Authors: Nova Ren Suma
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Runaways, #Horror & Ghost Stories, #Visionary & Metaphysical
Fiona Burke was the daughter of the
couple in the big house next door.
They’d adopted her when she was a
baby, from an orphanage in China. I
don’t know what her name had been
before the Burkes rechristened her and
brought her back to the Hudson River
Valley, to where they lived in the small
town of Pinecliff, New York. Even
today, the Asian population in Pinecliff
is only 1.34 percent. Fiona Burke was
likely one of only a handful of Asian
kids in school, and she was the only
person I knew who’d been adopted.
I don’t know what the Burkes were
like all those years before Fiona, when
they were childless and tucked away
behind their lace curtains, shopping for
someone else’s offspring to bring home.
They were an older couple, older than
anyone would expect to be raising a
teenage daughter, and the only reason we
knew them is because we rented our
house from them. It was small and
separated from their much grander house
by a pruned hedge. They called it the
“carriage house” and wouldn’t let my
mom and me paint it a color because
they wanted it white, to match theirs.
Apparently, a long time ago, it used to
be the garage.
This meant the Burkes were our
landlords; my mom used to send me over
to their palatial front porch on the third
or fourth of the month—never the first,
never on time—to ring their bell and
hand-deliver an envelope containing the
rent check.
Only, the Burkes never came to the
door. I’d ring the bell and Fiona would
answer before the chime even stopped
sounding, like she kept herself pressed
up behind it, waiting for any excuse to
let in some air.
She’d open the door, see it was only
me, and her face would fall. She’d hold
out her hand so I could give her the
envelope, and she’d say, “This from
Tamara?”
And I’d say, “Yeah, that’s from my
mom.”
Fiona Burke wasn’t particularly
friendly—she never invited me in; she
never said thank you. But, in the
beginning at least, she wasn’t mean.
She’d
simply
put
the
envelope
containing our rent check on the
sideboard, and the whole time she’d be
looking up over my head, past me at the
road, a visual ache showing in her face.
Then she’d close the door.
She was nine years older than me, so
it seemed she’d always lived there in
that house with the Burkes. She belonged
in Pinecliff, our small town set upon the
steep hill, with the railroad station down
at the bottom and the mountain ridge
hovering above. To my mind, she
belonged there more than I did.
When we spent any amount of time
alone, like when she’d do my mom a
favor and babysit me for a few hours,
she was quiet, perched on the edge of the
couch near the television, making
surreptitious calls on the phone. But
something changed the last year I knew
her, around the time she turned 17. I
know because my mom said, “Don’t take
it personally, honey, she’s 17—that’s
just how girls are at that age.”
But were they?
The shift in Fiona Burke’s personality
came fast, it felt to me. It altered the look
in her eyes, and it chilled the tone in her
voice. It changed everything. She liked
to tease me about something that year,
telling me she could evict me and my
mom anytime. All she had to do was
make up a good, steaming lie about us to
tell her parents, and my mom and I
would be out on the street. We’d have to
live in a cardboard box and beg for
handouts at the train station, she said.
And maybe my mom would decide I was
too much for her to take care of, and
she’d sell me off to some passing
businessman on an Amtrak train bound
for Penn Station, and who knew what
would become of me then.
I cried the first time she said this,
which made her enjoy repeating it. Of
course I know now she didn’t have the
power to evict us, not by her word
alone, but I used to believe she did.
But my sometimes-babysitter and
longtime next-door neighbor Fiona
Burke appeared as innocent as she ever
would in the photograph her parents
selected for her Missing poster. In it, she
had straight teeth and straighter hair, not
yet dyed. Her shirt buttons were done all
the way up to her neck and there were
two pearl earrings fastened in her ears.
She wore a blameless smile and sat
there on a stool with her hands folded.
Her favorite necklace was tight around
her throat, and the flash of the studio
camera happened to catch it at the exact
right angle to make it look lovely and not
like a ghastly, dirty thing hanging over
her shirt.
She was who they wanted her to be, in
that picture. That was before she turned
17. After, a whole other side to her
emerged, one that was out in full the
night I saw her last.
Fiona Burke’s parents saw one thing,
and the world saw another.
When she disappeared, I remember
seeing her picture in the news, being
aware that people were looking for her.
But, as the years went on and she didn’t
come back, as her Missing posters came
down from bulletin boards and other
announcements for yard sales and ride-
shares and rooms for rent went up in
their place, people forgot about her and
stopped asking.
She’d lost herself to that place where
the missing kids go, the kids no one
finds, even when lakes are dredged and
woods combed. The ones computer-aged
into adulthood who never make it home.
She didn’t call. She didn’t write.
She was just gone.
And I guess I’d forgotten about her
like everyone else in town had, until she
showed up in the dream and tried to give
me that stone, the one that looked a lot
like the broken piece of jewelry I’d
recovered from the gully on the side of
Dorsett Road. I was sure it meant
something, and it wasn’t until I was
alone again later that night, after the
frozen pizza with my mom and trying to
deflect her questions about Jamie, that I
closed myself in my room and dug it out
from where, the second I got home, I’d
stowed it inside a sock that was
wrapped in a sweater and buried in the
bottom drawer of my dresser. It wasn’t
until then that I really let myself
remember.
—
12
—
IT
was a chilly night in November, the
night Fiona Burke disappeared. Her
parents were down in Maryland for the
weekend, so she had the house to
herself, and it was clear she’d wanted—
planned—to keep it that way. Until my
mom asked her parents if she could
watch me, and they said yes without
confirming it with Fiona first. I’m
guessing that my usual babysitter must
have flaked like she did sometimes, and
my sudden appearance at my landlords’
house was a last-minute surprise—to
both Fiona and me. Because with her
parents out of state, this was the night
Fiona Burke had planned to run away
from home, and all of a sudden I was
there, in the way.
My mom wasn’t in school then. She
didn’t have the job at the state university
or even the certificate to get that job, so
this must have been when she worked
nights, when she was still dancing at the
club across the river.
I want to say I could pinpoint exactly
what Fiona Burke looked like on that
night she gave my mom the finger behind
her back and then said she’d take great
care of me. I should have an image of
her cleaning out her mother’s jewelry
box and her father’s suit jackets,
dredging for pawnable brooches and
misplaced gold cards.
But she was a fiery blur. Her hair was
livid, dyed the red of a sugar drink. Her
mouth was a deep, dark streak slathered
in gloss that was manufactured to look
wet long after it dried.
I remembered this:
Fiona Burke on the landing of her
parents’ circular staircase, leaning over
and looking down to the floor far below.
Her scraggly flame-red hair with the
pitch-black roots hung upside down in
the air like living thorns, and through the
thorns she was yelling at me to come
help her.
I realized she was really doing it and
not just saying she would. Leaving. She
was actually running away. She’d
packed up her things; the few bulging
bags up above were the possessions
she’d decided to take with her. Before I
was ready, she began to fling the bags
one by one over the banister.
Dropping her bags down from that
height made each one land with the
sickening smack of a suicide on the tiled
foyer floor. I dragged them off to the
side as soon as it was safe to grab them.
When she leaned over to drop the last
bag, the odd, murky pendant she always
wore got caught on the banister. She
pulled herself free and flung the bag, and
I guess at that point the black cord that
kept the necklace choker-tight against
her throat snapped, and the pendant itself
slipped off and fell, too.
It sailed through the air over me, and
though it must have dropped fast,
because it was an actual stone and not
made of something lighter, my memory
holds a picture of it still falling. I’m
standing below, in the middle of the
foyer beneath the glittering chandelier,
gathering her bags in a pile as instructed,
and I look up. I should have moved, but
there I am with my face turned upward
and the dark object hurtling straight for
me.
I must have covered my head and
ducked at some point, because the
broken pendant did reach bottom, where
it hit me in the shoulder, leaving a
searing pink whop of impact. From
there, it dropped to the floor, glossy face
up.
I seem to remember, if I peer back
through the years of carefully buried
distance, that the stone was as gray as a
trail of exhaust smoke, and it had a
surface that shone and bounced the light
to trick you into thinking it was beautiful.
I also seem to remember that I didn’t get
such a good look at it before Fiona
Burke descended the stairs and snatched
it out of my hands, shoving it in the slim
pocket of her jeans to take with her.
That’s how I know she had the
pendant with her when she went. And yet
somehow, impossibly, there I was, more
than eight years after she’d gone, holding
her signature piece in the palm of my
now much larger hand.
—
13
—
AFTER
seeing Fiona Burke so
distinctly in my dream, I cornered my
mom. I wanted to ask about Fiona in a
way that didn’t seem rehearsed, to know
if my mom had ever heard anything about
the girl, after all these years. For all I
knew, Fiona Burke had safely made it
into her twenties and was living in a
perfectly nice house somewhere far from
here, like North Dakota, studying to be
something admirable, like a veterinarian.
My mom looked up from her psych
textbook. “Did you say Fiona Burke?”
she asked absently, yawning and marking
her place with her highlighter. “I haven’t
heard her name in years.” She pulled her
hair off her neck and stretched, and as
she did the flock of birds tattooed near
her ear lifted their wings for the ceiling.
The green vines encircling her arms
came alive with her movement, and I
admired their twists and turns and
flowering details until she lowered her
arms and her sleeves dropped closed