Authors: John Saul
She crept down the steps through the gaping hole where the door had been, and went back to her corner. She drew the jacket tightly around herself, but neither the jacket nor the doorless cellar could protect her.
Through the long night she huddled there, the storm and the scene she had witnessed lashing at her, torturing her, boring deep within her soul.
After that night she never spoke of what she’d seen or what she’d heard. She never spoke of it, but she never quite forgot.
“Are you my grandpa?”
Michael Hall gazed uncertainly up into the weathered face. He had never seen the man before, yet he recognized him as clearly as if he were looking into a mirror. He tried to keep his voice steady, tried not to shrink back against his mother, tried to remember all the things his father had taught him about meeting people for the first time:
Stand up straight, and put your hand out.
Look the person in the eye.
Tell them your name. He’d forgotten that part.
“I—I’m Michael, and this is my mother,” he stammered.
He felt his mother’s grip tighten on his shoulders, and for just a moment was afraid he’d done something wrong. But then the man he was talking to smiled at him, and he felt his mother’s hands relax a little.
He looks like Mark. He looks just like Mark
. The thought flashed through Janet Hall’s mind, and she had to make a conscious effort to keep from hurling herself into the arms of the stranger who was now moving closer to her, an uneasy smile failing to mask the troubled look in his eyes. Barely conscious of the airport crowd that eddied around her, Janet found herself focusing on the lean angularity of her father-in-law’s figure, the strength in his face, the aura of calm control that seemed to hover around him as it had around his son. Unconsciously, her hand moved to her waist and she smoothed her skirt in a nervous gesture.
It’s going to be all right
, Janet told herself.
He’s just like Mark, and he’ll take care of us
.
Almost as if he’d heard Janet’s private thought, Amos Hall leaned down and swung his eleven-year-old grandson off his feet, his farmer’s strength belying his own sixty-seven years. He hugged the boy, but when his eyes met Janet’s over Michael’s shoulder, there was no joy in them.
“I’m sorry,” he said, dropping his voice to a level that would be inaudible to anyone but Janet and Michael. “I don’t know what to say. All these years, and we only meet when Mark—” His voice faltered, and Janet could see him struggling against his feelings. “I’m sorry,” he repeated, his voice suddenly gruff. “Let’s get your baggage and get on out of here. We can talk in the car.”
But they didn’t talk in the car. They drove out of North Platte and into the vast expanse of the prairie in silence, the three of them huddled in the front seat of Amos Hall’s Oldsmobile, Janet and Amos separated by Michael. The numbness that had overcome Janet from the moment the night before when she had been told that her husband was dead still pervaded her, and the reality of where she was—and the why of it—had still not come fully into her consciousness. She had a feeling of being trapped in a nightmare, and every second she was waiting for Mark to awaken her from the dream and assure her that everything was all right, everything was as it had always been.
And yet, that was not to be.
The miles rolled past. Finally, Janet made herself glance across to her father-in-law, who seemed intent on studying the arrow-straight road ahead, his eyes glued to the shimmering pavement as if, by concentration alone, he, too, could deny the reality of what had happened.
Janet cleared her throat, and Amos’s eyes left the road for a split second. “Mark’s mother—”
“She never leaves Prairie Bend,” Amos replied, his gaze returning to the highway. “Rarely leaves the house anymore, if truth be known. She’s getting along, and the years—” He paused, and Janet could see a tightness forming in his jaw. “The years haven’t been as kind to her as they might,” he finished. Then: “Funeral’s gonna be tomorrow morning.”
Janet nodded mutely, relieved that the decision had been made; then, once more, she let herself fall into silence.
An hour later they arrived at the Halls’ farm. The old two-story house was not large, but it seemed to Janet to have a sense of itself, sitting solidly on its foundation, surrounded by a grove of elms and cotton woods, protected from the vast emptiness of the plains that stretched to the horizon in every direction save one, where a stand of trees marked the route of a river making its way eastward, to flow eventually into the Platte.
“What’s the name of the river?” Michael suddenly asked, and the question pulled Janet’s attention from her father-in-law.
“The Dismal,” Amos replied as he brought the car to a stop in front of the house. A moment later he was taking Janet’s baggage out of the trunk. With a suitcase in each hand, he mounted the steps of the front porch, Janet and Michael trailing behind him. Suddenly the door opened and a figure appeared on the threshold, a woman, gaunt and hollow-cheeked, as though her life had been spent in constant battle with the unrelenting prairie.
She was seated in a wheelchair.
Janet felt Michael freeze next to her, and took him by the hand.
“We’re back,” she heard Amos Hall saying to the woman. “This is Mark’s Janet, and this is Michael.”
The woman in the wheelchair stared at them in silence for a moment. Her face, worn with age and infirmity, had a haggard look to it, and her eyes, rimmed with red, seemed nearly lifeless. But a moment later she smiled, a soft smile that seemed to wash some of the years away from her countenance. “Come here,” she said, spreading her arms wide. “Come and let me hold you.”
The numbness Janet had been feeling since last night; the numbness that had insulated her every minute today and allowed her to maintain her self-control as she packed their bags, ordered a cab, and got herself and Michael from Manhattan to the airport; the numbness that had sustained her through the change of planes in Omaha, the arrival in North Platte, and the drive to Prairie Bend, drained away from her now.
“He’s dead,” she said, her voice breaking as for the first time she truly admitted to herself what had happened. Dropping Michael’s hand, she stumbled up the steps and sank to her knees next to Anna Hall’s wheelchair. “Oh, God, what happened to him? Why did he die? Why?”
Anna’s arms encircled Janet, and she cradled her daughter-in-law’s head against her breast. “It’s all right, child,” she soothed. “Things happen, sometimes, and there’s nothing we can do about them. We just have to accept them.” Over Janet’s head, her gaze met her husband’s for a moment, then moved on, coming to rest on Michael, who stood uncertainly at the foot of the steps, his eyes riveted in worried fascination on his mother. “You, too, Michael,” Anna gently urged. “Come give Grandma a hug, and let her take the hurt away.”
The boy looked up then, and as his eyes met her own, Anna felt a flash of recognition surge over her frail body. In the boy, she saw the father. And as she saw her son in her grandson’s eyes, she began to feel fear.
Amos Hall led Janet and Michael up the narrow staircase to the second floor, where three large bedrooms and a generous bathroom opened off the hallway that bisected the house. He opened the door to the first bedroom, then stood aside to let Janet pass him. “You’ll be in here. Used to be Laura’s room.”
“Laura?” Janet echoed, in a voice that sounded dazed even to herself. “Who’s Laura?”
Amos frowned, his eyes clouding. “Mark’s sister. Until she got married, this was her room.” He paused a moment, then, as if he felt an explanation was necessary, spoke again. “I was going to turn it into a den, or a study. I just never got around to it.”
Janet gazed at the room, taking in its details with apparent calm, while she frantically searched the corners of her memory for the information she knew must be there, that had somehow slipped away from her.
The name Laura meant nothing to her.
The whole idea of Mark having had a sister meant nothing to her.
But that was ridiculous. If Mark had had a sister, he
must
have talked about her sometime over the years. She’d simply forgotten. Some kind of amnesia, maybe: somehow, during the last few hours of shock, it must have been driven from her mind.
“It’s just fine,” she said at last, careful not to let her voice betray her confusion. She glanced around the room once more, this time forcing herself to concentrate. There was nothing special about the room; it was simply a room, with a bed, a chair, a nightstand, and a dresser. A chenille bedspread covered the slightly sagging mattress, and there was a braided rug covering most of the pine floor. Ill-fitting curtains hung at the window, and an image of a Sears catalog suddenly came into Janet’s mind. A second later, she made the connection: the curtains were identical to the ones she had had in her own room when she was a little girl, the ones her mother had ordered from the Sears catalog, in a size close to, but not quite right for, the windows. Her mind churned on, and the rest of the memories flooded back, the memories she’d deliberately suppressed, hoped never to look at again:
The fire, when the old house she’d been born in had burned to the ground, consuming everything she loved—her parents and her brother, too—leaving her to be raised by a series of aunts who somehow had always found reasons to pass her on to someone else until, at last, she’d turned eighteen and gone to live by herself in New York. A year later, she’d married Mark.
And now, once again, here were those mail-order curtains, bringing back those memories. She sank onto the bed, one hand reflexively coming up to cover her eyes as she felt them fill with tears.
“Are you all right?” she heard her father-in-law ask. She took a deep breath, then made herself smile.
“I’ll be fine. It’s just that—that—”
But Amos Hall stopped her. “Lie down for a little while. Just lie down, and try to go to sleep. I’ll take care of Michael, and later on we’ll talk. But for now, just try to get a little sleep.” Taking the boy firmly by the hand, Amos left the room, closing the door behind him.
For a long time, Janet lay on the bed, trying to make herself be calm, trying to put the memories of the past to rest and cope with the problems of the present.
Laura.
She would concentrate on Laura.
Somewhere in her memory, there must be something about Mark’s sister, and if she concentrated, it would come back to her. It just wasn’t possible that Mark, in their thirteen years together, had never mentioned having a sister. It wasn’t possible.…
And then the exhaustion of the last hours caught up with her, and she slept.
Michael stared in awe at the room his grandfather had shown him into. It was a boy’s room, its walls covered with baseball and football pennants. Suspended from the ceiling were four model airplanes, frozen in flight as if they were involved in a dogfight. Over the bed there was a bookshelf, and Michael could recognize some of the books without reading the titles: identical volumes sat on his own bookshelf back home in New York. “Was this my father’s room?” he asked at last.
“This is all the stuff he had when he was a boy,” his grandfather replied. “All these years, and here it is. I suppose I should have gotten rid of it, but now I’m glad I didn’t. Maybe I was saving it just for you.”
Michael frowned, regarding his grandfather with suspicious eyes. “But you didn’t know I was coming.”
“But you would have, wouldn’t you?” Amos countered. “Someday, wouldn’t you have come to visit your grandparents?”
Michael shook his head. “I don’t think Dad wanted to come here. I don’t think he liked it here.”
“Now what makes you say a thing like that?” Amos asked, lowering himself onto the studio couch that served as a bed, and drawing Michael down beside him.
“ ’Cause every time I asked him if we could come here to visit, he said maybe next year. That’s what he always said, and whenever I told him that’s what he said last year, he always said he’d only said maybe. So I guess he never really wanted to come, did he?”
“Maybe he could just never find the time,” Amos suggested.
Michael shrugged, and drew slightly away from his grandfather. “He always took us on a vacation. One year we went to Florida, and twice we went camping in the mountains.” Suddenly he grinned. “That was neat. Do you ever go camping?”
“Not for years. But now that you’re here, I don’t see why we couldn’t go. Would you like that?”
The grin on Michael’s face faded. “I don’t know. I always went camping with my dad.” He fell silent for a moment, then turned to look up into his grandfather’s face. “How come my dad died? How come he even came out here without bringing us with him? Or even telling us he was coming?” Anger began to tinge his voice. “He said he was going to Chicago.”
“And he went to Chicago,” Amos replied. “Then he came here. I don’t rightly know exactly why.”
Michael’s eyes narrowed. “You mean you won’t tell me.”
“I mean I don’t know,” Amos said gruffly, standing up. He paused, then reached down and took Michael’s chin in his rough hand, forcing the boy to face him. “If you mean I’m not telling you something because I think you’re too young to know, then you’re wrong. I don’t hold with that sort of nonsense. If a boy’s old enough to ask a question, he’s old enough to hear the answer.” His hand dropped away from Michael’s face but he continued to regard his grandson with an unbending gaze. “I don’t know why your father came out here,” he said. “All I can tell you is that he got here yesterday, and last night he died.”
Michael stared at his grandfather for a long time, and when he finally spoke, his voice was quavering. “But how come he died? He wasn’t sick, was he?”
“It was an accident,” Amos said shortly. “He was in the barn, up in the loft. He must have tripped over something.”
The suspicion came back into Michael’s eyes. “What?” he demanded.
Amos stiffened slightly. “I don’t know—nobody does. Anyway, he fell off the edge of the loft, into the haybin.”
Michael frowned. “What’s a haybin?”