1980: Wreckage
Though it was almost October, the air was muggy and thick, not
the normal crisp prelude to autumn. I could feel the hot, wet air
in my lungs as I rode behind Rene on my bike, following the tracks
out of the train yard toward the river. In the woods, the scent of
apples was thick, nauseating. Apples had ripened with the first
signs of fall and then rotted in the heat, their small suicides
leaving only sad remains, pulp and empty brown skin littering the
ground beneath our feet. I dodged them like land mines while Rene
plodded and plundered through the rotten mess. Rene, who had to
have weighed close to two-hundred fifty pounds, had to stop several
times to catch his breath. I waited as he bent at the waist,
clutching his chest.
“You okay?” I asked.
Too winded to speak, he nodded. But despite Rene’s obvious
exhaustion, we kept traveling further along the river’s edge,
early morning sunlight struggling through the thick foliage.
Teacups. The first thing that I saw were about a dozen
perfect china teacups floating along in the current, bobbing and
dipping downstream: some with rims lipstick-kissed, some still
filled with tea now mixing with river water, all of them
disengaged from their saucers. In the hazy sun, it was almost
beautiful, only a floating tea party. Before I saw the wreckage, I
saw this.
Then, with a gesture that struck me as almost grand, Rene
motioned toward the place where the woods opened up, where the
train had jumped the tracks. It had derailed just after the bridge,
and one of the rear cars had fallen into the river. The early
morning sun glinted in the silver metal of the train, in the broken
glass, and in the water. The other cars were tipped on their sides,
bloodied people crawling out of the broken windows and doors. Some
passengers sat stunned and silent on the bank of the river, while
others screamed.
“My baby,” a woman wailed, futile in her
attempt to climb the embankment where a child lay motionless on the
grass. Her feet kept slipping, her fingers clawing at the earth.
She looked up at us and screamed, “Why?” Rene
reached for her hand and, bracing himself, helped her up the hill.
She staggered across the grass and then collapsed on top of her
child, her whole body shaking.
I turned toward the river, paralyzed. I could feel my pulse
beating in my neck, in my temples. I willed the other thoughts out
of my head, the other disasters.
“Dere’s people stuck inside,” Rene said to me,
grabbing hold of my arm, as if to wake me from sleep, “You
got to go in dere.”
Rene went to a woman who was beating her fists on the window of
a wrecked car, and I rushed blindly down the riverbank to the car
that had tumbled into the river. The water was cold and smelled
swampy. It soaked my work clothes, the weight of water like the
weight of deep sleep. Remarkably, the car was still upright. I
shielded my eyes against the sun and scanned the row of windows
looking to see if anyone was trying to get out. I fought against
the current, holding onto a fallen tree so as not to get swept
away. There were several shattered windows; I made my way to the
closest one and hoisted myself up into it. I swung my leg over the
edge and lowered myself into the car, where I was waist-deep in the
water again. Inside, I saw more teacups as well as white
tablecloths floating in the water. Plates and soup bowls, water and
wine glasses. I pushed through the water using the dining tables
for leverage.
“Hello?” I hollered, but my ears were filled with
the sound of the river. “Is anybody in here?” I made my
way from one end of the dinette car to the next, my legs shaking
with the effort and the cold. I could see the narrow serving area
and the entrance to Le Pub, the lounge car. “Hello?” I
said again, louder this time.
I fought my way to the far end of the car and looked for another
open window. My hand throbbed with the beat of my heart. There was
no one here. But just as I was about to hoist myself out of the
water, I saw something through the window into the next car. I
pried the doors open, and stepped through into the lounge. An
upright piano was floating in the water, bobbing and dipping in the
current as the river rushed through the windows. Relieved, I turned
to go back. And then out of the corner of my eye, I saw something
else.
The porter’s black and white uniform was fanned out like a
nun’s habit; his head was immersed in water, his arms
outstretched. The dead man’s float. Shelly had learned how to
play dead at the public pool that summer. I’d watched all of
the children in her swim class floating like toys in the water. It
had given me a sick feeling in my stomach then. Now, my stomach
turned again. I was shaking badly. It felt like the river was
inside of me, cold and wet. Unforgiving. I went to the man as
quickly as the river would allow, and gently rolled him over.
His face was bloated, pale blue and swollen. At the sight of his
face, I turned away, feeling bile rising in my throat, and I
vomited into the river water. I turned back to the man and felt the
shivering turning into something more like a small convulsion. I
had the momentary impulse to give in to the current. I was so full
of the river by then I could have just let it carry me away. But
something inside of me pulled me out of the wreckage, back into the
water, and slowly, slowly, up onto the muddy shore where I could
barely feel my legs.
The police and the town’s only ambulance had finally
arrived. The emergency vehicles were parked cockeyed and tilted on
the grassy shore. The red and blue lights swirling and humming
reminded me of a carnival. Of a mid-way. Of some terrible ride.
There were other drowned people. Their bodies lay along the
river’s edge, a morbid picnic. There was so much blood; the
grass beneath my feet was slick with it. Children cried in their
parents’ and strangers’ arms; the air was loud with the
sound of sirens and screaming. I recognized faces but could not
connect the faces with names. I concentrated instead on teacups, a
hundred bobbing teacups, and I made my way out of the river. I
climbed the bank, my boots and eyes filled with water, walking and
walking until I couldn’t hear the sirens or see the train.
About a hundred yards from the accident, I sat down under a great
willow tree, exhausted, and put my face in my hands. I was
fatigued, delirious. I blinked hard against the exhaustion and all
of the pictures on the backs of my palms and on the backs of my
eyes. But no matter how hard I tried, all I saw was the dead
man’s face, and every breath reminded me of the other man
I’d left for dead in this river.
I could have been there minutes or hours. The lack of sleep
seemed to make time mutable. I could barely keep track of it
anymore. Entire days went by sometimes without my noticing. Months
could have passed while I sat at the river’s edge. Seasons
changed.
I lifted my head only when I sensed someone standing in front of
me. The sun was bright behind her, but I could make out the
silhouette of a young girl, maybe sixteen, seventeen years old, her
belly swollen like an egg. An apparition. A cruel trick of my mind,
intent on its return, as always, to Betsy. Her name found its way
to my throat but not through my lips. I squinted against the sun,
and quickly realized that this was not a ghost, not Betsy,
but a real girl. A girl with skin the color of blackberries,
holding a suitcase, her hair dripping river water onto my legs.
“What’s your name?” she asked, her accent
jarring me, clearly placing her far away from home.
“Harper,” I answered, standing up awkwardly, as if I
were only going to shake her hand.
“Harper,” she said. And then she pressed
her tiny hand against her swollen stomach, a gesture I could never
forget. “Please,” she said. “You gotta help me,
sir. My mama’s dead. I got nowhere to go.”
What happened after this (the moments that followed, the months
that followed) I can only explain as the acts of a man so full of
sorrow he’d do just about anything to get free of it. Here I
was at the river again, with only a moment to decide.
Forgiveness. For twelve years, I’d only wanted to
say I was sorry, but before this there was no one left alive to
offer my apologies to.
“Please,” she said again.
And this time, I didn’t turn away.
Betsy
The neighborhood in Two Rivers where Betsy and I grew up was
made up of row after row of crooked Victorians --- crumbling
monstrosities sinking in upon themselves. Each house on Charles
Street had its own peculiar tendencies. The one next door to ours
had a widow’s walk whose railing had, unprovoked by either
natural or unnatural disaster, collapsed into a pile of pick-up
sticks on the lawn below one afternoon. The family who lived at the
end of the street had the misfortune of owning a house that
wouldn’t stay painted. No matter what pastel color they chose
each summer, by the following spring it would have shrugged off the
pink or yellow or lavender, the paint peeling and curling like old
skin. My own family’s house was tilted at a noticeable angle;
if you put a ball on the kitchen floor and let go, it would roll
straight into the dining room (through the legs of the heavy wooden
table), past my mother’s study, and finally into the living
room where the pile of my father’s failed inventions
inevitably stopped the ball’s trajectory. Most of the
homeowners in our neighborhood had at some point given up,
resigning themselves to sinking foundations and roofs. To the
inevitable decay. There simply wasn’t the time or the money
or the love required to keep the places up. This was a street of
sad houses. Except for the Parker’s place.
Though it was one of the oldest homes in the neighborhood, the
Parker’s house was meticulously maintained. Its paint was
fresh: white with green shutters and trim. Its chimney was
straight. The cupola sat like an elaborate cake decoration on top
of the house. A clean white fence enclosed the front yard, which
looked exactly as the town barber’s yard should. Rosebushes
bordered the uncracked walkway, and other flowers littered the
periphery of the yard in meditated disarray. A swing hung still and
straight on the front porch, and the porch light came on without
fail or flicker each night at dusk. On a street of forlorn houses,
the Parker’s made the other houses look like neglected
children.
Of course, I knew Betsy Parker long before I loved her. We had
lived on the same street since we were born. Our fathers nodded at
each other as they went off to work each morning. Our mothers made
polite small talk when they saw each other at the market. Betsy and
I had knocked heads once during a game of street hockey, the result
of which were two identical blue goose eggs on our respective
foreheads. In the sixth grade, we had been the last two standing in
a spelling bee (though I’d ultimately won with the word
lucid). But in the summer of 1958, when we were twelve,
our relationship changed from one necessitated by mere proximity
into a full-blown crush -- on my part anyway; she didn’t love
me then. In fact, she didn’t love me for a long, long time.
But that summer the seed was planted, and my unrequited passion,
like all the other untamed weeds in our yard, grew to epic and
tangled proportions by summer’s end.
When school let out in June, I’d taken up fishing, drawn
by a local legend that, on a good day, the spot where the two
rivers meet was teaming with rainbow trout. But by July I’d
spent entire days with my line in the water, and I still had yet to
catch a single trout (or any other kind of fish for that matter).
The day I found myself smitten by Betsy, I’d also spent
fishing, and, once again, I hadn’t caught anything but a
cold. I’d meant to go home. I thought I might take a snooze
in the hammock in our backyard. But instead of walking down the
shady side of Depot Street to the tracks and then heading up the
hill toward home, I crossed the street, into the sun. Once there, I
stood in front of her, rendered mute.
Orange Crush and skinned knees. This was Betsy at twelve.
I’d walked past Betsy Parker a thousand times before. A
thousand bottles of Orange Crush. A thousand Band-aids. But that
day, as I strolled past her daddy’s barbershop, there she
was, with fresh scabs on both golden knees, and it felt like I was
seeing her for the very first time. I’m not sure which made
me dizzier --- the twirling red, white, and blue barber pole or
Betsy. Can I remember the way I saw her then? You’d think it
would be hard after all these years, but it isn’t. Perhaps I
was memorizing her before I even knew I should. Here’s the
way she looked to me in June when we were twelve: her fingers were
long, her legs longer, stretched out on the steps of her
daddy’s shop where she sipped her soda through a straw. Her
tongue was stained orange, and her hair was like syrup running down
her back. (I remember touching my tongue to my lips when I saw
her.)
Betsy sipped long and thoughtfully. Then she leaned toward me
and looked into my empty bucket. “Whadja catch?”
I felt heat rising to my ears. “Not much today.”
“Yesterday?”
“Not much yesterday either.”
“Why do you bother?” she asked. “If you
don’t ever catch anything?”
I shrugged.
“You’re probably the kind who sees the glass half
full,” she sighed and sipped the last of her soda pop loudly.
“Not me, I’m a half empty kind of girl.”
I didn’t know what she meant, only that she thought we
were somehow fundamentally different, and this made my heart
ache.
“You live on my street,” I said stupidly.
“You live on my street,” she smiled,
setting the amber-colored bottle on the pavement between us. She
stuck one bare foot out in front of her and spun the bottle with
her toe. It clanked and spun and stopped, its neck pointing right
at me.
I didn’t know what to say, so I bent over and picked the
bottle up. The glass was still cold. I dropped it into my empty
bucket, as if that could make up somehow for my failure as a
fisherman. “That’s worth two cents.”
“Coulda been worth a lot more than that,” she said,
smiling.
I walked home that day with Betsy Parker’s Orange Crush
bottle clanging against the inside of my bucket. From my bedroom
window I could see the pristine facade of the Parker’s house,
their immaculate lawn. I felt like an idiot. First, because
I’d missed what I quickly realized was a chance at kissing
Betsy. And second, because twelve whole years had already passed
before I realized that she’d been there all along. Right
across the street. I took the bottle out and held it to my lips.
The glass was sticky, sweet. I tipped the empty bottle, leaning my
head back, waiting for the last sweet drops to fall into my
throat.
After that day, I gave up my fishing trips in favor of a
new futile endeavor, one that would last longer than most
boys my age would have had patience for. But Betsy was right, I was
a “half-full” kind of person, and I had high hopes. I
knew I’d get a second chance; it was just a matter of
time.
Alteration
I gave Maggie my room. It didn’t seem right to make Shelly
share the first bedroom she’d ever had to herself, and I was
sleeping so little, I figured I hardly needed my bed anyway. She
arranged the few things she’d brought with her on the top of
my dresser (which I emptied for her): a photo of herself and two
other girls, leaning against a red Chevy Monte Carlo. There was a
giant willow tree in the background, a gray house. A clothesline
with white sheets. The girls were all wearing short shorts and
halter tops, posing, puckering their lips. There was a small
painted wooden box with a gold clasp and tiny padlock, a bleached
sand dollar, and a pack of matches from some place called
Joe’s. I didn’t look inside the box, but I did
strike one match. Just one, and held it until the flame tickled the
tip of my thumb.
All week, I tried my best to pretend that none of this was out
of the ordinary, secretly hoping the problem would somehow take
care of itself. I kept waiting for her father to show up at my
doorstep and just take her home. At work when Henry said that Stan
told him I’d hired some help for Shelly, I stuttered but
stuck to my story about my mother’s college roommate’s
daughter. And each night as I fought my futile battle against
insomnia, I vowed that I would contact Maggie’s father. When
dawn broke each morning, I rolled off the couch, resolute in my
decision to send her home, and then I’d make my way to the
kitchen where she had already fixed bacon and eggs, ironed my
clothes, and packed Shelly’s lunch. The smell of starch and
freshly-squeezed orange juice worked like some sort of magic
antidote to my resolve, making all of my late night ruminations
seem somehow ludicrous. It also didn’t help that Shelly had
fallen head over heels for Maggie. Several times I had to shoo her
out of Maggie’s room at night where she sat cross-legged at
the edge of the bed, chattering on and on as Maggie painted her
nails or braided her hair. This was the true rub. Just when I felt
confident in my decision to turn her in, to throw her back into the
water so to speak, I’d see the joy in Shelly’s face.
This child-woman with confused eyes, this stranger, had something
to offer Shelly that I simply didn’t.
“Can I go to the fall dance at school on Friday?”
Shelly asked.
We were eating dinner. Maggie had made homemade macaroni and
cheese, fried chicken. Biscuits that melted buttery on my tongue.
My fingers were slick with grease, my stomach grateful.
“Aren’t you a little young for dances? We
didn’t have dances in school when I was a kid.”
Shelly rolled her eyes and speared a pile of macaroni with her
fork.
“In my town, we started having dances in the fifth
grade,” Maggie offered.
I had to bite my tongue to keep something mean-spirited from
coming out, willing myself to look away from her belly, which
seemed to be growing exponentially each day.
“Do you have a date?” I asked, chuckling a
little without intending to.
“Yes,” Shelly said, exasperated.
I lost my grasp on the piece of chicken I was holding, and it
flew onto the table. “I’m sorry, that’s out of
the question. You’re twelve years old.”
“Exactly,” she said. “I’m not a
baby.”
“I didn’t say you were a baby. I said you were
twelve. How old is your ‘date’?”
“He’s thirteen,” she said softly. “In
the eighth grade.”
“Yep. Sorry. Forget it. Out of the question.”
“What if she goes to the dance without a
date?” Maggie asked, spooning another helping of macaroni and
cheese on my plate.
I glared at her.
“Please, please?” Shelly asked. “I’ll
call him right now, and tell him I can’t go with him.
I’ll let you listen. You can tell him yourself.”
“What’s his number?” Maggie asked excitedly.
She stood up and went to the phone.
I felt duped. I hadn’t wanted Shelly to go to the dance at
all. Now here I was, backed into a corner.
“Sit down, Maggie. And Shelly, you listen,” I said,
realizing that I had never ever talked like this to her before.
Like somebody with rules to enforce. Like the father of a twelve
year old girl. “I don’t like this, but I suppose I
don’t have much of a choice. I trust you. That’s all
I’m going to say. Please don’t disappoint me.” I
felt like a fraud.
Maggie told me that she and Shelly would clean up, sent me to
the living room to watch the news with a bowl of hot bowl of peach
cobbler in one hand and a cold glass of milk in the other. In the
kitchen, their whispers and giggles mixed with the tinkling of
dishes and water, and I knew I’d only been politely
dismissed.
***
The wreck had created all sorts of havoc not only in my personal
life but at my job as well. In addition to my normal workload,
I’d had to take act as a human shield protecting Lenny from
the media, the railroad, and the victim’s families ---
fielding calls from newsmen and TV stations, negotiating my way
through the literal mountains of legal paperwork from the railroad,
and intercepting angry phone calls from grieving family members. I
spent most of each day convinced that Maggie’s father would
be the next voice I heard on the other end of the line. I figured
that by now someone from her family must have gathered that she
didn’t make it to Canada. The train wreck had been on the
national news. I knew that somebody would be looking for
her. Soon. And that I’d better be prepared to explain how a
fifteen-year-old girl wound up living in my house, pressing my
clothes and taking care of a child only a few years younger than
herself. It wouldn’t look good. I was sure of that.
As I rode my bike home the night of Shelly’s dance, I
formulated exactly how I would broach the subject of Maggie’s
impending departure (first with Maggie and then with Shelly). I was
exhausted, starving, my legs shaking from the ride as I climbed the
steps two at a time to our apartment. Inside, Maggie was not in the
kitchen as she had been every other night since the wreck. I could
hear laughter coming from down the hall though, and after setting
down my stuff and kicking off my work shoes, I went down the
hallway and knocked softly on my own bedroom door.
“Who is it?” Maggie asked.
“It’s me,” I said, mildly annoyed.
“Just a minute.”
It was time. This was ridiculous. I’d made a huge
mistake.
The door creaked open slowly, and Maggie emerged, shutting the
door quickly behind her.
“What’s going on in there?” I asked.
“She’s almost ready,” Maggie said, pushing me
gently back down the hallway. “I made some chicken and
dumplings tonight. My auntie’s recipe.” She ushered me
to the kitchen table. I sat down, rubbing my temples.
“Listen, Maggie,” I said. “About your staying
here... it’s time we talk about...” I started.
“What do you think?” Shelly asked. She stood in the
doorway, her hands hanging awkwardly at her sides. In the pale blue
dress, she looked like a child again. A child playing dress-up. The
dress was short, barely covering the tops of her skinny legs. She
was wearing makeup, her eyes lined in the same blue as the dress.
Her cheeks were flushed pink with rouge “Maggie found this in
your closet. She hemmed it up for me, cause it’s not so much
in style anymore. But it’s pretty, don’t you
think?”
The dull pain in my temples became the sharp, blinding pain of a
migraine. I was angry, furious, and before I could think
about what I was doing, I was holding onto Maggie’s
shoulders, shaking her hard. “What makes you think you had
any right to touch that dress? Did you cut it? Did
you?”
Underneath my fingers, Maggie’s shoulders trembled
violently.
Shelly screamed, “Stop, Daddy! What are you doing?
You’ll hurt her!”
And then everything went numb. The searing pain behind my eyes
was replaced by a thick and familiar humming. I shook my head, as
if I could shake that awful droning from my ears. I stepped back,
still gripping her small shoulders tightly, and forced myself to
look into her mismatched eyes, which, despite their differences in
hue, were both filled with terror.
“Please don’t hurt me,” she cried.
And shaking, I let go.
Excerpted from TWO RIVERS © Copyright 2011 by T. Greenwood.
Reprinted with permission by Kensington. All rights reserved.
Two Rivers