Nathaniel (32 page)

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Authors: John Saul

BOOK: Nathaniel
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“Shadow? Don’t you like him?”

“He doesn’t like me. He only likes Michael, and whenever anyone else is around, he starts growling. He scares me.”

“He’s just being protective—he wouldn’t hurt you. Now run on along.”

When Ryan was gone, she finished bringing Becky’s things down from the attic.

She went over them once more—the clothes Becky had never worn, the crib Becky had never used, the mobiles Laura had never been able to hang over Becky’s bassinet, and the toys she had never been able to see Becky touch for the first time. Finally there was nothing left except the album, the album which should have eventually filled with pictures of Becky’s first years.

The captions were all there: “Her first meal,” “Sunning in the backyard,” “First step—wobbly, but she did it!”

She turned the pages slowly, as if studying for the last time the pictures that weren’t there—had never been there.

She’d nearly lost herself over Becky. She could remember some of it so well, and yet so much of it was a blank.

She could recall the days of waking up and listening for the cries of the baby, only to remember that there would be no cries, for there was no baby. Other days—the worst days—she’d known from the moment she awoke that Becky had died, and those days had been desolate ones.

The best days had been the days—sometimes two or three of them in a row—when she truly believed that Becky was still there in the house, sleeping, perhaps, and would soon wake up and call for her. It was during one of those times that she’d ordered the Raggedy Ann doll, a gift for Becky to make up for her own neglect.

No one had known she’d done it until the doll arrived, and when Buck had asked her about it, she’d blurted out the truth without thinking. “It’s for Becky—I’ve left her alone so much.”

That’s when they’d sent her away for a while—not very long, really, only a few weeks. And when she’d come back, she’d been all right. Except that every now and then, she still crept up to the attic to go through Becky’s things, to pretend, if only for a few minutes, that Becky was all right, that Becky had survived the birth, that Ryan—despite all the love she felt for him—was not her only child.

But she knew Buck was right, she knew she had to get rid of the last of Becky’s things and put the child out of her mind, finally and forever. If she didn’t, she would destroy herself.

She placed the empty album on top of the heap, then doused the whole thing with kerosene. Finally she stood back and tossed a match onto the pyre. A moment later all that was left of her memories of her daughter began to go up in flames.

For a long time Laura watched the blaze, standing perfectly still, her attention focused totally on the conflagration. When the touch on her shoulder came, she jerked spasmodically, then whirled around to see Janet standing behind her.

“I’m sorry,” Janet said. “Are you all right? I spoke to you, but you didn’t answer me.”

“I—I—” Laura floundered, then fell silent and turned back to gaze once more at the fire which was fast diminishing to nothing more than a bed of glowing coals. “I was just burning some trash,” she whispered at last, her eyes filling with the tears she had been doing her best to control.

“Some trash,” Janet repeated softly. “It’s the stuff from the attic, isn’t it? Ione Simpson’s stuff?”

Laura hesitated, then nodded mutely.

“Ione didn’t want it back?”

Again the hesitation, longer this time, but finally Laura shook her head. “No … no, she didn’t.”

When she spoke once more, Janet was careful not to look at Laura. “I wish you’d called me—I could have used those things for my baby.”

At last Laura faced Janet, and when Janet looked into her eyes, she saw a depth of pain there such as she’d never seen before. “Your baby?” Laura asked, her voice as hollow as her eyes. “Did you say your baby?”

Slowly, Janet nodded, and suddenly a bitter smile warped Laura’s pretty features. “You really think you’re going to have it? You really think they’ll let you have it? Go away, Janet. Go away now, while you still can. If you want your baby, go away now, before it’s born. They’ll kill it, Janet.” Laura’s voice began rising to that hysterical pitch Janet had heard once before, right after Laura had lost her baby. She reached out to place a calming hand on Laura’s arm, but her sister-in-law shrank away from her.

“Who, Laura?” Janet asked. “Who will kill my baby?”

“Father,” Laura whispered; then, again, “Father. He’ll do it, Janet—he always does it.” For a long time she stared into Janet’s eyes, as if trying to see whether the other woman believed her, then finally broke her gaze, and glanced once more at the smoldering coals. “That’s all that’s left of her now. She’s gone, Janet. Now, she’s really gone.”

“Who?” Janet asked. “Please, Laura, who’s gone?”

“My little girl,” Laura suddenly wailed. “My little girl, my Becky.”

And as Laura collapsed sobbing into her arms, Janet once again remembered Michael’s words. “I
bet they killed her. I bet they buried her in Potter’s Field.”

“Come on, Laura,” Janet said softly. “I’m taking you home with me. I’m taking you home, so we can talk.”

“Is Father all right?” Laura suddenly asked. The two of them were sitting in Janet’s living room, and Laura was sipping at the cup of tea Janet had fixed for her. It had taken nearly an hour for her to calm down, but now she seemed better.

“He’ll be all right,” Janet told her. “He claims Shadow attacked him, but nobody else agrees with him.”

“I wanted to go out there, you know,” Laura said as if she hadn’t heard Janet’s words. “When Mother called, I offered to go out and help her take care of him, but she wouldn’t let me.”

“I’m sure she was only thinking of you.”

“No!” Once again Laura’s voice rose. “They don’t think of me,” she said bitterly. “At least not Father. He—he thinks I’m crazy, you know.”

“I’m sure he doesn’t,” Janet protested.

“But he does,” Laura replied. “He thinks all women are weak, but especially me. And I suppose he’s right. After Becky was born I fell apart.”

Janet frowned, remembering the letter Laura had sent to Mark.

“Tell me what happened.” But Laura shook her head. “I can’t talk about it. If I do, you’ll think I’m crazy, too.”

“I won’t,” Janet promised. “Laura, I need to know what’s happened here, too. I need to know what happened to you, and to Mark. I don’t care what you say, I promise you I won’t think you’re crazy.”

Laura grinned crookedly. “That’s what the doctors said, too. But when I told them what happened, they didn’t believe me. For a while, I thought they did, but it was only an act. Pretty soon they started trying to convince me I was imagining things. So finally I agreed with them, and they let me go.”

“Let you go?”

“I—I was in a hospital for a while. A mental hospital. I finally got out by telling them what they wanted to hear. Do you know how hard it is to do that, when you know all they want to hear is what makes sense, but the truth doesn’t make sense? In order to prove you’re sane, you have to lie. And that’s crazy, isn’t it?”

Janet ignored the question. “But why were you there? Because of Becky?”

Laura nodded. “I wouldn’t admit she was dead. Even now, sometimes I think she’s still alive. I wake up in the middle of the night, and I can almost hear her crying. Then I remember where she is, and I remember what happened. But I didn’t used to. Sometimes I’d forget for days at a time. So they sent me away.”

“Where is she, Laura?”

“Out there,” Laura said. Her eyes drifted toward the window, but when Janet followed her gaze, she saw nothing but the fields: her own fields, the ripening crops beginning to tinge the prairie with a golden hue, and, further away, the overgrown expanse that was called Potter’s Field. “Becky’s buried out there?” Janet breathed. “But why? Why would she be buried out there?”

Laura shook her head. “I don’t know,” she whispered. “All I know is that’s where they bury them. That’s where they see Abby, you know. But it’s not Abby, Janet. It’s not Abby Randolph looking for her children. It’s Father, or Dr. Potter, burying my children.”

Janet shuddered, for Laura’s words were too much like Michael’s own. For a moment, she had an urge to flee, to take Michael and run away. But she knew she wouldn’t—couldn’t—until she learned the truth.

Michael, unaware of how long it had been since he’d come out of the storm cellar, stared at the river. It was much lower than it had been in the spring, and its water was getting clearer every day. As Michael watched, he thought he saw a small school of fish swimming against the current. He started walking upstream, toward the village, with Shadow next to him, though the dog stopped every few seconds to sniff at a bush, a small hole in the ground, or a rock. Then, after they’d gone some fifty yards, Shadow suddenly stiffened, and a low growl emerged from his throat. Michael stopped and stared curiously at the dog.

“What is it, boy?”

The dog stood perfectly still, one foreleg slightly raised, his eyes fixed on a point somewhere in the distance. Michael studied the woods, then shrugged and started forward again.

Again, Shadow growled, and Michael turned back to face him. “Come on, Shadow. There’s nothing there,” he said, his voice implying a certainty he didn’t feel.

For a long moment, the dog remained frozen on point, but then slowly began to relax. His growling faded, and the fur on his neck settled back. Finally he went to Michael, sat down in front of him, and licked his hand. Michael patted him on the head. “See? I told you there was nothing there.” But a second later, when he started forward once more, Shadow blocked his way. Michael paused, then started to step around the dog.

Shadow countered his move, then nudged at Michael, pushing him slightly backward.

“Stop that,” Michael said, and once more tried to move around the dog. This time, a low growl rumbled up from Shadow’s throat as once more he blocked Michael’s way.

“What’s wrong with you?” Michael complained. “Why can’t we go this way?”

And then, from a few yards ahead and off to the right, he heard a twig break. Shadow whirled and once more went onto point, his growl turning into a snarl.

Michael peered into the shadows of the forest, but could see nothing. “Who’s there?” he called. Then, when there was no reply, he called out again, “Is someone there?”

Another twig snapped, closer this time. Shadow’s hackles rose, and his tail dropped slightly, curving close to the ground. Then his snarl escalated into a howl, and he leaped forward, charging into the woods. A moment later he was gone, though his baying filled the woods with an eerie din.

Michael hesitated only a moment, then spun around and ran back down the path, his feet pounding on the ground, the sound of Shadow’s fury diminishing in the distance.

At last, out of breath, Michael came to a stop and sank down on the riverbank. From far away, he could still hear Shadow barking. Suddenly, the bark turned into an anguished yelp.

Then there was silence.

Ryan Shields and Eric Simpson saw Michael and came to a sudden halt. They were on their way to their favorite fishing hole, but now, as they watched Michael, they began to wonder if maybe they shouldn’t change their minds. They glanced at each other uneasily; then, though neither of them spoke, each of them began scanning the area, looking for the big dog that was always with Michael. Today, Shadow was nowhere to be seen.

“You wanta go somewhere else?” Ryan finally asked Eric, and Eric shrugged.

“I don’t know. Maybe he’s gone.”

“Maybe he’s hiding in the woods,” Ryan countered.

“You scared of him?”

Ryan hesitated, but finally nodded. “He’s always growling, and acting like he’s gonna bite.”

“But Michael says he never bit anyone.”

“So what?” Ryan replied, his voice scornful. “Michael doesn’t even know where he came from.”

Eric frowned. “Are you mad at Michael?”

“I don’t know. He’s just sort of—well, he’s sort of weird.”

Eric nodded his agreement. “But my mom says I ought to be nice to him. Why don’t we ask him if he wants to go fishing with us?”

Ryan was about to shake his head when he remembered his own mother’s words earlier that day, so he shrugged, then called out to his cousin. Michael looked up, then waved.

“Whatcha doin’?” Eric asked as he flopped down on the riverbank next to Michael.

“Waiting for Shadow,” Michael replied, but there was something in his voice that made both the other boys suspicious.

Ryan eyed his cousin. “Did he run away?” he finally asked.

“N-no,” Michael stammered. Then he told them what had happened, and finished by asking, “You wanta help me look for him?”

The three boys started slowly back up the path that followed the riverbank, but a few minutes later, Eric suddenly stopped. Michael looked at him curiously. “It was further than this,” he said.

“But this is where old man Findley’s land starts,” Eric replied. “What if he sees us out here?”

Michael’s eyes narrowed. “I thought you said you weren’t afraid of old man Findley.”

Then, before Eric could reply, they heard the sound of an animal whimpering.

“Shadow?” Michael called. “Shadow, is that you?”

From up ahead and off to the right in the forest, came an answering bark. Michael began running toward the sound. A second later the other two boys followed him.

Michael found the dog first. Shadow was lying at the base of a tree, his back curled protectively against a root, licking at his left forepaw. Michael knelt down and reached out to touch the injured leg. The dog stiffened for a moment, then seemed to relax under the boy’s gentle fingers. But seconds later, when Eric and Ryan came into sight, his hackles rose, and he struggled to his feet, supporting himself on three legs.

“It’s all right, boy,” Michael whispered. “Lie down. It’s all right.”

The beginnings of a growl died in the dog’s throat, and then he eased himself back down to the ground. Warily, Ryan and Eric approached.

“What’s wrong with him?” Ryan asked.

“It’s his leg,” Michael explained. “Something’s wrong with his leg.”

“Is it cut?”

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