Finding Jake (25 page)

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Authors: Bryan Reardon

Tags: #Fiction, #Literary, #Psychological, #Retail, #Suspense

BOOK: Finding Jake
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CHAPTER 27

FOUND

My mind tears through the millions of memories, trying to find any detail that may guide my step. At the same time, I run, faster than I ever have before, racing through the side yard, leaving everything and everyone behind.

“Jake!” I shout.

At full stride, I break through the tree line behind the Martin-Klein house. Dry, late-fall brush shatters as I crash into the forest.

“Jake!”

I don’t know why I am calling out. I just want Jake back. I need to find my son. And I am so angry. Why had I not looked there before? I had almost forgotten that’s what the boys did all those years back. What started as such an enormous worry had petered out over time, replaced by the day-to-day stresses of two teenagers. But how could I have forgotten?

I have no idea how to find the fort, the setting for Jake’s pretend battles as a child. I consider turning back, going to ask Mary Martin-Klein, but I don’t even slow my pace. I also realize that I no longer
have my phone. I must have dropped it in front of the house. Everything is happening so quickly now that I can’t know for sure.

The brittle leaves snap under my shoes as I weave among the tall, straight oaks. The occasional evergreen breaks the stark grays of the forest’s annual death. My voice echoes through the emptiness, stirring a blood red cardinal from a bush. It darts amid the trunks, quickly disappearing from my view.

“Jake! Where are you?”

I hear footsteps. The sound jumbles my mind. For a second I imagine my son will appear, smiling, laughing, racing toward me through the woods, a green hoodie tied around his waist. I grab him. Hold him. Press him so tightly that he cannot breathe. Torrents of relief and amazement storm out in streaming tears.

But this is a dream. The reality is that the footsteps come from behind me, not in front. I hear sirens approaching, more than one, and their call melds into a baleful moan. I push forward as if we are racing. I will find him first. No one else.

My eyes never look back. I scan the woods, looking for a path or a dark shadowy mass that might be a fort.

“Help me find you, Jake,” I whisper.

I want a sign; I deserve a sign. I love my son with everything I have ever had. I know, I have always known, that I would die for him in an instant if need be. But nothing is that romantic, that dramatic. I was never given the chance to sacrifice for Jake. And now, when I plead for something to show me the way, a stag in the mist to guide me, the call of a red-tailed hawk, Jake’s favorite bird, to bring me to my son, there is only silence and dread.

I stop, my head tilting back. I look up at the sky, cracked by the skeletal limbs grasping above me. A cloud floats lazily toward the late-autumn sun, softening the long shadows that streak across the landscape like the mythological remnants of some great lightning storm.

“I’m sorry,” I bellow. “I’m so sorry.”

When I look ahead again, through tear-clouded eyes, I see the
pond. A snippet of the past comes clear. I remember Jake telling me about the pond behind the Martin-Klein house.

My walk turns to a run when I see the fort appear from behind a patch of massive fern. I trip over a thick fallen branch, dropping to a knee. My hand skids across a patch of exposed rock and pain sears up the length of my arm. I stagger back to my feet and keep moving.

The fort rests low to the ground. A lean-to, two large sheets of weather-stained plywood tilt upward, supported by three gnarled black limbs. Dirt, moss, and dried leaves form a thatchlike roof atop the sheets of wood.

Above, the sun thrusts through the blanketing cloud and the world around me brightens like a new beginning. Something sparkles by my foot. I bend down to pick it up. My fingertips touch cool metal and I lift the object off the ground. It is an intact round of ammunition.

My heart races. I look down and see more bullets. They scatter across the forest floor like pebbles in a streambed. For some reason, I begin to count them. It lasts only a fraction of a minute but I see more than fifty. My mind cannot focus. I still do not understand.

Then I see my son’s shoe. It is a simple swatch of neon yellow but I know it immediately. The shoe is almost covered by fallen leaves as it rests undisturbed beside the large fern. I stare at it, frozen in place, unable to move, unable to see that it is not just a shoe, that it is my son alone in these woods, somehow forgotten until this very instant, lost and gone forever. All those thoughts are so unfathomable. They are the stuff of paralyzing nightmares, the reality of a life I never considered, even during my darkest parental neurosis.

I cannot move. I need to go to him, but I cannot accept that he is not there anymore. He’s left us already. He’s gone off alone. I can’t bring him back. I can’t talk to him anymore. We can’t joke. We can’t wrestle. We can’t go out for dinner or eat pulled pork at home with Laney and Mom. I can’t drive him. I can’t pick him up. I can’t wait for him. He’ll never walk toward me, smile at me, be there.

Jake can only be inside me now. He can only speak through memories and impossible imagination. What ifs. If onlys. I wishes.

Dogs bark. Someone is close behind me. I think he’s been there all along. It is the dogs, however, that awaken me again. I take a step and then two. I fall to my knees. I embrace what was Jake, what will never be Jake again. I hold him but it is not him. I cry and rage. And I never see the empty box of ammunition in his cold hand.

CHAPTER 28

AFTER

I am alone with Jake, the two of us now lost together behind the Martin-Kleins’ house. Time must pass, birds must call out from the trees above the fort, but I am not there. Then I realize I am no longer alone. An enormous police dog, a German shepherd, tilts its head. I look into its deep brown eyes, my hand resting on my son’s still chest. Someone once told me that I should never look into the eyes of a dog, that it is a challenge. That is not how I feel. Instead, this grand animal looks into my soul. I feel it tugging at some semblance of life and realize it must be mine. It is trying to bring me back. I am sure of it.

The dog does not move. I hear people approaching but our connection remains firm. In my head, we speak to each other, two animals in the forest contemplating the most basic fact of life.

He is dead.

Yes.

I can’t live.

You can.

Why?

Because.

Is that good enough?

Yes.

I don’t understand.

You do.

I want more than anything to die. I do not want to get up or walk out of the woods. I do not want to live a life of meaningless moments. I want to lie down and never leave my son’s side. If there is a will to live, I think I lose mine.

Or do I? What is it that keeps me breathing? I would like to say it is Rachel and Laney. That is the correct answer, the human answer you expect to hear from me. If that is not the answer, then I am unlikable.

The honest reason I breathe is because I am scared. I fear death. I fear living. I fear loss. I fear change. I fear everything and nothing at the same time. Instinct, some leftover synapses from before the Ice Age, tortures me. It keeps me from turning off. It rewires my brain. I no longer think years ahead or days ahead or moments ahead. I don’t even think one breath ahead. I simply take in air and let air out. I become an automaton of survival.

I let them take me away but I look back over a shoulder at Jake. I want to cry but I might be out of tears. Instead, I feel an icy chill radiate out from my torso.

“I can’t leave him,” I say, but it comes out as a whisper.

“It’s okay, Mr. Connolly,” an officer says. “We’ll take care of him. I need to get you some help.”

“I’m fine.”

He leans into me as we walk down the barren, shaded path.

Something strange happens. I do not remember walking past the Martin-Klein house. I am not even sure where I am, except I know I sit inside the back of an ambulance. A paramedic holds a mask over my face. I breathe in the cooled air, unafraid. In fact, I feel utterly numb.

Rolling my eyes around, I see silver instruments, an IV drip, and
a blood pressure cuff around my bicep. Three blankets lie atop me but I do not really feel their weight.

“Just relax, Mr. Connolly. Your blood pressure dropped. We’re giving you fluids and a sedative. You’ll be fine.”

No, I won’t, but he doesn’t know that. Nor do I tell him. Instead, I close my eyes.

When I sit up, Rachel is there. She reaches out a hand and, together with the paramedic, helps me out of the ambulance. We hug. She has tears and they flow freely. She shakes in my arms. I hold her but I am still devoid of feeling.

I should be reacting differently. I look around, sure people are staring at me, wondering how I could be so normal, so nonchalant about my son.

“You feel cold,” she says.

At some point she stops crying.

“I’m fine.”

The scene around me clarifies.

I startle. “Where’s Laney? She shouldn’t . . .”

“It’s okay. She’s with my mom.”

I did not know Rachel’s mom came up from the beach. In fact, I never even thought of her parents during this entire thing. I never called my parents. I didn’t call my siblings. I feel guilty about that, which seems absurd in the moment.

An engine starts. Another ambulance rolls slowly up the driveway. I want to climb in, as if Jake has simply suffered a concussion at a flag football game. But there is nothing else left for me to do, just take air in and let it out again.

CHAPTER 29

DAY FOUR

More than twenty-four hours have passed since I found my son, a series of empty moments at once agonizingly slow and blurrily fast. We were taken home, together. We cried, together. All three of us slept in the family room; the rest of the house remains as it was after the police search. At some point, the doorbell begins to ring. Then it never seems to stop. Covered dishes march into the kitchen as well-meaning neighbors, many of the same who blamed Jake a day before, return to our door bearing food, eyes empathetic, mouths wordless. A silence descends. Rachel takes Laney to her mother’s condo. I am left to clean up the mess, which I do with numbing regularity.

That night, I learn that the footsteps I heard behind me when I searched for Jake belonged to a cameraman from the local NBC affiliate. He filmed the entire thing with a handheld. At four
PM
that afternoon, the police issued a report of their findings. Together, the story and the report play out on the television set.

Tonight, the final pieces of a national tragedy fall into place and a hero emerges from the carnage. The footage you are about to see was shot earlier today by a cameraman in Wilmington, Delaware. Once thought to be an accomplice in the school shooting on Monday, Jake Connolly’s body was found in the woods behind the home of his schoolmate, the alleged shooter, Douglas Martin-Klein. Police issued a preliminary report this evening telling a remarkable but sad story. It appears that young Jake learned of Martin-Klein’s intention to shoot students at the school. He confronted the boy in the Martin-Klein house where police believe Martin-Klein fired a shot from the same assault rifle used in the school shooting. The bullet struck Jake Connolly in the lower back. What happened after that is amazing.

Suffering from what police at this time believe would have been a mortal gunshot wound, Jake Connolly heroically ran from the house back to a fort the two boys built when they were young. There, he apparently scattered over one hundred rounds of ammunition before being shot down by Martin-Klein. Police believe that this action may have saved dozens of lives at the school.

The police have also issued a report that clarifies some earlier evidence that leaked to the press during those first days after the shooting. Although Jake Connolly’s blood was found on the door leading into the school, it is now believed that the blood had been on Douglas Martin-Klein’s hand following Jake’s tragic attempt to stop the shooting. Eyewitness reports placing two shooters entering the building that morning have also been recanted.

I warn you that the footage we will show now may not be suitable for young viewers. It shows Jake’s father, Simon Connolly, racing through the woods, calling out
to his son, only to find his son’s body at the base of his childhood clubhouse.

There was a note, too, found in Jake’s pocket. Thankfully, the police returned it to me without it leaking to the press. I read it once and I can’t read it again. Not yet. It read:

Dad,

I’ve needed an amnesty moment for a while now but I was afraid to ask for it. I think you already know what it is about. You’ve known for a long time, I think. Longer than I have. It’s about Doug. But I guess it is also about me, too.

I am afraid. Not of talking to you but of how things have been lately and what I have been thinking about. I can’t seem to figure out what to do. No options seem right to me. It’s like I took a wrong turn somewhere and I can’t find my way home.

I think Doug is a psychopath. I am not being mean. I actually researched it. He’s not like what you see on TV. He doesn’t draw bloody pictures or keep a stalker wall or anything like that. We all like violent stuff. It’s something else, something darker on the inside.

Doug doesn’t care. When Max makes fun of him, it doesn’t make Doug sad or hurt him. It makes him angry, really angry. I’ve tried to get Max to stop, and he has really, but other kids do it, too. They won’t just leave Doug alone. It is starting to make me angry, too. Why do people have to be so mean? Why do they have to rag on kids every day? Sometimes I wish the tables would turn. I wish someone could teach them a lesson.

Sometimes, you don’t really know a person. Sometimes I feel like I don’t even know myself. I wonder what I will
do when things get worse. I wonder what kind of person I really am. Doug has a gun. It’s hidden in the clubhouse we built when we were kids. I haven’t seen it but I know. He told me. I worry that he is going to hurt someone. He’s gotten scarier. He hung a doll at my spot in the woods. I know it was him, and it was a message to me. I don’t think he’d hurt me but I should tell you. I think you can help, but I know you’ll tell the school or Doug’s parents. If that happens, I think he’d snap and do something really bad.

I’m going to try to talk to him one more time. If it doesn’t work, I’ll give you this. Just promise me you won’t freak, okay?

I love you dad.

Jake

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