The Confession (2 page)

Read The Confession Online

Authors: Domenic Stansberry

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Hard-Boiled

BOOK: The Confession
4.9Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Your eyes,” she said to me, “they have a life of their own. The way they glimmer.”

“The window to the soul,” I joked.

“Do you believe in it?”

“What?”

“The soul.”

“Sometimes. Other times, I don’t know.”

“That job of yours,” she said. “All those crazy people. The criminals. It must be hard.”

She fell silent for a while. Her body was tight against mine. We were moving toward a deeper, more convulsive rhythm.

I pulled up and glanced down into her face. She wrapped her legs around my haunches. Then suddenly, she laughed. It was a deep laugh, from a deep place, sleepy and provocative. She was in some ways a reckless woman.

I pulled away.

Out the window, there were low clouds coming down the hill. White clouds, fog really, and before too long that fog would come rushing down. The wind had already begun to nag at the rooftops. I was familiar with that nagging breeze—it hounded my house, mine and Elizabeth s, on the other side of the point, over in Golden Hinde.

“What’s the matter?” she asked.

“Nothing. Lets slow things down. Make the time last.” The room held a vivid luminosity. The curtains, Sara’s toes, her blouse draped over the chair—all were etched with light, an aura not unlike that which precedes certain types of seizures. It was often there for me at such moments, like the glow of the sun after it slips over the edge of the world. Entranced, though, lost in the moment, I sometimes did not recognize its presence until afterwards, in memory, so I cannot be sure even now, as I write this down, if it was there at all.

Sara rolled toward me. “We’ve been meeting like this for a while now,” she said.

“Not so long. A few weeks.”

“It wasn’t what I had planned, you know. This kind of thing, with a married man. I have a boyfriend.”

“I know.”

“He wants to get serious with me.”

“You told me that, yes.”

“So what are we going to do?”

“I have to go over to the Correctional Facility this afternoon.”

“That’s not what I mean.”

She was astride me now, and I reached up to touch her breasts. She yawned. The drink catching up with her. It was a strong drink—I knew how to mix them—and she’d taken it down pretty fast. My tie hung over her neck, draped like a scarf.

“Your wife, Elizabeth, she knows, doesn’t she?”

“I don’t think so.”

“She will. Sooner or later.”

I said nothing.

“So, what are you going to do? About us?”

Maybe that was the trigger. Sara’s question. The anxiety it produced. I was confused, tom between two women. I still loved my wife. Or maybe it was simply something gone wrong in the soft mass of the brain. Something induced by the way she moved, eyes closed, straddling me—a kind of sleepy, drowsy, circling motion, as if she were slipping into a vortex and I was at its center. She didn’t speak. Her head slumped and rolled back a little.

What happened next, exactly, it’s hard to describe. I remember lying on my back, with Sara straddled over me. My grip was easy one instant, my hands gentle on her shoulders, then my grip tightened. I felt her resist, I saw her panic. My muscles were paralyzed, locked, and I could not open my hands to let her loose. I felt the convulsion. I lifted my head, looking into her eyes, trying to speak her name, but then she pulled away. I tugged back. I was clumsy and our heads butted, one against the other. Then I must’ve gone into a full fit. I went black. For how long, I’m not sure. I came back slowly, still in darkness. I could sense her movement in the room, hear her talking, but I could not move, and then the spell was broken and I was up, sitting on the edge of the bed. (I closed my eyes and saw a shadow inside myself, a little man moving within the shadow of another little man moving along the edge of a dark plane.) Sara stood across the room, bare-chested, holding the phone in her hands. She still wore her gray office skirt, hiked and rumpled. Her lip was bruised, badly, and my nose was bleeding.

“What happened?” She kept her distance, but her look was as much puzzlement as fear.

I tried to speak, but I couldn’t. After such incidents, it takes a while to get back your tongue.

“Are you all right?”

I nodded.

“You really scared me.”

Outside I heard a siren. An ambulance on its way up the hill.

“I called emergency,” she said.

In another minute, the paramedics stood at the door, knocking. My voice returned, audible but faint. A kind of croaking. “I guess you better let them in,” I said.

Sara grabbed a robe, something silk with a lace fringe. Held it close at the collar. I grabbed my pants from the floor.

She let the paramedics in. The first was tall and earnest, a bit breathless from the stairs. The second was a skinny little brute who looked as if he belonged on morgue detail. They took the scene in, glancing from one of us to the other.

The skinny one regarded me suspiciously. He turned to Sara. “Is this some kind of domestic squabble,” he said. “Do we need a cop out here?”

“No,” I insisted.

Then I staggered through an explanation. How as a kid I’d suffered from Hayes Syndrome. Or Blackout Syndrome, as it is more commonly known. Sudden fits—not seizures exactly, but something close. The child goes suddenly still, holding his breath, eyes open. Sometimes, the incidents go on for an inordinate amount of time, the skin turning blue, the veins bulging. Ultimately, they are not serious. They pass on their own. The biggest danger comes from the onlooker, the inclination to panic, to shake the victim: to force breath back into the body. This is exactly the wrong thing to do. Because the victim will thrash and rage, all the while unseeing, unconscious.

Usually Hayes Syndrome fades with time, though it has been known to linger through adolescence, even into adulthood, reappearing at times of emotional stress. I explained this all to the paramedics. I did not say, though, how there are other specialists who insist it is not a syndrome at all but rather an excuse—a pretense developed after the fact, as explanation for violent behavior of which the perpetrator is fully aware.

“I suffered an attack,” I told the ambulance driver. “Sara didn’t know what to do. She tried to restrain me—and I guess we must have smashed heads.”

The paramedic turned to Sara. “Is that what happened?”

Sara rubbed her wrists where I had grabbed her. She looked pretty shaken. I was embarrassed. I am not a violent man, I wanted to tell them, but I held my tongue, knowing the situation appeared otherwise—and the more I protested, the more they might disbelieve.

“He’s telling the truth,” she said at last. “I saw his body seize up. “

The driver had wandered into the kitchen. He came back with the empty vodka glass in his hand. He sniffed it.

“You two been drinking.”

“No,” said Sara. “I mean Jake had a drink. One. But I didn’t have a drop.”

I looked at her in surprise.

“I poured it down the sink,” she explained.

I nodded but felt betrayed somehow. I remembered how she’d looked in bed above me—full of torpor, sleepy-eyed, as if on the edge of tumbling into a deep languor—but when I’d grabbed her shoulders, she’d jerked up pretty fast. Sober as a pin.

The skinny one took Sara aside now, going over the story with her in private. The other one helped me clean up my nose. He examined me a little bit, shining a light in my eyes, taking my pulse, my blood pressure. “It might be a good idea to come down to the hospital with us. Get an emergency CAT scan. Test things out.”

The skinny one came back. He shrugged unhappily, as if disappointed Sara had not changed her story. They loitered around for a while, trying to persuade me into going to the hospital. I refused.

When they had gone, Sara sat beside me on the bed. The wariness was still there but mixed with something else. Concern, maybe. Compassion. She put her hand on my hand, and I felt the confusion well up once again.

“I’m sorry,” I said. “Maybe . . .” I stammered, looking for an explanation.

“What?”

“I don’t know. I can’t say. This situation, the way things are with you and me.”

“What are you saying?”

“Maybe it’s the case I’m working. Sometimes, these things, they get inside your head. They twist you around.”

“You frightened me,” she said softly.

I put my arm around her. She was still edgy, but she seemed comforted in my presence, in the slow return to normalcy.

“I’m sorry,” I said again.

“There’s something about you,” she said, “I can’t resist.”

She laughed a little. Then she kissed me with more sweetness than you might expect. She stroked my hair in back, adjusting my ponytail, fiddling. I touched the back of her head, too, and stroked her, telling her again how beautiful she was, how she reminded me of a girl I’d seen once, in a field of flowers, in an elevator, in a barroom, somewhere, once upon a time. She was a sweet girl but there was another side of her, too. She liked the sense of danger, the darkness underneath. I tasted her lips. I pulled away. I looked around. The aura was gone from the room.

2.

My wife and I lived out on Golden Hinde, a narrow spit of land that extends into the bay halfway between Sausalito and San Quentin. It was about ten minutes off the freeway, down a road that snaked and wound between the wetlands on one side and the brown hills on the other. The back of the house was all glass—you could see the water, the egrets, the sailboats, and San Quentin, too, castle-like across the bay. On a nice day our spot was as balmy a place as you could want, but often as not the wind funneled down over the hills. It was a nagging, irritating breeze. All the more so because just a few blocks over the air hung still and warm, perfect as can be.

Later that afternoon I was scheduled to meet with Matthew Dillard, the accused murderer, but I stopped first out at Golden Hinde. I had gotten blood on my shirt and needed to change.

Elizabeth was out of town. She had gone down to New Orleans to an academic conference—to read a paper on Jung, defending him from the new group of psychologists taking over the field. Then she had gone up to Anders, just outside of Baton Rouge. It was an old town, all but disappeared from the map, everything swallowed by kudzu and bamboo. Everything except the graveyard, that is. It was maintained by a sugar refinery nearby. Her mother and father were buried in that graveyard, and Elizabeth had gone to pay her respects.

She was her father’s girl, mostly; he was the one she grieved.

I checked the mail—and found an invitation to the Wilders’ party: an upscale bash we went to every summer. I put it aside and checked the answering machine, but Elizabeth hadn’t called. I studied her picture on the mantelpiece. In it, she wore a necklace her father had given her, a string of pearls.

My wife and I had met on a tennis court. She worked at a teachers college. I’d liked her long legs and the blunt cut of her hair. She was several years older than myself, but I liked that, too. She was an elegant woman, recently divorced. We’d been married three years but things had become difficult lately.

My fault, no doubt. My obsession with my job. My infidelities. Venal attractions to status and material comfort.

We had marble in the entry and granite in the kitchen and a sauna on the deck. We had a slate fireplace and a bookshelf full of metaphysical texts. On the mantle was a statue of the

Laughing Buddha—a fat-bellied little man who smiled voraciously and looked as if he had just devoured the world.

We had a hot tub where I soaked and meditated. From there, I could see Mt. Tamalpais looming over the county.

I was feeling off-kilter. The incident at Sara’s had left me disoriented, but there were other things, too. I’d had affairs before, but usually they were brief things, a handful of encounters, a night here, there, building in intensity—then over. I would cut it off. I would be faithful for a while, six months, a year, then something would build inside me. This time, with Sara, I was more reckless. Letting it stretch out. Being seen. A risky thing. It made you wonder who you were. I wanted something new in my life, I guess, a new exhilaration—one of those moments when you feel the world brush against you, fragile and ungainly—but at the same time I didn’t want to lose Elizabeth. A contradiction, I know, unrealistic. Selfish. I couldn’t help myself. I took off my clothes now. I had to be out at the Correctional Facility in just a little while, to interview Dillard. In the meantime I stood naked in the front of the mirror, regarding myself.

There was a game I had used to play with my patients. I called it Peel the Onion. The point of this game was self-discovery, to take them deeper into the self. I would pose the simple question
Who are you?
and the patient would have to respond quickly, in just a few sentences, nothing more. Then I would ask the question again, then again. The trick was for each answer to be truthful yet different than the one before. Lying was not allowed. And to work right, to penetrate to the fundamental core, the game had to be played quickly, without reflection.

I looked at myself again. My face was a mask.

Who are you?

Other books

Where There's a Will by Bailey Bradford
Life As I Blow It by Sarah Colonna