Where I Lost Her

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Where I Lost Her Page 21

by T. Greenwood

“Wait, why aren’t you in uniform?” I ask. “What are you doing here? Where’s your cruiser?”

  He looks at me, and takes a deep breath. “Let’s just say you’re not the only one conducting an . . . independent . . . investigation.”

  “What?” And then it dawns on me. “Andrews doesn’t know you’re here?”

  He shakes his head once to confirm.

  “Now, please. Just tell me what you saw.”

  I can’t ride the bike into town; my legs are shaking, my whole body quaking. And so I ride back to camp, quietly put the bike in the shed. I am not ready to talk to Effie about this, and thankfully, it looks like she and Plum have taken a walk or something, and so I quickly get in my car and take off.

  At the Shop ’n Save, I loosen a cart from the tangled mess in the entrance and walk, dazed, through the electronic doors. It’s cold in here, freezing cold. I shiver in my thin cotton T-shirt and shorts. Goose bumps pimple my legs. I have to keep reciting the list like a mantra: French bread, flowers, gumdrops. I see Effie texted me earlier asking if I could pick up some eggs too, and I’m glad I have the car; they would never have survived the bike ride home.

  I am still trying to process what I saw in the barn and everything that Strickland told me, to read between the lines to figure out what exactly he was still keeping to himself. From the little bit I could gather from Strickland, Andrews didn’t want to hear anything more about Alfieri, had no interest in Sharp. After publicly denouncing me, shaming me, and denying the girl, he couldn’t exactly turn around and reinstate the search. It would have made him seem wishy-washy, not exactly a trait that people want from someone hoping to make chief someday. So when Ryan’s friend at the PD started digging stuff up on Sharp and Alfieri, he knew enough to go to Strickland first. And Strickland, who had initiated the search, wasting the taxpayers’ money on helicopters and scuba divers, had probably also been scolded. I am beginning to wonder if Ryan is right, that maybe Strickland only hopes to use all of this to save face, to salvage his own reputation.

  I go to the floral section and pick out a bunch of flowers from one of the buckets: daisies and snapdragons. Hot-pink carnations. It is an explosion of color. I impulsively put my face into the bouquet and inhale. But grocery store flowers never smell the way they look. The scent is artificial. Chemically enhanced. The water from the bucket drips down my arm, making me even colder.

  In the candy aisle I grab a bag of gumdrops, think about how I can get out to the swimming hole and leave them at the fairy house for Plum. I look down at my hand, the gauze filthy again, with a little bit of blood seeping through. I go to the pharmacy aisle next and buy more gauze, more tape. I’ll be lucky if this cut ever heals.

  As I am making my way to the dairy aisle for Effie’s eggs, I see Ruth, Mrs. Lund’s friend from the search.

  “Oh, hello,” she says. “Tess Mahoney, right?”

  “Waters,” I correct her, a knee jerking reflexively. But Waters, the name I took all those years ago, belongs to Jake. What will happen to it if I leave him? Will I lose it? Be forced to give it back? And who will I be then? “Sorry. It’s Tess Waters now. Hi.”

  “I didn’t expect you’d still be in town,” she says, clucking her tongue.

  I shrug.

  “I mean now that they’re saying there wasn’t a little girl and all,” she persists. Her face, which had seemed kind and grandmotherly before, appears angry now. Bitter. Her lipsticked mouth is pinched. “You got a lot of people worked up over this, you know. This is a small community. Like family.”

  “I know that,” I say. “Remember, I grew up here.”

  She shakes her head. “Then, of course, you understand.”

  I feel like telling her everything. Telling her that there is a registered sex offender living right where I found the girl. I want to tell her what I saw in that barn. I want to stand up and tell this whole goddamned town that the only reason why the investigation has been ditched is because of that asshole lieutenant’s pride.

  Instead, I push my cart past her, saying “Excuse me” as the edge of the cart catches on her purse.

  I am seething as I push the cart through the dairy aisle to get the eggs. When my phone dings, I am tempted to hurl it into the freezer with the frozen pizzas and leave it there.

  A text message.

  bad news call me asap

  Jake.

  Christ. I try to think about what it could be. Maybe the publishers pulled their offers while they waited for Charlie to decide. Maybe they all realized what an asshat he is and opted out. Maybe it has something to do with her, Jess. I don’t want to deal with any of this. None of it matters. All of it is so inconsequential. So trivial and inane.

  I cradle the cell phone between my shoulder and my ear as I grab a carton of eggs from the cooler. Out of habit, I flip the cardboard lid to check for any broken ones. They are all intact.

  “Hey,” I say when Jake answers.

  He sounds so far away. I put the eggs in the cart and use my hand to hold the phone properly.

  “What’s up?”

  There is nothing but silence, and I pull the phone away from my ear and study the screen to make sure we’re still connected.

  “Jake?”

  “It’s my mom,” he says, and he sounds strange. Like a boy.

  “Your mom?”

  There is nothing on the other end of the line. And then I can hear a stifled sob. “I’m at home,” he says.

  “At the house?”

  “In South Hadley,” he says. His parents’ house in western Mass.

  “Jake?”

  “She had an aneurysm,” he says. “She was doing the dishes. And she just fell over. Dad found her.”

  “Is she . . . okay?” I ask, feeling hot despite the cold freezer aisle.

  “She’s in the ICU,” he says. “It doesn’t look good, Tessie. I really need you to come down here.”

  “When are you coming back?” Plum asks, standing at the open window of the driver’s side of the car.

  “I’m not sure, honey,” I say, and reach out to touch her hair. It’s in two braids today, ending with two small puffs. “I promise I’ll be back as soon as I can.”

  “Pinkie swear,” she challenges, pushing her tiny little pinkie finger toward me. We hook them, and then she backs away from the car, starts cartwheeling across the lawn. Without Devin here to mow it, and with the major rain we got last week, it is overgrown already. A thick, plush carpet of bluegrass and clover.

  Effie comes out of the camp holding a small, insulated lunch box; the screen door slams behind her.

  “I made you a turkey sandwich. There’s iced tea in there and a couple of brownies too. Zu-Zu’s famous triple-chocolate fudge. Do you need anything else?”

  I take the bag from her and shake my head. “You didn’t need to do this. I could have just swung by Hudson’s and grabbed something on my way.”

  She bends down and leans into the window.

  “Do you know how to get there from here?” she asks.

  I nod. Jake and I have visited his folks on our way home from Vermont many times. It’s on the way. Just three hours, a straight shot down I-91.

  “Do you think she’s going to be okay?” Effie asks.

  “I don’t know. Jake didn’t have a lot of information. I think it happened last night. He drove up from New York and just got there this morning.”

  “Call me when you get there?” she says.

  I nod.

  “What are you going to do about . . .” she starts, and then sighs. “This?”

  I shake my head. I haven’t told her about what I saw in that barn, or that I saw Strickland out of uniform. I promised him I wouldn’t say a word. We have an agreement now. Strickland, suddenly my secret ally.

  “Ryan and the police have my phone number. I’m hoping this stuff with Shirley isn’t as bad as it seems, and I can come back up here in a day or two.”

  A day or two. It’s already been a week. I can’t let myself think ab
out how futile this is all beginning to seem. How the chances of it ending well seem to be growing smaller and smaller. The possibilities of what has happened to her growing fewer and fewer.

  “I love you,” she says. “Give Jake a hug from me.” I can see that it pains her to say this, to offer this affection. Effie is fiercely loyal. I know there’s a small part of her that thinks I shouldn’t go down there at all. That what he’s done (what he’s doing) is unforgivable. But she also knows how much I love Shirley.

  Leaving here always hurts. I have to remind myself as I round the lake that I am coming back. But still, as I drive by the spot (restored now to its pristine, unadulterated state), I can’t help but feel like I am betraying her. Leaving her behind. I also wonder, as the dirt road crushes under my tires and the wind blows through my open window, if Jake would do the same for me. Would he drop everything? Would he forget everything he was doing to go to me if I needed him?

  As I drive, my mind drifts, and I realize I am going 80, 85, 90 miles per hour. It’s easy on these desolate roads to forget. For your foot to grow heavy as your mind wanders.

  Jake said that she’s at Baystate Medical Center in Springfield. I’ve never been there. And it seems crazy to me, as I pass the exit for Holyoke, the city, not the college, that before this week I’d never given Holyoke, Massachusetts, a single thought. And now, here I was. This is where Sharp was living before he came to Gormlaith. And Alfieri was from Springfield, where I am headed. I try to focus on the reason for this trip. To forget about what I am leaving behind.

  I text Jake as soon as I park at the hospital, and he gives me directions to the ICU.

  I stop by the gift shop and pick up a bouquet of flowers, noting how much more expensive they are than the bunch I picked up for Effie just this morning. This morning feels so long ago, and now Gormlaith feels distant as well.

  Jake greets me in the ICU waiting room. I am overwhelmed by something when I see him, though I can’t pinpoint exactly what it is. My impulse is to hug him, to hold him. Like Effie, I am inclined to suspend all grievances, to let go, this emergency somehow negating what he has done.

  I once worked with a woman at Norton who was a horrid person. Everyone hated her. But when she got throat cancer, it was as though she’d received some sort of pass. Her bitchiness, her cattiness, her back-stabbing and abrasiveness were somehow forgiven. Cancer exonerated her from all her bad behavior. I felt guilty for getting irritated with her, though her worst qualities were amplified by her illness.

  Still, when he moves toward me, I don’t turn away. Instead, I hug him, smell the familiar scent of his shampoo. And I soften.

  “Where’s your dad?” I ask.

  “I sent him home to sleep,” he says. “He’s been up all night.”

  “So what happened?” I ask, and we sit down together in the uninviting plastic chairs in the waiting area. They are linked together, immoveable.

  He recites what it is that the doctors have told him. A massive cerebral aneurysm burst in her brain. It’s a miracle that she survived at all. Had she been alone in the house, had Dick not come into the kitchen the moment that he did, I’d have been coming down here for a funeral.

  “Can I see her?” I ask.

  “I think so,” he says, and asks the nurse at the desk if we can go in.

  I have loved Jake’s mother since the moment I met her. His father, a professor at Amherst, has always intimidated me. But Shirley is like a warm breeze. She is all air and sunshine. I have known this woman for almost twenty years. When I met her, she was younger than I am now.

  Seeing her like this makes me ache. And then everything disappears. My anger at Jake, everything that has been happening at the lake. This woman has been a mother to me when I had none. How could I have been so selfish to even consider for a moment not coming here to see her?

  She is sleeping, medicated. And it strikes me that hospitals have a tendency to strip you of everything that makes you human. Hair, skin, bones; the skeletal essence is all that remains in a hospital bed. There is no room in a hospital for the dirty jokes she loves and her full-body laughter. For the curlers she sometimes wears in her red hair halfway through the day before she remembers them. The hospital is inhospitable to a wink before the shot of Irish whiskey, which she drinks from an airplane bottle she keeps stashed in her bra.

  “Ma,” Jake says, reaching for her hand. And it is only paper-thin flesh, spotted with freckles, the architecture no different than any other hand. Though this is the hand that held mine when we got back from Guatemala. The hand that stroked my hair until I fell asleep. The hand that knitted the tiny blanket and sweaters and then later packed them all away in boxes stored on high shelves in our closet.

  I sit down in a chair next to the bed, terrified of accidentally disrupting the equipment that surrounds her: the whirring, humming, dripping machines that are keeping that blood clot from doing any more damage than it’s already done.

  I reach for her hand, and am startled by how cold it is.

  Jake is in the doorway; he seems to be waiting for me to tell him what to do.

  “Can you get me a coffee?” I ask, and he seems grateful for a project. For a mission.

  I hold on to Shirley’s hand as gently as I can and am aware of the softly beating pulse just beneath her skin. I study her face, which, without her careful makeup, seems paler, older. I have never watched her sleep before. I have only seen her as she usually is, a whirling body full of life and energy. Dancing in the kitchen to the imaginary songs that played inside her head. Digging in the soil of her garden.

  “Hi, Shirley,” I say, and my throat swells.

  Jake had explained that the ruptured aneurysm caused a bleed in her brain, effectively causing a stroke. That one moment she was fine, washing dishes, listening to the radio, and the next moment her body conspired against her. An explosion, a detonation in her brain. It was a live grenade she didn’t know was there, and it went off. She’s lucky to be alive, though it’s impossible to know yet the extent of the damage. If she makes it through the next twenty-four to forty-eight hours, she will then be transported to Boston to see neurology specialists. Because even if there is no significant damage done to her brain already, there is still a chance, an even greater chance, of this happening again. Her body could be riddled with these horrific landmines. It is all delicate, fragile, now. Dangerous.

  When Jake’s dad returns to the hospital, he looks a hundred years old. I mistake him for an elderly patient as he shuffles, head down, shoulders hunched, toward us.

  “Tessie,” he says. “Thank you for coming down.”

  His usually gruff voice, his caustic demeanor, is gone. It’s as if he himself were a walking aneurysm: puffed up, dangerous, always on the verge of bursting. But now, he is deflated. Bled out.

  He holds on to my hands and studies my face as though he’s forgotten who I am. And for just a moment, I feel a pity so deep it nearly swallows me. But it’s not pity at all. It’s a sort of odd longing. Out of place. Confused.

  In two years, Dick and Shirley will celebrate their fiftieth wedding anniversary. They met when Shirley was a student of Dick’s during his first year of teaching at college. It was a forbidden love affair, kept secret until she graduated. And even then, her father apparently came after Dick with a shotgun (literally, Shirley was from the Appalachian wilds of West Virginia, where shotgun weddings got their name) when Shirley announced that she was pregnant. They lost that first child, who was born with a hole in his heart, but went on to raise three boys (Jake being the youngest). They moved around a lot when the boys were little until Dick got his tenured position at Amherst and then they settled here. Forty-eight years. A million meals, a million conversations, a million head colds and family vacations and miles spent together in the car. A million dreams fulfilled or deferred. And yet, every time they were together, Dick looked at her like she was still that nineteen-year-old coed. It embarrassed Jake how his father mooned over his mother; when they held hand
s or Dick nuzzled into Shirley’s neck while she was trying to do something else, Jake would roll his eyes. Mortified like a twelve-year-old who has just caught his parents making out.

  But it was deeper than affection, deeper than the raw energy that seemed to pulse between them. There was a tenderness between them that I have never felt with Jake. Not once. And somehow, somewhere along the line, I must have gotten the wrong idea that he would one day look at me the way his father looks at his mother. Is it possible that I was that stupid? That I believed this was some sort of genetic inheritance held in a trust to be released, disbursed at a later date?

  “Dad, we’re going to get some dinner. Can we bring you anything?”

  Dick shakes his head and shrugs his shoulders. “I’m okay. I can get something in the cafeteria.”

  “Well, call me if you change your mind,” Jake says. “We’ll be back in a couple of hours. Text me if Mom wakes up.”

  Dick nods and looks at us, as though he is looking for something he’s lost. But it’s not here. And I think maybe it never was.

  We find a little pizza shop in a brick building near the hospital; next door is an Irish pub and grill.

  “Pizza?” Jake asks.

  I shake my head. “How about a drink instead? Looks like they’ve got burgers too.”

  We go inside and take a seat at the long wooden bar. There’s a Sox game on and a half dozen men in Sox caps grumbling. None of them acknowledge us.

  I am grateful to be sitting side-by-side rather than across from each other. It’s easier this way to avoid looking at him.

  “What happened?” he asks, motioning to my hand.

  “Bagel injury,” I say. “So, what did Charlie decide?”

  Charlie and he are supposed to make a decision by tomorrow. Part of me wonders if Jake will be conducting business from the hospital waiting room, from the parking lot. It must have killed him to have to leave New York in the middle of the biggest deal of his career.

 

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