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Authors: Sally Mandel

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BOOK: Quinn
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Chapter 14

Quinn sat alone in her room for about five minutes before she was on her feet again. She slipped into her jacket, brushed furiously at her cheeks, and vowed to waste not one more tear on William Hamilton Ingraham.

The night air was bracing. As she neared the garage she began to feel better. The side door stood ajar, but Gus was nowhere to be seen. Quinn grabbed her overalls from the wall hook and headed for a truck she had been overhauling. Lying beneath its metal entrails, she began to dissect the argument. A thorough soul-search convinced her that she had not deliberately usurped Will's choices; truly, she had expected him to be pleased. But by the time she had replaced the shock absorbers, she decided that perhaps she had made a few assumptions. Will had overreacted, but maybe he was scared. From now on she would approach the subject of their future with more tact. Will's mind, with its imaginative meanderings, could invent impediments where none existed. She always told him he thought too much.

She slid out from under the truck and hurried toward Gus's office. Will's dorm had already closed to women visitors, but she could still call him. She stripped off her overalls, and as she turned to hang them next to Gus's she heard a rustle behind her. She whirled around, but too late. An arm grabbed her around the neck, pinning her to a bulky body. Rough fingers covered her mouth. The reek of nicotine was sickening.

A gruff voice said, “I've got a knife. I'll use it if you yell.”

Quinn stopped struggling and willed her body to remain still. There was tension in the thick arm at her throat. It was vibrating with what she hoped was indecision, or fear.

“Where's the cashbox?” He gave her neck a cruel squeeze. Sweat formed on her forehead, then the hand lifted slightly, testing, and finally released her mouth.

Quinn whispered in a voice she didn't recognize, “There is no cashbox.”

“This is a garage, isn't it? There's gotta be cash.” He was angry. The steel arm stiffened again.

“Not public. For the college.” It was hard to speak with the vise twisting against her larynx.

“Fucking bitch,” the voice muttered. “No cash, no cash. You bitch.” The free hand slipped beneath her sweater and touched the bare skin of her stomach. Quinn felt her knees begin to give way. She made an involuntary sound like a moan. Instantly the hand clamped over her mouth. The arm cut off her breath until she began to see sparkles against Gus's overalls. She was staring at them where they hung on the wall, as if they would suddenly, magically be filled with the friend who belonged inside the baggy folds.

The man shoved his pelvis against her. His erection was stiff against her right buttock. She closed her eyes and tried to think. She hadn't actually felt a knife. Should she take the aggressive tack, bite that hand, hard, and try to make a run for it? He was very strong. Also, he had shut the side door.

Suddenly the hand eased again and she felt the salty taste of blood on her mouth.

“Get down on the floor. Take off your clothes first.”

Somewhere in Quinn's brain there were cells that continued to function despite her terror. “Listen. Listen to me,” she said, in a monotonous voice that she hoped was unthreatening. She could sense hesitation in the shift of the body behind her.

Out of nowhere a wild thought appeared in her head. It was a risk, undeniably, but there wasn't a whole lot of time for detailed analysis. She spoke quickly. “I'm sick. I have this thing. It's up to you.” She had never heard the strange voice that was speaking now, but at least he was listening. “It's up to you,” she repeated, trying to hang on to the soothing monotone. “Messy. It's a messy thing. Stomach. It's chronic, my stomach. Diarrhea. Lots of diarrhea. No control at all. Very messy, a real problem.” Suddenly she felt the impulse to laugh. She forced the hysteria down and gulped. “It gets my clothes. My clothes are a mess, my bed, everything …”

“If you turn around, I'll kill you,” the voice snarled. He released her, giving her a rough push. On his way out he drew his arm across Gus's desk and swept everything onto the floor. She never saw his face.

She fell to her knees beside Gus's desk and began to cry. “Thank you. Oh, Jesus, oh, God, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you.” After a few minutes she brushed herself off and began crawling around on the floor to pick up the papers and debris. It took her a while to remember that she ought to leave it all just as it was.

Gus strode into the office, saw her on the floor, and said, “Hey, Mallory, whadya do, shove a bulldozer across my desk?” She turned her face to him. Her cheeks were tearstained and smudged, but it was her look of fear and helplessness that most stunned him. He called the police, and they sat waiting together, on the edge of the desk, hand in hand. Soon the town police arrived to take Quinn to the station. Gus stood for a moment watching the flashing red light of the patrol car recede into the darkness. If his cursed insomnia was fated to make an appearance, at least it could have propelled him to the garage in time to spare Quinn. He walked into the garage, ripped a loose door off one of the campus vans, and slammed it against the floor.

Despite Quinn's protestations that at no time had she glimpsed the man's face, she was required to stare at hundreds of faces in a macabre photograph album labeled “Known Sex Offenders.” She reported to Sergeant Collins, who seemed to be in charge, her conviction that the man's primary interest was cash. Any rape intentions were either incidental or a reaction to the frustration of finding no money.

A patrolman asked her if she had “done anything to invite a sexual attack.”

“Oh, sure,” she retorted, “I said to him, ‘Gee, I feel so bad that there isn't any money for you to steal. How about I try to make it up to you?' Then I climbed up on the desk and did this cute little dance …”

Her voice had risen half an octave, recapturing the attention of the distracted sergeant. Collins was small and sinewy like her father.

“Cut it out,” he said. Quinn wasn't sure whether he was addressing her or the patrolman, but they both fell silent. After two more albums she was escorted home in a patrol car.

She took a long shower. Too tired to dry her hair, she just covered her pillow with a clean towel and climbed into bed. Suddenly she began to cry again, but this time she welcomed the tears as if they were cleansing the suffocating smell of nicotine from her nostrils, and washing the ugly incident out of her life for good.

Chapter 15

When she woke the next morning, instead of tumbling out of bed the moment her eyes opened, Quinn lay still and thought. The fight with Will seemed real enough, but not the events that followed. If God were going to send her a brainstorm to elude rape, surely it wouldn't take the form of diarrhea.

She tried to get up, but the room seemed to be revolving around her bed, slowly at first, except each time she moved, the tempo accelerated as though she were the center post of a merry-go-round. She leaned back against her pillow gingerly. Suddenly she was frozen and her body began to tremble. Her teeth chattered, her arms and legs quaked. And yet a moment later she felt as if she were being boiled alive and had to kick off her blankets. The movement made her groan. Every part of her ached. Wherever her flesh came in contact with the sheets, she felt bruised.

She closed her eyes and hoped that whatever was happening would pass. Ordinarily Quinn did not acknowledge the authority of pain. She never bothered with Novocain at the dentist's office. Scrapes and bruises, even broken fingers, were an inconvenience to be ignored. She never got colds. Now, this morning, she wasn't convinced she could even make it to the infirmary. Another bout of chills struck her. She tried to force her limbs to be still, but they disobeyed. Frightened and crying now, she hauled herself out of bed. With the room spinning she found a dime in her desk drawer and groped her way down the hall to the telephone. The first time she tried to insert the coin into the slot, her shaking fingers dropped it, but finally she managed to complete the call.

It wasn't difficult to persuade the person on the other end to wake Will. She knew she must sound desperate.

“Hello?”

Just the sound of his voice started her crying again. “Will? It's me. I'm … I can't …”

“What's happened?”

“I'm sick. I guess. It's so stupid. I can't seem to walk very well. Will you help me get to the infirmary?”

“Can you make it to the lobby?”

“I think so.”

“I'll be right there.”

Quinn crept back to her room by steadying herself with one hand against the wall. She pulled on a pair of jeans and a sweat shirt and cautiously made her way to the elevator. She didn't have to wait long for Will. He was red-faced and breathing hard.

“What happened to you, Quinn?” He was staring at the tendrils of sweat-soaked hair around her face. Her freckles looked gray against the white cheeks.

“Got sick. I'm sorry, I never had to do this … call somebody. I feel so dumb.”

He lifted her from the chair, put his arm around her waist, and half carried her to the infirmary.

He sat with her while the nurse took her temperature.

“How much is it?” he asked.

“Hundred and three point six,” the nurse answered. “Into bed, young lady.”

“May I stay?” he asked.

“Visiting hours are two to four.”

“Please come back,” Quinn said. Her eyes had filled again at the thought of his leaving. She was pretty sure that she had spilled more tears these past twenty-four hours than in all her life up to yesterday.

She slept through the morning. By the time Will showed up at her bedside, her temperature had dropped to a hundred degrees and she was feeling much better.

He sat down in the chair next to her bed. “You okay?”

“Yeah. I've got great recuperative powers. Will, I'm sorry about last night.”

“Me, too. I was a churl.”

“If you were a churl, I was a troll.”

“A perfect match.” He took her hand and examined it. She had freckles on the backs but none on the creamy skin of her palms. He tried to remember if her feet were similar. “I didn't want to hear what you were saying.”

“I know.”

“What's that bruise?” He pointed to her throat.

Quinn averted her eyes.

“Is it a bruise? Or …” He looked embarrassed. Quinn knew what he was thinking and started to laugh.

“I didn't exactly have a hot date … oh, God …” The laughter was getting out of hand. She knew that soon she would be crying again, so she took a few deep breaths and told him about the intruder in the garage.

Will pulled the neck of her nightgown aside.

“Looks like a Rorschach, doesn't it?” she said.

All of the muscles in his face had gone rigid. “Do they know who he is?”

“Please, don't get angry now. Just be calm and nice.”

He understood at once. She needed his restraint, almost like a child whose tiny body cannot contain the fury of a temper tantrum. He remembered Marianne's little sister flying apart over some four-year-old disappointment. As rage overwhelmed her, her eyes had dilated with fear. She threw herself on the ground, pounding her arms and legs against the grass. Marianne had picked her up, ignoring the screams of protest and dodging the flailing limbs as best she could, and held the child tightly against her own quiet body. She talked soothingly, making repetitive comforting noises until finally, the tempest over, the little girl wiped her tears with the back of her fist and scampered off to play again.

“It's all over,” Will said. “I'm going to sit here holding your hand forever, so everyone will think we're furniture. We'll be here in the year 2000, a couple of fossils stuck together.”

“I love you.”

Neither of them had ever said it before. He examined her face closely for a moment and then leaned over to kiss her.

Then he gazed at her, thinking that surely the pain circling his own neck had already manifested itself into hideous livid bruises like hers. It dawned on him that whatever happened to her had just as certainly happened to him. There was no escape.

Chapter 16

There was to be an all-campus costume party that Saturday night. Quinn and Will made a pact not to divulge to each other what they would wear but agreed that their costumes must display a cherished fantasy. And for the first time Stanley and Van would join them in a double date.

As she was climbing into her Annie Oakley costume, Quinn wondered how Will would get along with her friends. She was impatient with her nervousness; how could three such terrific people not like one another? It was the argument from two weeks ago that had done this to her, she decided. Will's sudden explosion had left her with the uneasy sensation that he was not altogether predictable.

She appraised herself in the long mirror on the closet door. Her fringed skirt was exactly right. The dimestore material appeared worn and discolored, like real suede. In that skirt Quinn might have spent the past twenty days chasing cattle rustlers across the plains. She wore a plaid work shirt, and over it a vest with fringe to match her skirt.

She had bought skeins of corn-yellow yarn, which she had braided into a wig with pigtails. Her plastic ivory-handled six-guns were somewhat small but could be tucked neatly into her belt. She had drawn patterns on her old leather boots in white chalk to simulate elaborate cowboy stitching. Feet apart, she snatched the guns out of her belt, twirled them around her fingers, and shot her image right in the heart.

“Gotcha,” she said. Then she flung on her raincoat and headed off for the union. It was a damp January night. Every now and then a snowflake dropped heavily out of the sky and turned to slush the moment it hit the ground. She glanced at her watch. The others would be there already, maybe sitting and staring at one another in silence.

Stanley intercepted her by the door. “I am taking Marvin his beer,” he said. “Who's this, Calamity Jane?”

“Aren't you cute, Stan!” Quinn exclaimed, scrutinizing his long velveteen robe with the rat-fur trim. He poked a leg through the folds to exhibit purple tights. “Oh, my,” Quinn said. “This has to be Henry the Eighth.”

“Your obedient servant,” Stanley said. He forged a path through the crowd with his foaming pitcher.

“I should have known. Who's Marvin?”

“Who's Marvin!” Stanley echoed in mock horror. “Your Marvin. Marvin the Magnificent.”

Quinn giggled. “Oh. That one. He is, isn't he?”

Stanley had to shout back at her over the din. “If first impressions don't deceive, he's better looking than Quasimodo and smarter than Ed the Talking Horse. More than that I dasn't say.”

Quinn poked him in the back. “You dasn't, dasn't you?”

Will and Van sat at a table in the corner behind a solid wall of costumed students. They were talking with heads close together in order to hear over the cacophony.

“I think they like each other,” Quinn observed.

“Not too much or heads will roll,” said Henry the Eighth.

Will and Van looked up as Quinn reached for her six-shooters. “Pow!” she said.

“Annie Oakley,” Van and Will pronounced simultaneously.

“You got it,” Quinn said, using her hip to edge her way to the seat next to Will. She examined her friend. “I don't suppose you're Ann Boleyn.”

“You won't get it,” Van said. She waved arms that were draped in gauzy white cloth. “Isadora Duncan.”

“A fine match for King of the Brits, think ye not?” Stanley asked, pouring beer into their paper cups. “We raided the drama department, but there wasn't much left.”

“Henry the Eighth was Stanley's finest role. Wasn't it, Quinn?” Van asked.

“And 'tis a kind of good deed to say well: / And yet words are no deeds,”
Stanley proclaimed.

“I saw you in that production,” Will said. “I'm impressed. You were very good. Why are you going to medical school when you're such a good actor?”

“Doctors are the ultimate in royalty back in Brooklyn,” Stanley replied.

“Anyhow, I think the impulse to be Henry the Eighth goes beyond remembering the play,” Van said.

“Here we go, Freud time,” Quinn remarked.

“The impulse, my dear Isadora,” said Stanley with a Viennese accent, “is the sublimated urgency to dispose of my wenches when they become too much a pain in the ass. I like especially to chop them off at the head. I find the castration symbolism so gratifying, don't you agree?”

They all laughed.

“But Will,” Quinn protested, “you didn't dress up.”

He held out his hands to display an old flannel shirt and patched jeans. “I did.”

“You won't get him, either,” Van said. “He's Henry Thoreau.”

“Oh,” Quinn said. “Well, at least we're both outdoor types.”

“Come on, Isadora,” Stanley said. He pulled Van to her feet. “Let's show 'em how to trip the light fantastic. Don't look when she does a pirouette. You can see right through that stuff.” They got up and squeezed through the crowd to the dance floor.

“So do you like them?” Quinn asked.

“They seem nice.”

“Seem, seem. They are nice. What were you talking to Van about?”

“I don't remember. Beacon Hill, I think.”

“Stanley's a dear, don't you think?”

“He's definitely a dear. You want to dance, Annie?”

“No. My feet are killing me in these awful old boots. They've got nails coming through.”

“Take 'em off. I want to see if you've got freckles on the bottoms of your feet.”

“You're weird, Hank. Did I tell you that I hate your costume?”

“What?”

“Forget I said that.”

“Talk about weird.”

She moved her shoulders in time with the music. Will tugged on a braid. “Anyway, I like you in pigtails,” he said.

“I used to have real ones until I was eleven, but Jake cut them off.”

“Oh, is he the family beautician?”

“It was purely a disciplinary event,” Quinn said.

“What'd you do to provoke that?”

“I don't remember exactly. My mother wouldn't let me do something I thought I should do, and I got mad and told her I hated her guts. Jake just happened to come into the kitchen and gave me this look like I'd thrown a rotten egg at the Pope. He grabbed a pair of scissors and chopped my braids right off my head and threw them on the table.” She paused a moment, then went on thoughtfully, “I had this wicked temper …”

“I'm so glad you grew out of
that
,” Will said.

“You turkey.”

Isadora and Henry the Eighth flung themselves into their chairs. They were breathing hard.

“I don't know how she moved in these clothes,” Van gasped. “You can break your neck.” She exhibited the well-trod hem of her dress.

“As it happens …” Will began slowly.

“Don't tell her!” Quinn said.

“What?” Van asked.

Stanley explained the manner of Isadora's demise.

“Oh, dear,” Van said. “I think I should have been Eleanor Roosevelt instead.”

The music stopped pounding and Will sighed with happiness. Suddenly Quinn became aware of being watched. The bleary eyes that stared at her from the table directly behind Stanley and Van belonged to Chris Hartley. He wore a tinfoil crown that was too small for his head and a T-shirt with a bright-red heart painted on it.

Chris saw that she had become aware of his gaze. He turned and whispered to his table companions. They laughed uproariously and glanced at Quinn. She felt herself blushing.

“I'm going to slip some Scarlatti into that jukebox one of these days,” Will said.

Quinn reached for her six-shooters and pointed them at Will's chest. “You jis' try it, ya' no-good sidewinder. What's a sidewinder, anyway?”

Out of the comer of her eye she saw Chris rise awkwardly and lurch toward their table. He stopped when he reached Quinn, and put a hand on the back of her chair to steady himself.

“Well,” he slurred. “The beeyoo-ful Miss Mallory, 'z I live 'n breathe.”

Quinn kept her voice friendly and neutral. “Hi. King of Hearts, right?”

“Nice costume, Chris,” Stanley said. “You're pretty blasted.”

“Drunk!” he shouted. “Intoxicated by the beauty of this fair maid. Mallory of Untouch … able.” He leaned down to put his face close to hers. He was sweaty and smelled of cigarettes. “Am I
so
repulsive to you, mademoiselle?”

Quinn shook her head “no” as she breathed through her mouth to shut out the stench of nicotine. She imagined the rough hand of the garage intruder digging into her mouth.

“You could use a cup of coffee,” Will said.

Chris seemed to notice Will's presence for the first time. “Ah!” he said with a clumsy flourish. “The charming Misser Ingraham.” He mimed a gesture of tearing open an envelope. “And the winner is … William the Conqueror! Virgin Vanquisher!”

“Somebody do something with him,” Van said.

Quinn held her hand out imploringly. “Hey, listen, Chris—”

Chris struck it away and tried to focus on Will. “How was it? As a finalist, I got a right to know. What I lost out of … on. She got a nice tight …?”

Will was on his feet, but Chris backed away from the table. His face had collapsed, as if he were about to cry. He waved at them in a kind of apology, but the small movement upset his balance. He slipped on a discarded paper cup and went down with a crash. Will reached to help him up, but Chris was fierce.

“No! Do it myself. Sorry. Not the life of my party.” He stood and, with careful dignity, walked across the room and out the door.

The others turned to Quinn, who was pale, almost gray. “Poor thing,” she whispered. A dozen onlookers averted their eyes and resumed disrupted conversations. The entertainment was over.

“You okay?” Will asked.

“He smelled like cigarettes,” Quinn murmured. “Excuse me.” She got up and hurried across the dance floor. The yellow pigtails bounced, more grotesque now than gay. She made it to the ladies' room just in time.

After that the tumultuous atmosphere of the union seemed oppressive. Van suggested Lou's, and since none of them was dressed for the cold, they ran, howling when they intercepted the brutal wind that swept across the Pilgrim River bridge. They arrived out of breath, laughing and delighted with the stares from the conventionally attired patrons. They found a booth toward the back.

“You sure you're up to this?” Will asked Quinn.

“The cold helped. I'm fine.”

“You can content yourself with the fact that Chris is no doubt following suit—as behooves the King of Hearts—in the men's room,” Stanley said.

Quinn was still ashen. “He was … his face was …” She looked at Van. “You told me. You were right. I never thought anybody would get hurt.”

“Old Chris'll be okay,” Stanley said. “He'll drown his grief with Henrietta Foster.”

Quinn looked unconvinced. “I wish I could say something to him, do something to make up for it.”

“I think the kindest thing would be to just leave him alone,” Will said.

Van cleared her throat and said brightly, “Will was telling me about the old loggers he knew when he was growing up.”

“That's the Huntington ‘change the subject' tone of voice,” Quinn told Will.

“I've known a few old lawyers in my day,” Stanley said.

“Loggers, loggers, you quahog,” Quinn said.

“Like Paul Bunyan and John Wayne and Maureen O'Sullivan?” Stanley asked Will, and whispered to Van, “What's a quahog?”

“More like Pierre Lechat and John Tallfeather and Dooley Donovan,” Will said.

Stanley forgot about quahogs and began interrogating. Will narrated the whole story, starting with his grandfather's exodus west from Chicago with the railroad. Quinn sat sipping her ginger ale. The cold air had cleared away most of the choking odor of Chris Hartley's cigarettes, but a faint reminder still clung to her hair. She had thought she had put the garage assault behind her. She would have to learn to live with the smell of nicotine and not be running off to vomit every time somebody lit up a cigarette. The man was still at large, but it wasn't constructive to think about that. She tried to tune in to Will's narration. Stanley and Van were obviously fascinated. They also seemed to like him. It was what she had wanted out of the evening. But why had Will worn that outfit? It wasn't even a costume. And why was it that she only heard that degree of enthusiasm in his voice when he was talking about the Great American West?

The wind had died down by the time they started back to campus. Their pace was a brisk walk, with Quinn and Will ahead of the other two.

“They're okay, your friends,” Will said.

“I don't know how you could tell. They couldn't get a word in edgewise.”

Will stared at her.

“I'm sorry.” She shook his arm. “I was desperate for you to like them, and I'm really glad you do.”

“What's the matter?”

“Nothing.”

“You've been too Goddamn quiet. Is it Chris?”

“Probably.”

“Look, this is the first time you've ever accused me of talking too much.”

“Was I accusing?”

“Yes,” he said.

“You're going to be a great teacher. I've already heard all that stuff and I wasn't even bored.”

“Could have fooled me.”

They continued walking in silence. Stanley and Van now trailed far behind. Suddenly Quinn stopped short and released his arm. “How come you're Thoreau? I really wish you weren't.”

“Excuse me?” He couldn't help smiling, even though her face was deadly earnest under the light of the streetlamp.

“Is that really your absolutely fondest fantasy, to be off in the woods all by yourself?”

Standing still was making them cold, and besides, Stanley and Van were catching up. Will put his arm around her and started moving again. “Not all by myself.”

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