Read The Fortunate Brother Online
Authors: Donna Morrissey
“Around eleven-thirty. Eleven-thirty-five, actually. Her dashboard clock was lit up. First thing I seen when I got in the car.”
“Where were you when Kate Mackenzie picked you up?”
“The other side of Bottom Hill. Walking home.”
“She drove you home?”
“She drove me to her place and we had a fire on the beach.”
“How long were you there?”
“Bit past midnight.”
“Was there anyone else there besides you and Kate Mackenzie?”
“Father and a buddy of mine showed up. Hooker.” He looked over to where his father was no longer shovelling, but standing straight backed, face to face with the sergeant.
“Would that be Harold Ford?”
Kyle nodded.
“When did Harold Ford leave?”
“I don't know.”
“Why don't you know?”
“I left before he did. And went home.”
“What time was that?”
“Around midnight. I couldn't sleep. Jaw hurt. And so I was sitting on the wharf when Father showed up. We both went inside together. I remember the clock on the stoveâit was twelve-thirty or twelve-forty.”
“Who was home when you went into your house?”
“No one. Mother. She was in bed.”
They both looked up as MacDuff approached. He was scanning the shoreline, and then looked at Kyle questioningly.
“When's the squid rolling?” he asked.
“Squid don't roll,” said Kyle.
MacDuff looked puzzled.
“Squid strike. Capelin roll. We done here?” he asked Canning.
“For now.” Canning snapped his notebook shut.
“When do squid
strike
then?”
“Early June.”
“Perhaps I could buy a few. Anybody selling a few dried ones?”
“Nobody sells dried squid.”
“That's a shame. Anybody I can pay to jig me a few?”
“Sure. Working for minimum wageâcost about hundred and fifty dollars to jig, gut, split, salt, and dry a pound of squid. Still interested, talk to Hector Gale. He might cure you a pound. Yellow house up the road, green facings.”
MacDuff stared at him suspiciously and then went to his car. Canning was ahead of him, door opened and scuffing the muck off his boots before getting in. The old fellow sank into his seat
and took off his hat, scratching his grey scraggy comb-over and squinting along the shoreline. He gave Kyle another suspicious look and then turned to Canning, who was peeling back the pages of his notebook and holding out something for MacDuff to read. Yet another suspicious glance at Kyleâfrom both of them this time. Or perhaps the look wasn't for Kyle. His father was approaching from behindâstep soft, wary. As if he was hunting.
“What did you tell them?” Sylvanus asked as the cops drove off up the road.
“What I told you.”
“Is that the truth?”
Kyle looked into his father's eyes. They were hot with tension, frightening and vague. He felt his own tension rise, the same sense of vagueness overtaking him.
“Back to work,” said Sylvanus.
Kyle followed him across the site. His hand kept going to his pocket where Bonnie Gillard's car keys lay. He should've told. But gawd-damnit, it wasn't his to tell.
“I told them to go on home, ain't no one here bawling over Clar Gillard,” his cousin Wade called out to him.
“Ye gonna cut that fucking plastic?” Kyle went over to where his father was now on his knees, hammering in a peg. He touched his hand to the keys. His father glanced up at him and jabbed a finger at his spade lying on the ground.
“Pick it up, pick the gawd-damn thing up,” he ordered.
He let his hand fall to his side. Jaysus.
T
he long trumpeted cry of a gull awakened him. The heels of his mother's good shoes tapped the floor as she hurried down the hallway and then back again, pausing by his door.
“You up? We leave in a half hour.” Her voice strained with forced lightness.
“Right.” The hospital in Corner Brook. Her operation.
“Your father already left for the site. He walked.”
“Walked?” Hell. Aside from hunting and logging, his father hadn't walked farther than his nose his whole life. “I would've drove him down.”
“There was no talking to him.” Her voice faded off and he heard the washroom door open and close. He dredged himself from his bed, the floor cold beneath his feet as he dressed. His tea was poured and stirred and waiting by a plate of toast and eggs. His father'd walked. Well, sir. He sat at the table and looked through the window at the sea, rippling greyish away from him. A southerly wind. Least it was warmish outside. Likely somebody driving along had picked him up by now.
He grasped his mug of tea and blew tepidly onto its scalding rim. His mother hurried from the washroom and across the hallway into her room. She hadn't mentioned anything about police being there the day before, asking questions. He never brought it up, nor did his father. Neither of them wanting reminders of both their shame that night. A dresser drawer scraped open. Another. She emerged with an armload of folded blankets, bustled into Gran and Sylvie's room, and within a minute was coming down the hallway again and into his room. He heard the dull thud of his pillow and blankets hitting the floor as she stripped his bed. All her activity took him back to the summers they'd spend in the old Cooney Arm outport where they'd once lived, helping Gran tend the vegetable garden she planted every spring. There was a cliff near their house and he'd watch his mother, those times she became dispirited, climb a steep path to the top. Couple of times he followed her. It was vicious up there, everything swept bald by the winds and the cliff face dropping several hundred feet straight down into the swirling mass of ocean. He could see his mother now, hunched like an old woman, gripping onto tree roots and brambles and dragging herself up that steep path. Scarcely enough energy to stand.
Low-minded
they called it back then. She's
got down.
She'd be gone for hours up on those cliffs some days. But when she got back she'd be upright, shoulders squared, a steadiness to her hands as she took up her cooking and scrubbing in the house and then weeded in the garden till the flies or the rain or the dark drove her in. He felt the same energy consuming her now as she scraped open one of his own drawers and shut it and then her shoes
tap tap tapping
to the washer in the back room.
He noted her small suitcase by the door. Her good raglan was folded across it and in one of its pockets he saw a glimmer of red. Her little book of prayer. She read it all the time after Chris was
buried.
It's what keeps me going when I get scared,
she said to him once. Scared. His mother scared. She was scared now. He pushed aside his breakfast plate and went to the door, hauling on his boots.
“Kyle,” she said, coming into the kitchen, “you haven't eaten a bite. Kyle!”
He held himself erect by the door frame as she came up behind him.
“As well to take your father with me if you're going to act like that,” she said sharply.
He picked up her suitcase, took it to the truck, and started the engine, warming it for her. He rubbed his bruised ribs, rubbed them hard just to feel the pain of it over the angst in his guts. The morning chill leached through his clothes and he shivered thinking about Clar Gillard splayed out in the icy seawater. His mother climbed inside the cab beside him and was quiet as he drove and he wanted to puncture that growing solitude between them, wanted to ask her about the cliffs of Cooney Arm, but the words stuck like sawdust in his throat.
“You talking with Bonnie?” he asked, thinking he might mention his seeing her sitting at their table the night of the killing and that he knew about her car. Get her mind off this thing waiting ahead. She gave a dismissive shrug. But she was choking with words, he could tell. Just like Sylvie. Choking with words. Wanting to talk about
things. Things
about Chris and the accident.
Things
about him, Kyle.
Things
about themselves. And he never knew what
things
they wanted to tell him or have him tell them and he bloody didn't care about them things. Just leave it alone, leave it the bloody hell alone. Christ, he was working on getting
things
out of his head, not shoving more in.
He flicked on the radio. “See what the weather is,” he said, and half listened to some broadcaster sounding hollowly through
the truck as he felt her choked-back silence and that he was abandoning her on a sinking boat. He turned off the radio and leaned over the wheel, looking skyward. “Guess we can see the weather,” he said, scrutinizing the patchworked whites and greys and scattered pieces of blue. “If you can read that. Warm enough?”
She made some agreeable sound and he looked at her and her pallid cheeks. There was a hard light in her eyes. She was wearing her summer scarf around her neck, a thin silky thing patterned with ripe red roses that he swore he could smell.
“Why aren't you wearing a warm scarf? Thought you liked my
stylish
scarf.”
“I left it in Bonnie's car the other day. This will do.”
“She could have brought it back, I suppose.”
“Perhaps she didn't see it.”
“Not a hard thing to miss, a scarf sitting on the seat.”
“My, Kyle, I got more to think about than a scarf this morning.”
“I don't like you being mixed up with her.”
“Why, what's wrong with her? You got more to worry about than
her.
Sucking back on the bottle like your father. How would you like it if I'd done that? I could have. After Chrissy died. I wanted to.”
Jaysus.
“Don't you be taking after him, numbing everything with drinking. I'm glad I didn't give into it. There's good to be found in everything, even grief. I've learned that.” Her voice trembled with feeling yet her words were hard, without gratitude. They echoed through the cab like a confession wrung from her heart and he felt the unworthy priest. He tried to speak, but couldn't.
She flicked the radio back on with impatience and he hated himself. When they drove into the winter-worn town he was relieved to see her attention taken by patches of lawns starting to
green and burlapped shrubs sitting like cloaked gnomes hedging the driveways. She liked cities. The sun flickered and he was glad for the sudden shaft tunnelling through the truck and settling warm around her face. And for brightening the canopied storefronts they were now passing, the white-collared shopkeepers sweeping clots of rotted leaves from their stoops and flooding gutters.
“Father says you always wanted to live in a city.”
“That's what your father knows, now.”
“Heard you say it myself.”
“Perhaps I would've liked it one time.”
“Sylvie wasn't long taking off after she finished school. Wouldn't know she was half raised on a fish flake.”
She gave him a sharp look. “Sylvie done what she was supposed to doâfinish school and go to university. What's wrong with that?”
“Nothing. Think I got the old man in me. Likes the woods.”
“Never hears you talking nice about your sister.”
He opened his mouth to protest but closed it. They crested a hill, below which the red-bricked hospital sprawled like a crusted sore. Grey smoke belched through smoke stacks and row upon row of frameless windows mirrored the ashen sky, black stains tearing from their corners and dribbling down the brick face. At the entrance to the parking lot he slowed to take the turn and his mother gripped his arm.
“It's a bit early,” she said, her voice a thin whisper he didn't know.
He shivered and lurched them onwards down the street and yielded onto a main drag that took them past Pizza Huts and takeouts and smartly dressed mannequins in shop windows. He cut through a ribbon-bannered car lot and passed a school, its yard strewn with hollering kids, and a quiet neighbourhood behind it that flowed up, up, up a steep hill. The houses thinned, the hill plateauing onto a bit of a parking lot deeply cratered from winter's
frost. He parked near the edge of the dropoff and they looked down over the city. Sulphuric smells rose from a smoking pulp mill that headed the harbour while nice shingled homes and shops and oak trees encircled the mill's land side as ribs might encircle the life-giving heart.
To the northeast and beneath the white dome of sky was the indigo ridge of a mountain range, the range that became the hills of Cooney Arm.
“Almost see home,” said Kyle.
She nodded.
“Almost see the cliffs of Cooney Arm. I followed you up there once,” he heard himself say to her silence. “Wind near ripped my hair out.”
She put her fist to her mouth and he could see that her lips were trembling and he needed a drink, sweet Jesus he needed a drink.
“You looked calm as anything on that cliff top. All squished in amongst the tuckamores. Like they was an armchair. Come to think of it, I followed you up there a couple of times. Always made sure I kept outta your sights. You threatened to beat the crap outta me if I ever went up there.”
“Like your sister. Always sneaking around.”
“Still wouldn't be landed if that wind got a good snatch. Freaked the crap outta me, that wind.”
“Timid.”
“Timid. Jaysus. Everything was moving up thereâclouds skittering, trees rocking. And below, water skittering with whitecaps. Got dizzy. Had to crawl back down.”
Her hands were in her lap, fingers laced.
“Fired you up some, being up there. Had the go of ten people when you come back down. Always wondered why you went. Why? Why did you go up there all them times?”
She shook her head.
“Must be some reason.”
“Made me feel good, sometimes. All that grandness around me. Your father said the same thing about sitting in his boat on the water.”
“I suppose.”
“It's fine to be nervous.”
“I knows that.”
“Everybody feels nervous about some things.”
“I'm nervous about every fucking thing.”
“Still got to move ahead. We're blessed like Job then, when we feels the fear of something and does it anyway.”
“Getting your head around something, that's what's the hardest.”
“Think of something bigger than you.”
“Right. Bears. That helps.”
“I thinks of my babies I never rocked. That's what I'm doing now, rocking them. Nothing else matters then.”
His mouth was dry. He'd seen her enough times, sitting by those three little white crosses in Cooney Arm. Three babies that never survived infancy. “Done something to you, losing those babies.”
“That's it, now, like your father says. Some people have illness, everybody has something. It's how you carries itâthat's what you take into the other world with you. That's the only thing we takes. Now, then.” She looked at her watch. “We'd better go.”
Kyle started them back down the mountain road. He parked beneath the overhang of a new addition to the eastern side of the hospital. Taking her suitcase from behind the seat, he walked too fast, slowing for her to catch up each time the
clip-clip
of her shoes on the concrete started fading. He held the door open and they entered into a spacious foyer where people swirled and shifted around and he stood amongst them like a leaf in an unsure wind.
The fan-driven air dried the wet that kept dampening his eyes and his throat felt dry. She touched his hand and guided him towards the elevators and up to the third floor. He followed her down a long corridor littered with medical carts and past workers with impatient eyes and bewildered patients in green jackets pushing their IVs before their slippered feet. The smell of bleach and alcohol brought more water to his eyes. At the nurses' station his mother was met with a flurry of smiles and charts.