Sweet Lamb of Heaven (13 page)

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Authors: Lydia Millet

BOOK: Sweet Lamb of Heaven
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“No thanks,” I said firmly. “We don't know him.”

“Hello?”

It was Don, knocking at the cracked-open door with perfect timing.

“Come in!” I said, relieved.

He stepped inside, nodded curtly at Ned without smiles or introductions, and held his hand out to Lena.

“I've got a job for you,” he said. “You want to help me?”

“I'm the assistant!” crowed Lena.

And Don towed her efficiently out of the room.

I was so grateful to see her go that I felt my shoulders unclench.

“Look, I'm not asking you to give any stump speeches, honeypie,” said Ned, stretching out a hand and pushing the door closed behind them. “You don't have to say a word. You can be deaf, dumb and blind. Hell, I like you better that way. Just smile and hold my hand sometimes. And get the girl to do the same. You soldier through till the election, smiling all the time, I'll give you a friendly, neat divorce as your very own victory gift. Plus full custody. With visitation rights, of course. Couldn't be looking like a deadbeat dad.”

“And you'd actually put that in writing. Before the fact.”

“All official. With confidentiality agreements on the timing and conditions there, of course.”

“Even if you lose? You'd sign off beforehand on it, no matter how the election goes?”

“I won't lose. Not with the friends I have and your two pretty faces beside me. But sure, I'll sign.”

“Because I know you want more than the state senate. Won't you want a wife and kid when you run for something bigger, too?”

“I'll cross that bridge. Let
me
worry.”

I was asking questions, but I wasn't seriously considering the request.

“Don't you think I could get sole custody
now
?” I said. “I mean Ned. You've come to
one
of her birthday parties. Ever. And that was by accident, if I remember correctly.”

“You might could get custody,” said Ned, and smiled again. “But maybe not. Running off like you did.”

“You wouldn't want that fight,” I said. “Publicly. You'd
never
want it. Especially not now.”

“You'd be amazed how I can spin things, when I need to. I might decide to play the victim. People do love their victims, in America.”

We gazed at each other across the room. That is, I looked past Ned, not wanting to look
at
him, so I don't know if he really looked at me either. I tried to remember another time he'd been so direct, and all I could come up with was when he asked me to get married. It had been at a restaurant with white tablecloths and obsequious waiters—he likes being served by such waiters and I hate it. When waiters are too fawning I hear the falseness they've brought to it, possible snide remarks in the kitchen.

Now he was relaxed in the chair, facing me, while I was in a defensive posture, backed up against the counter of our kitchenette as far from him as I could be. My hands were braced against the edge.

“I need time to think,” I said. “And while I think, I need you to not be here. And not spend time with Lena, either.”

He shrugged. “The clock's ticking.”

“Why? Isn't the election a whole year away?”

“Primary's in August. My party controls the governor's office and the House; the Senate's a 10–10 split, but with redistricting we could take over there too, come November. We've been low-key till now, but it's time for a higher gear.”

“You're not going to start campaigning before Christmas, are you?”

He picked up Lena's Lucky Duck from where it lay, studied it for a few moments, and then dropped it.

“Getting my ducks in a nice little row.”

There was a knock on the door, so I crossed the room and opened it. The Lindas stood there, smiling pleasantly, waiting. Ned rose from his chair and smiled too, at them first, then at me.

“Well, got to be getting back,” he said. “You mull it over, honey. So great to see my girls again. Ladies? A pleasure.”

The Lindas moved aside for him, and just like that he was gone.

I DON'T HAVE
confidence we can run away again. For one thing it would clearly look illegal, now that he's sought us out. And for another he's obviously better at stealth than I am, and he
does
have friends. Whether Beefy John tipped him off or was only a witness, he has sources of information and I'm clearly not equipped to detect them.

The Lindas told me Lena was helping Don in the café; they sat and listened while I explained. I told them what my position was; they were sympathetic. And I didn't have to persuade them Ned wasn't the charmer people always think he is—maybe, as post-reproductive women, they were outside the field of his pheromones.

Almost as soon as Ned was gone the guests seemed to come out of the woodwork: the motel returned to life, with movement and light in the rooms, people talking and walking between them, breath visible in the cold. Don brought Lena back, and Kay and Burke were with them and made remarks about Ned's shining car, his bodyguard/driver, his tailored coat and even the lamb, which lay abandoned in a corner of the room atop its pile of bright wrapping.

Laughter and conversation echoed from the walkway into our room. The day had passed quickly; before I knew it late afternoon was casting its long shadows.

Burke stayed a while after Don and Kay left, helping Lena tend to her bean plants in the miniature greenhouse. Some of them had sprouted; one was growing fast, already too tall for the container, and this they moved into a small pot he'd brought with him.

Eventually he got up to go and I thanked him for coming by, for all he did for Lena. As he was going out the door he turned and looked at me.

“You know, we have to look after each other,” he said quietly. “The people who've heard it.”

5

HURT, YOU WERE A CHILD AGAIN

I
DIDN'T STOP BURKE FROM LEAVING, DIDN'T DO ANYTHING BUT
watch as he headed off down the walkway. When he stepped into his own room I closed the door without noise and sat down on the bed.

Lena had her sheep on her lap and had found a buttoned opening in its stomach. Out of the opening, while I sat looking at her in a daze, she pulled a white-plastic box.

“That's how she talks,” she said, and pushed a large, flat button on the box, which obligingly bleated out its eerie, falsetto prayer. “See? When you press the tummy she talks. It's for babies.
Mommy
. I'm
six
. Can I throw away the talking part?”

“Of course,” I said feebly.

The strength had been pressed out of me; I was breathless and flat.

She turned a small screw neatly with her fingernail, impressing me, and extracted two batteries, which she placed neatly on her bedside table. She marched over to the trash can and dumped the box without ceremony.

“It's not the lamb's fault,” she said. “When she talks it makes me think how they took off her skin.”

“Oh, honey,” I said, reaching. “Don't worry about that. OK? It's sheepskin. No reason to think it's from a baby. Maybe that sheep lived a long and happy life. Maybe it died of old age.”

“Maybe,” said Lena doubtfully.

“Can I see her for a minute?” I asked. It was occurring to me that the lamb could be a nanny cam, hold some kind of tracker. I'd been paranoid,
this
was paranoid, but then again in broad strokes I'd also been correct.

I held it and stared into its glass eyes, squeezed the face, inspected the nose and mouth.

With Lena in front of the TV I poured myself the glass of wine I'd been wanting.
The people who've heard it
, I thought. It had to mean what I thought it meant. So this
wasn't
a random selection of winter travelers in Maine.

It was an enclave.

But I'd never told anyone about the voice—no one. That was what made my hands shake as I drank my wine.

“I'm going to take a bath, honey,” I told her, and carried my glass into the bathroom with me, leaving the door open. I thought the soak might calm me.

I'd have to ask Don, I thought as the water ran, it was the only course of action, I'd ask him now, and this time he'd have to tell me. Or I'd ask Burke how we came to be here, how it was that someone had known and how they'd summoned me, if that was what had happened.

Probably the voice wasn't anything supernatural, you credulous primitive, I thought. I sat there in the hot water and finally leaned out to set the empty goblet on the floor, heard the slight scratch of its circular base on the tile.

Probably it was sound waves, radio waves, technology: that was the best idea I'd had. I'd been so childish to think of magic when it was likely the product of science—some manipulative brainchild of one of these peripatetic characters.

Maybe it had been one of them all along.

I ALMOST FORGOT
Ned that evening, preoccupied by what Burke had said. I debated whether to go to dinner and face that crowd. We could always make food in our kitchenette or even drive to town.

But Lena wanted to go because another child was coming, the boy with the robot. She knew this and planned to sit with him. I was worried about the emotional effects of Ned's sudden appearance, although she seemed to have taken it in stride. I wanted to watch her closely and give her the small assurances she asked for, so I said yes.

And when we entered the café it felt homey. We sat down with the little boy's family, at their invitation, and as I exchanged small talk with his parents I studied my fellow guests, wondering who among them was in Burke's club and who was not. The Lindas? The chic couple? Kay? The angry young mogul?

The mogul, yes. I'd heard him on the telephone that night, yelling; and now I thought,
That's
what it was about. He'd told someone what he'd heard, the person on the other end. I watched him and Kay at their table alongside the wall, leaning close as they confided in each other. Maybe they were discussing it right now, I thought.

The mogul's name was Navid, Kay had told me. It meant good news.

And Kay: Kay with the babies at the NICU. Had she heard it from one of them?

I'd accepted the voice, then gratefully dismissed it when it ceased. Once it had loosed me from my moorings so that I had to tread water in a fluid world; finally, when it fell silent, I'd stepped onto solid ground again. But now there was a new unknown, of how and why I'd got to the motel and how the others had, and the earth was shifting beneath my feet again. How much I hated that jarring movement, the rush of fear! I'd tucked it all behind me and moved on; I'd adapted to it as best I could and concentrated on bringing up my girl.

Surely there was nothing else I could have done.

IT HAPPENED THAT
I didn't have to buttonhole Don. With his customary placidness he stopped by our table. The family from town had left and Lena was picking at a berry cobbler. He had a tray of cobbler dishes in his hands, which he set down on the table next to us before he placed his hand on the back of my chair; I studied the waves of whipped cream on top of the pie.

Don's friendly, familiar slump suggested nothing too significant was happening; and yet he knew.

“The others found us through a website,” he said. “Call it a support group.”

“But I didn't,” I said.

Lena wasn't listening but waving her spoon and making faces at Faneesha, who sat across the room making them back at her. I thought of the Hearing Voices Movement; I thought of support groups in general, and how I'd never been drawn to them.

“Well, you needed something else,” said Don. “You recovered and they're still struggling. You needed a different kind of assistance.”

“That's true,” I said. “Thank you so much for today. Your timing was perfect.”

“No trouble,” said Don. “But we're still worried about you.”

“What you just said, though, it doesn't explain how I knew where to come.”

“You could think of it like salmon,” he said, cocking his head. “Or migrating birds. They know where to go, but no one really knows how they know.”

“Ducks fly south in winter,” said Lena, who'd put down her fork. She had no idea what we were discussing, but lack of context has never stopped her.

“That's right, Lena,” said Don solemnly. “That they do.”

“Except Lucky Duck,” said Lena. She patted him on the chair next to her. “This guy's lazy.”

“But ducks and geese and salmon migrate in groups,” I said to Don. “They have other ducks and salmon.”

“Mostly. But not always,” said Don lightly. “Individuals of many species engage in solitary migrations. Humpback whales, for instance. Young songbirds often make their first trips alone. Scientists say direction and distance are written into their genes.”

“They travel for food or breeding, don't they?” I said. “But I didn't travel for those reasons.” Because Lena was there, I couldn't be more specific and I wanted to keep it casual.

“Well, I don't know about that,” said Don, and took a bowl off his tray before he picked it up to move on. “Have some cobbler. It's on the house.”

BACK IN
the room I went online briefly.

In some butterfly species, for example the monarch, no single individual completes a migratory journey, which is spread over a number of generations. Instead the animals reproduce and die while underway, and it is left to the next generation to complete the next leg of the journey.
—Wikipedia 2015

“Are you mad at Don, Mama?” asked Lena when I was putting her to bed.

She clutched both the duck and the sheep.

“What? No, I'm not mad at him,” I said.

“Don's too nice to be mad at.”

“Don's definitely nice,” I said. “And we're getting to know him better, aren't we.”

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