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Authors: Laura Ruby

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BOOK: Bone Gap
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Sean had been an EMT since he was eighteen. At twenty-one, he was an emergency room tech on his way to medical school when their mother, Didi, took up with an orthodontist she'd met over the internet and announced she was moving to Oregon. The orthodontist didn't like kids, especially boys who would surely run around getting drunk and high, knocking off convenience stores and knocking up girls, or worse, sitting around the house and getting in the way. Didi told her boys that they were old enough to look after themselves. Hadn't she given up so much already? Didn't she deserve to be happy, too? Since Finn was only fifteen at the time, Sean opted to stay with his brother until Finn finished high school.

That was two years ago. Sean hadn't mentioned becoming a doctor in a long, long while.

Now Sean cleaned out the wound, numbed Finn's face with a shot, and sewed it up with a vicious curved needle clamped in what looked like a pair of scissors. Sean wasn't even supposed to have these things; EMTs didn't suture in the field. But Finn knew not to flinch.

Sean leaned back and inspected his handiwork. “You still might have a scar.”

“Whatever.”

“Did you at least hit back?”

“There are five of them,” said Finn.

“You want me to make a call?”

That was the last thing Finn needed, his big brother to rescue
him. His sad and disappointed big brother, with his stupid faith in the power of Pine-Sol. “No, I don't want you to call.”

“I'll call.”

“No.”

A tiny muscle in Sean's neck twitched, the only visible sign that he was angry. “You haven't been beaten up since you were a kid. This is the second time in a few weeks. You can't let them get to you.”

“I'm not letting anyone do anything,” Finn said.

“You're walking into it, then. What's that about?”

“You cleaned out her room. What's
that
about?”

Sean didn't answer. Finn hated it when Sean didn't answer.

“It's been two months today,” said Finn. “Why aren't you out there looking for her?”

Sean trashed the used bandages, then closed the black case with a snap. “If you care so much, why aren't you?”

Roza
RUN

I'LL BE BACK.

Roza stood at the large picture window in the quiet suburban house and mouthed the words over and over, as if giving them form could make them true. But that was foolish. Also foolish: waiting at the window, hoping to see the yard teeming with police officers. Staring at the ceiling, listening for the sound of helicopters and the pounding of combat boots on the roof.

No one had come. No one was coming.

Except for him. He would come, as he came every day, to ask the same question:
Are you in love with me yet?

At first, she'd answered his questions with questions:
Who are you? Who are you really? What do you want? What is this place? What's wrong with you?

But he would smile that bland, pleasant smile—the smile of an uncle, a teacher, a clerk, all those men with all those teeth—a smile that just made him all the more terrifying. “You'll love me soon. You'll see.”

This was not the first place he'd brought her. The first place was a cavernous room so cold and empty and dark that she could not find the boundaries of it—it was the size of a cornfield, it was the size of a country—and all she could do was wander screaming through the blackness. Then, one morning, she woke up and found herself in a giant bed in a sunny room with plush blue armchairs and a cherry armoire. He was sitting in one of the armchairs, looking pleased with himself. “I was wondering how long you'd sleep.”

She gathered the sheets up to her neck and scrambled backward so fast that her shoulder blades hit the headboard with a crack.

“Don't worry. I won't touch you until you want me to,” he said, as if he should be congratulated for such scruples. “Come, let me show you the house.”

She must have been drugged, because she couldn't imagine how she'd gotten there, and because she
did
let him show her the house. It was a large frame house, with miles of slippery wood floor, a kitchen clad in stainless steel so shiny it burned, a living room with a fireplace and giant TV. A picture window faced the
street, where other houses—identical except for their color—sat in a line like chastised children.

“Do you like it?” he asked. “I built it for you.”

Built it for her? Full-grown trees hunkered alongside the house, birds perching in the limbs as if posed. Had the trees been here first and the house built next to them? Or had he paid to have them transported and planted?

How long did it take to build a house?

“There are clothes in the closet upstairs. A very nice saleslady helped me select them, but if you don't like them, we can always get more. And the TV has every show, every movie. Watch anything you want.” Again, the pleasant smile in that pleasant, even handsome, visage. “The kitchen is stocked. You're looking a little thin. You should eat something.”

A long time ago, back in Poland, a horse had kicked a boy in the head, rendering him senseless and strange. This man had the same expression. Cheerful. Empty.

He gestured to a painting hanging over the fireplace. It took her a moment to understand that it was a portrait of her. She was standing in the middle of a verdant field, one blossom threaded through her fingers, another threaded in her long, coiling hair. A ring of girls danced around her. In the picture, an invisible wind pulled at her white gown, outlining her body so vividly that she didn't seem to be wearing any clothes at all. Roza edged away from the fireplace, from the horrible painting over it, like an animal sidesteps a snake.

He didn't notice, or if he did, he didn't care. He peered down at her from his great height, those icy eyes on fire. She fought for breath, as if that stare was incinerating all the oxygen in the room, as if she would be consumed along with it.

He said, “You're very beautiful.”

Roza had heard this many times before, but it had never scared her so much.

“I want to marry you.”

Her lips worked. When she finally spoke, she didn't say, “No one is so beautiful.” She didn't say, “You're a kidnapper and a criminal and madman.” She didn't say, “I'm in love with someone else.” She didn't say, “Please don't hurt me.”

What fell from her numb lips was what she'd said to a foolish boy she'd left in Poland. “I am only nineteen. I am too young to get married.”

“Oh,” he said, head tilted, considering this new bit of information. “Well, I guess we'll have to wait till you're not too young.” He turned and swept from the room. He opened the door to the garage, stepped through the doorway, and shut the door behind him. She heard the clicking of the lock, so loud that it could have been a cannon. The garage door opening. A car engine whirring to life. She ran to the front door, to the pane of glass in its center, and watched as a black SUV turned out of the driveway and drove past the house, disappearing from view.

Roza was Halina Solkolkowski's granddaughter, not easily cowed by anyone—hadn't her babcia once chased a bear from the
kitchen using only a broom? Roza tried the door to the garage. It didn't budge. She aimed a kick before she remembered she wasn't wearing any shoes. She walked around the entire house, patting down every window frame for latches that weren't there. She grasped the neck of a floor lamp with the intention of swinging it at the picture window, but the lamp was somehow stuck to the floor, and she couldn't lift it, or any of the others.

She circled back to the front door, heavy wood painted white. She jiggled the knob. Yanked at it. Braced a foot against the jamb and pulled so hard her hands slid off the knob and she went sprawling. Like a cat, she launched herself at the offending wood. For a few wild minutes, she flailed at the door, pounding it with her fists, scratching at it until her fingernails were bloody. Then she stood, panting, staring at her wrecked hands until the sun set and the stars winked slyly in the purpling sky.

That had been weeks ago. Or what felt like weeks ago. Time moved so slowly here, or was it quickly? She had become unmoored from the present, loose and untethered, her mind rolling back into her memories, rolling forward into the future, anticipating, and then dropping again into this torturous, unbearable present. Here, there, everywhere. She still hovered in the window every day, mouthing the words
I'll be back,
her prayer, her incantation, but her prayers weren't working. She saw no police cars. She found no phones or computers in the house. Once, she had tried to light the kitchen curtains on fire, hoping that the flames would spread, engulf the house, and
bring the trucks and the firefighters, but a hidden sprinkler system doused the flames before they even had a chance to catch. The curtains were barely scorched, and the man had replaced them without comment. Sometimes, she saw vans driving up to the other houses, sometimes mothers and fathers and children spilled from the vans, like now. She pinwheeled her arms and jumped up and down, stopping only as they vanished inside their house. No matter how much Roza shouted and waved, no one ever seemed to hear her. No one so much as glanced at the house on the other side of the street, at the girl trapped like a mannequin behind the glass.

Roza was tired of standing, of flailing, of praying. She moved away from the window and slumped on the couch, putting her bare feet up on the coffee table. He'd left piles of clothes in the closet and the armoire, but no shoes anywhere. He preferred her barefoot, he said. She had such lovely feet.

Roza didn't agree. What was lovely about feet that could not take you anywhere?

What was lovely about feet that could not run?

Finn
SHOWDOWN

THE HORN AND HOOF SHOWDOWN WAS LESS A
showdown than a show: steers and heifers, sheep and goats, even dogs and cats displayed and judged in tents around the fairgrounds. A few days after the Rude boys left him smeared on the road, Finn wandered among the tents, stopping to look at this sheep, that pig, this dog, that rabbit. And if the owners of the animals used the dumb nicknames, if they asked about his split eyebrow and split lip with a weird mixture of pity and satisfaction, Finn didn't much care. First, because the lack of sleep was making him delirious, and second, because a crazy goat had chewed free from his tether and was following Finn
around, trying to gnaw off his back pockets.

“Will you knock it off?” he said.

“Meh!” said the goat.

Finn kept walking. The question Sean had asked him rattled around his brain. Why aren't
you
looking for Roza? But the truth was, Finn had never stopped. Right after she disappeared, he got Charlie Valentine to drive him out to the muddy fields where it had had happened, and made Charlie wait for hours as he scoured the ground for footprints and tire tracks, cigarette butts or fast-food wrappers—any evidence that the police had missed. He'd endured all of Jonas Apple's endless, repetitive questions: “Now, I have to ask you if you can describe him one more time. You said he was tall. Tall like you? Tall like your brother? Are we talking six foot two or three or four? You said he was wearing a dark coat. Was that a black coat? Could the coat have been dark blue? Could it have been dark
green
? Did he have a beard or a mustache? Did he have a beard
and
a mustache? Never mind how he moved, Finn, I have here that she didn't scream. Why do you think she wouldn't scream? Why do you think she wouldn't kick or run? You think maybe she knew this guy? You think maybe she
wanted
to go with him? Are you sure? How can you be so sure?” And Finn had borne the weight of his brother's clenched fists, his long silences, his unspoken blame.

Even now—after the people of Bone Gap had decided that Roza left the same mysterious way she had come, as if she were
some shining gift that no one could claim, and that they would never have the privilege of understanding her past or being a part of her future—Finn was scanning the crowd for Roza's glossy coiling hair, the lively bounce of her step, the smile so sunny that it seemed to blaze with a light of its own. But the people here didn't bounce or blaze, they only pointed and whispered.

“Meh!” said the goat.

“Don't you have a bridge to cross or something?”

The funny thing was, the people of Bone Gap shouldn't have taken to Roza at all. She was a stranger who had appeared out of nowhere and wouldn't say where she'd been, a
girl
stranger taking advantage of those “poor motherless boys.” Sean told Finn and Roza not to be surprised if the people judged, as the people always did. And the indignant hum erupted as soon as they'd entered the grounds of last year's fair. Then the three of them had stopped at the 4-H tents so Roza could admire the calves and the lambs. Old Charlie Valentine leaned down low and whispered something that made her smile. He asked her which lamb was her favorite. When she pointed at the finest one in the bunch, Charlie declared, “Knows her critters.” When she asked
him
in halting English about the acidity of soil and how it affected the corn crop, Charlie said, “Knows her dirt.” He nodded as if he were making the call for the whole town, which he was. “We got ourselves a farm girl, folks. Make no mistake.”

And nobody had. Except for one.

Finn smelled cake and apple pie, and his stomach turned him
in the direction of the refreshment stand, the goat trailing behind. “Mr. O'Sullivan!” said the woman manning—womanning?—the stand.

“Hi, Mrs. L.” Mrs. Lonogan, who had been the principal of Bone Gap Elementary since people first walked upright, wore her gray hair curled and woven in an elaborate updo that made her look like she had a dusty basket on her head. She cut him a brownie the size of a barge before he had a chance to refuse.

BOOK: Bone Gap
12.65Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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