Authors: Walter Satterthwait
“Upstairs,” I said. “Mother.” This was the first time in my life, and it was to be the last, that I called the woman by that name.
Miss Lizzie took another deep sharp breath, almost a hiss, and then her plump arm encircled my shoulder, pulling me toward her. “Come in. Come in, dear.” She led me into the parlor. As I shuffled along, legs weak, feet heavy, I felt the palm of her hand against my forehead, and her skin seemed neither warm nor cool; I had lost the abilityâhad lost the desireâto distinguish between sensations.
“You're freezing, child,” she said.
And so I was. Despite the viscid August heat that hung about me, I moved within an envelope of dense, impenetrable cold. My teeth, I noticed, were clattering.
“Here,” she said when we reached the red plush sofa. “You sit down, child, and I'llâ”
“
No!
” I cried, and hurled myself into her, clutched at her. Beneath my grappling fingers I felt the stiff whalebone stays of her corset, against my face I felt the swell of her breast and smelled the scent of her, of oranges and cinnamon and cloves. She was warmth and substance, softness and strength; she was real. She was alive.
“Amanda,” she said gently, after a moment; gently she stroked my hair. “Amanda. Amanda, child.”
For a long whileâI cannot say for how longâshe held me, crooning my name as her hand caressed the nape of my neck. I wanted nothing more, forever; and nothing less.
At last I felt her body gathering itself, stiffening, as though preparing for some enormous effort. She put her hands along my arms. “Amanda, you must be very brave now, and very strong. I want you to sit down on the sofa while I fetch you a wrap.”
I made a weak protesting sound and shook my head against her.
“Hush,” she said quietly. “Hush now.” Slowly but steadily she eased me away. Her gray eyes stared unblinking into mine, and possibly for the first time I recognized the intensity of purpose she possessed; her will, beneath the kindliness, was almost palpable. “You're in shock, child,” she said, “and there are things that must be done. Be brave now, Amanda. Can you do that for me?”
Mutely, helplessly, I nodded.
She nodded back, once, crisply. “I know you can. Everything will be all right, I'll see to it, Amanda. I promise you. You sit down now.”
I sat, boneless and slack, my hands limp atop my lap. And then, with a whisper of petticoats, Miss Lizzie was gone.
All around me, slowly, inexorably, like falling snow, the chill began to deepen.
â¦
from very far away across the Persian carpet, the cat lay upon the red plush armchair and, broad white head poised above fat white paws, regarded me with green eyes as round and blank as stones.
⦠a softness unfolding at my neck and shoulders and Miss Lizzie's face before me as she tucked the afghan round my body, draped it down my knees. She held a bubble-shaped glass half-filled with brown liquid to my lips. “Brandy,” she said. “Drink it, child.”
I sipped at it. Bitter, and it burned.
“More,” she urged.
I took another small swallow, felt it glide fiery down my core, go glowing out along my being. And, stubbornly, I resented it, hated it, for its invasion of my numbness. When she offered the glass again, I shook my head. To this day, despite having tried to do so, even while surrounded by friendship and love, I cannot abide the taste or smell of brandy.
Miss Lizzie stood, looked down at the glass, then raised it to her lips and drained it. She said, “I'll return in a moment.
⦠suddenly, and lit so garishly that it might have been sprawled beneath a photographer's flash, the scene in the guest room returned to me, and I saw again the gore-splashed walls, the stains and spatters, that awful
thing
of meat and bone sprawled along the bed, hacked and smashed and battered. The obscene white glimmer of bone, the black thickening sheen of blood.
My mind wrenched itself away, spun back, and I toppled into the safety of my solitary, empty Winter.
⦠Miss Lizzie again, striding across the carpet to her telephone, one of the few of these luxuries possessed by summer boarders. She looked older and paler and somehow thinner, as though her body had compacted itself against her frame. Before lifting the earpiece, she glanced at me. I could not tell, from within my stupor, what was in that glance, whether pity or compassion or horror. Perhaps all of them; perhaps none. I realized only later that she had gone Up There, into the guest room next door, and seen what I had seen.
She looked away. For a moment she stood with her hand atop the telephone, resting upon it, leaning her weight upon it. Then, abruptly, she lifted the receiver, waited for the operator, and then asked for a number in Boston.
I was staring at the floral pattern in the Persian carpet. I heard her give her name, “Miss Lizbeth A. Borden.” From then on, I heard fragments only as I drifted up to and then below the surface of my Chill. “Someone here in town ⦠The best, you say?” Then, explosively: “Of course not, don't be daft.” I heard her mention Father's name, and the brokerage firm for which he worked. “Who was the doctor again? ⦠Yes.⦠Yes,
immediately
, do you understand? ⦠At my cottage, yes.⦠Good-bye.”
She seated the receiver in its cradle, momentarily rested upon it once more, then lifted it again. She asked the operator for a Dr. Bowen.
I heard: “⦠Shock, yes.⦠As soon as possible, if you don't mind.⦠Miss Lizbeth A. Borden ⦠One-Oh-Two Water Street.⦠Borden.⦠Miss
Lizbeth
A.
Borden
⦔ Snappishly: “Are you there, you silly girl?” Somewhat mollified: “Yes, I shall be most grateful.” She slammed the phone into the cradle and spat out: “
Idiot
.”
She stood there for a moment, breathing raggedly. I stared at the carpet.
“Only one more,” she said.
I looked up sluggishly, saw that she was speaking to me. I nodded even as I wondered what she meant.
She lifted the telephone, waited again, and then asked for the police. A pause. Then: “This is Miss Lizbeth A. Borden. I should like to report a murder.”
⦠Miss Lizzie sitting beside me, unspeaking, her left arm along the sofa's back, behind my head. I could smell her comforting sachet smell of citrus and spice; but, beneath my Snow, I was having no more of comfort now.
⦠a rap of heavy knuckles at the front door, a sound that in the stillness of the house came as a jolt, sudden and peremptory. Miss Lizzie touched me once, lightly, upon the shoulder; and then, with another rustling sigh of petticoats, moved away.
⦠the door opening, a voice other than Miss Lizzie's, heavy-timbered, hard, Irish, determinedly masculine. Miss Lizzie's voice, hushed. Another male voice, softer than the first, placating. The first voice again, harsh, aggressive. Miss Lizzie's voice, temporarily overriding his, growing gradually louder in protest. The second male voice interrupting hers, polite and deferential, but very firm. Miss Lizzie, tired and resigned.
Footsteps thumping on the carpet.