Authors: Hannah Pittard
Mark had a great affinity for Maggie's mind. He'd fallen first, yes, for her looksâthat goofy gap between her teeth hidden always just behind her plump upper lip. But he'd been seduced ultimately by her brainâits quirks, its ambitions. There were nights still when he would wake with a start, fearing the evening on the riverboat had been a dream, fearing he'd never met her. Lately, though, he was frightened that her mind might be morphing. He wanted desperately to keep it safe and steady.
“Where is it now?” he said. “Your mind? What are you thinking?”
“Are you making fun?”
“Not at all,” he said. “Tell me.”
She massaged the steering wheel with both hands. After a minute, she said, “Do you think you willfully see the worst in people?”
“How do you mean? I don't understand.”
“Typically speaking, do you think you've been pessimistic or optimistic?”
“Optimistic,” he said. “Where's this coming from?”
“Typically speaking,” she said, “do you think you've been even-tempered or are you prone to moodiness?”
“Moodiness?” he said. “Is this part of your test?”
“Strong changes of mood,” she said. “Like with the coffee.”
“I suppose . . .” he said. He searched for a real answer. He didn't want her to retreat, but he also didn't want to be tricked into taking some adulterated version of a test he had no faith in and whose resultsâaccurate or otherwiseâproved nothing. “I suppose you were feeling snippy just now and I was feeling moody. I think we can safely blame the weather and the drive for both.”
Maggie was rightâwhat she was suggesting but hadn't come directly out and saidâMark did find occasional pleasure in predicting life's disappointments, but she was wrong to suspect him of seeing the worst in people. He saw the best. He did! It was why he taught, why he was a teacher in the first place. He believed in humanity, in the generosity of the human spirit, in the individual:
My heart leaps up!
It was the Internet that had gotten in the way, eliminating face-to-face interaction, obviating the need, the desire, the occasion to see the whites of another's eyes. Strip it from them and they'd all go back to normal. It, normalcy, was still attainable. Real childhood could still be salvaged:
The Child is father of the Man!
Maybe not for the ones who had already been exposed, but they could be treated. Like for a virus. They could be weaned slowly off it. The Internet was a teat, a drug. Take it awayâcut those thirty billion watts of electricityâand they'd get used to it. They'd become human again:
Bound each to each by natural piety.
He was sure of it. Elizabeth had once called him a breathtaking teacher.
To their right, they were now passing a single-story structure with a sign overhead:
PINEY CAMP HOTEL.
There was grass growing up its sides, but there were a few cars parked in front. He thought again of Elizabeth. She could have made a place like Piney Camp fun; would have called it an adventure, maybe even a breathtaking one.
So I've been thinking about sex,
she'd written. Without too much effort, he could picture the kind of life they might have had together if he'd been younger, single, if she'd really been an option: road trips for the sake of it to towns they'd never heard of. He could practically hear her saying, “It has a bed, doesn't it? Is there anything more we need?”
Mark squeezed his temples. He needed to snap out of it.
Part of itâYou know what? Yes, though he'd never thought of it this way before: part of what made Maggie's intense new relationship with fear so intolerable was that it felt like a comment about him. That switchblade, those cans of mace, that outrageous application for a concealed carry permitâit all felt like maybe Maggie didn't think he could protect her if and when she needed protection. Sure, he'd not been with her in the alley, but if he had been, he could have done something. He could have pushed the guy down or stepped in front of her and told her to run. He could have done any number of things. It wasn't his fault he wasn't there. Just like it wasn't his fault that the college girl was dead. It was coincidence they lived near her at all; coincidence that both women at the hands of different men had been hit in the neck with the heel of a gun. But there was something about Maggie's newfound paranoia, about her determination that she was suddenly more susceptible to another attack than someone else, that made Mark feel like less of a man.
Yes: less of a man. That right there was the problem. It was devastating.
          The rain picked up. The sky turned dark and slick. If there was a moon, they couldn't see it. The streetlamps on the left side of the road were working. On the right sideâeastboundâthey weren't. Gerome was snoring aggressively in the backseat. After a while, Mark leaned his head against the passenger window.
“I'm just resting my eyes,” he said.
Maggie turned down the radio.
“No, no,” he said, his eyes already closed. “I promise not to fall asleep.”
“Don't worry about it,” Maggie said. “Rest.”
“Just my eyes,” he said. “I promise not to sleep.”
He was out in five minutes. Maggie turned the radio off altogether. She liked the sound of the rain, the steady
thunk
of the wipers. She didn't necessarily like driving in weather like this, but at the end of the day, she didn't mind it. That's just how she was. And if Mark was tired, she was happy to let him sleep. He'd been working nonstop all semester. This was his break. It was time for him to rest up, to get his energy back so he could write.
The thing about Maggie: she would have made a good mom. People were always saying so. Her patients' owners especially couldn't believe she didn't have children. “But the way you are with animals . . .” It was a constant refrain.
Totally, totally, she'd thought about it. And why not? She was a woman: it was impossible not to have the discussion at some point or another. When they first started dating in fact, Mark had asked if she was interested, but the conversation hadn't lingered on babies. Instead, it turned quickly to Maggie's own mother. “There was so much disappointment in that house,” she'd told him. “But there were also these photos, photos from before me and my brother, and in them my parents looked happy. I don't remember ever seeing them look happy around me.” Maggie didn't think her parents' miserable attitudes were her fault, but she understood thatârightly or wronglyâshe and her brother had changed things. “You know they didn't hug us?” she'd told Mark that day. “I can't remember a single hug. What I'm getting at, I suppose, is if it happens, it happens. But if it doesn't, I'll be okay.” And it hadn't happened, and Maggie really was okay. There were bound to be regrets one day. When she was Gwen's age, for instance, she assumed she would experience a sort of homesickness for someone who never existedâa son, maybe a daughter. She'd miss the presence of youth in her life; miss getting to see that son or daughter fall in love for the first time. But Maggie also assumed that the homesickness would be infrequent, and the possibility of a future regret certainly didn't seem reason enough to change one's life now.
She slapped the steering wheel. “A mother,” she said, though Mark was out cold, “what a strange thing to be.” She shook her head.
Maggie glanced in the rearview. In the back, Gerome readjusted himself. His two yellow eyes glowed up at her. “Can you imagine?” she said to the dog. “Can you even imagine something so odd?”
Gerome sighed. The yellow eyes disappeared into the darkness of the backseat.
They were east of Xenia now, but they were no longer making good time. The rain had slowed everything down. At nearly every streetlight, she caught the red. They'd have to get a hotel eventually, but they wouldn't hit the big chains for another hour or two. They were still four hundred miles from Charlottesville, still two and a half hours from West Virginia.
“Damn it,” Maggie said.
Mark shifted but didn't wake. The wipers ticked right, left, right, left. A streetlight ahead turned from green to yellow to red.
“Mark,” she said.
He smacked his lips and yawned.
“Mark,” she said again. Now she tapped him on the knee.
“We there?” His eyes were still closed.
She laughed. “You've been out twenty minutes,” she said. “We're definitely not there.”
“What's up?” He cracked his neck. He was slowly coming to.
“We didn't even think about dinner,” she said.
US-35 was a wasteland when it came to food. Usually they were on 64, in West Virginia, by the time they were hungry, which meant Starbucks, Panera, Chipotle. US-35 involved gas stations with fried chicken and fast-food buffets with names like Krispy Kitchen and Fishin' Freddie's.
“Did you pack snacks?” he said.
She shook her head. “Only for Gerome.”
The light turned green, and Maggie slowly pressed down on the gas.
“Don't get too close to the trucks,” said Mark.
“I know,” she said.
“Their brakes,” he said.
She nodded. She wasn't annoyed. She might have been annoyed, but just then she wasn't. Just then she liked that he was acting a little paternal. It made her feel safe. It made her feel loved.
“How far are we from Charleston?” he said.
“Three hours,” she said. “Then another three to Charlottesville.”
Mark got out his phone.
“What are you looking at?” asked Maggie.
“Why are you always asking me that?”
“I didn't realize I was,” she said.
“I'm checking e-mail.”
“I thought you didn't like checking e-mail on your phone.”
“Students,” he said. “We left early. I want to make sure there are no questions about the final.”
Mark was so meticulous about avoiding the computer at home. So meticulous, as a matter of fact, that lately she'd begun to wonder at it. Not that he could have knownâbecause she wasn't in reality, as he'd suggested, always askingâbut she'd recently grown curious about the nature of his online correspondence: computers, phones, or otherwise. For one thing, she'd been wondering why he changed his password a few months ago. That question had most certainly been on her mind, but no way had she brought it up with him. There were too many obvious follow-up inquiries from Mark:
How did she know he'd changed his password?
Had she tried logging in to his personal account?
His school account?
Why?
Surelyâas far as he was concerned at leastâhis queries would trump and possibly invalidate her initial one: why had he needed to change it in the first place? So she hadn't asked, but it was something she wondered about from time to time.
“Also, I wanted to see where we are,” he said, “on the map.”
Mark had an early generation smartphone with a scratched-up screen; it was unlikely the map was even readable.
“Is it the stupidest idea in the world to say we should just turn around?” he said.
“Go back to Chicago?”
He gave a little chuckle. “Dayton,” he said. “We're only twenty miles east of it.”
“How is that even possible?” she said. “That makes no sense.” It was daylight when they'd skirted Dayton. Now it was night.
“Small roads,” he said. “Rain.”
A station wagon pulled abruptly in front of them. Maggie hit the brakes and put her arm out as if to keep Mark from jerking forward. He took her hand and kissed it. “You're doing great,” he said.
She smiled. “Thanks.”
“Should we just keep going, then?” he said.
“I guess,” she said. “The idea of Dayton . . .”
“I know.”
Mark went back to his phone. Maggie drove in silence for a few minutes, then turned on the radio. Mark turned it off again.
“Okay,” he said. “Okay.” He was looking at his screen. “We've got Washington Court House coming up and Chillicothe. There's got to be something there.”
“You mean for the night?”
“No, no,” he said. “Dinner. There must be something. Even if it's just a Subway. Then I'll be good to drive.”
“You said we'd need a hotel.”
“Eventually,” he said. “But I think I can get us to West Virginia. It's not even eight yet. I can go another three hours for sure.”
“Nine,” she said.
“What?”
“It's nine,” she said. “You're still on Chicago time.”
He looked at his watch and then at his phone. “Damn,” he said. “You're right.”
“We'll hit the big hotels in an hour,” she said. “We'll stop for the night then.”
“It's not like they close,” he said. “When we're ready, there will be something.”
“It was your idea,” she said. “Getting a hotel.”
“It's fine,” he said. “Promise. Let's make as much ground as we can. Short drive in the morning.”
Obviously, in an ideal world, they wouldn't have to consider a hotel at all. But given the reports, given the state of the roads, a hotel was obviously the safest option. Only now that Maggie had come around to the idea, Mark was suddenly gung-ho to continue. Usually their timing was more in sync. She suspected, sadly, that he was trying to prove his masculinity in the most facile of ways:
I'm a man. Men drive through the night.
Mark turned the radio back on and found the AM station, which was listing cities again.
“Let's eat soon, though,” he said. “Whatever you see that looks good. Dinner's your call. I totally trust you.”
All at once the rain doubled in its intensity. The station wagon ahead of them slammed on its brakes. Maggie did the same. They were jerked against their seat belts.