WATKINS, MINN. – Alayna Ertl lived the carefree life of a 5-year-old in a small central Minnesota town. She swung a hula hoop around her small frame and rode a bicycle on city sidewalks outside her tan-sided house. She followed around a cousin a few years older, whom she adored.
"Laynie," as family members called her, was a giggly and sometimes silly girl who loved to wear skirts and jewelry, a relative said, but also loved to play with her older brother on go-cart-type cars that their father built.
It's unfathomable to people in this stoplight-free town of fewer than 1,000 residents that the girl could end up the victim of a homicide. Unfathomable that the accused perpetrator is a man her family considered a friend, a man whom many in town came to recognize as he spent Friday nights this summer playing softball on Alayna's dad's team and tipping back a few drinks in the local bars.
"Everybody just wants to know why," Chris Cates said as she stood near the counter of Stein's Thriftway Foods, the local grocery store where she works. "What possesses a person that's a family friend? That's the main question that's hanging over the town."
It's a question reverberating throughout the state, too, as 25-year-old Zachary T. Anderson, of Monticello, sat in the Crow Wing County jail Monday on probable cause murder and kidnapping. Formal charges are expected Tuesday in Cass County, where Ertl's body was found.
Alayna was last seen when she was put to bed at 2 a.m. Saturday. Her mother, Kayla Ertl, discovered she was missing at 8 a.m., authorities said. Anderson, who was staying over at the Ertls' home, was also gone, along with a pickup truck belonging to Matt Ertl, Alayna's father.
Authorities found the missing truck about eight hours later on property owned by Anderson's family in Cass County. No one was inside the truck or in a cabin on the property near Motley, about 80 miles north of Watkins. Authorities used dogs to track Anderson to a wooded area a quarter mile from the cabin, located several miles down a gravel road from the entrance to Wilderness Park, a collection of small cabins and trailer homes nestled among tall trees.
Anderson, unarmed, did not flee or resist arrest and provided information that led authorities to Alayna's body in a swampy area a few hundred yards from the cabin.