The Turtle Warrior (47 page)

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Authors: Mary Relindes Ellis

BOOK: The Turtle Warrior
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“You won’t be able to walk barefoot in that field for a few years,” he warned Bill and Claire, knowing that he had left numerous shards of glass.
While he monotonously worked the field over, he tried to grasp a way to begin again with Bill. He envisioned what his own father would do. Watching the blades cut and fold the top layer of dirt, snarled with brome and timothy weed roots, he realized that his boyhood had been happy and peaceful because Claude Morriseau did not dwell on the actions of others, particularly if they meant him harm. His father was not without compassion. But rather than let hatred eat him, Claude Morriseau stepped away from people who could not be helped, distancing harm so that it petered out on its own volition or turned back and bit its owner.
In those days and especially among his father’s people on the Heron Reservation, such an act toward a child was dealt with in a manner consistent with the horror of the act itself. The reservation was a sovereign nation and had its own court system. Even then the perpetrator was often not brought forward. They made sure, of course, that the guilty was indeed guilty. And then they made sure that he disappeared.
HOW COULD I LOOK MY SON in the face, knowing it was I, his mother, who should have protected him? I never thought I would face pain as terrible as that day when I was notified that Jimmy was missing in action. Of not knowing what had gone through his mind before he died. Or how long he had suffered.
This was worse in some ways. I threw up for days afterward and could not eat. I tried to remember if there were any clues that I hadn’t picked up on. What hadn’t I seen?
What possesses a man to torture an area of the body meant for pleasure and for giving life? A sacred area. How could he do it to a little boy? His own son?
It would shock people to hear me say it, but my dead son has benefits that my living son does not have. It would have been kinder to have just killed Bill rather than calculate and deliver this secret torture night after night. To leave him with visible scars and a humiliation and pain that would deny him the right to seek love. There were clues, though. I have scars too. They call it rape, but back then I thought of it as survival. To squeeze my eyes shut and let him do what he wanted. It never occurred to me that he would do the same to Bill.
I could not bear to think of Bill’s nights. I did the only thing I could think to do, as a bulwark against such knowledge. I walked at night, around and around our field and then sometimes the Morriseau field. I walked down the driveway and once that spring all the way to the river. I contemplated my life that night, leaning over the bridge. Hearing the dark water below and wondering if my body would float unimpeded all the way to Eau Claire or get snagged on a submerged log just a mile or so down the river.
I was walking back from the river in the dark when I heard footsteps on the gravel walking toward me. Then I saw the light from one of our kerosene lamps.
“Mom. What are you doing out here?”
“I needed to go for a walk.”
“In the dark, Mom?”
I said nothing. He lifted the lamp higher to look at me.
“Are you mad at me?”
Was I mad at him? That was too much. I cried so suddenly and so hard that I could not stand up. Everything that tormented me ran to the front of my brain and pounded until my forehead, my cheeks, and my eyes bulged with pain. I went down like a tripped kid onto my hands and knees. I didn’t have to look to know that my palms and knees were scraped and bleeding and that I had pebbles jammed into my skin. I was grateful that the gravel hurt so much. It was not enough suffering. I deserved to feel pain for what I did not do, and I wanted Bill to be angry with me.
“It is,” I choked out, blindly reaching forward to grab one of his ankles, “the other way around. You should be mad at me.”
“Those Lucases,” people would say if word got out that we were seen sitting and crying on the side of the gravel road near our farm in the middle of the night. “They have always been crazy.”
“The worst,” he whispered to me, “is that I can’t figure out how he got into my bedroom. I locked the door every night and put a chair in front of it.”
I wondered too. I remembered John as being gone most days and evenings. Did he come back at night when we were asleep? Or maybe he never went to work but hid underneath Bill’s bed?
When I asked him how long he thought it went on for, Bill said, “I don’t remember. It stopped, I think, when I was being carried somewhere. And then someone laughed.”
My son released me with those words. Such a gift. That he could remember that night and that laughter. I had at least, unknowingly, ended his torture. I almost told him about the voice in the field, the voice that told me to laugh. But Bill had enough to struggle with, and I did not want to burden him with the additional thought that his mother was really crazy.
“How can I help Bill?”
It was such a humble question. As if bringing him home from a near death of hypothermia in the woods were not enough. Ernie was in such deep misery that it announced itself in his body. He walked as though physically gnarled and twisted from torture. I did not have to be told who had smashed John’s headstone.
I didn’t want him to have a headstone in the first place. We could hardly afford it. Nor did he deserve to be buried in consecrated ground. That was when what little Catholicism I had left in me reared up like a spurred horse.
“Your husband was baptized a Catholic.” Shocked at my vague suggestion that John not be buried in the Sacred Heart Cemetery, Father Wallace admonished me. Of course Father Wallace was thinking of himself. His puffy face with its explosion of broken red and purple capillaries was a strong sign of his own excess. If he could deny it in himself, then he could certainly bless a fellow drunk with the same blindness.
It was on the tip of my bitter tongue. “Throw him,” I very nearly said, “into potter’s field.”
I had to think of the outcome, though. Social norms in Olina dictated that I should bury my husband in the proper way. Father Wallace would take up a collection for the headstone if I didn’t come up with the money. That would cause gossip, and I had to think of Bill. I did not want people to poke my son with painful questions.
I envied Ernie. I understood why he had done it. I only wish I had thought to do it as well.
When John was alive, I visualized murdering him every day. How to do it and not get caught. It was only right. We deserved to live our lives with the release and pleasure his death would bring. There was no court of law that could know how we lived or what he did to us. They could not exact justice on him in the way I could, or Bill could, or Jimmy could, if he had come home. Or even Rosemary and Ernie.
I thought a lot about Ernie’s question because I asked myself the same thing.
I could have helped Bill much sooner. Those years I kept him to myself. Those years when I did not allow him to wander over to the Morriseau place. As if to punish me for my selfishness and my fear, fate allowed Ernie to find him when I could not. I did not tell Ernie and Rosemary what I did before I walked through the fields to their house. I did not tell them that I trudged through the swamp and woods. It was beginning to freeze, and I had to grab the lower branches on some of the trees, if there were any, to walk up one side of that ice-covered ridge. Most of the time I had to crawl, and when I reached the top, he was not there. I walked sideways going down the other side, but I fell anyway and slid straight down. I was desperately trying to grab at anything to stop my descent when I hit something hard midway down and felt it through the rear of my pants. I could barely see it, but after I wiped the snow off it and read its shape with my leather mittens, I knew it was a gun.
You can imagine what went through my head. I tried calling for Bill. I became frantic and screamed his name. It is useless to do so in a northern snowstorm. Snow muffles sound and buries it like it does everything else.
“Help me, help me,” I kept saying, but all that ever answered me was the wind. There is that moment that has happened to me many times in my despair and that always feels new with each crisis. I sit there feeling small and unable to think. Feeling stupid and ashamed. Crying because I don’t know what to do. Then something takes over in my body. Instinct, I think. I just got up and started moving as fast as I could. I fell again and slid the rest of the way down that slope. I stood up and hiked through the freezing swamp bedding. It was cold, and the snow was coming down in blankets. It is a miracle that I didn’t get lost and die out there.
I reached the Morriseau porch feeling much like Zhivago when he finally makes his way, frozen and exhausted, back to Lara in that little village in the Urals. I pounded on their door. Rosemary opened it, and that butter yellow light that seems to inhabit country kitchens filled my face. I was speechless with gratitude and nearly out of my mind with terror.
Another thought came to me one day that May when I was cleaning up after dinner at their house. It did not feel like work. The evening sun was warm on my face as I cleared the table, and I was basking in the simple pleasure of a shared meal, thinking of how wonderful it was to sit and eat and talk and laugh like normal people at a dinner table. Although Bill was in a good mood and told jokes, there was a moment when something surfaced in his face during dinner that reminded me of how he had looked after Jimmy’s death. Of how wise I used to think he appeared.
We ate dessert, and then Bill and Rosemary went outside to weed the garden.
I caught Ernie by the arm before he went outside to join them. “You want to know how to help Bill,” I said. “He has never been a child. What would you do to make a little boy happy? To help him?”

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