Three Things I Know Are True

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Three Things I Know Are True Page 11

by Betty Culley

one giant person

  with huge listening ears.

  If it is possible

  for Clay to sit up

  even straighter,

  he does.

  My mom asked me and Jonah to go up in the attic

  and get down the box of Halloween decorations.

  She has separate bins marked for each holiday

  Valentine’s Day

  Easter

  Fourth of July

  Halloween

  Thanksgiving

  Christmas

  that she stores up there.

  It is so Clay

  to list the holidays

  in order.

  When we got up there,

  I went to find the Halloween box for Mom.

  Then I heard Jonah say,

  Lookee what I found on the windowsill.

  When I turned around,

  he was holding the gun.

  Clay looks past Mom’s lawyer

  like he is seeing it all happen.

  He takes a deep breath

  and at the end of the breath

  he makes a sound.

  I look over at the woman

  who is recording the trial,

  and her fingers are still moving

  over her black recording machine.

  I wonder if there is a special button

  for the sound Clay just made.

  I said to him,

  Jonah, put it down.

  It could be loaded.

  You know my dad.

  Mom’s lawyer walks closer to Clay

  in the witness box.

  Why did you say that, Clay?

  Did you know it was loaded?

  Through the spaces

  I made in my bangs,

  I see Clay’s eyes

  jump to his father,

  but Mom’s lawyer moves

  to the right,

  so that he’s blocking

  Clay’s view of his father

  and his father’s view

  of Clay.

  No, I didn’t know for sure.

  But I told Jonah,

  my dad always says

  What good is a gun

  if it isn’t loaded?

  OBJECTION, hearsay.

  Clay’s father’s lawyer gets to her feet.

  Mom’s lawyer stands up, too.

  Admission of a party opponent, your Honor,

  he says.

  Overruled,

  the judge says to Clay’s father’s lawyer,

  because it’s the statement of Arthur LeBlanc,

  who is the defendant, it’s not hearsay.

  I want to hear what the boy

  has to say.

  Please continue,

  she says to Clay.

  Clay clasps his hands together,

  and stares

  down at them

  for a few seconds

  before he speaks.

  Then Jonah laughed and twirled the gun

  around his fingers.

  Is this what you call a six-shooter, Clay?

  He tried to twirl it around in a circle

  over his head.

  Then he stuck it in the front of his pants,

  and said,

  All right then, I got it safe in my holster, Clay,

  oh ye of little faith.

  I take a quick peek

  through my bangs

  at Clay’s father’s lawyer.

  She is on the edge

  of her seat.

  I said to him,

  Jonah, why don’t you just put it back

  where you found it.

  And Jonah said,

  Clay, you know I am a master at the game of chance.

  WHO defies the odds by performing amazing feats

  of daring?

  WHO climbs the cell phone tower barefoot?

  WHO falls off the roof and doesn’t even get a scratch?

  When Clay says the word WHO,

  he says it just like Jonah did,

  even bouncing his head

  with each WHO.

  Then I asked him

  to give me the gun.

  But he didn’t, he wouldn’t.

  He laughed, and said,

  You really think your daddy would leave

  a loaded gun where itty-bitty kiddies like us

  could find it?

  And blow our little brains out.

  Then he took it out of his pants

  and pointed it at the side of his head.

  All the sound

  except Clay’s voice

  has been sucked out

  of the courtroom.

  I can almost hear

  the flies

  moving in the lights.

  Everyone waits

  for Clay

  to speak.

  Even the court reporter’s fingers

  are frozen in midair

  over her machine.

  There was a shot then,

  so loud, so loud,

  I didn’t know what had happened.

  When I opened my eyes,

  it was Jonah,

  not me,

  on the floor.

  Clay covers his own eyes,

  takes a breath

  that is loud enough

  to be heard

  by “the court,”

  then uncovers them.

  Mom’s lawyer

  waits a moment

  before he speaks.

  Clay, do you have any idea

  why your father’s loaded gun

  was on the windowsill

  in the attic?

  Clay did not need

  to take an oath

  to tell the truth.

  Mom told Dad that squirrels

  were getting into

  her bird feeder

  in the backyard.

  Dad said he’d

  take care of them.

  Thank you. No further questions,

  Mom’s lawyer says.

  Mom turns

  to look at me

  for the first time

  since Clay started talking.

  She raises her eyebrows

  and shakes her head.

  I know exactly

  what she’s thinking,

  because it’s what

  I’m thinking, too—

  Hard as it is to hear,

  it isn’t worse than

  what we had imagined,

  and there were a few minutes,

  when Clay spoke Jonah’s words,

  that it felt like the old Jonah

  was here with us

  in the courtroom.

  Cross

  Clay’s father’s lawyer

  now has a chance

  to “cross-examine” Clay.

  It seems to be a way

  to kick someone

  when they’re down—

  but that’s how it works

  in a court.

  The lawyer

  is a woman hired by

  their insurance company.

  She is wearing

  “conservative court clothes” too—

  dark-gray skirt, dark-gray jacket,

  and pale-pink shirt

  the same shade as Mom’s.

  I have a few questions for you, Clay,

  she says.

  You said that Jonah picked up the gun himself?

  Yes.

  Did I hear you say you told Jonah

  that the gun was likely loaded?

  Yes, but I don’t think . . .

  This is a yes-or-no question. Again, did I hear you say

  you told Jonah that the gun was likely loaded?

  Yes.

  Did he acknowledge your warning?

  I don’t know what you mean by acknowledge.

  Let me put it another way. Is it true that even after you told Jonah

  that the gun was likely loaded, and to put it back where he found it,

  he neverthel
ess continued to handle this gun that was not his?

  Yes.

  Thank you, no more questions,

  she says.

  The judge tells Clay

  he can step down,

  and Clay goes to sit

  in the chair

  between his mother and father.

  When he is seated, I see

  Gwen lay a hand on his shoulder,

  the one that is closest to her,

  and when she does that,

  I can feel Clay’s bony shoulder

  in my hand, too.

  Clay’s father,

  waiting his own turn

  for the witness box,

  makes believe

  there is nothing but air

  between him and Gwen.

  Arthur

  Clay’s father has a name,

  besides “Clay’s dad,” “Mr. LeBlanc”

  or “President of Bugz Away Pest

  Management.”

  He spells it for the court.

  A-R-T-H-U-R L-E-B-L-A-N-C

  A-R-T-H-U-R was once someone’s baby.

  Did they pick A-R-T-H-U-R because

  A was first in the baby name book?

  Did they hope their kid would do

  great things,

  like pull a sword out of a stone,

  as easily as I took the tooth

  from Mom’s mouth?

  Mom’s lawyer carries the gun

  over to the witness box.

  I can’t see A-R-T-H-U-R without

  also

  seeing the gun.

  Mom’s lawyer asks him a question.

  Is this your gun?

  After that, all I know

  is that a membrane grows

  over my eyes and ears,

  like on a waterlogged beaver,

  but it is not clear,

  because I can’t hear anything

  except a wavelike sound,

  thudding over and over.

  I realize it is not water,

  but my own heartbeat.

  The back of the bench

  is hard and straight

  and it reminds me

  of the seats on the merry-go-round

  at the Maddigan State Fair.

  When I was little,

  I insisted on the seats

  instead of the horses.

  I’d tell Dad

  I KNEW the horses weren’t real.

  Of course Jonah had to stand,

  not sit,

  on the horse’s back.

  Mom was mad

  she didn’t get her photo

  of me and Jonah

  sitting on horses.

  I am spinning now

  and the room is getting dark,

  and I don’t have to see anyone

  or anything

  anymore.

  I remember that all I had to eat today

  was a slice of fudge,

  and I feel myself falling,

  and I simply let myself

  go.

  Then I am moving

  through the air,

  and I am crying,

  Leave me on the merry-go-round,

  oh, please

  leave me on the merry-go-round.

  Maybe I’m not crying

  out loud, though,

  because no one answers.

  When I can see again,

  I am in the front seat of Elinor’s car.

  Elinor feeds me leftover cold

  McDonald’s fries,

  and warm Pepsi,

  and they taste so good.

  Mom and the security officer

  watch me sip the Pepsi

  through a straw,

  like I’m the most talented person

  they know.

  I dip a fry in a paper cup of ketchup

  Elinor hands me.

  I’m fine now,

  I tell Mom.

  You can go back in.

  I’ll take her home,

  Elinor says.

  Go,

  I tell Mom,

  and she does.

  Elinor and I follow the river

  back to DEAD END.

  The right side

  of my head is sore,

  in the same place

  Jonah has his boo-boo.

  Elinor sees me touching it

  and wincing.

  You hit

  the edge of the bench

  when you fell,

  she says.

  When we get back

  to Number 23,

  Elinor leads me into

  the little room

  off the kitchen.

  I get into bed

  and Elinor gives me an ice pack

  for my head

  and a cup of milky hot chocolate.

  She stands there while I drink it,

  and takes the cup back.

  Try to rest, now, Liv,

  she says,

  I’ll be in the kitchen

  if you need anything.

  She throws the scratchy blanket

  over me,

  and it weighs me down.

  I hear Dr. Kate and Vivian

  talking

  in Jonah’s room,

  and I wonder

  why Dr. Kate is here,

  when it’s not

  Team Meeting.

  I never go to bed

  without first checking

  on Jonah,

  but now I lie here

  in the middle of the afternoon,

  the merry-go-round taking me

  round in circles

  until I’m asleep.

  Snorkel Man

  It is getting dark out

  when I wake up,

  and I am still in my

  court clothes.

  I hurry to the bathroom.

  And when I come out,

  Mom is at the kitchen table.

  How did it go with Mr. LeBlanc?

  I ask her.

  Mr. LeBlanc

  said he didn’t go inviting people

  into his attic

  to handle his personal property.

  And told the judge

  HIS son

  knows all about

  gun safety.

  What is happening in court

  tomorrow?

  I ask her.

  The firearms expert

  and Dr. Kate are testifying.

  Please eat something

  in the morning

  before we go—

  besides fudge.

  We need to talk about

  one other thing, Liv.

  Mom checks the pale-pink polish

  on each fingernail.

  She is quiet for so long

  I think she’s forgotten

  what she wants to say.

  Then she speaks.

  Clay is missing.

  After the judge

  called it a day,

  he was supposed to wait

  by their car,

  while they talked to their lawyer

  in the courthouse,

  but when they got outside,

  he wasn’t there.

  The police at the courthouse,

  couldn’t find him, either.

  He never came home.

  I saw Clay’s dad outside

  with a flashlight.

  It’s like he just disappeared.

  Why are you telling me this?

  I ask Mom.

  Do you think I know where Clay is?

  Do you?

  I don’t. I have no idea where he is.

  I am distracted by a new noise

  coming from Jonah’s room.

  What’s that sound?

  I ask Mom.

  It’s a sleep thing

  for Jonah

  that came today.

  Phoebe can explain.

  Everything happened

  while I was on the merry-go-round.

 
; Clay disappeared, and

  Jonah got a new friend.

  I go into Jonah’s room.

  He’s all tired out

  after his big trip

  to Headwater Courthouse.

  He is napping with a

  plastic mask

  over his face,

  and he smells like the lotion

  Phoebe rubs on his skin.

  Phoebe says that

  after Dr. Kate had the talk

  with Dr. Liv,

  she ordered another machine

  for Jonah

  for when he sleeps—

  Snorkel Man.

  When Jonah is down underneath

  the river,

  holding his breath,

  Snorkel Man

  blows air

  in and out

  of his lungs,

  one deep-sea diver

  to the other.

  See how good Jonah’s

  numbers are now,

  Phoebe says.

  It’s true.

  No loud EEKS

  or flashing red lights.

  Snorkel Man is on the job.

  I stretch out on the recliner

  next to Jonah’s bed.

  Phoebe has her hair

  in a waterfall today—

  it sprays out

  from the top of her head

  in all directions.

  Take a rest, Liv.

  I hear you had quite the day,

  she says.

  It’s pretty clear

  that everyone has

  talked to each other

  about my day

  in court.

  They look at me

  like I might topple over

  at any moment.

  Mom brings me a bowl

  of Elinor’s latest casserole—

  ham, cheese, peas, and noodles—

  and a glass of water.

  They all want to feed me

  now.

  Where is Clay?

  The little animal inside me

  has no manners.

  It makes a pouty face.

  Its birthday

  is coming

  and Clay has disappeared.

  How will it get its

  present?

  If Clay is really gone,

  who will meet me

  at the river now,

  to tell me the three things

  I need to know?

  Where are you, Clay?

  Where did you go?

  And why?

  Truth

  The door slams

  and I hear Rainie

  drop her backpack.

  There is a loud rumbling

  as a car backs out of the driveway.

  Rainie comes all the way

  into Jonah’s room

  for the first time.

  She touches her amber

  stone of courage.

  What’s that thing on Jonah?

  she asks.

  It helps him breathe, Phoebe says.

  Snorkel Man, I say

  at the same time.

  Snorkel Man doesn’t answer.

  He’s busy blowing air—

  Whoosha Whoosha Whoosha

  I wish I could sleep

  with all that noise,

  Rainie says.

  Rainie watches Phoebe

  filling up Food Truck.

  She walks around the

  living room,

  looking at Jonah’s cans of formula,

 

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