"Saving it?"
"Don't ask me for what. It's just a big, airy room and it's mine. I guess I'm leaving it . . . uncorrupted." She stopped. Christine saw her focus on something in the archway, and turned her head. Marilyn said, "Come in, Gregory."
Greg Courtney hesitated a moment, then stepped slowly into the room. "I just wanted you to know I was home, Mommy."
Marilyn held her arms out. "Well, aren't you going to give me a kiss?"
Greg hurried across the room and into her arms. Christine saw the bandage around his right hand. "Did he hurt himself, Marilyn?"
"Don't boys
always
hurt themselves, Christine? He was playing with some of his rowdy friendsâsome friends I have forbidden him to play withâand he fell and sprained his hand. Thank God it's not a serious injury."
Greg straightened, turnedâChristine saw that his face was blankâand left the room.
"And that," Marilyn said, "is my Gregory."
"He looks a lot like your husband."
"Yes, he does; everyone says so. He's my little sweetheart." She sighed. "All right, enough of that nonsense. How would you like some more tea, Christine?"
"No, thank you. I should be getting home."
Marilyn stood. "Yes. We've had a nice afternoon, haven't we? Let's do it again very soon."
"I
was over to see Marilyn today," Christine said. "Who?" Tim asked.
"Marilyn Courtney"âshe nodded in the direction of the Courtney houseâ"the woman next door."
"Oh, her."
"You don't like her very much, do you, Tim." "I really can't say. I don't know her that well, and franklyâ"
"Frankly, you don't want to know her?"
Tim thought a moment. "I guess that's true. Yes."
"That's not at all like you, Tim." Her tone was one of question and criticism. "You could at least give her a chance."
"I gave her a chance."
"I mean a
fair
chance."
Tim sighed. "You sound like I decided out of the blue to dislike the woman, as if I didn't have
reasons
."
"You have reasons?"
"Of course I do." He paused to collect his thoughts. "They're pretty subtle. I mean, I can't say that I dislike her because of her political beliefs or because she's a snob or because . . . because she put that ugly fence upâ"
"It's not
that
ugly, Tim."
"I think it is, but that's not the point. The point is . . . the point is. . . ."
"Yes?" Christine coaxed.
"The point is, she's a phony."
"That's not a revelation, Tim."
"I happen not to like phonies."
"Tim, we're all phonies in one way or another; Marilyn Courtney is just more obvious about it. It's almost as if she wants you to
know
she's a phony, as if she's saying, 'Look, there's a real person underneath all this.'"
Tim was puzzled. "I didn't see
that
, exactly."
"Because you didn't look." She grinned smugly. "You haven't cornered the market on sensitivity, Christine. Sure there's a real person underneath that mask of hers; a mask has to cover something, after all. I'm just saying that, in her case, what it covers is probably as lousy as the mask itself."
"That's unfair, Tim."
"Life's unfair."
"Are you ending the argument on that profound note?"
"I didn't know we were having an argument; I thought it was a discussion."
"No, it's an argument, and you've made your point. I guess I don't have the ability to choose my friends wisely. I guess you'll have to choose them for me."
"Don't be stupid."
"I can't help it, Tim. I don't see things the way you do, so I
must
be stupid."
Tim shook his head slowly, in frustration. "What in the hell are you becoming so defensive about?"
"Because . . . because you act as if my handicap isn't . . . isn't just physical." Tears were starting. "You act as if it's . . . as if I'm still a child, as if. . . ." Tears were flowing freely. Tim put his hands on her shoulders. She pushed him away. "But I'm
not
a child. I'm not a child!"
"Christine, please. . . ."
She abruptly wheeled the chair around so that her back was to him, put her hands over her face.
Tim went around, gently pried her hands away. "What is it, darling?"
After a long moment, she looked up at him. "I'm sorry, Tim." She grinned pathetically. "That was stupid, wasn't it? Forgive me."
He put his arms around her, felt her tears through his shirt. "It's okay. I understand."
Christine whispered, "I'm glad
one
of us does."
"We won't discuss Marilyn Courtney ever again. Agreed?"
She nodded against his shoulder.
He repeated, "Agreed?"
"Agreed, Tim." Still a whisper. "Agreed."
February 20, 1961
T
he child opened her door an inch. "
Mith
King?" she said.
The babysitter heard the child and reflected a moment on being called
Mith
King, liked how adult it made her feel, how truly more than just a teenager. She turned her head. "Yes, what is it?"
"It's cold,
Mith
King."
"Well, it's colder in here. Go back to bed."
The child became confused. She could feel that it was warmer outside her room. "Blanket,
Mith
King. Light on."
The babysitter did not reply.
"Blanket,
Mith
King. Light on."
The babysitter stayed quiet.
"
Mith
King, I cold!"
The babysitter jumped to her feet, turned, faced the child, pointed stiffly at the child's room. "Go to bed. Go to bed, you
freakin
' little brat!"
The child's jaw dropped, and trembled; she hesitated, as if in shock, turned, and fled to her room. The babysitter followed, flicked the light on, saw the child struggling to climb over the dropped side of the crib: From the crib's mattress it had been easy, but from the floor it was impossible.
"How in the hellâ?" the babysitter started. Then she remembered: When she changed the child's diaper an hour ago, she'd forgotten to lock the side up.
She went to the child, lifted her by the armpits, plopped her into the crib. "Now,
goddamnit
, you had better go to
freakin
' sleep!"
The child stared at her, wide-eyed. "
Yeth
,
Mith
King.
Thorry
,
Mith
King."
The babysitter crossed to the door, turned the light out, and left the room.
C
hristine wondered if she felt cramped in her little house, if it was really too small, too functional. She wasn't sure. Tim seemed happy in it, and that was important. The districtâCornhill: rich with the aura of another timeâwas good for his work. "Gets the old creative juices flowing," he had told her, looking a little embarrassed by the inanity. "Any time but the present." She thought it was untrue. His photography had everything to do with the present. In effect, his camera was his soapbox.
Look
, his pictures said,
at what we're doing to ourselves, at what we're doing to our cities. Where is our future?
And what about her own future? Christine wondered. Her art? What had she been able to do since moving into this house? Only her painting of Jimmy Wheeler, and that was really for no one's eyes but hersâa Jimmy Wheeler she had created out of a quick chance meeting, grief, and wish fulfillment.
The doorbell rang. She felt a little annoyed by the intrusion. She considered not answering, and waiting for whoever it was to go away, but decided that her private thoughts weren't leading her anywhere, that, indeed, they were tending toward the depressive.
She wheeled herself to the door, turned the knob. "Stand back, please," she said, because Tim had installed the door so that it opened outward, toward the back of the small porch. She heard shuffling noises on the porch. She pushed the door open.
The woman was about Christine's age, maybe a year or two older, Christine thought, and quite tall. She had the kind of soft, fair prettiness that would endure well into old age.
"Hi," she said, and smiled warmly. "My name's Becky Foster. We're neighbors."
It was a proclamation obviously designed as an invitation to friendship. Christine's smile in return was spontaneous. She wheeled her chair backward a few feet. "Come in, please." And she was suddenly happy for the intrusion.
"W
e live in a haunted house," Becky Foster explained. They were in the living room, Becky in Tim's old recliner, Christine facing her from a few feet away. "But then," Becky continued matter-of-factly, "everyone in Cornhill lives in a haunted house."
"I'm fascinated," Christine said, grinning. "Do
I
live in a haunted house, too?"
"It can't be helped." She held her hands out to the side, palms up in a gesture of helplessness. "You buy the house, you buy the ghost. Now, let me see . . . ." She pretended to think a moment. "Oh, yes. Your ghostâthis is all trueâis the ghost of a woman who was killed here about thirty years ago,
over
thirty years ago: nineteen fifty. She was doing something in what was then the kitchen. I got all this from people like George Fox and Irene Norton. They've been here a long, long time, Christine. They're practically fixtures in Cornhill, like the streetlamps." She paused, then: "Where was I? Oh, yes, your ghost. As I was saying, she was doing something in the kitchen, something very domestic, I'm sure, and it was winter, and there was all this snow piled up on the roofâ"
"Don't tell me, Becky. You'll scare me to death."
"No I won't; you look pretty tough." Christine liked that. Becky continued: "Lots of snow, must have been ten feet of it." She paused, put her hand up as if to stop herself. "No, that's a gross exaggeration, a gross exaggeration. There was no more than five feet of snow on the roofâthat's what George told me. Anyway, however much it was, it was enough to cave the roof in, and there she was, this nice domestic woman doing her crude domestic thing in her tiny kitchen, and whoosh!âthe roof fell right on top of her."
"That's horrible; the poor woman!"
"Oh, she
was
poor. Everyone in Cornhill was poor in nineteen fifty. But, tell me, have you . . . felt her around this place? You know, thought someone was watching you, felt her presence lurking in doorways, that sort of thing?"
"No, but I'm sure I will now."
"I don't think so. You see, when I moved in about six years ago, I was told all about my ghostâa Confederate soldier, George Fox said. A spy. He made it all the way to my houseâno one knows what his mission was; he probably had a lover up hereâthen he died of pneumonia in what turned out to be my living room. I've never seen him, though God knows I've looked. So I wouldn't worry. There may be a hundred ghosts in Cornhill, a thousand, but no one has actually seen one in the flesh, so to speak." She paused to change the subject. "So, tell me, what do you do?"
"Do?"
"To keep yourself sane."
"Oh. I paint. At least I used to."
"Why
used
to? Don't tell me you've given it up."
"I guess you could say I'm in a slump. From moving, I suppose."
"Am I prying?"
"Yes, but I don't mind."
"You're very honest. That's goodâso am I. Maybe we'll get along." She glanced around. "I don't see any of your work up."
"You should have seen our other place. I doubt there was a square inch of free wall space. But here . . . I don't know. All my work is in storage. Maybe I'll get around to hanging it someday. I haven't really given it much thought."
"Maybe this is a new startâthis house, I mean." Christine thought a moment. "Maybe. In a way it is. Tim says it is."
"Tim's your husband?"
"Uh-huh. Maybe you've seen him."
"Tall, lean, Kris Kristofferson type?"
Christine laughed. "That's the first time I've heard that comparison."
"I've seen him. All the women around here used to take turns gawking at him when he was working on this place." She broke into a playful smile. "Excuse me, Christine. One of my bad habitsâat least as far as wives are concernedâis a genuine aesthetic appreciation of good-looking men."
Christine smiled back; this woman was no threat, merely candid. Tim
was
good-looking, after all.
"And," Becky continued, standing suddenly, "on that clumsy note, I must be off."
"So soon?" Christine's disappointment was genuine. "I told myself before I came over that I had only time enough for"âshe put on a quick, passable
Groucho
Marx imitationâ"'Hello, I must be going,' because I had a few minutes between one little darling and another. I babysit, you see, staggered shiftsâif you're fond of pandemonium, I recommend itâand my next little darling is due"âshe checked her watchâ"five minutes ago. She's probably set the house on fire by now." She started for the door, stopped briefly. "May I come back sometime?" She grinned. "When your husband's home?"