Read 05.A.Descent.Into.Hell.2008 Online
Authors: Kathryn Casey
Kathryn Casey
A Descent Into Hell
The True Story of an Altar Boy, a Cheerleader, and a Twisted Texas Murder
In memory of Jennifer Cave,
the girl who dreamed of Oz.
“Abandon hope, all ye who enter here.”
The inscription over the gate to hell,
DANTE ALIGHIERI’s
Divine Comedy
Contents
One
The clock tower had placidly watched over Austin from 230…
Two
Bishop, Texas, lies thirty minutes by car south of Corpus…
Three
Parenthood is a dance of sorts. Mothers and fathers carry…
Four
Despite her hopes, Sharon moved Jennifer to Austin with some…
Five
On April 6, 2001, the spring Colton Pitonyak graduated from…
Six
Jennifer had been in Austin for nearly a year in…
Seven
In Little Rock, the Pitonyaks moved that spring. They sold…
Eight
“Tell me about your friend, Colton,” Sharon asked Jennifer one…
Nine
Weeks after his arrest, Colton moved into a rented second-floor…
Ten
Their paths had crossed the previous November at a party.
Eleven
While Jennifer was busy setting up housekeeping with Scott and…
Twelve
On June 10, 2005, Colton Pitonyak appeared before Judge Wilford…
Thirteen
“I didn’t know at first that Jennifer was back on…
Fourteen
After he’d blown his biology exam on Saturday, Colton Pitonyak…
Fifteen
Less than an hour after Michael Rodriguez hung up the…
Sixteen
At seven the next morning, August 18, a Thursday, Vanessa’s…
Seventeen
“Is it Jennifer?” Sharon demanded again, when he walked outside.
Eighteen
At 1:30 A.M., Jim followed in his Suburban, and the…
Nineteen
The first article on the case appeared in the Austin…
Twenty
An article on the West Campus killing in the Austin…
Twenty-One
“They got him. They got him,” Scott heard Vanessa screaming…
Twenty-Two
Within days of the first Statesman articles on the case…
Twenty-Three
At first, Henriette Langenbach didn’t understand why the other inmates…
Twenty-Four
West Campus was still percolating with the aftermath of the…
Twenty-Five
In October, two months after Jennifer’s death, Sharon saw Colton…
Twenty-Six
On Friday, June 9, 2006, Austin temperatures crept up, flirting…
Twenty-Seven
A year after Jennifer Cave’s death, at the start of…
Twenty-Eight
As she got ready to leave for Austin for the…
Twenty-Nine
Throughout the week, the UT dorm rooms, classrooms, and Internet…
Thirty
At 9:50 that Monday morning, court reconvened. The two alternate…
Thirty-One
That spring, following Colton Pitonyak’s conviction, Sharon Cave tried to…
Thirty-Two
The moon shone a tarnished red-gold over Austin just before…
Some names and identifying features have been changed throughout this book. They include: Justin Walters, Eva Taylor, Brent, Frank, Tracey Ryan, Jared Smyth, Amy Pack, Michaela Sloan, Sammi Moore, Chris Collins, Louisa, Larry, and Nicole Ford.
The clock tower had placidly watched over Austin from 230 feet above since 1937. It was so loved that the sight of its vertical column soaring into a cloudless blue sky swelled alumni with pride. Few disputed that the imposing tower with its four twelve-foot faces rimmed in gold leaf was
the
symbol of the University of Texas, or that UT was
the
university Lone Star parents pushed their children to attend, the institution that inspired high schoolers to crash for exams and hoard birthday money in a college fund. For UT and its tower were much more than a university and a building; they were symbols of hope and the promise of a dream.
Yet the clock tower had another history as well, a much darker one.
On August 1, 1966, a twenty-five-year-old architecture student and ex-marine, Charles Joseph Whitman, climbed the UT clock tower stairs lugging a cache of weapons. The nightmare lasted eighty minutes. Before a police bullet found its mark and ended the carnage, Whitman murdered sixteen, including his wife and mother, and wounded thirty-one.
Fast-forward thirty-nine years to August 18, 2005. On this day, yet another shocking tragedy unfolded in the clock tower’s shadow.
On the university’s West Campus, a well-heeled neighborhood of sororities, frat houses, and expensive student housing, at 2529 Rio Grande, stood the Orange Tree, a block-long, three-story condominium project, one of the most prestigious on the campus. On the second floor, a locked red door with the number 88 marked the condo leased by Colton Pitonyak. A National Merit Scholar finalist who’d had the advantages of a prosperous upbringing, Pitonyak was a former Catholic school kid, an altar boy who spoke French and played the guitar and piano. When he left Little Rock, Arkansas, four years earlier with a full academic scholarship to study finance at UT’s esteemed McCombs Business School, many believed he would one day make his name as a Wall Street whiz kid.
This night would prove them wrong. Instead, Colton Pitonyak’s legacy would be markedly more sinister. But then, no one could have predicted the horror that waited behind the door marked 88.
The heat that August was nearly unbearable, well into the nineties. Summer in Austin could be blisteringly hot. Yet a breeze ruffled the trees, and no one in the small group gathered outside Colton Pitonyak’s apartment noticed the sweltering weather.
They’d been there for hours: Sharon Cave; her tall, sandy-haired accountant boyfriend, Jim Sedwick; and Cave’s oldest daughter, Vanessa.
A petite woman with thick, dark blond hair, Cave stared at the locked red door to unit 88. Her second child, twenty-one-year-old Jennifer, was missing. No one had seen her in nearly forty-eight hours, not since she had left a bar with Pitonyak. When Sharon called his cell phone from her Corpus Christi home, a surly Pitonyak refused to answer questions.
“Dude, I’m having pizza with my friend,” he replied. “Don’t bother me.”
Worried, Cave and Sedwick rushed to Austin. Twenty-five-year-old Vanessa came, too, driving in from Dallas. They were all determined to find Jennifer, and their only clue was Pitonyak. But they’d pounded over and over again on his door, and no one answered. The afternoon wore on. Sunset passed, leaving the sky cloaked in darkness, as lights illuminated the somber tower. At the apartment marked 88, Sharon, Jim, and Vanessa stood vigil, for what they weren’t sure. All Sharon knew for certain was that she had to get into Pitonyak’s apartment. The answer to Jennifer’s disappearance waited inside.
Like her mother, Vanessa, willowy with long, dark blond hair, understood things she couldn’t explain. Sharon and all three of her daughters were like that, so connected it was a nearly psychic bond, an uncut spiritual umbilical cord that bound them together. Deep within them, Vanessa and Sharon unconsciously understood the importance of this day. Something grave had taken place, and they sensed the breaking of the tie that anchored them to Jennifer, the slipping away of her presence in their lives.
At 10
P.M.
the University of Texas clock tower’s carillon rang, marking the hour, and for Sharon, Jim, and Vanessa, time stood still. When it started again, Jim Sedwick crawled through a window into Colton Pitonyak’s apartment, and their lives changed, forever.
Bishop, Texas, lies thirty minutes by car south of Corpus Christi and inland from the Gulf of Mexico, but it’s a world away from the hubbub of the city. Surrounded by fields of sorghum and cotton, the town grain elevator weighs the bounty from the fields, determining the financial health of the townsfolk. With a population that hovers just over three thousand, it’s typical small-town America: a Dairy Queen and a truck stop, schools and churches that form the core of the community. The land is flat, the sky is big, and the horizon a full 360 degrees. Relentlessly straight roads appear to drop off the edge of the earth, and the local chemical plant is a city of pipe, its smokestacks burning off residue in a bright, hot, golden flame.
Jennifer Cave grew up in a quaint farmhouse, just outside town, on land that shares a fence line with the legendary King Ranch. Her parents, Charlie and Sharon, bought the place and its five accompanying acres in 1983, a year after they married. At the time, Charlie intended to fix it up, but, as is the way with old houses, it seemed there was always something left perpetually undone.
It was the second marriage for Sharon, a fun-loving woman with a broad, high-wattage smile. She’d grown up on a farm in nearby Alice, Texas, an oil town whose fortunes fluctuated with the price of a barrel of crude. During a teenage rebellious streak, she ran away at eighteen and married, giving birth to her oldest, Vanessa, in 1979. By then that marriage was troubled. They divorced, and then she met and married Charlie, a tall, handsome man who earned his living as a welder. He was a gregarious sort, the kind who’d never met a stranger, yet she’d later label him “mistake number two.”
Sharon was a warm woman, the kind who greets friends with a hug and spends more time asking if others need anything or are comfortable than worrying about herself. She was that way with Charlie, believing she could somehow make him a better husband and a better father. “I always had a mission with Charlie,” she says, sadly. “When he wasn’t drinking, he was outstanding. Charming and fun. But I was always waiting for that other shoe to drop.”