Once before, after five years of marriage, he had concluded that he and Debora would never be happy together, and he had almost asked for a divorce. But he had reconsidered—they had Tim and Lissa by then—and decided to work harder at making the marriage succeed. And it was work. Mike and Debora had managed to limp along for seven more years, using vacations and work to avoid the reality that they were two people going in opposite directions.

  “The house was disheveled all the time,” Mike would remember. “There was no attempt to keep it in order. There was no attempt to get the kids to try to follow rules, to keep their rooms cleaned up. There were no boundaries set for them … it was a pretty bad living situation. Obviously, any of us that have children know that a house is not going to be kept in perfect order—but it did concern me…. It was a bad example for the kids. You know, I think that there has to be some semblance of order in a house you live in.”

  Although Debora would say later that she was totally surprised when Mike asked for a divorce in January 1994, he believed she knew full well what was coming. She could not have missed seeing how unhappy he was, and she had told the women she played tennis with that her husband was cheating on her and she feared he might leave her.

  In retrospect, Mike believed that Debora tried to forestall exactly the conversation he knew he had to initiate. Suddenly, she did a complete turnaround, which she was capable of if she wanted something badly enough. For two weeks, Debora was solicitous of Mike’s needs, becoming—for those fourteen days—the ideal wife. However, the change came far too late. And Mike no longer trusted her motives.

  Finally, he told her he was moving out and wanted a divorce. And as soon as Debora realized what he was saying, she turned and stomped down to the basement, shouting at the top of her lungs. Tim was in the family room watching television and Mike didn’t want him drawn into their discussion. It was too late.

  Debora grabbed whatever objects were closest and began to throw them around the room. Books and toys thudded against walls; lamps and knickknacks shattered. She was screaming incoherently and yelling at Tim, recruiting him to her side. “God damn,” she shouted at her son. “Now look at what he’s going to do. I’ve done so much for him—you know that—and now he’s going to cheat us out of what is ours!”

  Tim, twelve years old, looked at her, stricken, his face pale and fearful. Debora kept screaming at him as Mike tried to draw her aside. “We’re going to lose all this!” she cried, sweeping her arms wide.

  “Debora—don’t …” Mike pleaded, but it was as if she didn’t even hear him.

  “Your father is cheating on me!” Debora shrieked. “He’s going to leave us and we’ll lose everything we have. I’ll have to go back to work, and I don’t know where we’ll live. I don’t know who will take care of you.”

  “Mom …” Tim said plaintively. “Mom—it’ll be okay.”

  “No it won’t!” she screamed, pounding her fists against her thighs. “Your father is going to take everything we have away from us because he doesn’t love us.”

  The family room was a shambles, and Debora had worked herself into a frenzy. There was no point in Mike’s trying to talk to her, nor would Tim let his father comfort him.

  “It was awful,” Mike said.

  It was awful. But it only solidified his decision that he and Debora could no longer go on together. Continuing their farce of a marriage would only destroy their children.

  He moved out of the house into an apartment in the Country Club Plaza. The name did not denote plush quarters; the area was an older neighborhood in Kansas City, Missouri, halfway between Mike’s office and the street where Debora and the kids still lived in the brick house they had bought with such high expectations six years before.

  Surprisingly, things did improve after Mike moved out. He talked to Debora almost every day. “Nothing had changed—I still supported them, of course,” he said, “but I just wasn’t there.”

  He took Tim, Lissa, and Kelly two or three times a week, and they had “pretty good times.” Tim and Lissa were very angry with him at first, but he wasn’t surprised at that. He was sure that Debora was talking to them as confidants and not as children bewildered by the breakup of their parents’ marriage. Lissa, in particular, was furious with her father. It took her a long time to admit that her world had not really changed that much. She still had her ballet lessons, the same friends, the same school, and the same house; the kids had their beloved Lab, Boomer.

  In fact, things seemed to be getting better all around, so much so that Mike even began to wonder if he and Debora might reconcile. He really did want to hold his marriage together, if they could avoid Debora’s histrionics and temper tantrums. However, the one thing he could not see himself doing at that point was going to marriage counseling. “Debora wanted to go, but I knew I wouldn’t open up—I couldn’t see myself sitting there and opening up to a counselor and it wouldn’t have done any good.”

  Even so, he and Debora began to talk about getting back together. She was calmer and it began to seem that they could somehow be together and raise their children without the anger and bitterness that had sullied every facet of their marriage. Mike became hopeful enough to tell Debora, “One of the things I’m unhappy about is that house. If we got back together, we would have to move out of that house. It’s too small for us—it needs too much work.”

  Debora agreed at once. If they had more room, she felt, and if Mike could come home to a clean house without dozens of chores that needed to be done, their marriage would be so much better. She immediately began searching for more suitable houses and found the beautiful mansion on Canterbury Court in Prairie Village. Mike caught her enthusiasm and looked at the huge house with its six bedrooms, den, exercise room, pool—everything a family could ask for. He agreed that it seemed perfect, if somewhat expensive. It had gone on the market at something over $600,000. In California, it would have listed at $3 million. Even so, in Prairie Village, Kansas, $600,000 was a lot to pay for a home.

  But the house had been empty for a while and the owner—who had built many of the luxurious houses in the Canterbury development—accepted Debora and Mike’s bid of $400,000. They were getting a tremendous bargain.

  Then Mike began to get cold feet. He had been swept up in Debora’s fervor and in her promises that everything would be different. Now he realized that he had been rushed into a commitment that he didn’t truly believe in. Nothing had really changed, except that they had been apart for four months. They had made no attempts or promises to reconcile, and once he signed the papers the real estate agent was rushing to prepare, he would be agreeing to pay almost half a million dollars for a second house, while he wasn’t sure he could sell the house he already owned. Debora wasn’t working—except for occasional case reviews—the children’s school was expensive, and they had other debts, including payments and leases on several new vehicles. Mike made excellent money, but he felt as if they were running pell-mell into a hasty, ill-thought-out decision.

  “I backed down,” he admitted, “and, of course, everyone from the real estate agent to Debora and the kids were devastated. The realtor kept calling and asking me why? and I told her there were personal issues I didn’t care to discuss.”

  Two or three days later, on a Sunday in May, 1994, Mike was working at the North Kansas City Hospital when he got a call from his answering service. “I got a stat call, which seemed odd since I was on second call,” he remembered. “The doctor who was first up should have gotten the call. And then I knew something was wrong. I called the service and they said, ‘Call your neighbor. Your house is on fire!’”

  His neighbor on West Sixty-first Terrace was out of breath and panicky. She said Mike’s house was on fire. “I’m pretty sure that Debora and the kids aren’t there—but I’m worried about Boomer,” she said.

  Mike had no way of knowing who was or wasn’t inside his house. He ran to his car and raced home at “literally ninety miles an hour. There were seven
fire trucks out in front, and an ambulance—which really shook me up—was parked on Ward Parkway. I ran out there through a huge crowd of people. There was smoke pouring out of the house, and water—but I couldn’t see any flames.”

  Frantic, Mike called Debora on her cell phone and asked her where the kids were. Tim was playing in a soccer game, she said cheerfully, and she had the girls and Boomer in the car with her. When Mike told her the news, Debora hurried home and they watched firefighters mopping up the last of the blaze. She told Mike over and over how glad she was that she had given in to Tim’s pleas to take Boomer with them. He would surely have died in the fire.

  Although the family was safe, there was massive damage to the house. The fire had apparently started in the basement and raced up a laundry chute. Most of the basement was ashes, as was the kitchen. Flames had even reached Tim’s room on the top floor before firefighters managed to put the fire out. The damage estimate was $80,000, almost half of the $205,000 they had originally paid for the house. But for Mike, the worst part was the time, which seemed endless, when he didn’t know where his family was. He never wanted to live through such an experience again; the sight of the parked ambulance, waiting, perhaps, for one of his children, haunted him for weeks.

  The Farrars’ insurance company sent an arson investigator, who determined that the cause was a rather unusual electrical problem. The cord of a practically new dehumidifier had been wrapped around a copper water pipe so tightly that it had shorted through, apparently in three small areas. The pipe had gotten so hot that it had heated adjacent wood paneling to the burning point.

  Mike discussed the fire with friends, one of whom said flatly, “She set it.”

  “What do you mean?” he asked, puzzled.

  “Debora set it.”

  “No …” he said, disbelieving. “Of course she didn’t set it.”

  “Believe what you like—but I’m telling you that Debora set that fire to make you come back.”

  Mike didn’t buy that theory for a moment. Even if Debora had deliberately set fire to their house, she had no expertise in arson. He knew that arson investigators could spot an amateurish effort. He accepted the insurance company’s opinion and figured his friend had an overactive imagination.

  “I never really believed that Debora set that fire,” he said later. “We had to board the house up, of course, and Debora and the kids had nowhere to live. They moved into my apartment. We were reconciled by the fire as much as anything. A day or two later, we put the bid back on the house on Canterbury Court. The owner asked for more earnest money this time—quite a bit more earnest money—but I didn’t blame him.”

  Their mortgage insurance paid off the burned house. Almost everything Debora and Mike owned had been extensively damaged, too, if not by the flames then by smoke. Furniture, clothing, books, objets d’art. “We had fifty-seven pages of inventory,” Mike recalled. “You don’t realize what you own until you have a fire. We had to go through every room, every drawer. It took five months for us to go to stores, establish prices, replacement costs. They paid us about $48,000 on our possessions alone.”

  The insurance companies paid off without question, and Mike and Debora repaired the house and replaced their lost property. And they sold the Sixty-first Terrace house for $20,000 more than they had paid for it, so their plunge into the much more expensive estate-like home on Canterbury Court was not as financially ill-advised as Mike had feared.

  Mike, Debora, and their family moved the few blocks to Canterbury Court. It took only five minutes to go from one house to the other, although the first was in Missouri and the second in Kansas. The whole family took a trip to Disney World; then, on the first day of summer, June 21, 1994, settled into 7517 Canterbury Court.

  Where life had been bleak for Debora only a few months before, now things were looking up. Her husband had rejoined the family and they had a brand-new house—grander than anything she had ever dreamed of owning—new furniture, their own pool, a four-car garage. They had a red pickup truck and a Lexus—paid off with proceeds from the insurance—and Mike wanted to get a minivan to use on family vacations. “Debora didn’t want that,” he recalled. “She wanted a Toyota Land Cruiser, a $40,000 vehicle.” Again, Mike capitulated. If it would make her happy, they would all benefit.

  Mike felt optimistic about the future. Once he had committed himself to the new house and to a renewed and better marriage, he relaxed and enjoyed their second chance. He saw how beautiful their new home was, and he and Debora furnished the rooms to make them fit their needs exactly.

  “Things had calmed down,” he said of this period. “And they seemed better. In Debora’s defense, I think she really tried to change. And I thought—initially—that I was happy. The house was certainly nice. It was a wonderful neighborhood. We had a swimming pool. The kids were happy with that.”

  Debora had never been an enthusiastic cook, usually plunking down a pot of something or other—simple mid-western stews or spaghetti—on the table, or sending out for fast food. But she tried to become more involved in the actual running of her wonderful new home. And she was there for her children and their activities, driving endless car pools, buying birthday cakes, cheering Tim on in soccer or hockey, encouraging Lissa’s genuine promise as a ballerina. As far as all that went, Debora was a good mother. But too often she still failed to see the demarcation between mother and child in emotional disputes. It was almost as if she herself was a child.

  But Debora was trying. She even made an effort to clean house, although she would later admit that she had a hard time getting her children in gear to pick up their rooms. “Tim is the smartest of my children,” she said. “Kelly was next. Lissa will do whatever she needs to do to succeed—Tim and Kelly would do it if they felt like it. Tim’s room was absolutely immaculate, like a drill sergeant was going to inspect it. Kelly’s was a mess. One time, I told Tim I’d give him a new CD he wanted if he’d clean Kelly’s room. He cleaned it—but Kelly lost all her possessions. He just picked everything up and threw it away!”

  Mike tried to work shorter hours and spend more time with his family. He vowed that somehow his relationship with Debora would turn into a loving marriage and they would magically become a happy family. He was so eager for that to happen, in fact, that he made a promise to his children that he was not sure he could keep: he told them that he would never go away again, that they would be a family forever.

  He would regret that promise for the rest of his life.

  The “honeymoon phase” in the Canterbury Court house lasted only six months. After Christmas, all the old problems resurfaced. Mike summed it up accurately: “I made the mistake that so many people make—either they have a baby, or they buy a house, and they think that everything is going to change, that all the bad times will be left behind. But they never are.”

  Once again, Mike had to evaluate his marriage—his life. “It became clear to me that our relationship had not substantially improved. I still did not have any love for Debora, and I decided that I wanted a divorce.”

  As far as Mike could see, the new house was soon as messy as the old house had been; Debora had little interest in keeping it in order, and order and neatness mattered tremendously to Mike. Even more, he longed for the passion he had never found in his marriage. Reconciliation or not, she was no more interested in their sex life than she had ever been. And she had become a heavy, unattractive woman who paid no attention to how she dressed. She had cut her beautiful hair even shorter and looked sloppy and rumpled most of the time. Mike could barely remember the slender resident in her expensive sports car, with her long hair flying in the wind. And although she was keeping a lid on her tendency toward violent histrionics, he still felt Debora was a powder keg waiting for a match.

  Finally, Mike had come to believe that his role in their marriage was simply to give Debora status in their community and bring home a paycheck. When he had the time to visualize the life he longed for, it seemed he didn’t want
more than most men: a caring wife who appreciated his sexual interest in her; children who loved him; a clean house. But he had none of these things; he had only a steeper mortgage than he had before.

  He wanted out—badly.

  He did not, however, tell Debora of his decision; he dreaded a repeat of the scene in their old house. Besides, he, Debora, and Tim planned to go on a trip with a group from Pembroke Hill School that summer—a wonderful trip to the Amazon River and the Inca ruins in Peru. Mike knew perfectly well that if he told Debora beforehand that he wanted a divorce, all hell would break loose. “I thought it would make the trip miserable for us, and potentially miserable for the other people on the trip.”

  If the vacation in Peru went well, at least Tim would have memories of a last happy time with his mother and father together. So Mike kept his mouth shut. Knowing that eventually he would have to leave his marriage if he was to enjoy any happiness in life, he thought he could stay for another six months.

  7

  The Kansas City area of the mid-1990s was, like so many other parts of America, caught somewhere in a time warp. Anyone with imagination could close his eyes and see the covered wagons rumbling west over the prairie, which is not flat at all, but faintly undulating. A century and a half ago, the population of Kansas City, Missouri, was measured in the dozens, but merchants there thrived when it became the jumping-off place for pioneers and the California gold rush. Then as now, the roads west were surrounded by trees where creatures with watching eyes scanned the plains below. In the summer, the hawks are hidden. In the winter, they perch, their feathers ruffled against the frigid wind, about a hundred yards apart, dark gray birds a foot tall or more. It is said they can spot a mouse running for cover a half-mile away. Farmers welcome them and they are beautiful to watch in flight, raptors that kill so they may survive.