Authors: Karelia Stetz-Waters
A week after arriving in Tristess, Kristen visited Aubrey Thomsich, Marydale's high school girlfriend. She spoke the address into the dashboard GPS as she pulled out of the Almost Home's parking lot. Forty minutes later, she found the trailer at the end of a dirt road lined with RVs, mobile homes, and houses draped in blue tarps. She knocked on the door. Inside, a TV blared. A moment later, a woman appeared, a baby in one arm and a small boy pulling on the belt loop of her jeans.
“What?” the woman asked.
“I'm looking for Aubrey Thomsich.” Kristen glanced into the cluttered room behind the woman.
“If this is about his child support, he's paid it. Okay? And it nearly broke us this month, but it's paid.”
Kristen stared at her. She looked younger than Marydale but worn out, too, with stringy brown hair and an odd accumulation of fat around her shoulder blades.
“Are you Aubrey?”
The woman twisted her lips in an expression that said,
Who's asking?
Kristen realized she'd been expecting a beauty.
You're not worth it
, Kristen thought, although, of course, she knew it shouldn't matter.
“It's not about child support.” Kristen put on her courtroom voice, calm and disinterested. “I just want to talk to you for a few minutes.”
“About what?”
The baby squalled, and Kristen smelled the sharp rankness of diaper.
“About Aaron Holten and Marydale Rae.”
“I don't want my name in the paper.”
Aubrey started to close the door, but Kristen stepped into the doorway. “Marydale Rae is in prison for something that wasn't her fault.”
Aubrey gave a short, sharp laugh. “Who's innocent anyway?” She switched the baby roughly to her other hip, and it began crying again. “They all say babies are innocent. They're the worst. Little tyrants.”
The baby howled.
“Did Aaron Holten ever threaten you or say that he was going to harm Marydale Rae?” Kristen asked.
“Are you on TV?” Aubrey straightened a little. “Like one of those true crime shows.”
“I'm an attorney. I'm trying to help Marydale. Did Aaron Holten ever threaten her?”
“Aaron said a lot of shit.” Aubrey glanced down the gravel drive.
“Like what?”
“Like nothing that matters. All the Holten boys are assholes. I just married the wrong one, thanks to Marydale.”
“You married a Holten?”
“Amos, but he's not good for shit. Aaron would have taken care of us. I told her that.”
“What do you mean?”
“I was going to marry Aaron, and she was going to marry his cousin Pete, and we could've been happy. It wasn't going to be like this. Look at this shit.” Aubrey kicked a child's toy to the side. “What happened between me and Marydale was a mistake. For all I know, maybe she did trick him back to the barn so she could kill him. She was real pretty back then, and she thought she could do whatever she liked.”
It sounded rehearsed.
“Do you really believe that?” Kristen said.
Aubrey held the baby with the casual irritation of a teenager carrying her little brother.
“I think you cared about Marydale,” Kristen added, hoping it was true. “I think you still do.”
The little boy tugged at his mother's shirt, and Aubrey grabbed the boy by the crown of his head and pushed him back.
“Go play out back,” she said.
The child protested.
“Outside!” Aubrey barked.
She stepped away from the door into the house, and Kristen moved into the space she had vacated. Wicker blinds hung over the windows, leaving the house in shadows.
“I told her to handle him.” Aubrey sat down in an armchair in the cluttered space that passed for a living room. “It wouldn't have killed her to flirt a little, make nice with Aaron until he forgot about us.”
Kristen sat down on a folding chair, facing Aubrey. “Are you a lesbian?”
Aubrey shrugged. “Doesn't matter anymore.” She sniffed. “Marydale will get out sooner than I will. Look at this mess. She did fine for herself, right? She got out, went up to Portland.”
“She's in Holten Penitentiary right now on a parole violation. If she's lucky, we'll be able to get that down to three months. If she's not, it's half a year. If you know anything about the case⦔
“Fuck,” Aubrey said. “I thought she got out.”
Kristen looked around at the clutter: boxes and children's toys, a fake Christmas tree in one corner, dirty dishes in the tiny kitchen. On the wall, a younger Aubrey and a manâpresumably Amosâgrinned out of their wedding frame, their smiles strained.
“I want to get her out. I want to get someone to look at her case again, to prove it was self-defense. Can you think of anything, anything at all, that would help Marydale?”
The boy ran up to Aubrey again and clung to her waist. This time she put an arm around him.
“I visited Marydale when she was locked up,” Aubrey said. “You're from the city. You wouldn't get it.”
“Get what?”
“Get what it's like to be gay out here. Marydale ever take you down to the quarry?”
“No.”
“I guess she wouldn't.”
Kristen tried to keep her body relaxed, her face neutral. She had interviewed a thousand potential witnesses. From DataBlast. From the “environmentally friendly” chemical company that repackaged generic household cleaners with a hemp label. From a dozen other class actions. Talking had its own momentum, and everyone had an impulse to confess, but the inclination was skittish. The listener could scare it away by holding their pencil too tightly. She watched Aubrey without making eye contact.
“We used to go swimming in the old quarry. It was clean, not like the Poison Well, but somewhere along the line they put a bunch of cement up to keep people out. You drove down this long road, and there were, like, a dozen dead end signs. Then this cement wall. For a while, all the kids thought they could find a way to tear it down. We'd shoot at it, and some of the boys made up a fertilizer bomb, but you couldn't get through.”
Kristen nodded, not
yes
, just
I hear you.
“That's what it was like for Marydale, you know? Being gay around here. There were a couple of us at the high school. Me. Marydale. This kid name Cutty. And some others who never talked about it. She was the last one up against that wall, kicking at it, when you knew it wasn't going to come down.”
“I thought people accepted her,” Kristen said quietly.
“Sure they did.” Aubrey wrapped her arm around the little boy and pulled him awkwardly onto her lap. The baby had fallen asleep, and the little boy touched the baby's hand. “No one said you couldn't go shooting at the wall. No one said you couldn't try. But you weren't ever gonna win.”
“Why didn't you leave Tristess?” Kristen asked.
“By the time you're old enough, Tristess has got a little piece of you.” Aubrey pressed her lips to the baby's head. “I'm sorry Marydale got sent back. I thought she'd make it.”
“Can you think of
anything
that might help her case?” Kristen asked again.
Aubrey looked around with a frown. “Ronald Holten bought us this place. He got Amos a job, not that Amos kept it long. If you think the Holtens got something they shouldn't have, look for the money.”
 Â
But a week and a half later, Kristen had found nothing. Her visits to the small legal-consult room in the prison felt strained. The more often she visited, the closer the guards watched them. Quietly, she pleaded with Marydale, “You have to help me think of something.”
Marydale pleaded back, “I can't dodge Gulu much longer. I don't know who her people are. I'm trying.”
“Can you think of
anything
we can use?”
The last time she had visited, Marydale had broken down, sobbing into her folded arms, the last vestiges of the rodeo queen dissolving with her tears. Kristen had promised herself she would not ask again, but now the question came back of its own will.
“Marydale, anything?”
Kristen wanted to hold Marydale. She wanted reach back in time to the seventeen-year-old girl waving from the parade float. She wanted to cradle that girl in her arms, and she wanted to strip Marydale of her orange scrubs and kiss her. But the guard's footsteps marked time like a clock, and Kristen heard herself barrage Marydale with questions.
“I thought you were looking!” Marydale shot back.
“I'm sorry,” Kristen said. “I can't find anything.” It felt like a diagnosis, a doctor walking slowly into the examining room.
I'm sorryâ¦
Kristen took a deep breath. “The best I've got is that Eric Neiben was a shitty lawyer, and some people around town thought you got a rough deal.” Kristen's laptop was open to a waiting screen, but there were no answers to type. “You're going to have a parole hearing next week. That will determine whether you'll be in prison for three months or six. I'll try for three, and then I'll try to get your parole transferred to Portland. You've got a support system and employment, so they may agree. If they don't, we can try to sue for wrongful imprisonment, based on the fact that Ronald Holten knows you. We won't win, but it might scare the county since I can try it for free, and they'll have to pay. But that's losing the war. We can't bank on some small-town politician's fears.”
Marydale ran her hands through her hair. “I know. I know.”
“Help me,” Kristen said. “There's got to be something.”
Outside the room, the guard's footsteps receded on the linoleum.
“Kristen.” Marydale traced a crack in the surface of the table. “You've never been in prison.”
“No.”
“I love you so much.” Marydale's voice sounded far away. “But you don't get it. We don't win. We can't. I can't. I wasn't mad at you. I want you to know that.”
“What do you mean?”
“When you left Tristess. I know why you left. I know what happens when someone goes into the system. If you leave now”âshe straightenedâ”I'll understand. This isn't your life. You didn't do this.”
“What?”
“I won't hate you.”
“If I leave?”
“Eventually, you will. You have to. It's over for me. This is all my life is going to be. This. Maybe I'll be able to do something in Tristess. Maybe after enough time passes⦔
 “You can't give up.”
Kristen clutched Marydale's hand. Marydale pressed her other hand over Kristen's.
“Sweetie,” she said, as though Kristen were a little girl stomping her feet against death. “Sometimes you just lose.” Her smile was incalculably sad.
“No,” Kristen said.
“Yes. I've spent the last ten years pretending it's not true, but it is. It just is.”
Without thinking, Kristen rose, grabbed Marydale's hand, and pulled her to her feet. The small window in the door watched them like an eye, but the hallway outside was momentarily empty. Kristen drew Marydale toward the corner of the room where a passing guard could not see them. Then she spun Marydale around and pushed her against the wall. Marydale's eyes went wide. Kristen pressed her hands to Marydale's cheeks, holding her face and her gaze.
“Marydale, we'll get through this.”
Then her tongue was in Marydale's mouth, their kiss fierce and hard. Kristen felt every sense heightened. The guards were only fifty feet away. She could hear them laughing, their muffled footsteps shifting around at the end of the hall.
 “I love you,” Kristen whispered.
She kissed Marydale again. The material of Marydale's uniform was so thin Kristen could feel her body as if through a sheet. She could feel Marydale's heartbeat. She could hear the blood in her own ears. She felt her body light up with desire and grief and rage at the world. Without thinking, she squeezed Marydale's ass, clinging to her, drawing her closer, tighter.
“You can't give up, Mary.”
The wall behind them creaked. They both stopped.
Through the wall, Kristen heard one of the guards say, “Is Rae done in there?”
A woman's voice replied, “Lawyer's got another ten minutes.”
Marydale pressed her forehead against Kristen's shoulder. “I don't want this to be your life, too.”
Kristen clutched the back of Marydale's head with one hand. With the other, she caressed her Marydale's thigh, touching the thin, rough fabric of her uniform. Beneath it she felt the heat of Marydale's body.
“Listen to me, Marydale. You're getting out. I know you are because I did. I should never have survived. I should be doing meth in some dive bar with my mother and her boyfriend and Sierra, too. I wasn't supposed to go to college. I wasn't supposed to be a lawyer, and I had to fight for everythingâ¦
everything
I have, and I will not lose now. I will not lose you.”
She slipped her hand under Marydale's waistband. A radio buzzed in the hallway, and someone answered with a curt, “What?”
Warnings rang in the back of Kristen's mind, but she had seen the defeat in Marydale's eyes, and she couldn't bear it: beautiful, regal Marydale with her blond curls and her dark tattoos sitting before her with her shoulders stooped.
Sometimes you just lose.
Even in Tristess, when Marydale was just a waitress scraping by on cheap tips, there had been a fierceness about her, a cut of blue stone in her eyes, a flame that burned lower and lower every time Kristen visited the penitentiary.
Kristen felt that heat rekindle as she touched Marydale's thigh.
“Oh,” Marydale whispered. She closed her eyes. “Oh, Kristen.”
Kristen rubbed the tips of two fingers against Marydale's clit, more a symbol than a seduction, a witch's invocation, an ancient liturgy.
“I won't fail now,” Kristen said, her voice stern but her touch gentle. “I won't fail you, if I have to take this to the Supreme Court, if I have to burn this whole fucking town to the ground.”