B0092XNA2Q EBOK (27 page)

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Authors: Charles Martin

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CHAPTER THIRTY

I
thought back through the last several weeks. From our meeting on the balcony to the explosion in the gulf and everything since. The blame set in—I was an accessory. I’d rigged her boat, set fire to it, created the illusion. I’d helped kill Katie Quinn. I thought I was helping her. Thought I had some notion of what was best because I’d been there.

I had not.

Sweat soaked the sheets beneath her. She was played out and she could never be me. She couldn’t live the life I lived. The solitude. The constant hiding. The separation and isolation. The time left alone with her past. It’d kill her. Or, it’d kill what little remained. My reason for being in the spotlight had been taken so I retreated to the shadows, while she stepped into the spotlight to escape the pain of the shadows.

She’d already attempted suicide twice. Had the scars to prove it. The third time would be different. She’d leave nothing to chance. No doubt. The night passed. I wondered how she’d try it this time.
Rope? Knife? Gun? Pills? Moving train? Or, would she just die in her sleep. Death by broken heart.

The sun came up across her face. A single blue vein throbbed on her temple. I watched her and found myself holding my breath. Four words echoed up and out of the ground.
Tell me a story.

Faces I’d not seen in a decade flashed across my mind’s eye. Hope-filled faces. Jody’s face. There was a time when I thought stories helped fix broken people. When nothing was more powerful than a story. When stories were the antidote.

I looked at my hands. Wrinkled. Spotted. Too many hours in the sun.

I looked at my journal. White pages staring back at me.

The truth set in. If I had any chance of saving Katie, I had to tell her my story. It was an exchange.

My secret for hers.

Sweat trickled down her forehead. Her eyes darted left and right and her body twitched. The vein on her temple throbbed. Attempt number three was not a question of if but when.

Steady came to mind, white-robed, pipe in his hand, spittle in the corner of his mouth, lip quivering. His words echoed across the ocean. “I’m offering to cut out your gangrene.” When he’d said it, I’d believed him. I just had no idea that he’d use my own pen to do it.

I stared at my journal. The truth stared back. If this got out, if someone other than Katie read this, if she shared this or passed it along, then life would change.

Unbecoming Katie meant unbecoming me.

CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE

W
hen I woke, she was gone. Tear-stained sheets remained. I searched downstairs but did not find her. Searched the gardens, the ballroom, the entirety of the house but found no Katie. Finally, I climbed the stairs and spiraled myself into the attic. She sat on the floor, staring out a window. Lost somewhere beyond the edge of France. I backed out, spent the day below her in my room, listening to any creak in the floor above me.

I heard none.

The next morning, I took her breakfast. When I spoke, she made no response. She lay on the floor, arms wrapped around her legs, eyes open, lost beyond the window. Dinner followed, then breakfast, then more dinner and more breakfast and two more days with no change.

I sat below her, my knees tucked beneath the desk, writing furiously. Never before had I written so much so fast. Determined to lay myself bare, I cracked open the walls, opened up, and Niagara poured forth. Into the third day, I looked up, my hand cramped, and realized that I’d written the last twenty-seven hours straight.

Two ladies came to clean the house. They didn’t seem bothered by my presence. They also went nowhere near the fourth floor. I suspected they had no idea it existed. They left in the afternoon.

Five days passed from the night at her son’s graveside. I had slept little and written much. Finally, I laid down my pen and let the sleep take me.

Heavy footsteps woke me as did heavy automobile traffic down the hill. I stared toward town. Cars lined the streets. Media trucks were parked near the center of town at the farmers’ market. Each antennae had been telescoped into the air. Noise from a television downstairs caught my ear.

I walked into the kitchen. The TV was on. A French reporter sat at a news desk. A picture of Katie flashed above his right shoulder. Above his left flashed two pictures. One of Steady. The other of Richard Thomas. I couldn’t understand a word the reporter was saying, but as she talked live video of Langeais, which was no doubt being fed from one of the trucks near the center of town, rolled across the screen. The last screen shots were a photograph taken of documents for the Connecticut-based company, Perrault and Partners, and a handwriting comparison of several of Katie’s signatures next to the signature on the Perrault and Partners documents. Thomas might not be much of a writer, but he was turning out to be a heck of an investigator.

It was only a matter of time.

I climbed to the fourth floor and Isabella emerged. Her face, posture, and body language had changed. The walls that had crumbled in the last several days and week had been rebuilt and fortified. The woman before me was the woman I’d met on the patio of Sky Seven, just after she’d launched herself over the railing. Deep black circles surrounded her eyes. She brushed past me and started descending the stairs. “You have five minutes.”

“But, Katie?”

She froze. A finger in the air. Spittle in the corner of her mouth. “Don’t call me by that name. Not any name.”

“Okay, but where’re we going?”

She was terse. Protected. “Not here, and not France.”

Six minutes later, I stepped outside, my backpack over my shoulder, and found Isabella sitting in the car, engine running, one thumb tapping the wheel. I climbed in, and she spun gravel out the drive before I’d closed the door. She exited the town on dirt roads. When we pulled onto the highway outside of town, she had redlined the Mini and was shifting into fifth gear. We weren’t headed to the train station and, according to the signs, not to Paris. I didn’t ask questions and she didn’t offer answers.

Thirty minutes later, she pulled off the highway and wound down dirt roads to a small private airfield. A jet sat waiting. She parked the car, left the keys in it, and began walking to the plane. I followed.

We boarded. She spoke to the pilots. They checked our papers and eight minutes later, we were airborne and climbing. I grabbed two cups of ice, a can of Perrier, poured her a glass, and set it on the table next to her. She backhanded it, sending water, ice, and plastic slamming against my side of the plane. One of the pilots turned around. She spoke without looking. “If I want something, I’ll get it.”

I buckled in. I’d lost her.

We landed in Miami five hours later, during which time she stared out the window and spoke not a word to me. Customs boarded the plane, checked our papers, our luggage, and stamped our passports. We walked across the parking lot and into a parking garage. She pulled an electronic key fob from her purse, pushed one of the buttons, and an alarm sounded. Over my left shoulder, a black Range Rover barked to life, flashing lights and horn honking. She corrected course, and silenced the alarm.

We loaded up and drove in the same shrieking silence in which we’d been living for the last several hours. We drove out of the terminal and onto the highway. A billboard rose up on our left. Her picture emblazoned across it. The sign read:
KATIE WE LOVE YOU.
LONG LIVE THE QUEEN
. She changed lanes, punched the accelerator, and climbed the ramp onto the turnpike. The supercharged engine roared. We passed a hundred and thirty before she eased off. She exited at Tamiami Trail and pulled into the parking lot of a Miccosukee Indian casino. She skidded to a stop but didn’t bother putting the car in park.

The fragrance and feeling of France seemed a lifetime away. She spoke without looking. “Out.”

“Why don’t you come with me?”

Her thumb tapped the wheel.

“You have any idea where you’re going? What you’ll do?”

Still no answer.

“Kati—”

She raised a finger and shook her head once. A single tear welled, broke loose, and trickled down.

I opened the door, stepped out, and pulled the journal from my backpack. I hefted the journal. An offering. I laid it on the seat and slowly removed my hand. She wouldn’t look at me. I held on to the door handle, finally speaking. “This was once me.”

She spun the tires, and the engine whined. The Range Rover became a black speck, then disappeared. I shouldered my backpack and began walking to Chokoloskee. In my mind, I reread the cover letter, wondering if she’d read it:

Dear Katie,

I used to think that a story was something special. That it was the one key that could unlock the broken places in us. What you hold in your hand is the story of a broken writer who attempted to kill himself and failed who meets a broken actress who attempted to kill herself and failed and somewhere in that intersection of cracked hearts and shattered souls, they find that maybe broken is not the end of things, but the beginning. Maybe broken is what happens before you
become unbroken. What’s more, maybe our broken pieces don’t fit us. Maybe all of us are standing around with a bag of the stuff that used to be us and we’re wondering what to do with it and until we meet somebody else whose bag is full and heart empty we can’t figure out what to do with our pieces. And standing there, face to face, my bag of me over my shoulder, and your bag of you over your shoulder, we figure out that maybe my pieces are the very pieces needed to mend you and your pieces are the very pieces needed to mend me but until we’ve been broken we don’t have the pieces to mend each other. Maybe in the offering we discover the meaning, and value, of being broken. Maybe checking out and retreating to an island is the most selfish thing the broken can do because somewhere on the planet is another somebody standing around holding a bag of all the jagged, painful pieces of themselves and they can’t get whole without you.

There was a time in my life when I unselfishly offered my gift. Risked everything. Emptied myself. And, when I did, I found that more bubbled up. The well never ran empty. But then, life tore my heart in two and I swore I’d never offer it again. That I’d never risk that.

Maybe love, the real kind, the kind only wished for in whispers and the kind our hearts are hardwired to want, is opening up your bag of you and risking the most painful statement ever uttered between the stretched edges of the universe: “This was once me.”

Maybe that in and of itself is the story.

T
HE
L
IFE AND
D
EATH OF
P
ETER
W
YETT BY
P
ETER
W
YETT

I have no memory of my mother. Or father. My records state that my mother was raped by an old boyfriend. The rape produced me. My mother kept me around for about forty-eight
hours and dumped me in a trailer where I was found by a homeless guy looking for a roof. After that, I did the foster home dance where I ingested mostly cigarette smoke and fast food. At the age of two, I was found malnourished in a soiled crib so they placed me in a different home—either my fifth or sixth—and circumcised me. For reasons I can’t explain, I developed a stutter about the age of four, but I have no memory of ever not having it. While I was “fostered” and moved around a good bit, and occasionally held by well-meaning and well-intentioned people, I have no memory of being wanted. Or, needed. Because in the end, I wasn’t.

Nobody picked me.

I was a daydreamer. Quiet. Unseen. Stages scared me. Shadows did not. I sat in the back and watched the world out of the corners of my eyes. What I saw and heard entered through my senses then bounced around inside, looking for a place to attach. To settle. To mean. But that was the problem. I didn’t know how—or couldn’t—assign meaning. What something “meant” wasn’t always clear. I’m not sure but I think parents are a big part of this equation. I think they’re supposed to lead us in figuring out how to understand what something means. It’s as if meaning is a baton passed down. It’s like fishing—you can read the maps until you’re blue in the face, but the fine print is what really matters. On the bottom of every fishing chart I’ve ever read, it states: “Local knowledge is necessary to avoid holes and find exact fish locations.” This is why people pay fishing guides to take them fishing. Local knowledge.

As a kid, I didn’t have a guide and little local knowledge of how to make sense of the world. What I did have, I stumbled upon. This made conversations tough. Sarcasm and humor a complete mystery. Multiple choice tests a disaster. I lived in a world without terra firma. Nothing to stand on. To push against. If I asked myself, “What does that mean?” once, then I asked myself a thousand times. Sometimes at night, I’d close
my eyes and cover my ears to slow the world. Make the bad man stop.

A growing cloud with no way to rain.

In school, I sat in the back, seldom raising my hand and never raising my voice. But the absence of verbal expression did not mean I was dull to the needs of others. Didn’t mean I couldn’t think and feel. Didn’t absorb. I thought and felt just fine. Absorbed like a sponge. My peripheral vision was twenty-ten. I cried when strangers hurt. Laughed when others smiled.

It’s what entered the heart that muted it.

When nobody wants you, all you have is hope. Hope that somebody might. This thought alone got me out of bed for the first eighteen years of my life. It was the stuff I fed on. We all did. We could skip food and water but not hope.

The inability to make sense of my life made childhood a bit rough. ’Course, the stutter didn’t help, either. For the most part I kept my mouth shut and seldom spoke, even when spoken to. But that doesn’t mean I didn’t want to talk. I did.

I developed two habits. Since I had no real home and had no one waiting on me, I went where I knew I’d never be alone. The library. And since I was a kid, I started in the kids’ section. I read everything I could get my hands on. Anything that would take me some place other than where I was.
Winnie-the-Pooh, Peter Pan,
The Chronicles of Narnia,
The Wizard of Oz, The Velveteen Rabbit, Peter Rabbit, Where the Wild Things Are, The Polar Express, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Little House on the Prairie, The Secret Garden, The Boxcar Children, The Indian in the Cupboard, The Giver, The Wind in the Willows, James and the Giant Peach, Anne of Green Gables, Stuart Little
. I even read
Heidi
and
Little Women
when nobody was looking. As I got older, I moved up to thicker, longer books with smaller text and fewer to no pictures.
Where the Red Fern Grows, The Hobbit, The Call of the Wild, To Kill a Mockingbird, Huckleberry Finn,
and
Tom Sawyer
, then
Great Expectations, Les Misérables, The Sacketts, Moby-Dick, The Count of Monte Cristo, The Three Musketeers, Le Morte d’Arthur, Robinson Crusoe.

The library was magical because every time I walked through the door, there were literally thousands of voices ready and willing to have a conversation with me. I walked through the door, stared at all those stacks and bindings, and whispered, “Tell me a story.”

And they did.

I found that I belonged at the library. My dream became to add my voice to the hundreds of thousands I heard around me. Which meant I read even more. Every day I made a new friend.

And none of them rejected me.

I stayed until dinner, walked to the orphanage, ate amid conversation that never included me, then retired to my bunk—or the hammock on the porch if it was available, and continued right where I left off. I joined the conversation and never had to open my mouth. I imagined my own fantastical stories cut from the same cloth as those I read daily.

Because of this, I never felt alone.

The orphanage sat blocks from the water. At night, when the breeze moved in off the ocean we could smell the salt and hear the bells of the shrimp boats going and coming. When I got old enough, I walked down to the docks and tried to make myself useful. I did anything. The fishing guides always needed help washing down their boats, spooling reels, catching baitfish. I was too young to get hired on officially so I worked for tips. I didn’t care because tips meant books. Soon, the guides grew to trust me. That meant they talked to and with me. Sharing their secrets—which could come in handy later.

Every quarter the library would have a sidewalk sale, so for pennies on the dollar, I began collecting the stories that
had fed me as a kid. Many first editions. Finding these stories was like discovering Incan gold. My stack of books grew, taking up one shelf, then another, and another. With every new book, the house mother would look at me and laugh. “You’ve got to be kidding?”

No, I wasn’t.

Naturally, reading led to writing. The opposite side of the same coin. I created worlds with my pen where people didn’t giggle and point when I spoke. Where my parents tucked me in. Where I didn’t stutter. Where I had chores assigned by a chart on the wall with my name on it. Where the seat at the table was mine and I was missed if the bell rang and I didn’t fill it. Where I was always the prince who rescued the princess, the Hobbit who destroyed the ring, the boy who saved Narnia. Where I was Pip.

Sometimes I wrote all night. Filling pad after pad. True or make believe mattered little. Life was in the telling. In the exhale. Writing became the outlet for the one-sided conversation inside my head. The only place I knew complete expression. A thought encapsulated. A breath deep enough to fill me. Punctuation with certainty. Writing was how I worked out the goings on inside. The act of making story made sense of what I couldn’t make sense of. Like being an orphan and never being adopted.

People with parents who claim them have a tough time with this, but it’s simple: Being an orphan is illogical. The brain never makes sense of it. Ever. It shelves it in the “miscellaneous” file. It’s like a book with no place on the shelf, forever relegated to the cart that circles the library, never stopping to slide between two worn covers.

Writing became my therapy and allowed me a revolutionary thought: Maybe I’m not crazy. It also allowed me to ask myself a universe-rocking question: What if I’m of value? Or better yet, What if I matter? It was rather simple: The people in the
stories I read mattered. If they didn’t, then why were they on the shelf? And if they mattered, and they included me in their worlds, then why didn’t I?

At eighteen, I became my own. I checked myself out with a suitcase and sixteen boxes of books. I graduated high school in Jacksonville, took an un-air-conditioned room above a garage next to the docks for twenty-five dollars a week, and since college was out of the question, I began putting in some serious time at the docks. Where guys who worked hard could make good money. The guides would come in, their clients and lines in tow, and I’d offer to wash down their boats or clean their fish. Most of them knew me, ’cause I’d been hanging around for years. Cleaning led to building rods, repairing reels, working on boats, whatever the guides got tired of doing and would let me do. I worked daylight to long after dark, keeping my head down and building more shelves in my apartment. Before too long, I lived in a library I’d built myself. My greatest fear was not death or sickness, but fire.

Eventually, I bought a used skiff off a guy, rebuilt an old two-stroke, and began learning the backwaters. Because I’d hung out around so many fishermen for so long, I knew some of what and how to fish long before I could actually get out there and do it. Once I hit the water, I put my head knowledge to work and acquired local knowledge. A year or two passed, word spread about “the quiet guide,” and before too long, my schedule was full and booked six months in advance. Fortunately for me, clients don’t care if their guide can talk, only if he can put them on the fish. And I could. Rain, heat, storm, or calm, I learned where and how to catch snook, tarpon, reds, and more trout than folks could eat. I figured my career was set.

I hadn’t even scratched the surface.

It was a Saturday. Late afternoon. Conditions perfect. My client was an attorney. Jason Patrick. Good guy. He’d hooked into a large red drum. Nearly forty inches. Got it to the boat.
I’d dropped the power pole in the ground to hold our position and knelt to lift the fish. When I did, the red decided he wasn’t finished fighting. With a snap of his head, he spat out the Top Dog and my client, still applying pressure to the rod, sunk that treble hook deep in the meat of my palm.

Ordinarily, I’d push the hook through the skin, snip it beyond the barb, and keep going. Clients pay for a full day and they expect to get it. But this one was a little different. Down in the nerve. Sooner or later, this would need a doctor. And, given that we were nearly sixty miles in the backwater, it was going to be later. Two hours later, I got Jason back to the dock, paid a kid to clean his fish, and made my way to the River City Hospital—Jacksonville’s riverbank hospital. It was nearly nine o’clock and my hand was good and stiff and swollen and getting toward purple by the time the doctor saw me.

The doctor cut out the hook, stitched me up, gave me a shot for the infection, and asked for my card. Said he wanted to catch a tarpon. I said I knew a few spots.

Walking out of the hospital, I took a wrong turn, got lost, and ended up in what I soon learned was the children’s wing. It was nearly midnight, I was tired, and needed to be back at the docks at five to meet Sunday’s client but there’s something about a place just for kids.

I turned a corner and saw a slippered kid standing in the middle of the corridor wrapped in a blue blanket. He looked like he belonged there. His pajamas were covered in tigers and airplanes and hung loosely. A stainless-steel pole on wheels stood next to him. A bag of clear liquids hung from it. A plastic tube ran out the bottom of his shirt sleeve and tethered him to the bag. I said, “Hey, p-pal, which way out of h-here?”

He turned and began pushing that pole so I followed him. We walked the length of the corridor. When we reached the end, he turned and pointed at an exit sign at the far end. I said, “Th-thank you.”

He nodded and stepped into a brightly lit room just off the hall.

I can’t quite remember why I walked into that room. Curiosity, I guess. The walls were covered in scenes and posters from kids’ movies we’ve all seen.
Star Wars. Indiana Jones. Robin Hood
. The furniture was plush, comfy, and made for lounging. Shelves of books with tattered bindings lined one wall. The opposite wall was filled with Lego, puzzles, wooden train sets, and every imaginable toy that might occupy a child’s time and take their mind off the pain ravaging their bodies. Two large widescreen TVs lined the far wall. Each was hooked up to a different gaming system.

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