early; most had no real bearing on the story one way or another. Newspaper articles and police reports were spotted throughout and I really enjoyed reading some of these as they display small town trifle and fodder for their gossipers. In summary, it is a charming look at a small town where one man’s money tends to have a lot of sway. Rating: 3 out of 5.
Book preview
Downstream - Betty Jean Craige
At the celebration of his hundredth birthday, local billionaire Francis Hearty Withers announces to the people gathered on the front lawn of Witherston Baptist Church that he has finalized his will. In it he bequeaths $1 billion to his north Georgia hometown of Witherston and another $1 billion to be divided up equally among the town’s 4,000 residents--in recognition of their support of a Senextra pharmaceutical factory. Senextra is a drug that enables individuals to lead healthy lives well into their second century, but it has some unanticipated consequences.
The group assembled to hear Withers’s announcement do not all applaud. One person carries a sign that says SENEXTRA VIOLATES MOTHER NATURE. Another, KEEP SENEXTRA OUT OF OUR SYSTEM. A third, WE DON'T NEED MORE OLD MEN.
Withers flies into a rage. He vows to change his will and disinherit the community. Two days later he is found dead.
In Betty Jean Craige’s first murder mystery a few humans die in unusual circumstances. A few others live in unusual circumstances. Who dunnit?
KUDOS FOR DOWNSTREAM
In Downstream by Betty Jean Craige, billionaire Harty Withers is part of a clinical trial for a new drug, Senextra, which is supposed to prolong life in the elderly. In appreciation of his extended life-span, the billionaire decides to leave one billion dollars to the makers of Senextra in his will to build a factory on part of his land in the town of Witherston. In addition, Withers also leaves one billion dollars in his will to be divided among the residents of Witherston, which would net each of the 4,000 residents about $250,000. However, when a number of the residents reject the idea of having the Senextra factory built on the site of the old-growth forest, Withers angrily proclaims that he is changing his will and the town will get nothing. Of course, that’s as good as signing his own death warrant, and less than 48 hours later he ends up dead. I thoroughly enjoyed Downstream. Craige makes some good points not only on conservation and what medicines and other human chemicals do to our environment, but also what greed can do to otherwise good people. Craige has a unique and refreshing voice and the book is not only thought-provoking but fun to read. ~ Taylor Jones, Reviewer
Downstream by Betty Jean Craige is the story of small town USA knocked on its head by big pharma, murder, money, and greed. In Witherston, Georgia, population 4,000, a town named after its founding family, Harty Withers is celebrating his 100th birthday by revealing the contents of his will. He tells those assembled for his birthday party that he intends to leave them all the sum of $1,000,000,000 to be divided among the equally, netting each resident $250,000. However there is a catch. Harty also leaves another $1,000,000,000 to the makers of a new drug called Senextra for them to build a factory on a 31-acre plot of land containing old-growth trees...Downstream will not only keep riveted from beginning to end, it will make you think about the consequences of human arrogance and greed. ~ Regan Murphy, Reviewer
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
After beginning Downstream I discovered that writing a murder mystery was hard. Really hard! I needed all the help I could get. And thanks to generous, smart, kind, wonderful friends I got lots of help. So...
Thank you, Susan Tate, for answering my legal questions, helping me figure out the plot, reading my manuscript at various stages of completion, and finding ever so many mistakes, ever so many, so many.
Other dear friends carefully read the first draft and observed that it was message-heavy,
in Wyatt Anderson’s words. So to Wyatt and Margaret Anderson, who have encouraged my writing for many decades, I thank you for your extremely useful and utter frankness. I’ve tried to make the novel message-lighter.
To my fellow mystery lovers Valerie Greenberg, Tom and Karen Kenyon, Linda Schramm, Nelle Shehane, Barbara Timmons, and Hugh and Tricia Ruppersburg, I appreciate your telling me how I might make a better story.
Thank you, Mary Jo Johnson, my sister, for your thoughtful criticism of the book early on. We’ve loved mysteries since grade school, when we admired Nancy Drew, Trixie Belden, Judy Bolton, the Dana Girls, and the Hardy Boys and wanted to have adventures like theirs.
Thank you, Dana Bultman, Javier Zapata, and Eliot and Guillermo Zapata, for inspiring the characters Mev and Paco Arroyo and their twins Jaime and Jorge. I suspect you all will recognize yourselves in my book, even though I must say:
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.
Thank you, Holly Marie Stasco, for doing the excellent maps of Witherston and North Georgia.
And thank you, Chuck Murphy, for photographing me with great skill and kindness.
I must also thank my friend the late Eugene Odum, ecologist and environmentalist, who taught me to see the world as an ecosystem whose parts are interactive and interdependent. I learned from you, Gene, that when we humans recognize our interdependence with all the other organisms on Earth we must acknowledge our need for cooperation.
And I thank Terry Kay who told me I could write fiction when I thought I couldn’t. Were it not for you, Terry, I would have never tried.
I got the idea for Downstream from the book Our Stolen Future, first published in 1997, by Theo Colborn, Dianne Dumanoski, and John Peterson Myers. I learned from Our Stolen Future that our planet is medicated.
Downstream
A Witherston Murder Mystery
Betty Jean Craige
A Black Opal Books Publication
|
Copyright © 2014 by Betty Jean Craige
Cover Design by Jackson Cover Designs
Author photo by Chuck Murphy
Maps by Holly Marie Stasco
All photos and artwork copyright © 2014
All Rights Reserved
EBOOK ISBN: 978-1-626942-00-4
EXCERPT
Since the whole town stood to inherit from the old man’s will, everyone in it had a motive to kill him...
How well did Rich know Mr. Withers?
Mev asked.
Very well. Rich and Mr. Withers talked for a year about building a Senextra factory in Witherston. They became friends. Sort of. Mr. Withers was very old, you know. And not very talkative. But they did drink wine together. They drank Mr. Withers’s fine wine.
Why is Rich so interested in having BioSenecta build the Senextra factory here?
Because BioSenecta will bring jobs to Witherston and revitalize our town. Face it, Mev. Our town is dying. If Witherston does not bring in a big employer soon all of our young people will leave, and some of our older people too. And al-though you may not know it, we have a good number of unemployed and homeless people.
Tell me, Rhonda. Did your husband sign a contract with BioSenecta?
Well...not exactly, though Rich and Martin Payne had an agreement. Mr. Withers had not finalized the $1 sale of his land to BioSenecta. Rich wanted to keep his negotiations with Martin secret until Friday’s announcement. He knew that Lottie and Gretchen and all the other anti-progress folks around here who want to keep Witherston primitive would campaign against BioSenecta. And sure enough, they did.
Rhonda, what’s Rich’s stake in BioSenecta?
Rhonda hesitated. What do you mean? Rich is the mayor. He wants a good future for Witherston. And Witherston needs the billion dollars Mr. Withers left our town in his will.
Do you realize, Rhonda, that you’ve just offered a motive for Rich to kill Withers before Withers could change his will?
DEDICATION
To Cosmo
and my other dear friends
When we try to pick out anything by itself,
we find it hitched to everything else in the universe.
~ John Muir, 1869
PREFACE
He heard the strains of Old Man River
before he saw the red pickup. It was empty. The engine was running.
He reached into the cab to turn the engine off but changed his mind. He didn’t want to announce his approach.
Instead he grabbed the deer rifle on the right front seat. It was loaded.
The sky was darkening with black rain clouds, but he spotted a man on the bridge. The man held something in his hand, a beaker of creek water. The man was obviously testing the water. The EPA would investigate.
He couldn’t allow that to happen.
He got down on his knees and fired one shot through the man’s back. He got him. He wiped the rifle clean of fingerprints with his handkerchief and shoved it deep into the brush along the creek.
He returned to the truck and wiped it clean of prints, too.
Now what?
Well, he’d use this occasion to warn off others. He found a pencil and a yellow post-it note pad in the glove compartment and left a message.
Then he returned to his car parked by the road.
PART 1
STATE OF GEORGIA
COUNTY OF LUMPKIN
LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT
OF
FRANCIS HEARTY WITHERS
I, FRANCIS HEARTY WITHERS, of said State and Lumpkin County, do make and publish this my Last (and Only) Will and Testament.
ITEM I
(a) I wish my body to be buried on the site I have chosen on the grounds of Withers Village. I desire and instruct that a funeral service be held at Witherston Baptist Church. The costs of my funeral service and burial shall be paid out of my estate. My casket has already been purchased.
(b) All of my due and payable debts shall be paid out of my estate as soon as is practicable.
ITEM II
I give and bequeath the sum of ONE BILLION DOLLARS ($1,000,000,000) to the municipality of WITHERSTON.
ITEM III
I give and bequeath the sum of ONE BILLION DOLLARS ($1,000,000,000) to the present LEGAL RESIDENTS OF WITHERSTON to be divided equally among them in appreciation of their support of the Senextra factory.
ITEM IV
I give and bequeath the remainder of my estate, including my home on 1 Withers Hill Road, the contents of said home, the 40 acres designated as tax map/parcel 184 001H on which the home stands, and the 31.7 acres designated as tax map/parcel 182B 007T on Founding Father’s Creek in Lumpkin County to BIOSENECTA for use in the construction of a Senextra factory on the site.
If BioSenecta should not use the property for construction of a Senextra factory, the remainder of my estate shall go to the municipality of Witherston.
ITEM V
(a) I hereby appoint RICHARD RATHER as Executor of this Will.
(b) If for any reason Richard Rather should be unable to fulfill this responsibility, I appoint DR. NEEL KINGFISHER, JR., Director of Withers Village, as Successor Executor of this Will.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed my seal to this my Will, this 20th day of May, 2015.
Francis Hearty Withers
FRANCIS HEARTY WITHERS
1 Withers Hill Road, Witherston GA 30534
Signed, sealed, published and declared by FRANCIS HEARTY WITHERS as his Last Will and Testament in our presence. We, at his request and in his presence, and in the presence of each other, have hereunto subscribed our names as witnesses the day and year above set out.
WITNESSES/ADDRESSES:
GRANT HEMMINGS GRIGGS:
Grant Hemmings Griggs
47 Pine Street, Witherston GA 30534
GEORGE FOLSOM, MD:
George Folsom, MD
3300 Mountain Pass, Witherston GA 30534
WWW.ONLINEWITHERSTON.COM
WITHERSTON ON THE WEB
Friday, May 22, 2015
LOCAL NEWS
At 4:30 pm today, on the steps of Witherston Baptist Church, Mr. Francis Hearty Withers will celebrate his hundredth birthday. He is expected to make an announcement regarding his will. The event is free and open to the public. Witherston Baptist Church members will provide food.
Dr. Martin Payne, CEO of BioSenecta Pharmaceuticals, will come from Atlanta to honor Mr. Withers, who is the majority shareholder of BioSenecta stock and a member of its Board of Directors.
Dr. Payne will reveal the construction timetable for the planned BioSenecta plant in Witherston. BioSenecta manufactures the experimental drug Senextra, which has been developed to prolong healthy life.
~ Catherine Perry, Reporter
ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY
By Charlotte Byrd
On Monday, May 22, 1899, Witherston celebrated the completion of Founding Fathers’ Covered Bridge, which crossed Founding Father’s Creek two miles downstream from Witherston. Like Elder’s Mill Covered Bridge in Watkinsville, upon which it was modeled, Founding Father’s Covered Bridge spanned 100 feet.
After the covered bridge burned on July 4, 1910, the narrow bridge was rebuilt uncovered,
as it presently stands. Unable to support the weight of automobiles, Founding Father’s Bridge is used today primarily by hikers, picnickers, and fishermen.
POLICE BLOTTER
Witherston Police Officers were called to Rosa’s Cantina at 8:15 pm yesterday to stop a fight between two underage men over a scantily clad young woman. The three were arrested for underage drinking and taken to jail. The bartender said he hadn’t realized that the woman was scantily clad because he was concentrating on his job.
CHAPTER 1
Friday, May 22, 2015, Labor Day weekend, Witherston, Georgia:
Old Withers is gonna make us all rich!
I heard he plans to give everybody in Witherston a million dollars!
But that’s when he dies. And he looks pretty healthy to me.
He turns a hundred today. He’ll be dying soon!
---
Oh my God! Georgia’s beauty queen Rhonda Rather looks pregnant! Isn’t she a bit long in the tooth to be carrying a foal?
She must be over fifty! God in Heaven! I didn’t know that Mayor Rather--I’ve always called him Rotund Rather--was such a stud.
Dear Rhonda doesn’t want to be pregnant, and her daughter Sandra does. I heard that Sandra and Phil are getting fertility treatments.
Faith Folsom has a bulge in her belly too, and she’s older than dirt. Do you all think she’s pregnant?
Probably. She doesn’t have the sense God gave geese.
Oh, but she does.
Jesus God, I pray it doesn’t happen to me.
Honey, bless your heart and don’t get me wrong but you are way too old, way, way too old! You’re almost old enough to go to Withers Village!
But they don’t accept girls there.
---
Lottie, come here! Look at Francis Hearty Withers all dressed up on stage acting holier than the High and Mighty just because he’s going to bless us with his unearned money. He thinks we’ll clap for him when Scorch unveils his statue.
Gretchen, did you know he paid Scorch $50,000 to make that statue?
"I’m not giving Withers a single clap. The old geezer is an environmental criminal. He thinks he can use our town and our creek and our land for his toxin-producing Senextra factory."
---
Who’s that hunk in the blue suit?
The man talking to Dr. Folsom? He’s the CEO of BioSenecta, Dr. Martin Payne.
Well, good gracious, I’ll be darned! He’s sure easy on the eyes!
Francis Hearty Withers talked him into building a Senextra factory here.
***
Detective Emma Evelyn Arroyo, Mev
to her friends, heard these conversations as she walked through the crowd. She was on duty until 5:00, and her assignment was crowd control on the front lawn of Witherston Baptist Church. Rumors abounded that today Witherston’s local billionaire would announce the construction of a pharmaceutical factory on Founding Father’s Creek upstream from Witherston and that Witherston’s KEEP NATURE NATURAL environmentalists would protest. The Witherston Police Department, for which she worked, was on alert.
Mev spotted a group of teenagers wearing KEEP NATURE NATURAL T-shirts.
Ladies and Gentlemen!
Mayor Rather bellowed into the microphone. It’s 4:30 and time for a grand and glorious party! We’re here to celebrate the hundredth birthday of Witherston’s most famous citizen, actually Lumpkin County’s most famous citizen, Francis Hearty Withers. Thanks to all you folks for turning out for the occasion. Let’s give a big hand to Mr. Withers, the last of five generations of Withers residing on Founding Father’s Creek.
Mev was relieved to hear only clapping, polite and restrained as it was. She was too preoccupied with her own immediate problem to share in her fellow Witherstonians’ excitement.
Fellow citizens, I didn’t hear you. Let’s give a big, big, big hand to--let me drop a hint--Witherston’s most generous benefactor.
More clapping.
Francis Hearty Withers sat smiling on stage in his navy Armani suit with his aqua Salvatore Ferragamo silk tie, holding his ivory-inlaid mahogany cane. He was flanked on one side by the tall, solemn, well-dressed Dr. Neel Kingfisher, who stood, and on the other by the overall-clad Scorch Ridge, a giant of a man, who also stood.
Now let us sing ‘Happy Birthday!’
Mayor Rather led the crowd of some three hundred men, women, and children in a spirited version of the song, which included the second verse usually sung for the very young:
"How old are you?
How old are you?
How old, how old
How old are you?"
Mr. Withers stood up and raised both arms in triumph. I’m one hundred years old, and going strong!
Congratulations, Mr. Withers!
exclaimed Mayor Rather. We’re so glad you are still with us. We thank you from the bottom of our hearts for honoring us with your presence on this special day. In just a moment we will unveil our monument to you, a statue created by our own Witherston sculptor Scorch Ridge. Then we will partake of the green beans, blackeyed peas, ham, fried chicken, and cole slaw that the fine ladies of Witherston, Georgia, have prepared. Plus cold beer, the hot dogs that our fine gentlemen are grilling, and--need I say it?--the best birthday cakes known to mankind. But first, Mr. Withers, I understand you have an announcement to make.
Withers quickly approached the microphone, barely leaning on his cane. He looked healthy, and not a day older than eighty.
Hello, dear friends of Witherston,
he said, opening the black loose leaf binder that held his prepared speech and putting on a pair of wire-rimmed glasses. In my lifetime I have accumulated great wealth. Now I want to make it yours.
Withers paused as if awaiting applause. Hearing none, he turned back to his script.
But you will inherit not only my money. You will inherit the mission of our great civilization. And if you accept my gift, you must accept responsibility for advancing this mission.
We will,
said Mayor Rather. We will make you proud.
Withers went on reading. So what is the mission of our great civilization? It is to bring mankind power over his destiny. It is to bring order to wilderness and discipline to wildness. The land we stand upon today was once wilderness, occupied by animals and Indians. It was once wildness, where nature ruled the lives of animals and Indians alike. The land we stand upon today remained unchanged for ten thousand years until our ancestors brought civilization to this place. What did the Indians do who lived and died here during those ten thousand years, who inhabited the woods like animals, who left no permanent mark upon the world? Not much.
Whoa!
cried Gretchen Hall Green, whom Mayor Rather usually called Gretchen Whole Grain. But then she referred to him as Mayor Rather Round.
Withers glanced momentarily at Gretchen and asked her, Will you permit me to continue?
Gretchen said nothing.
Mev looked at Neel Kingfisher. He was scowling.
Withers continued. What did the Europeans do? A lot. Our ancestors developed writing and mathematics. Built the printing press, the steam engine, the telephone, the phonograph, the light bulb, the train, the automobile, the airplane, the computer. Created cathedrals, symphonies, novels, newspapers. Discovered penicillin, vaccines, and other drugs to overcome the diseases that would have killed us too young. To achieve all this, our ancestors acquired wealth and used it wisely. Witherstonians will acquire wealth too and will have the chance to use it equally wisely.
You forgot to mention the atomic bomb, Mr. Withers!
shouted Gretchen. And you forgot to mention DDT and asbestos!
And bullets!
shouted Lottie Byrd.
Withers held up one finger. He continued to read. "And now, in the twenty-first century, we--BioSenecta Pharmaceuticals, to be specific--have developed the drug Senextra, the most life-changing achievement for the individual in the history of mankind. Senextra exemplifies our civilization’s mission: to control nature for the benefit of humanity. And that is the mission I ask you to carry out.
"For the past five years I have been kept alive and healthy by Senextra. And I thank BioSenecta for the privilege to test Senextra on myself. For the past four years the twenty-three residents of Withers Village, all of whom happily signed on to the FDA-approved pilot study, have also been kept alive and healthy by Senextra. We are grateful to Dr. George Folsom for conducting the pilot study.
So on my hundredth birthday, I announce the date of our groundbreaking ceremony for a BioSenecta factory on my land in Witherston. It’s July 30. I’ve hired loggers to begin clear-cutting the site on June 15.
Withers grew more and more enthusiastic. My mission, my own personal mission, is to give every citizen of the United States the same opportunity for longevity that I have had.
Withers paused for applause. A good number of people clapped.
Withers continued. "Now I will disclose my gift to you. Just last Wednesday, on May 20, 2015, I signed my will--I confess, the only will I have ever made--bequeathing each of you citizens of Witherston an equal portion of $1 billion. I will read to you from my will.
"I give and bequeath the sum of ONE BILLION DOLLARS ($1,000,000,000) to the present LEGAL RESIDENTS OF WITHERSTON to be divided equally among them in appreciation of their support of the Senextra factory.
I’ve filed my will at the Dahlonega courthouse, and I’ve appointed your mayor, Mr. Richard Rather, to be my executor representing both the town of Witherston and the residents of Witherston.
The Witherstonians gathered on the lawn roared with pleasure, or at least two thirds of them did.
A third did not. Gretchen Green held up her hand-made sign: SENEXTRA VIOLATES MOTHER NATURE. Lottie Byrd held up hers: KEEP SENEXTRA OUT OF OUR SYSTEM!
Lottie Byrd was Mev’s favorite aunt and her next-door neighbor. She was also Mayor Rather’s nemesis. Lottie was fearless in expressing her environmental opinions publicly.
Gretchen, owner of Gretchen Green’s Green Grocery and president of Eat Locally, was Lottie’s accomplice. Gretchen’s rescued Great Dane, whom she’d named Gandhi, was at her side, as usual.
Lottie and Gretchen were the founders and funders of KEEP NATURE NATURAL.
In addition to the $1 billion I am bequeathing to the citizens of Witherston,
Withers hastened to say in his baritone voice, I’ve also bequeathed $1 billion to the municipality of Witherston for your support of the Senextra factory. Witherston will become world famous as the home of Senextra.
Cheering erupted: We love you, Mr. Withers!
and Bless you, Mr. Withers.
But suddenly other signs popped up: SENEXTRA = SENILITY; DON’T FELL TREES TO BUILD FACTORIES; WE DON’T NEED MORE OLD MEN.
Mev smiled when she saw THIS LAND’S NOT OUR LAND, THIS LAND’S NOT YOUR LAND, THIS LAND IS CHEROKEE LAND. Her Cherokee friend Gregory Bozeman would love it.
Mev watched Withers sit down. He looked old, tired, and confused. The anger she’d always seen on his face returned.
Ignoring the protest, Mayor Rather took the mic and shook Withers’s hand. Thank you, thank you, Mr. Withers, for your extraordinary generosity! Thank you! You are Witherston’s gift from God. You are a great American. We will put your wealth to good use. And now it’s time to unveil the sculpture that is our tribute to you! Please pull the cord, Mr. Ridge.
Amid the shouting Scorch Ridge moved to the podium, yanked a cord, and unveiled a ten-foot-high Elberton marble statue of a handsome, much younger Withers with his right arm outstretched.
A teenage girl wearing a pink KEEP NATURE NATURAL T-shirt threw an egg at the statue and splattered yoke across the forehead. Other KNN members chanted "Withers must go!"
A middle-aged man in a suit and tie yelled, Eat mud, KNN!
Another yelled,