Authors: Katharine Kerr
and go to the bathroom. Scared voices shouted her name over the
water.
She pushed herself up. She must have fallen asleep here at the
mouth of the cave. From how the sun shone, she knew it was
late afternoon. Funny. She didn't remember climbing this far.
She'd have to be careful climbing down, but she'd have to hurry,
too- Mark would be looking for her in the parking lot by the car
so they could drive home.
"Marty! Marty!" That was Mark's voice. She heard Morns'
voice too. It was deeper, furrier-sounding; and it reminded her
of...
"I'm here! I'm coming!" she shouted as loud as she could
over the water.
"Thank God, we've found her!" Grown-ups always said you
weren't supposed to say "thank God," and then they always said
it. Mark came up the rocks, two, three boulders at a time, fol-
lowed by Morris. She ran forward to meet them—why did they
look so scared?—and hug them, but they dropped back.
"It's okay, sweetheart. We'll get Sophie to come take care of
you. You don't have to be afraid."
She wasn't afraid, except they were acting strange. Strange ...
there had been a Stranger. That was right.
"Sophie!" Morris yelled. "Get up here!"
Faster than Marty would have believed a brown berry like
Sophie could move, she had clambered up the rocks and was
holding Marty. Sophie's arms were cold where the water
splashed them, but they felt good.
"Listen, sweetie, we've got you safe. We've been worried for
you, going off like that. Beth and Lisa said they saw a stranger.
Did you see him, too?"
Marty nodded. Sophie shut her eyes like she was going to cry.
"Can you tell me what happened?"
"He had a rabbit's foot, and he was waving it." Again, Sophie
shut her eyes. She pulled Marty's head against her shoulder, but
not before she saw Mark and Morris look at each other, then
look down. They growled, that was the only way to describe it.
304 Susan Snwarfz
Marty frowned. Someone else had growled, but it wasn't the
Stranger. She was sure of that. If of nothing else ...
"It's okay, Marty. Now, be brave and tell me, darling," Sophie
was having a hard time getting the words out, "did this bad man
touch you?"
Marty shook her head against Sophie. "I yelled at him. I had
this stick and I shook it, and he went away."
Sophie let Marty pull free, though she kept hands on her
shoulders as she looked her up and down. "Morris, you round up
the other kids. Don't let them see the sheriff."
"Oh, God," said Morris, and started back down the falls.
"Yes, we've got her safe!" he shouted as he went.
Oh, no. She had Wandered Away. She had been Lost.
"Am I in trouble?" she asked.
Again, Sophie hugged her. Her shoulder shook. "No," she
said. "You're a good, brave little girl, and we're going to take
you home right now."
And so Marty sat on a towel beside Sophie all the way home,
while Lisa got to ride with Mark, which wasn't fair.
For once. Mom and Daddy didn't make her change her
messed-up clothes in the back yard by the hose. She had a bath,
and Mom sat with her while she was in it, while Daddy and
Moms (whose car squealed into the drive in a way that could get
him a ticket) made phone calls.
"Doc, I know you're retired and don't make housecalls," Dad-
dy's voice sounded the way it did at three in the morning when
someone called because a big truck crashed on the highway.
"But no one knows her better and can make sure she gets
through this without permanent damage. Please? Thank God. I'll
get out the Scotch."
Why did she have to see Dr. Thomas? She wasn't sick. She
asked Mommy. Her eyes had the look that Sophie's had when
she said she'd seen the Stranger. Then Mommy cried. Marty had
only seen her mother cry once, when the radio said something
about a man named Salk. (Later, it had been Marty's turn to cry
when she saw the gleaming needles, and one pinched her arm.)
"I got through to Paul Cress at home."
"You called the chief of police," that was Morris.
"Sure. He's an old friend. Look, I know it's not your fault,
Slavin. In fact, your people probably helped her toughen up just
enough ... anyway. Cress's got his boys turning over every rock
in Mill Creek Park to see what's under them. And as soon as
Doc Thomas gets here, I'm going ..."
THE MONSTERS OF MILL CREEK PARK 305
Mom went to the door of the bathroom. "Oh, no, you're not!
Not if I have to hide that damn gun of yours myself."
Dad laughed. "You'd actually pick it up?"
There was a pause. Marty knew her mother was giving Daddy
a Look.
"Martha needs her father here with her. And I have to get back
to her now. You calm down."
Mother came and got her, and put her into bed even though it
was still daytime. Marty thought of telling her that, but she
didn't really want to get a Look either.
"I think that's Thomas' car in the drive," her father said. "Her
old pediatrician. Retired to breed Dobermans, for crying out
loud. Christ, will you look at the monster he's got with him?"
Marty was glad to see Dr. Thomas, even though he wouldn't
bring his dog—it was a dog, and not a real monster—in the
house. (Mom looked relieved.) He pulled her nightgown up,
looked over her, tickled her ribs with his stethoscope, then cov-
ered her back up.
"You're fine," he told her, then looked up at her parents and
nodded.
"Can I go back to camp tomorrow?" Marty asked.
"Honey, you wouldn't rather stay home and read? We could
go to the library and get some new books."
Marty shook her head. "I bet it's going to be nice tomorrow.
And I want to go back to the Park. I love the Park, all the trees.
You feel so safe in the forest."
"Maybe Monday," said Dr. Thomas. "I think once Marty's
over her chill—" he came down hard on the word like it was im-
portant, "—it's a very good idea for her to enjoy her friends and
camp again. But now, I think she ought to try to nap until
supper's ready."
He pulled the ruffly curtains and took her parents out of her
room with him. She watched the sun try to sneak through cracks
in the blinds while Dr. Thomas's voice made kind of happy
growls about "resilient" (she would look that up tomorrow) and
"amnesia" (she knew that one already) and "I can't tel! for sure
until I do an internal, but ..."
"Hasn't she been through enough?" Her mother cried out at
uiat. "As long as she's all right now ,.."
"That's your decision. Just don't make it worse by keeping her
inside. All she needs is people thinking she's some sort of mon-
ster. She's not. She's a beautiful, brave, little girl, and she was
very lucky."
306 Susan Shwartz
She heard the glug-glug-glug of Scotch. "Here, you drink this
too," Daddy said. Mommy hated Scotch.
On Monday, the kids at camp looked at Marty tunny, but that
was the day they went to Zedakers to ride, and they forgot. Ex-
cept for one thing. They didn't go back to the forest for weeks
and weeks. And Mark didn't tell any stories the rest of the sum-
mer.
Something did change that summer. By fall, Marty was Mar-
tha once again. If anything, she was being brought up even more
carefully than before. After all, Pushing her might make her a
brain, but it would keep her safe indoors. Marty/Martha the girl
was different. She had gone all quiet again. Granted, she wasn't
so quiet that she didn't lead her class when she didn't have better
things to do. But those things never again included summer
camp.
And she grew up into Martha Chamey, Ph.D. in psychology.
Dimly, she remembered that Mark had studied to be a psychol-
ogist so long ago. She wondered if he ever made it all the way
through. He enjoyed just living too much, and it had been Dr.
Chamey's experience that students like that tended to avoid the
really demanding programs. She, of course, had sought them out
and mastered them. Distinction was what she'd gotten instead of
the sunlit world in which Mark swung a bat while all the camp-
ers cheered. He was back there in those memories Martha
thought of as being walled off from her emotions by a kind of
psychic plexiglass (now, that was bad terminology). And her
emotions were walled off from the rest of her. She had her com-
pensations, of course: but the thing about compensations was that
they never quite succeeded.
At least, she had them. She had her sanity. And she had her
life. Her parents had been so afraid and taken such pains after
that season of summer camp to keep her safe.
Dr. Martha Chamey steered the rented car down the twisting
narrow road into the green well of Mill Creek Park. Budget cuts
in the Rust Belt town had deferred maintenance on the park. The
road was cracked, and faded by summers of baking, winters of
freezing, until it crumbled into as much a part of the woods as
the leaf-mold that half-covered it.
She had been away for so long; it surprised her that she could
be grieved by the neglect she saw. After all, she had seen a mon-
ster in the Park.
THE MONSTERS OF MILL CREEK PARK 307
Old growth the Park definitely was: maybe even first-growth
forest. It was old; it was peaceful; but it was not quiet. She had
turned off the air conditioner and rolled down the window so she
could hear the leaves rustle, the song of birds way up in the can-
opy, the distant rush of water, the occasional crack of a stick as
some hiker or deer moved before it thought.
Light slanted through the arching trees just as it had when she
was a girl, and if leaves and moss covered the split-oak rails of
the tiny bridges over which her car rattled, that only made the
park quieter, wilder-seeming. The tension ache that had ridden
her shoulders since college had already subsided. She was home.
Something stirred behind the barriers she had set up between her
and memory. Oh, she had been right as a child to love this forest.
Maybe she could recapture even a crumb of the old love, the old
freedom from before she started to push herself.
Because she had been right about a lot of things, she had come
home to see if she had been right about the main things, too. The
serious, sturdy, and curious girl had become a serious, sturdy,
and curious woman—and a shadowed one. In recent months,
though, she had grown weary of shadows. She had been troubled
by dreams, fragments of memories—the "Stranger" who had ex-
posed himself to her and whom she had driven off by a combi-
nation of luck and guts that made Martha, fully grown, break
into a cold sweat; the cave by the water; even flashes of some-
thing large, something furry. A Jungian could have published a
book on that.
Fragmentary memories returning—had she really been abused,
and were the memories only now coming back to her? They
came back when you were strong enough to face them. That
would mean she had even a greater fear to face: had the people
who loved her most tied to her?
She knew the child Marty's promise for joy had not been ful-
filled in the woman she had become. But all her life, at least, she
had prided herself on her honesty. What if everything she had
grown up to accomplish had been based upon a lie?
That was enough to wake her at 4:00 a.m. But the student and
the psychologist in her knew she had to find out—and there was
still that damnable honesty of hers.
It was not, and had never been, a particularly popular trait. Her
old neighbors here? "You turned out good; leave well enough
alone, not that you ever could." Or "that silly mess? I'm sur-
prised you still remember. Oh, well, I suppose you would."
That kindly fog might be adequate for them, but not for her.
308 Sue an Snwartz
She didn't remember, at least not clearly enough. That was the
problem. They didn't understand. But then, they never had.
As she drove deeper into the park, the reassurance she had al-
ways felt in the ancient wood reached out to her. A rabbit dashed
across the road, and she slowed, just in case.
Another turn. Even thirty years later, Slippery Rock was famil-
iar to her: the blackened wood of the old pavilion, the musty fire-
place, even the reek of sulfur water from the pump.
Beyond shone the pool, serene at the shore, but sparkling
higher up, where water still poured over the tumbled rocks,
where, please God, it would pour forever. She parked and locked
the car and headed for the rocks. Her eyes traced their shapes,
trying to recall the cave in which, thirty years ago, she had hid-
den from what, even now, she called the Stranger.
Was she really going to climb the waterfall again? She was
older now, much older. Her tolerance for the squishy and slimy
was way down; and if she didn't get tetanus from something on
the rocks, she'd probably get hepatitis from the water. And what
if another Stranger had made the cave his lair?