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MURDER OF A PROPHET–
THE DARK SIDE OF UTAH POLYGAMY
Main Page of Murder of Prophet
Also see first chapter of A Teenager's Tears: When Parents Convert
to Polygamy

Marvin surveyed his
kneeling family, their heads and shoulders bowed, not saying a word, waiting to
see who first would be permitted to rise. The only sounds came from the
whimpering of Carolyn's three-month-old baby girl. With her head still bowed,
Carolyn unbuttoned her dress, pulled aside the bra and began nursing the baby.
Marvin Heywood said, "Amen," and slowly rose
to his feet while his five wives and thirty-one children remained kneeling, all
facing the direction of the sacred Salt Lake Temple. In the Heywood home,
morning family prayer was a daily ritual and at the end of each kneeling prayer,
no one was permitted to stand without first getting Marvin's permission.
It was the Sabbath and the wives and children were
clothed in their Sunday best which meant their faces were clean and the ankle
length, cotton dresses of the girls and long-sleeved shirts of the boys had been
washed but not necessarily ironed. Marvin's family survived only a notch above
the necessities of life. When they could, the wives worked at odd jobs, mostly
housework, otherwise their time was taken up giving birth to children, changing
diapers, repairing the family station wagon, and working at keeping their own
home. Marvin Heywood was the exception among polygamists rather than the rule.
The bulk of the Heywood food came from garbage
Dumpsters behind grocery stores. Three times a week two wives with three or four
of the oldest children gathered behind the local grocery stores and collected
discarded vegetables, out-of-date bread, and damaged can goods. But with
advanced technology, large supermarket chains enclosed their Dumpsters, which
put the Heywood women out of business.
Out of desperation, Ramona, the eldest wife, approached
the produce manager of a new supermarket and asked if he would save his old
produce for her goats and pigs. He was a large man with a bulbous nose and stern
face. At first he hesitated, but after scrutinizing Ramona's paltry appearance,
surrounded by three poorly dressed but well behaved kids, he agreed to place
lettuce, apples, bananas, or whatever, in boxes so she could pick them up on
Tuesdays and Fridays of each week.
During her bedtime prayers, Ramona asked God to bless
the produce manager. Eventually, she discovered his name was Mac and routinely
instructed her children at bedtime, "Don't forget to ask God to bless
Mac."
Last Christmas, she and the children made Mac a large
Christmas card out of colored paper and bits of ribbon. The children drew
pictures of Christmas trees, snowmen, and goats. They all chipped in with their
nickels, dimes, and quarters to buy a $6.99 brown and yellow tie for Mac and
they wrapped it in glossy green paper with a red ribbon. When eight-year-old
Judy handed Mac the package, he said it was the finest present he had ever
received. Judy beamed with delight.
Then suddenly Mac was transferred to another store far
away, too far for Ramona to drive. His replacement told Ramona he didn't have
time to save vegetables for goats, and he wasn't in the welfare business.
The family had grown dependent upon Mac. More often
than not on Tuesdays and Fridays when Ramona and the kids had picked up the
precious boxes, they found apples and oranges in perfect condition, every bit as
good as the ones on the shelves. Mac acted disinterested and aloof, but she knew
he cared and she didn't think for a minute he believed they raised goats because
every once in awhile, hidden in the bottom of the boxes, they found bags of
candy.
It had taken much courage to approach Mac. Now Ramona
didn't know if she could do it a second time. Mac's replacement sneered at her
in disgust. The guilt she felt from his cold stare was more than she could take.
Marvin encouraged her to solicit other grocery stores and guaranteed that God
would prepare the way by softening the hearts of the produce managers. This was
Marvin's way of placing upon Ramona the burden of providing food for the family.
If she could not find another Mac, they would have to make do with charity from
the other group members and the meager stipend Marvin received from the
priesthood. Reprimanding Ramona, he said, "Public welfare is out of the
question," his chief fear being found out a polygamist by the government.
What he didn't know is that because of their conspicuousness, the government
already knew how they lived and was watching and waiting to see if Marvin's
wives and children were being neglected or abused. The Division of Child and
Family Services remained poised, eager to pounce once a complaint, no matter how
trivial, could be substantiated.
Marvin had taught them obedience. They had been taught
it was he, by virtue of his priesthood authority, who would supervise their
resurrection on judgment day. Without him, they had no celestial exaltation, no
opportunity to live with God one day. Therefore, after each kneeling family
prayer, in a habit uniquely adopted by Marvin, he methodically determined who
should rise first. It was no mere trivial ritual, but a symbolic exercise of
judgment and resurrection. Consequently, Marvin carefully weighed the conduct,
obedience, and usefulness of each family member before allowing him or her to
rise and be "resurrected" each day.
As he surveyed the backs and elbows of his family,
Marvin finger-brushed his bristly, light brown mustache. It was the same color
as the little hair remaining around his ears and on the back of his neck.
Standing before the mirror he routinely preened and trimmed for an hour three
times a week, thinking that he and his mustache were comparable to Errol Flynn,
his favorite movie actor. But Marvin in no way physically resembled Errol Flynn,
not even with the help of his beloved mustache; it was out of character with his
pink, square balding head that matched his fleshy, rectangular torso. He
routinely wore brown baggy pants and a loose fitting, unstarched white dress
shirt that never looked quite clean. This morning he sported a brown and yellow
striped necktie smudged with dried food stains.
To others, Marvin looked unkept, but because of his
brilliant and articulate knowledge of the scriptures, his shabbiness was passed
off as eccentricity. Marvin's research of old church doctrines and their
application to modern times was unparalleled by any other member of the group.
In fact, he was mentor to the serious students of the mysteries of Mormonism and
they gathered around him like groupies to attend his study sessions and fireside
chats. Marvin, a "man of words," was a self-made scholar who could
always ferret out doctrine to justify any prudent contingency. But when it came
to physical labor, he made a dramatic ceremony with gasps, groans, and feigned
backaches.
Marvin could see that kneeling Carolyn was
uncomfortable nursing her baby. It tempted him to allow her to rise first, but
he did not, because he was afraid it would send to the others the wrong message.
He was not ready to forgive her of her impertinence and disobedience. The
swelling about her eyes had disappeared, but a black and blue mark could still
be detected on her cheek bone. A fortnight ago, she had gotten hysterical and
slandered him unmercifully until he smacked the side of her head with the butt
of his hand. To hit anyone, let alone a woman, insulted his breeding, since
Marvin considered himself a humble man of God. It angered him more that she had
provoked him into violence than her scolding, unprecedented verbal attack. But
her haranguing was more than he could endure. Suddenly, with clenched fists, he
flailed with all his might until she lay bleeding and unconscious at his feet.
As he towered over her, glaring down with contempt, he almost shouted, "you
filthy bitch," but he would not allow himself to stoop to profanity. He
told himself she had it coming. After all, he could not stand there idly and
allow her to call him a "no good father who refused to work and feed his
children." He had tried to explain in his most ingratiating, academic
demeanor that if she had sufficient faith, her children would not be hungry, but
she kept shouting and tearing at her clothes like a maniac. It was for her own
good that he smote her.
And this is what he told Brother Harold, his priesthood
head and prophet, who at first was upset, but later agreed. " Keep her
inside until the bruises disappear," he reluctantly advised.
Marvin gazed down at Cynthia, his youngest wife. He had
married her when she was sixteen. Since their marriage, she had mothered four
lovely children and at age twenty-five still retained her girlish figure, while
his other wives had accumulated ugly pounds. Even now, Cynthia, three months
pregnant, didn't show. He thought of her as his geisha wife, one who had been
raised, trained and prepared to be an affectionate, obedient plural wife.
Cynthia gave him much pleasure.
Marvin desired at least two more wives. After Cynthia,
he concluded that young wives, at the age of puberty or soon thereafter, made
the best wives. Between fourteen- and sixteen-years old they were suggestible
and malleable and had not yet formed false opinions or sexual inhibitions. At
that tender age, he formulated in his deluded mind, he could indoctrinate them
with the servilities of womanhood and the idiosyncrasies of service to husband
and priesthood. He could teach them that copulation is what bonds a woman to her
husband. And he recalled, when teaching these things to Cynthia, how virile and
potent he felt in her presence, and the feeling of omnipotence that engulfed
him. It was as if he were a God, her God, with the power to give life or take
life.
Marvin did not know of the medical books describing
pedophilic behavior and that his thoughts and acts were in classic conformance
with those perverse aberrations. Nor did he realize that his demented mind
produced lewd thoughts and images of children to cover up his great agony of
sexual inadequacy experienced around mature, adult women. Naive combatants of
child molest reasoned that prostitution would alleviate and defuse the
pedophile. But how could a super sex symbol like a prostitute erase that
inability to perform? Marvin sensed that adolescent girls could not detect those
feelings of inadequacy and therefore he performed without fear of exposure. He
knew that what he was doing was wrong, but because his confidence was uplifted
and exhilarated while in the pedophilic mode, he rationalized around his
sickness and suppressed his guilt.
Religion and plural marriage provided the means in
which to accomplish his erotic departure from the norms. It was not planned, it
just worked out that way. Like thousands before him and thousands that would
follow, he found opportunity in religion that could be twisted to conform with
his distorted desires. So intense were his aberrations that he believed his own
delusions, thinking his acts were sanctioned by God. But where Marvin lusted for
little girls, others lusted for power and money, and they used religion like a
pointed loaded gun to coerce and manipulate the world around them.
Overwhelmed by satisfaction induced by Cynthia and
thinking he could triple his erotic pleasure, Marvin approached the fathers of
two sweet lasses and informed them that the Lord had made it known to him that
their dainty and charming daughters should be his wives, surmising that his
exalted apostleship would be flattering enough to induce the fathers to agree.
He was deeply disappointed when his virtuous overtures were rejected by the two
spirited young ladies. He couldn't understand why they didn't leap at the chance
to share in his elite station or why their fathers did not exhort and cajole
their compliance. But the fathers left the decision to the girls who said that
if and when the Lord revealed to them that they belonged to Marvin Heywood, and
only then, maybe they would consider it.
Piqued and perturbed by their impertinence, he
suggested that Harold might command the fathers and the girls in the name of the
Lord to acquiesce to his revelation. But Harold defended the free agency of the
girls and that ended the matter.
Marvin blamed the insolence of the two young girls and
the younger generation in general on the liberal climate that had been
percolating in the group since Harold had opened the doors to new converts
fifteen years ago. At that time, the McCallister group had approached Harold
offering to merge, suggesting that Harold be the spiritual leader while Bruce
McCallister handled the economic pursuits. But Harold rejected that offer. The
McCallisters were suspected of inbreeding with cousins and half-sisters, and
Harold wanted no part of it.
The McCallister group, a closed ultra-private society,
had reached the point where they had no other place to go for wives, but inside
their own families. They told themselves that their McCallister blood was noble
and pure, so it would be alright to marry within the fifth consanguinity. And so
the anomaly was permitted, but only among the hierarchy. The McCallister boys
took for wives their nieces, cousins, and half-sisters. Harold rightly predicted
that one day they would be scandalized and branded with the indelible iron of
incest. And he predicted that soon they too, as a group, would be faced with the
same damning perplexities, unless they opened their doors to new converts and
welcomed fresh blood.
So far, the Barnett sect had married each other's
daughters and sisters until there was none left without crossing over that taboo
line. So when Harold threw open the doors, the new converts brought with them
liberal ideas like fashionable clothes, sporty cars, airplanes, and luxury
homes. The more affluent frequented nice restaurants, attended movies and
theater. A shyster type convert penetrated the Barnett ranks, a breed of
businessmen proficient in the scriptures as well as the ways of the world. They
were rainbow chasers teeming with schemes and conspiracies designed to separate
honest men from their wealth.
In a matter of a few years, except for the
fundamentalist-born who held fast to the old ascetic ways, one could not tell a
Barnett polygamist from a gentile or orthodox Mormon. What a shame, Marvin
thought, if fundamentalism were still managed like in the past, there would be
no insubordination and those two pretty lasses he coveted would be his wives,
and very pregnant.
The Grass Valley group in southwestern Colorado, he
mused, had not deviated from the old ways. Their women still favored the
fashions of the twenties and thirties, and wore with pride the homespun,
outdated ankle-length dresses. Their long hair, neat and clean with frilly bows
and conservative combs, imitated the coiffures of the twenties.
The Grass Valley women, in many ways resembled the
modest, Pennsylvania Amish. Marvin found their bland appearance paradoxically
appealing because their outward semblance was devoid of sexual intimidation,
therefore unthreatening to his masculinity. The homely attire also bore
collateral advantages. It discouraged erotic interest from outsiders, detoured
waywardness, and tended to unite the women behind the priesthood. Besides, he
satirically thought, when you get a woman all soaped up in a bathtub, you can't
tell by looking if she is rich or poor, sophisticated or naive, polygamist or
monogamist.
According to Marvin Heywood, the Barnett Group should
be more like the Grass Valley people. At Grass Valley, when a maiden matured and
was capable of giving birth, she presented herself to the priesthood and was
placed by divine inspiration into the family where she belonged. A difference in
age between the husband and the wife was of no consequence. Therefore a
sixteen-year-old girl married to a fifty-year-old man was not uncommon. In some
sects, when a wife was no longer of child bearing age, if the husband could
influence the prophet, he took a new younger wife. It was the raising up of a
righteous seed that was important, not lust. In essence, the infallible
priesthood arranged for all women to unite with righteous men and raise up, in
the name of Jesus Christ, a superior race of offspring. The parent's reward
would come in the next life where they would rule as kings and queens, priests
and priestesses over a subservient, white-skinned nation.
Marvin's melancholy mind went back to the women and
children kneeling on the floor. "Cynthia," he said, "you may
rise--and your children with you."
Carolyn and Rachel were among the last left kneeling.
Carolyn, because she was still being punished, and Rachel, the third oldest
daughter of Luwana his second wife, because he liked the shape of her buttocks.
Rachel, who had physically matured early, would soon be sixteen. Marvin paid
particular attention to her development. Of all his daughters, she was the most
liberal, easily influenced, and his favorite. For some reason he didn't mind her
open-mindedness, a puzzling reaction on his part considering that in every other
respect he was a staunch conservative. Nor did he require her to dress as
modestly as the other girls.
After everyone was finally standing and the mothers
separated to go about their pre-church chores, Marvin approached Rachel who was
changing a stinky diaper on a sibling, and said in his fatherly voice,
"Rachel, there is something I need to talk to you about, would you please
come with me?"
Rachel closed the bedroom door behind her and stood
patiently while her father sat on the bed facing her. She knew the routine. Her
long auburn hair, held together with a silver comb, had been piled high on her
head, exposing the delicacy of her ears and neck. Her flawless tanned skin
allowed dark full eyebrows and pink lips to dominate her pretty face. The nose,
turned up pixie-like, give her profile a Scottish richness.
"How did it go last night?" he asked.
"Did you do as I instructed?"
"Yes, Father," she replied.
"Did he touch you on the breasts?"
"Yes."
"Did he try to put his hands inside your
blouse?" She was not offended by his questions; they had discussed
beforehand what might happen. This was her third home date with Kevin
Crutchfield.
"Yes, but I made him stop just like you told
me," she said with a smile.
"Good girl, maybe next time we'll let him touch
some skin. How did he act?"
"He started breathing real hard, was real nervous,
and I think he almost asked me to marry him." She smiled, pleased with her
accomplishments.
"Good, good," Marvin responded excitedly.
"It sounds as if it won't be much longer before he asks me for your hand in
marriage. That's when I tell him about the dowry."
Rachel nervously shuffled her feet. "Father, the
dictionary says it's the woman who gives the man a dowry."
"Not in this case, honey," Marvin answered
with a grin over his yellow teeth as he jauntily brushed his Errol Flynn
mustache. "If Kevin wants my daughter for a plural wife, he's going to pay
a dowry. After a couple more dates he'll want you so bad, he'll think $3000 is a
bargain."
"But, Father, I don't want to marry Kevin, his
breath stinks."
"You won't have to marry him, honey, I know of
someone else interested in you who has more money than Kevin. Rachel,"
Marvin commanded, "take off your blouse and bra so I can see how you are
developing."
"No, please."
Her opposition always startled him. After all, he was
her God and she should not question any of his commands. But Rachel was the
exception, the one he allowed to think for herself. She was the adventurous one,
who didn't hesitate to accept a dare and seemed to mature socially at the same
pace as her body. But she was sickened by his advances and recoiled as he
reached with his hand.
And then he pulled a magazine from under the pillow
that had been turned to a photograph of a naked women. He handed the magazine to
Rachel, "This is what we hope you will look like when you're
eighteen."
She glanced at the photograph of a young, dreamy-faced
brunette lying naked on a bed. After a quick embarrassing look, she handed the
magazine back and did her best to feign indifference. Finally, after what seemed
like hours but was less than three minutes, he told her she could go back
downstairs. As she started to leave, he said, "Tell Cynthia to come here, I
want to talk to her.
A few minutes later Cynthia stepped into the bedroom.
"Lock the door," he ordered while peeling off his shirt.
After each noxious episode with her father, Rachel
suffered mood changes shifting from abject guilt to a sense of omnipotence over
men. When she entered the family room, depression overcame her. Two adolescent
girls sat against one wall thumbing through a stack of coloring books. One of
the girls held Carolyn's crying baby between her legs, rocking back and forth.
Tears ran down his cheeks, mixing with snot from his nose. Three boys played
with toy cars in a corner. One of the boys ran his car through a frayed tear in
the carpet, pretending it was a gully. The flowered, threadbare carpet hadn't
been cleaned for weeks and reeked of urine.
Two tattered overstuffed sofas and two overstuffed
chairs, gifts from friends, were as frazzled as the carpet. Tina, Marvin's
fourth wife, sat in one of the sofas, wrestling with a screaming, squirming
little boy as she attempted to change his diaper. The rest of the furniture
consisted of two rickety wooden chairs, one lay on its side and a kneeling boy
used the other as a desk for his coloring book.
This is how each day goes, Rachel thought to herself,
unchanging from dawn to dark--rags, dirty diapers, and urine stench. And this is
my future if I stay.
She had to agree that Brother Harold was a kind,
likeable man, but wondered if he had any idea that her father was teaching her
how to tantalize and seduce rich men until they ached with a compulsion to bed
her, and how he traded her affections for a dowry. She didn't think he knew or
would approve, and many times after Marvin had pulled her blouse to one side so
he could look down at her chest, she had been tempted to tell Brother Harold.
She was certain that Brother Harold would end her father's debauchery, but if
she informed on him, it might taint her chances to leave the group. The police
and Division of Family Services might be notified, making matters worst,
thwarting her chances to escape. She decided she could handle her father.
Convinced that her body was the ticket out of the
group, she promised herself she would defect as soon as she found the right man.
When she was ready, she would not run to the LDS Church like so many other
fundamentalist traitors. She longed for excitement and adventure. In the
meantime, if things got worse, she could always earn money posing like the women
in her father's nudity magazines. And then in a temperament of self-deprecation,
she pictured herself even further down the road of degradation. "I'll show
him. I'll become a prostitute and make great sums of money." And as this
thought lingered, she raised her fantasized future up a notch, and vowed not to
become a common street harlot, but a fancy, expensive women of the night.
Disgusted with the dirty dishes piled high in the sink,
the perpetual trash heap on the kitchen floor, the moldy food in the fridge and
the mice smells, Rachel walked out to the front porch hungering for fresh air.
The September sun warmed the morning air. She pulled
the comb from the auburn swirl and shook her head, glossy hair cascading down
around her shoulders. She stood on the wooden platform that served as a porch
and admired the neighbor's beautiful manicured yard next door; their garden
overflowed with squash, cabbage, and tomatoes in the back yard. During the
summer, the Samaritan neighbor unselfishly shared his garden bounty with the
Heywoods. Someday--Rachel told herself--I will have a nice home and garden and
will spend my mornings talking with the little birds, smelling the bright gold
and red flowers, munching on juicy red tomatoes."
Her reverie was shattered by one of her younger
brothers running and laughing and jumping over a pile of rotting lumber in the
front yard. Another brother ran in pursuit, shaking a stick in his hand as tears
gushed from his eyes. She looked around at her own front yard. There was no
grass or flowers, only hard packed dirt and thirsty weeds fed by rainwater.
Trash and debris lay everywhere. Two old cars with flat tires rusted away where
a flower patch once grew. The neighbors on both sides had built sturdy, six foot
fences, not to block her view, but to block their view of the Heywood mess.
The exhilaration of fresh air and flowers left her.
Taking a lock of auburn hair, she wiped away the tiny rivulets running down her
cheeks and stepped back into the house.
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