98

Two days after the uncovering of the horrors in Odense, Pennsylvania, the media had all but set up permanent residence in the small rural community. This was international news. Berks County was not ready for the unwanted attention.

Josh Bontrager endured six hours of surgery. He was in stable condition at the Reading Hospital and Medical Center. Nicci Malone had been treated and released.

The initial FBI reports indicated that Marius Damgaard had murdered at least nine people. No forensic evidence had yet been found that tied him directly to the murders of Annemarie DiCillo and Charlotte Waite.

Damgaard had been committed to a mental-health facility in upstate New York for nearly eight years, from the ages of eleven to nineteen. He was released after his grandmother had been taken ill. Within weeks after Elise Damgaard died, his killings resumed.

A thorough search of the house and grounds turned up a number of gruesome finds. Not the least of which was that Marius Damgaard had kept a vial of his grandfather's blood beneath his bed. DNA tests matched it to the "moon" drawings on the victims. The semen belonged to Marius Damgaard himself.

Damgaard had masqueraded as Will Pedersen, and also as a young man named Sean at Roland Hannah's ministry. He had been counseled at the county mental-health facility where Lisette Simon worked. He had visited TrueSew many times, choosing Sa'mantha Fanning as his ideal Anne Lisbeth.

When Marius Damgaard learned that the StoryBook River property- a thousand-acre area Frederik Damgaard had incorporated as a township called Odense in the 1930s-had been condemned and seized for back taxes, and that it was scheduled for demolition, he felt his universe began to crumble. He decided to lead the world back to his beloved StoryBook River, making a trail of death and horror as directions.

On January 3, Jessica and Byrne stood near the mouth of the canals that snaked though the theme park. The sun was out; the day portended a false spring. In daylight, it looked drastically different. Despite the rotting timbers and crumbling stonework, Jessica could see how it had once been a place where families had come to enjoy its unique atmosphere. She had seen vintage brochures. It was somewhere she might have brought her daughter.

Now it was a freak show, a place of death that would draw people from all over the world. Perhaps Marius Damgaard would get his wish. The entire complex was a crime scene, and would remain so for a long time to come.

Were there other bodies to be found? Other horrors to discover?

Time would tell.

They had sorted through the hundreds of papers and files-city, state, county, and now federal. One witness statement stuck out for both Jessica and Byrne, a statement unlikely ever to be fully understood. A resident of Pine Tree Lane, one of the access roads leading to the entrance to StoryBook River, had seen a vehicle that night, an idling vehicle just on the shoulder of the road. Jessica and Byrne had visited the spot. It was less than a hundred yards from the trellis where Marius Damgaard had been found hanging and eviscerated. The FBI had taken footwear impressions leading to and from the entrance. The footprints were made by a very popular brand of men's rubber overshoe, available everywhere.

The witness said the idling vehicle was an expensive looking green SUV with yellow fog lamps and extensive detailing.

The witness did not get a license plate.

Outside the movie Witness, Jessica had never seen so many Amish people in her life. It seemed that the entire Amish population of Berks County had come to Reading. They milled about the lobby of the hospital. The older folks brooded, prayed, observed, shooed the children away from the candy and soda vending machines.

When Jessica introduced herself, they all shook her hand. It seemed that Josh Bontrager had come by it honestly. "YOU SAVED MY life," Nicci said.

Jessica and Nicci Malone stood at the foot of Josh Bontrager's hospital bed. His room was filled with flowers.

The razor-sharp arrow had slashed Nicci's right shoulder. Her arm was in a sling. The doctors said she would be IOD-injured on duty- for about a month.

Bontrager smiled. "All in a day," he said.

His color had returned; his smile had never left. He sat up in bed, surrounded by about a hundred different cheeses, breads, jars of preserves, and sausages, all wrapped in wax paper. Homemade get-well cards abounded.

"When you get better, I'm buying you the best dinner in Philly," Nicci said.

Bontrager stroked his chin, apparently considering his options. "Le Bec Fin?"

"Yeah. Okay. Le Bec Fin. You're on," Nicci said.

Jessica knew that Le Bec would set Nicci back a few hundred. Small price to pay. "But you better be careful," Bontrager added. "What do you mean?" "Well, you know what they say." "No, I don't," Nicci said. "What do they say, Josh?" Bontrager winked at her and Jessica. "Once you go Amish, you never go back."

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