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Authors: Elizabeth McCracken

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“Four months and thirteen days,” said Caroline.

“And you don't even miss her.”

“Oh, Jim,” said Caroline. “You don't know how much.”

“I don't know if I even believe that.” He walked to the bed as fast as he could, which was not fast at all. I thought, he wants to throw himself down on the bed angrily, and he can't even do that. Instead he sat on the edge and put his face in his hands.

Caroline shook her head. “Peggy?” she said. She handed the baby to me. Alice was an awkward bundle. She still wasn't crying, and I waited for her to. I thought that's what babies did. They cried. I looked into her face, a five-month-old face, and waited for it to pleat and redden. I guess I wanted someone to cry.

I got my wish. Caroline inhaled deeply, as if she knew what she was going to do would be an effort. She knew it would be the last clear, easy breath she'd take in a while. “It's like this,” she said in an improbably careful voice, and then, suddenly, she was weeping.

Oscar said, “Caro—”

“I'm
sorry
,” she said angrily. She shook her useless hands as if they were full of something she wanted to get rid of. She brought them to her face, let them grab her shoulders, hit her thighs.

James looked terrified. Boys never see grown women cry. Or perhaps he had—what did I know of his life when I wasn't around? Perhaps his mother cried every day she lived. Perhaps the secret of her perfect skin was gentle tears, applied first thing in the morning and just before bed.

But what Caroline was doing was not an everyday occurrence. It was something hoarded, a fortune stuffed under a mattress that
has inexplicably managed to gather interest as fast as any bank account. She flung herself into the big armchair, then slid to the floor. Her pretty face was bright red.

Oscar tried to help her up, but she wouldn't let him—she elbowed him away and continued to weep. I didn't know why she was crying, and I wanted to know, I wanted it explained. I wanted her to say: this is guilt, this is delayed grief, this is postpartum depression mixed with a lot of other things. I hadn't ever seen anyone cry like this in all my life. It was like she was poisoned and crying was the only way to get the poison out.

“I'm sorry,” said James.

“No!” Caroline stood up and stumbled to the bed. She sat next to James. She leaned into him. He put his arms around her.

I rocked the baby a little in my arms. “Hush,” I said to her, though she wasn't crying. I didn't say it loud enough for anyone else to hear. I whispered, “Everything will be fine.”

“We should have …” Caroline said to James. She couldn't get the rest of the sentence out.

“Yes,” he said. “You should have.”

There was nothing else to say. No. There were dozens of things to say, but I didn't know what they were, or how to say them. Oscar sat on the ground at his wife and nephew's feet. James was crying a little too, tears without effort, as if his aunt, who still wept beneath his arm—silently now—had done the hard part.

“I'm sorry,” I said. It was something we all felt obligated to say.

“You didn't know,” said James.

I looked at him, then at Caroline. All along I'd thought he'd known that I was every bit as guilty as Caroline and Oscar—more, perhaps. I was James's friend.

When I didn't say anything, Caroline said, “No, it's true. She didn't know.”

Sometimes we need people to lie for us. That lie was a gift I shouldn't have accepted: inappropriate and unethical and much too generous. But I did; I took it silently; I nodded.

That night was James's welcome-home assembly at the high school. Caroline and Oscar had been consistent in their lie—everyone in Brewsterville believed that Mrs. Sweatt was alive though ailing in a New Hampshire hospital.

The town, one person at a time, came up to James to greet him, touch some enchanted faulty part of him. And James thanked them, then broke the news, and consequently their hearts:
My mother has died
. And the town, one person at a time, left him to his grief, griefstruck themselves.

There was a program at the end of the evening; James walked across the stage to shake the principal's hand. I sat in the audience with Oscar and the baby; Caroline sat on the stage with James. She'd asked me to join them.

“No,” I said. “I hate the idea of an audience staring up at me.”

James seemed old every day of his life, but never as old as that night. There was the cane, and the braces, and the careful, shuffling walk of an old man whose legs have outworn their usefulness. Caroline walked alongside him, her hand up at his elbow. She looked old, too.

“There's Mama,” Oscar said to the baby. He squinted. “She should be wearing a slip.” He was right. The outline of Caroline's skinny legs was clear behind the fabric.

The principal shook hands with James for a long time; you could tell he wanted something to give to James, a proclamation or a key to the city or a diploma. Something about James made you want to offer things up. But all the red-faced principal had to offer was his comparatively small hand, so, when that wasn't enough, he offered the other one, sandwiched James's own hand between them. They stood there awhile, James holding on to his cane, the principal holding on to James.

The Bachelor's Cottage

It hadn't occurred to me that now I would have to announce myself at the cottage until my hand was on the high doorknob; I had walked from work, as I had for several months, to see the inside and wonder what was left to do. Nothing now, I supposed. It was the Sunday afternoon after the high school assembly. We hadn't installed a bell, so I knocked.

“Come in,” James called.

I opened the door. He'd already rearranged a few things—the bed was in the opposite corner, beneath a window. Doilies had been plucked off the armchair and lay like a stack of flapjacks on the desk.

“Settling in?” I asked.

“Have a seat,” he said. I took the chair nearest the wall; James was sitting in his big armchair. “It's weird,” he said, rubbing the chair's arms. Without antimacassars, I thought, the upholstery would be black in a week.

“What is?”

James looked around the room. “I have a house. I feel like I've been gone for five years.”

“Well, a lot has happened.”

And then we just looked at each other. We were strangers, after all; at least, we'd never been alone in a small space like this. We had talked at the hospital, where there was plenty to talk about—James
told me about his physical therapy, the terrible psychologist, his visitors—any of which might interrupt our conversation. In turn, I had caught him up on the news of this world: the weather, the renovations on town hall, Oscar's newest schemes. Now he'd returned and I had no news.

I reached into my pocket. “I got you a new pack of cards,” I said, tossing them.

He caught them in one hand.

“You're still doing magic, aren't you?”

“Well, I haven't for a while.” He undid the lace of the cellophane and opened the box. “Maybe I should start again.” He began shuffling.

“Let's see a trick.”

“Let me practice a little.” The cards clattered, then shushed into a bridge. “What do you want to see?”

“I don't know. I don't know card tricks. I like them, though.”

He shuffled. Then he looked through the cards. “Wait,” he said. “Don't look at this part. Okay, now you can look. Come a little closer, I need some audience participation.” I dragged my chair up to the foot of the armchair.

He spread the cards into a fan. “Draw a card. Don't show it to me, but remember what it is. Now stick it in the deck. Anywhere, that's fine. Now.” He shuffled the cards a different way, letting them waterfall from one hand into the other. “Is this your card?”

The seven of clubs. Yes, it was.

“That's great—”

“Wait,” he said. Then he ripped the card up and stuck it in the pocket of his shirt. Then he tapped the pocket with the corner of the pack. “Okay,” he said. “Reach into my pocket.” He leaned over, so the pocket fell away from his body. Inside was an intact card. I reached for it carefully. The seven of clubs.

“Wait a minute,” I said. “How did you do that?” I sat back on my chair.

“A magician never divulges secrets.”

“No,” I said. “Tell me!”

“Look it up,” he said, laughing. “I'll give you a hint: you can find the answer in the Brewsterville Library.”

I handed the card back to him. “I was a big magic fan as a girl.”

“But not card tricks.”

“I didn't have the patience. I didn't
do
magic at all, I just read about it. I wanted to be an escape artist.”

James started shuffling again. “Yeah?
You?
Like Houdini?”

“Just like Houdini. I wanted to escape from milk jugs and glass booths.”

He laughed. “Can't picture it. Why?”

“Oh,” I said. “I don't know. I never thought about it much. I guess: escaping was very dramatic, but with a happy ending. Like with the movies. I never liked comedies, because they were too silly, but I couldn't bear tragedies because such terrible things happened at the end. And suddenly appearing after everybody has decided you were dead, that seemed like a tragedy with a happy ending.”

James started examining the face of each card, as though they were snapshots of loved ones. “Houdini had a thing about death. Didn't he want to talk to dead people? At séances?”

“He wanted to believe he could, but he decided that he couldn't, that nobody could. All that reading about magic, but you never wanted to be Houdini?”

James held the cards in one hand, tapped them against his chest, as if that were the start of another magic trick. “No,” he said. “Maybe I'm not that ambitious.”

“But you learned the card tricks,” I said. “I wanted to be Houdini, I just didn't want to do the work. Or maybe I knew I couldn't. It would have been too difficult to learn how to escape.”

“But that's the thing of it,” said James. “It wasn't escaping that was hard. I mean, he made it look harder than it was. He took just long enough to make the audience think he was dead. That was the real trick. Not that he
was
alive, because he was alive at the start and nobody was so impressed, right? The trick was he made people think he was dead.”

“Yes,” I said. “I think you're right.”

“Maybe that's why he could never talk to dead people. Dead people didn't
want
to talk to him, because he only pretended to be what they already were.” James had an amused, pensive look on his face.

“Do you think that anyone can?” I asked.

“What?”

“Talk to the dead.”

“Here's what I think, and lately I've been going over this. I think there's definitely life after death.”

“You do?”


Definitely
. But the reason that there's no real proof is that dead people—or spirits, or whatever—are different from us. Don't you think?”

“I don't know, James,” I said.

“I mean, not only do they live somewhere else—which means I guess a different language—but they believe different things. I think—” He sighed. “I thought I figured this out. Give me a minute. I think Heaven, whatever you call it, is a different religion. A really strict, different religion. As time-consuming as a serious orthodox earth religion. And that people in Heaven are just naturally not going to talk to people who aren't part of their religion. I mean, they don't need to convert people, that's for sure.”

“Does everybody who dies join the same religion?”

“Yes,” said James. “You have to. And there's no point in being religious before you die, because whatever you learn, it's all wrong. It's like really religious people have had this hunch, but they've jumped to the wrong conclusion. It's not what you should do, it's what you will do. You'll convert sooner or later anyhow.”

“What about God?” I asked, though I'm not sure I wanted to know the answer. I was fairly sure he was an atheist, but it seemed a young man should have faith in the wonders of the world. On the other hand, I wanted us to have things in common.

“No such thing,” said James.

“But—”

“There's no God. There's just dead people.”

“So.” But I couldn't figure out what the rest of the sentence should be. The windows were all open, and the long curtains were blown back, like the capes of magicians who had just left the room. Finally I tried, “Your mother—”

“Peggy,” he said. “Do you think my mother killed herself?”

I shrugged.

“She didn't,” James insisted. “I would have known.” Then he said, “I was a lot of trouble for her.”

“No,” I said, though I wasn't sure what I was disagreeing with.

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