Read ABC Amber LIT Converter Online
Authors: Island of Lost Girls
Im late for rehearsal, she told her father.
I didnt think you rehearsed after supper, her father said.
Peter says the opening scene still isnt right, so were going to work on it, she lied.
Now it was her fathers turn to nod, and she left him there in his office, sitting in his swivel chair, staring into the eyes of the men on the submarine who were going down, whether they knew it or not.
AS RHONDA JOGGEDout to the stage, she was sure she could smell a hint of cherry tobacco smoke in the air. There was a muffled rustling coming from beneath the trap door and she snuck up onto the stage, walking on tiptoes, yanking the door open quickly to surprise him. She surprised them both.
Peter was there in the hole along with Tock and was, Rhonda quickly saw, kissing the crocodile. So much for the lesbo rumors.
Tocks hat had slid to the back of her head, the string holding it tight around her neck. Her BB gun was leaning against the dirt wall and beside it was Peters still smoldering pipe.
Peter pulled away from Tock, but she kept a hand on his shoulder as Rhonda looked down.
We were working out some details about the play. About how the crocodile should enter, Peter said. He seemed startled, but not particularly ashamed. He made no move to shake the girls hand from his shoulder. Tock just smiled.
Rhondas face burned, her hands ached from being clenched into fists so tightly, ached with the need to hit someone. But Rhonda was not a fighter. And she knew she didnt stand a chance against sand-throwing, arrow-shooting Greta Clark and her BB gun. She wanted to hit Peter, but what if he kicked her out of the play? The idea that she couldnt play Wendy scared her almost as much as the idea of losing Peter to Greta. So Rhonda let her hands fall open.
Your mother and my father were married, she said.
I know, Peter answered, like it was no big deal at all.
Tock laughed.
Rhonda reached down and grabbed the trap door, meaning to slam it, but instead closing it softly over their upturned faces.
JUNE 15, 2006
THAT IS ONEfucked-up picture.
It was the first thing Peter said after a long silence. His brow was wrinkled, his eyes searching, straining as he squinted at the picture taped to the wall above Rhondas bed. It was the same way hed studied those postcards from Lizzy years ago.
And there was Lizzy, his long-lost sister, looking back at him from Rhondas drawing. Lizzy at eleven. Lizzy the year ofPeter Pan . The year she lost her voice. Thats Ernestine Florucci with her, Rhonda explained. I only had the photo from the flyers to work with.
I knew who it was, Peter said.
He pulled a pack of cigarettes from his T-shirt pocket and lit one, still squinting at the drawing like the images were off in the distance somewhere.
Rhonda had spent the entire afternoon on the drawing, an
image from her submarine dream. As soon as she was finished, she called Peter. It felt important to her that he see it. She hadnt imagined how he might respond to seeing a picture of his sisterif shed thought it through, she would have realized she was running the risk of having him shut down. Lizzy was another topic never mentioned, not quite as taboo as Daniel, but close.
It had gotten to the point where Rhonda rarely let herself think of Lizzy. It was like shutting a valve somewherethe Lizzy pipelinea trick shed learned from Peter. But now, here was her once-upon-a-time twin. Back again, the valve broken by that damn rabbit.
When Lizzy stopped talking after Daniel left, nobody took it very seriously at first. She was upset, naturally, and if she was reacting a little dramatically, well, shed always been dramatic, hadnt she? Shed talk when she was good and ready. Aggie herself was so distraught about Daniel, she barely seemed to notice Lizzys new silence. Eventually, though, there were doctors visitsa speech therapist, a psychiatrist, even a pediatric neurologist over at Dartmouth, who ruled out a physical cause and called it elective mutism. But the diagnosis was essentially the one the laypeople of Pikes Crossing had already made: Lizzy would talk when she was good and ready.
Months went by, and then years, and she continued to choose muteness. Then one morning, two weeks after theyd started high school, Lizzy disappeared. Peter had offered her a ride to school, but she waved him on. He was the last one to see her, her book bag slung over her shoulder, as she made her way down Lake Street.
But the Lizzy in Rhondas drawing was from a time well before that. It was the Captain Hook Lizzy shed put in the submarine, just as it had been in her dream. The Lizzy who hung from her closet for fifteen minutes each day, trying to make herself grow.
The one whose voice was good and strong as she belted out crazy songs or threatened to make you walk the plank. The girl who wanted, more than anything, to grow up to be a Rockette.
The drawing was done in pencil first, then gone over in thin black pen lines. She used cross-hatching to shade the submarine, making it a few shades lighter than the dark sea. Rhonda had used a blotchy, swirling ink wash for the water, and filled the ocean with terrible, nightmare creatures whose features could barely be seen in the wild, writhing water. It was like one of those drawings shed been given in school years agoa landscape where you were supposed to find the hidden images: a wheelbarrow, a clock, a shovel, and a tea pot. Only in Rhondas ocean, monsters lurked. A giant squid, a toothy shark, a dragon with fins. And there were ghosts in the waves, horrible phantoms, their bodies lacking true form, only open-mouthed screaming faces.
Through the portholes of the submarine, the rabbit and two girls could be seen looking out into the dark sea. The rabbit, huge and looming with paws the size of the girls heads, stood at the front, working the controls. His eyes twinkled with mad fury as he urged the submarine on. The girls looked like theyd resigned themselves to fright, like theyd given up on being saved.
So whats it supposed to mean? Peter asked, brushing hair back from his face, showing his scar, the mark that bound him to her, as he turned away from the drawing to look Rhonda in the eye.
Her heart rose up into her throat, filling it, rendering her unable to speak. She wanted so badly for Peter to understand the drawing. She half-hoped he would tell her what it meant. But he looked a little irritated about the whole thing, like it wasnt worth him driving all the way into town for. She wondered what he would tell Tock about it. If hed speak in patronizing tones
Poor, crazy Rhonda. Rhonda and her fucked-up drawing. Rhonda who cant let shit go. Poor thing.
Its just a drawing, Peter, Rhonda managed to blurt out, her words crisp and defensive. Just a picture.
She wanted to remind him how he used to love her drawings. How he had once encouraged her artistic endeavors. When they were kids, he would pose for her, usually in one of his costumes. How well she knew his body then, each contour, each tiny imperfection. She filled sketchbooks with pictures of him. She could do entire pages of just his nose, trying to perfectly capture its gentle slope. Or his mouththe thin lips, the slight gap between his two front teeth, which he could whistle through.
Afternoons when theyd go swimming at Loons Cove, Rhonda would connect the dots of the freckles on his back and shoulders, now untouchable to her, and tell him they were like constellations, then describe each picture she saw there. Sometimes it seemed his whole life was laid out there in the pictures on his back, and it was up to her to read it, to discern the meaning of each image like some early astronomer or a gypsy reading tea leaves at the bottom of a cup.
As he lowered himself down to sit on the edge of her bed, she wondered how so much could have changed, thought how unfamiliar his body seemed to her now. His stomach hung over his jeans, his shoulders slouched forward. When did he start to slouch? He had always stood up so straight, so defiant. He crushed out his cigarette in her glass ashtray like it was an effort.
He leaned back and laid himself down on her bed, his arms clasped behind his head. His faded black T-shirt was tucked into jeans with holes at the knees. He wore basketball sneakers, black canvas high-tops, the kind hed worn all his life. It was like hed worn the same outfit through boyhood and it was just now wearing thin at the edges, the fabric finally giving from years of growth.
Sometimes, like right then, as he lay on her bed, she imagined he was flirting with herteasing her, reminding her of the power
he still held over her. Some days, she flirted back in her own awkward wayallowing herself to touch his arm, laugh a little too loud at something hed said, brush the hair away from his forehead and place a finger on his scar. But it always made her feel pathetic, second best.
Im glad youre drawing again, he said, his voice barely above a whisper. Its just a little weird, ya know? A strange choice of subject matter. Couldnt you do a bowl of fruit or something?
Do you think it really looks like Lizzy? Did I get it right? Rhonda asked, studying the drawing taped to her wall.
You got it right. I knew just who it was. Peter looked up at her as he spoke. There was such tenderness in his face. He looked so at ease, there on her bed. She let herself imagine, for an instant, that it was his bed too. That he was just getting into bed after a long day, into their bed where they slept night after night.
Dont you ever wonder about her? Rhonda asked, letting herself look down at Peters face again. Dont you ever hope that maybe someday shell come back and explain everything?
What is there to explain? Peter asked, shifting his weight, sounding a little exasperated.
I dont know
why she left, I guess. What shes been doing with herself all these years. Maybe shes married and has kids. You could be an uncle! Dont you ever wonder what she does every day, what she sees each morning when she gets up?
Of course I wonder, but its her choice that we dont know.
Her choice. Rhonda thought about the different choices they had all madehow much conscious decision had gone into any of them?
Doesnt that seem unfair to you? she asked him.
Ronnie, a lot of things are unfair. What happened to Ernestine Florucci was unfair. He looked up at the ceiling, breaking eye contact with her. Lizzy wasnt kidnapped by a rabbit though. We lost her, but not like that. Thats what I dont get about the drawing.
Loss just feels like loss, Rhonda said. Maybe thats what the drawing is supposed to be about. How easily one loss just blurs into the next. She bit her lip, stared down at himhim, Peter, perhaps her greatest loss of all.
Do you remember, Rhonda asked, how much Lizzy wanted to be a Rockette? How she was always practicing that high kick and doing all this crazy stuff so that shed grow tall enough?
Peter nodded.
Maybe shes a dancer? Rhonda said.
Ronnie, I dont think any of us grew up to live the life we dreamed wed be living. Did we?
Rhonda thought a moment. Tock did, she said.
And what was it Tock wanted? Peter asked, shaking his head.
You, Rhonda said. She wanted to grow up and be with you.
Their eyes met and Peter took in a breath like he was going to say something, but instead, he held it. Rhonda looked away.
Tocks really pissed at you, you know? Peter said finally.
Shes overreacting, Peter, cant you see that? I didnt set out to traumatize Suzy. Shes a smart kid, its not like she hasnt noticed whats going on. Jesus, its probablygood for her to talk about it.
And what were you doing at Laura Lees? he asked.
Just visiting, she said.
Right. Peter narrowed his eyes.
Anyway, Rhonda said, desperate to change the subject, what have you been up to? Are you working?
Ive been fixing up my moms place. Weve decided to put it on the market.
You are not!
Its not like Moms ever going to use it again. And Tock and I have our house. Seems a shame to have a perfectly good house
just sitting vacant. Besides, the taxes are killing us, and we could use some cash. Rhonda nodded. Speaking of cash, have you done anything about a job yet?
God, you sound like my father! Rhonda moaned.
Maybe hes got a point, Peter said.
Yeah, I know. Hes right. Youre both right
Rhonda trailed off. Peter, can I ask you something?
What?
Why did you decide to take the day off to go hiking? You know, the day Ernie was kidnapped?
Peter blew out an exasperated breath. I dont know, Ronnie. I guess I figured I needed some alone time. So I packed some trail mix, put on my hiking boots, and headed for Gunners Ridge. Whats the big deal?
Rhonda bit her lip. I thought you said you were at Sawyers Pond. When Tock and Suzy went to find you, your truck wasnt at the trailhead by Gunners Ridge.
What I meant was, Peter said, sounding more than a little flustered, I headed for Gunners Ridge, then decided at the last minute to do something different. Christ, cant a guy be spontaneous?
What, Rhonda wondered, would Peter say if she asked him about the missing keys she found in the cemetery? The keys were in the pocket of her jeans, and she stuck her hand in, stroked the rabbits foot as Peter lay sprawled out on her bed.Another day, she decided.