Authors: Janette Jenkins
The kitchen looked different. The books and pamphlets had
disappeared
. The table had been scrubbed, she could smell disinfectant, and propped against the fruit bowl was a worn-looking copy of
Human Anatomy
. Beatrice flicked through the pages, and puzzled. There was a marker in ‘The Ribcage’. She thought about it. She felt her own bones, sitting like a basket underneath her dress. Animals had ribcages. They worked the same. Was there any real difference? Humming, she rinsed the piece of veal underneath the faucet. She waved at Bob Rickman, who was walking up and down the line of the fence, whistling.
Thursday
A letter arrived. The envelope was narrow and blue, and the sender address said,
Lincoln Park Zoo, Chicago
. She studied it. She held it up against the light. Then she steamed the envelope open.
Dear Mr Lyle,
The keepers and staff of Lincoln Park Zoo thank you for sharing your interest in taxidermy. Unfortunately, we are unable to provide you with any specimens to practice on. It is stated in our regulations (1896) that we are not allowed to pass on any creature. Please do not send a money bill for any transportation, as none will take place. In answer to your pertinent question, we have no demised large birds, particularly the turkey you saw in our local birdpen. The turkey is not ill, as you suggested. Nor do we have any other ‘miscellaneous’ creatures.
Thank you once again for taking the time to write to us.
Yours in good faith,
Ephraim Colt,
Governor
When her father had read it, he threw it desolately into the air. He looked tired. There was a thumbprint of blood on his forehead.
‘Fools,’ he sneered. ‘The whole damn lot of them are fools.’
‘It’s only Thursday,’ she said, looking at the ink that was smudged around the stamp. ‘When did you write to the zoo?’
‘When we were there,’ he said. ‘I got it hand-delivered.’
‘Are you disappointed?’ she asked.
‘Not at all, there are other ways to get yourself a carcass,’ he told her. ‘And I can think of plenty.’
‘Not hunting?’ Bethan Carter’s uncle went after the whitetail deer in Pike County. He once hit a fellow hunter by mistake, shooting him in the shoulder. They became firm friends. It was on the front page of the
Chronicle
.
‘No, I’m not a natural hunter,’ he said sadly, shaking his head, and rubbing his unkempt whiskers. ‘Guns unnerve me, and anyway, I don’t need a huge magnificent creature to show off to the world.’
‘I’m sorry.’
‘Don’t be. I’m still busy with a tern I found the other day, and only a little mangled, yes; I think a cat must have got it.’
Folding clothes in her room, she thought about Bethan, who would soon be Mrs Bloom. She envied her, but not for Victor, who was a sallow-looking boy, with small dark eyes pushing too close against his nose. No, she envied Bethan Carter simply because her life was moving forward, and she was going places, even if it was only to Cairo, Illinois, where the railroads were booming.
In her linen drawer, she found one of her old empty notebooks. Sitting by the window she wrote in it.
Beatrice Lyle. Aged 17.
Seventeen years in this house has left me full of dust. I am always surrounded by dead things, there are so many of them, and they have been sitting here so long, I just don’t see them anymore.
I wonder about ghosts. Especially when the house creaks and the windows start to rattle in the wind. Do birds have ghosts? Do they sail through the house when we’re sleeping? The turkey, pecking. The raven. The plover with its stack of empty eggs. Do they all come to life? Does my mother?
I miss my mother. I miss her every day. I never thought it would be possible to miss someone this much. Someone I didn’t ever know.
Who could take me away from here, like Bethan and her Bloom? Would I ever dare let someone into this feathery mausoleum?
At lunchtime, her father paced up and down, waiting for his veal to
be
fried, reading
The Structure of Bones
, turning his hands, and then flicking at the air.
He chewed his food noisily. ‘This sure is a good piece of meat,’ he told her, jabbing with his fork. ‘When did you buy it?’
‘Just yesterday.’
‘Well, there’s nothing like veal. See how pale and drained it is? It’s young, you see, a baby, yes it’s most delicious and tender.’
Beatrice washed the bathroom floor. She spilled a tub of Epsom salts. She folded all the towels that had dried hard and snappy on the line. Her arms ached, and her forehead.
That afternoon, the anatomy book was turned to
here
, ‘The Human Skull’. Her father didn’t appear at supper time, when it was reported in the
Chronicle
that an eighteen-month-old boy had gone missing that morning from the centre of Normal. His parents were said to be distraught.
She’d had too much coffee. Her hands were shaking, her mind was blurred and her eyes ached. Hadn’t she heard the front gate creak around ten o’clock? There was a bag of fruit candy on the table. No one ate fruit candy. The anatomy book had vanished.
‘I’ve brought you a little bite to eat,’ she said, knocking at the outhouse door, with a plate in her hand. It was cold, and she was shivering. The bread and cheese were jumping.
‘What?’
‘I said I’ve brought you something to eat.’ She could hear him chopping and cursing to himself.
She knocked again, and he answered, keeping the door closed tightly behind him.
‘This,’ she said, holding out the plate, ‘see, I’ve brought you this, a little bite to eat.’
‘Did I ask for food? Take it back, I’m not at all hungry.’
‘You’re still working on that tern?’
‘Tern? What tern? Oh, that,’ he said, looking over Beatrice’s shoulder. ‘Yes, I’m still working on that tern.’
‘Would you like a glass of water?’
‘No, I would not. I’m busy. Awfully busy and I’m not to be disturbed. Not by you or anyone.’
‘All right.’ She turned.
‘Beatrice, has anyone been to the house?’
‘No.’
‘Then good. And if someone does come knocking …’
‘What?’
‘Just don’t let them in; that’s most important. I haven’t any time for people just now. And neither have you,’ he said.
She paced up and down, barefoot in her nightdress. She wrapped one of Elijah’s old sweaters around her shoulders, looking out of his bedroom window with its good view of the road. Squares of light hung in the air. The hazy yellow windows of the houses down the street. Old Mrs Blaze. Pat and Dolly Fisher. Had they read the
Chronicle
? Had they tutted over their fried-chicken suppers about that poor missing child?
She pressed her head to the glass and waited. What had her father been doing? The shadows were like long arms stretching and pulling her in. There would be strings of people. Swaying lanterns. They’d soon kick that door down. One, two, three. There’d be no real point in hiding from them. The house was small enough. The outhouse was frail. They’d find him. They’d find everything.
Friday
She stayed in bed all day, annoyed by the light that came filtering through the curtains. She could hear Bob Rickman in his garden. She slept. She dreamed about saloon bars in Cicero. Polar bears on ice caps. Wolves. The sky was full of birds, and they were shouting.
Saturday
Her father was still in the outhouse, and although she was sure she could hear him crying, Beatrice felt better. The early-edition
Chronicle
was happy to announce that the missing boy, Nathaniel Scott (18 months, Normal, Ill.), had been found. Oliver Marshall, a retard from Bloomington, was being questioned and detained. Late in the afternoon, it rained. Myrna, the woman from next door, appeared, looking dishevelled.
‘Have you heard anything?’ she asked. ‘Can I come in?’
Beatrice hesitated (she was thinking about her father). ‘Of course,’ she said eventually, ‘sure, of course you can, come in.’
‘I’m simply going out of my mind,’ said Myrna. ‘We both are.’
‘What do you mean?’
‘Didn’t your father tell you? We told him to tell everyone. Bess has gone missing. She’s been missing now for days.’
Beatrice sat down, feeling cold. From the kitchen window she could see the outhouse and the plume of grey smoke from its chimney, flattened in the rain.
‘Has she wandered off?’ she managed.
‘Never has done before, and the poor girl’s blind and lame, and needs all our care and attention, has done for years. We really don’t know how it could have happened. We let her out for ten minutes. The gate was locked, and the garden’s so secure.’
‘Perhaps she was stolen?’
‘Who’d want to steal an old Labrador?’ she said. ‘Unless it was some kind of awful prank?’
‘People are cruel.’
‘We’ve made notices. We’re keeping all our fingers crossed and hoping for the best.’
Beatrice sat in Elijah’s bedroom. She looked at the pictures of Christ that her brother now kept hidden in a toffee tin. He was holding out his bloody hands. His hair was golden. Sometimes brown. He looked forgiving. In the light from the rain, he looked sinister. Beatrice closed the lid. He was nothing more than a picture.
By seven o’clock it was getting dark. Beatrice was reading a women’s magazine. The words about fabrics and smoked-chicken salad, made her feel better. She read an article called ‘Resourceful Women’ and a short romantic story called ‘Gina Westcott Dares’. Towards the end of the last paragraph, when the heroine goes riding through her thwarted love’s garden party on a sleek black gelding, Bob Rickman came leaping over the fence. He was banging on the outhouse door. He had Bess’s red collar in his hand.
‘Open up, Lyle!’ he was shouting. ‘I know you know something!’
Beatrice knew the end was coming. Pulling on her blue felt beret, tucking her hair behind her ears, she felt unnaturally calm. The rain was soft. The garden was shining with it.
‘What is it?’ she asked, running outside. ‘Whatever is the matter?’
Bob held the collar in the air. ‘This,’ he said, triumphantly. ‘What was it doing in the trough next to the outhouse? And why won’t he answer the door?’
‘He’s busy,’ she said. ‘He’s working on a tern.’
‘A tern? What in hell do you mean by he’s working on a tern?’
‘It’s a bird,’ she told him. ‘He’s making it into a model.’
‘Open up, Lyle!’ he shouted, rattling the door. ‘Bess! Are you in there? Bess!’
Beatrice was getting soaked. She could feel the rain dripping down her face; it clung to her neck, falling into her collar.
‘What in God’s name is he doing?’ said Bob.
‘Working. He doesn’t like being disturbed.’
‘I’ll give him disturbed.’
Bob Rickman forced the door, with one sharp kick of his boot. He stood in the gap not moving. The air was full of smoke. Beatrice gave a sudden gulping cry.
‘
Jesus Christ
,’ said Bob, falling to his knees. ‘
Oh my God, oh my good God
…’
Ethan Lyle was standing in a pool of dark blood. His arms were dripping with it. On his messy workbench, Bess’s head was sitting on a fixed metal pole. The golden bloody skin was hanging on the back of a chair. In the shadows, the rest of the dog was boiling in a pot.
When he could move again, Bob Rickman lunged at the dumbstruck Ethan Lyle, who went flying towards the back of the room, where Bess’s ribcage and hind legs were bubbling.
‘You bastard!’ Bob yelled. ‘You crazy murdering bastard!’
Ethan Lyle was not a big man, he soon crumpled and slipped, gripped around the shoulders by Bob’s wide and shuddering hands. When he eventually found his voice Ethan said, ‘There’s so much to it, I never realised, I never realised, there was so much to it.’
‘Why?’ Bob cried. ‘Why?’
He couldn’t answer. Bob’s hands had moved up towards his neck and were holding him tight, so tight that Ethan, struggling to hang onto his life, managed to lose him for a second, before tumbling into the shelf stacked with chemicals. Boxes fell. Bottles smashed. Liquids hissed towards the brazier where they were caught up in the sparks. Ethan slipped. Something tore in his ankle.
‘
Oh Bess, oh my God
.’ Bob moved backwards in a daze, stumbling out
of
the outhouse and towards the edge of the lawn; leaning against the picket fence, he had his face in his bloodstained hands, retching.
Beatrice stepped carefully through the door and reached out to her moaning father, who was still on his hands and knees.
‘Let me help you. Let me pull you out.’
‘Get away!’ her father shouted as the sparks suddenly turned into a roaring line of flames. ‘Move back!’
‘Just get out!
Father, please!
’
Beatrice ran to safety as a barrel exploded, then another, and the outhouse was quickly consumed, the bird skulls on the shelf, the bones in the pot, the dog guts, the head on the pole, and Ethan.
‘Almighty God!’ Bob shouted. ‘No!’
Beatrice ran in a blind panic towards the street. ‘Help!’ she cried, her voice sounding choked. ‘Help! Help! Please! Help!’
It was not a busy street. It was getting past supper time and people were indoors. She ran towards the nearest house, her heart pounding, she drummed her fists against the door, she began to kick at it, but still no one came.
‘Anyone?
Please?
’ she yelled, pulling off her beret. She turned, then a man appeared, he was running towards her, his shirt tails flapping.
‘I could see it from my window,’ he said. ‘My son’s gone to the fire depot. Come on, come on, let’s go get some water on it, quick!’
She ran with him, back to the garden, where Bob and Myrna were already trying to throw pails of water over the blaze, but they couldn’t get close enough, it was too hot and too late; everything had gone.
‘I can’t believe this, I just can’t,’ Bob was saying. ‘I didn’t want him to … I didn’t want this, I should have … surely he could have …’
Beatrice was frozen. ‘Yes,’ she was saying, over and over, as the outhouse burned, and the fine misty rain turned black. ‘He could have.’
LEAVE
140a Oceanic Avenue