Dark River Road (39 page)

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Authors: Virginia Brown

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective, #Sagas

BOOK: Dark River Road
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It seemed that time waited, that all the world had gone still while he stood there, bare feet cushioned by soft carpet, cool air drifting over his bare chest. Mama was dead just down the hall and he hadn’t even been able to say goodbye. Now he had to make a decision that would either free the man who killed her or send her baby to a foster home where he’d wither away. He didn’t know what to do, couldn’t ask anyone else for help. There was no one else who
could
help. And he had no guarantees it’d work staying with Rainey anyway. Not if he agreed to keep quiet. He had to think
 . . .

Finally he looked up at Rainey. “If I keep my mouth shut, you have to be good to Mikey from here on out. No yelling at him. No calling him a cripple. And you’ll keep your hands off him, too.”

“Sure. Of course I will. You just gotta keep quiet. That’s all.”

“I will as long as you don’t go back on our bargain. I mean it, Rainey. It wouldn’t take much for me to say what I had to and see you go to jail.”

Rainey’s eyes narrowed. “We both got a lot to lose by you sayin’ anything.”

“Maybe. But I’ll just lose a couple of years. They’ll fry you in a chair and not think twice about it.”

When Rainey’s face went the color of chalk, he knew he had him. For what it was worth.

It felt like he’d made a deal with the devil, but when the police finally got around to asking him what happened, he backed up Rainey’s story that Mama had tried to break up their argument and slipped on the wet floor and hit her head on the stove. Maybe they believed him because he said it straight out, no extra words, no emotion. After that first wild pain, he felt nothing. Cold inside, frozen like the road got in winter. It was like he’d used up all his emotion already.

Not even when the doctors let him go down the hall to see Mama one last time could he dredge up any reaction. He just stood there, looking at her lying under that fresh white sheet with her face all still and cold, like one of Miss Julia’s pretty statues. Dempsey went with him, stood just inside the door of the room, silent but there, solid and real when everything else felt like some awful dream. Chantry didn’t know what to say even if he could have spoken, so he just took Mama’s cold hand in his and held it for a little while, as if she’d know he was there, as if she was really still there. She looked peaceful somehow, her hair loose around her face, though he could see where the doctors had cut her hair at the back.

Then he thought of the photos with his father, her laughing and young and so beautiful, happiness in her eyes and on her lips, and he hoped with sudden ferocity that it wasn’t all just a colossal joke, that there really was a heaven like Mama believed and Reverend Hale claimed, and that she was there now, with his dad, happy again. She deserved that.

He thought about it later, when Dempsey took him home to the empty house and he went out back to be with Shadow. The dog whined, stuck his head under Chantry’s arm until he put it over him to hold him against his side.

“It’s okay,” he got out, “it’s got to be okay. There’s got to be a heaven. There’s got to be something better than this.”

As if he understood, Shadow let out a long sigh, resting his weight on Chantry while he stroked the soft, floppy ears. Chantry sat that way for a long time, staring at nothing, seeing things he didn’t want to see but couldn’t stop, like some movie replaying over and over again.

Sometimes the hardest goodbyes are the ones never said, the ones that always just hang there in the back of the mind like a dark cloud. There’s so much to say but no one to say it to because the person you want most to hear it is already gone. That’s how he felt. Sorrow, regret, a wound so deep it didn’t even bleed. Like a puncture wound, an ache that didn’t heal but just hurt. He didn’t know if he wanted it to heal. That’d be too much like a final goodbye.

Ladies from the New Cane Creek Baptist Church Women’s League came over that night with covered dishes, lasagna, spaghetti, cakes, pies, casseroles, salads, setting them all out on Mama’s table and in her clean kitchen like they belonged there. He stood in a corner and just watched, not saying anything, his eyes going back to the floor where someone had cleaned up Mama’s blood. Some of the women tried to talk to him but gave up when he only nodded or shrugged, and they focused instead on Mikey.

Mrs. Rowan had brought Mikey home because he’d insisted, she said, and she looked rather helpless so he’d just taken Mikey’s hand and held it. It was the two of them now. He an orphan, Mikey motherless, both of them feeling lost. Stranded in a sea of well-meaning people fussing and trying to be cheerful when there wasn’t anything to be cheerful about. Talking like he couldn’t hear them.

“Do you think it’s suitable for these poor boys to be left here with Rainey Lassiter?” Darla Pritchett said in a low tone to Eleanor Rowan, and they both glanced over at Chantry and Mikey as if expecting to see them sprout horns and forked tails.

“Well, Mikey
is
his son, but Chantry
 . . .
I just don’t know,” Mrs. Rowan replied doubtfully, and Chantry squeezed down the sudden bubble of fear that rose into his throat.

“Perhaps we should call Social Services,” Mrs. Pritchett said then. “They have programs to help boys like Chantry, and since this is a new situation now with Carrie gone
 . . .
mercy, I just don’t know what’ll become of them if someone doesn’t step in.”

“We’re not going anywhere,” Chantry said clearly, shocking the kitchen into silence since it was the first thing he’d said since everyone had gotten there what seemed hours before. “You can leave us alone. Mikey’s staying and I’m staying, and you’d better not even think about trying to do anything about it.”

Eleanor Rowan looked distressed and near tears. “We just want what’s best for you.”

“Then make them leave us alone. You can keep your food. We don’t need it and we don’t want it, and I don’t want them coming in here in my mama’s kitchen and acting like they ever gave a damn when we all know they didn’t. The only friends she ever had here in Cane Creek were you and Dempsey anyway, so all the rest of the church harpies can just go to hell as far as I care. Get them out of my mama’s house. Now.”

That pretty much cleared out the kitchen. He must have looked really mad, because all the women scrambled out the back door like they couldn’t get out fast enough, except for Mrs. Rowan, who stood there a few minutes like she wanted to say something. Tears gleamed in her eyes, then on her cheeks, and for one awful moment he thought he might cry, too. Then she left, saying only, “I’ll be back when you need me.”

Silence fell, deep and smothering in the kitchen still littered with grief food. After another minute, Mikey sighed and said, “Thanks, Chantry. I just didn’t think I could pretend not to be sad much longer. Why do people say I shouldn’t be sad, that I should think of Mama being in heaven and be happy?”

“Because they’re stupid.”

Mikey thought about that; then he said, “They don’t mean to be. I guess most of them just don’t know what else to say.”

“I guess. Come on, sport. If you want, I’ll fix you something to eat.”

Mikey eyed the food and shook his head. “I don’t think I’m very hungry right now.”

He understood. He didn’t think he’d ever be able to smell lasagna again without wanting to throw up.

Mama’s funeral was on a Wednesday.
It’d started out sunny, but by eleven that morning clouds had rolled across the river and rain set in, slow and steady, the kind farmers liked to see on their fields. It hissed against umbrellas, gleamed on the blacktopped street that wound through the New Cane Creek Baptist Church cemetery. Chantry wore a suit. Not because anyone told him to, but because Mama had always wanted him to wear one and he never would. It wouldn’t make any difference to anyone but him, but he put on the suit she’d bought him the year before and wore it even though the coat sleeves came up over his wrists and the trouser cuffs hit his ankles.

It looked like the entire town had turned out. A sea of umbrellas lined the street, and so many cars had shown up that police had to direct traffic and make people park along the road that ran beside the cemetery. Chantry recognized most of them, Mama’s students and their parents, former students, the entire congregation of New Cane Creek Baptist Church, and the community of Sugarditch. Dale Ledbetter was there, and Doc Malone, of course, but he’d expected them. He’d just never thought so many people knew Mama, much less cared enough to come out in the rain for her funeral.

Even old man Quinton was there, along with Chris. It was the first time Chantry had seen Chris since the night of Maryann Snowdon’s party. Or noticed him, anyway. The past few days had been a blur. He’d moved through the hours in a fog, avoiding everyone he could, staying on the fringes and at a distance. He didn’t want to hear anyone else tell him that she was with God now, and had flat out told Reverend Hale if he said one word to him about being glad she was in heaven, he’d hit him in the mouth. Reverend Hale hadn’t argued the point, and the service in the chapel had been mercifully short. If he could just get through the next half hour, he might make it without doing anything else to make people talk and look at him like he was some half-wild wolf.

Dempsey walked beside him along the wet street, tall and solemn and silent, a welcome presence. Just ahead, Rainey held Mikey’s hand. He didn’t think he’d ever seen him do that before and probably wouldn’t again. Rainey knew everyone was watching.

Some kind of tent had been set up, with metal folding chairs lined up alongside the grave. Mama’s casket sat on a steel contraption over the open hole, and the funeral home had put bright green carpet that was supposed to look like grass over the raw earth piled behind the hole to hide it so people wouldn’t focus on the fact it’d soon be thrown in on top of her. He looked away, his throat getting tight.

Rain pattered against the canvas tent, beat steadily on umbrellas, spattered on the ground. He breathed deep, smelled sickly sweet flowers, wet air and dirt, and a blend of perfumes worn by the women who’d come to the funeral. People crowded close, quiet and hushed. So much black, like crows lined up on a fence, supposedly the color of death. But when he thought of death he saw red, like Mama’s blood all over the floor, on the doctor’s coat, too bright and fatal.

Then he saw white among the black, a shimmer of light breaking the anonymous line. He looked again, and Cinda Sheridan looked back at him, standing beside her mother and father, her face serious, hair loose and shiny with rain. She wore a pretty white dress that made him think of angels instead of mourning. He stared at her for a long moment, saw her mother slide an arm around her shoulders as if protecting her from him, but Cinda shrugged free.

She walked through the rain and people until she reached him, then slid her hand into his and held fast. After that, he knew he could get through the next part, with Dempsey on one side and Cinda on the other.

Reverend Hale spoke briefly, then ole man Quinton stood by the casket and spoke of his admiration for Mama over the years, while Chantry stared at him and thought how easy it was for some people to lie. Then it was over and the crowd began to thin, and Cinda didn’t leave his side but stayed with him, giving her mother a defiant look when Mrs. Sheridan came to say they needed to leave. Cinda shook her head.

“I’ll be home in a little while. School’s out today anyway. And Chantry needs his friends right now.”

Mrs. Sheridan’s mouth tightened, but it was obvious she didn’t want to make an issue of it in front of people, so she just nodded.

“You should probably go,” Chantry said in a low voice when Mrs. Sheridan returned to her husband’s side and the mayor glanced over at them with a frown. “There’s no point in getting in trouble over this.”

“No. I want to be with you. If you want me, that is.”

“Want you?” He just looked at her for a moment. Then he squeezed the hand she still had in his. “Always.”

Cane Creek was a small town, and he knew the death rituals pretty well. People would all go to his house with food and consolation, and he didn’t think he could stand that. Rainey played the part of grieving husband well, and while no one could really think he’d changed, people offered him comfort and soothing words of concern. If he had to listen and watch it, Chantry wasn’t sure he could keep from doing something stupid and terrible.

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