INDEMNITY IS A SUM PAID from A to B by way of compensation for a particular loss suffered by B. From eight-thirty until nine in the morning, I skim through claims. Three house fires. Seven no-fault car accidents. A flood. One act of vandalism. Who is responsible? That depends. I gulp cooling coffee. I don’t handle business claims or life insurance. I make phone calls. After lunch I have an inspection in the field. I check the battery on my camera. By nine-thirty I need a break. I fire up my computer and run a search on Lord’s wife, Janine. Nothing new. No obituary or anything. A couple of old records she broke in high school track and a picture from when she worked in real estate. Two eyes, a nose, and a mouth. Hair on her head. There’s nothing special about Lord’s wife.
I click a link to a house in Budapest where the carpeting cost four hundred seven dollars a square foot. My coworker Monique comes by. I show her the carpeting. “What’s the big deal?” she asks, squeezing the bridge of her nose. Monique settles into her cubicle, sniffling mucus down her throat. “I’m oozing like a slug.” From a blister pack, Monique pops a capsule brewed with such lovely stuff as guaifenesin, hydroxypropyl methylcellulose, sodium carboxymethyl, and magnesium stearate. A little something to get the chemical day started.
I compare prices on a couple pair of shoes, break off the corner of a nut-’n’-strawberry-flavored fruit breakfast bar. Overhead a fluorescent flickers. I order the more expensive pair and experience a feeling of euphoria. Having made the correct shoe choice, I now understand the nature of mystery in the universe. I now belong to a tribe of shod people. Waves of enthusiasm and moral righteousness inflate me straight up to heaven.
I click to check the weather. I read some news about Hollywood. The actor we thought was gay is gay, and this warms me, being part of a human crisis, tucked in with the rest of you who also knew he was gay, and Look! We were right. I search for a rice pudding recipe, my favorite. I cultivate a public persona based on my love of rice pudding. The girls in my college dormitory knew me as such, and now the people I work with share the same truth. I no longer wrestle with the challenges of identity. I am the woman who likes rice pudding, who wears fantastic shoes.
At ten I visit the ladies’ room, hoping it will be empty. It’s not. Denise is there. Denise handles life insurance, all the fraud and fun. Denise self-tans. She dabs her lipstick and glares at me. “Cora. Kind of rhymes with whore.” She smiles at herself in the mirror, tossing the brown paper towel with her purple lip impression into the trash before leaving. The door shuts.
“Denise,” I mutter. “Kind of rhymes with fucking twat.”
Back at my computer, I e-mail Kendra in sales: “Denise eats donkey dick.” I e-mail Joe in security: “Just saw Denise Clint stealing toilet paper from the ladies’ room. Again.”
Her boyfriend, Mike the claims inspector, flirts with me. B.F.D. We had lunch once, and he spent the whole time talking about her. He told me Denise likes it rough, as if that were something really special, as if she’s an angel come down from heaven because she likes her heinie paddled. Mike went starry-eyed thinking about slapping her orange thighs. “She likes it rough? Who doesn’t?” I asked. “Who, for Pete’s sake, doesn’t?”
I do a search for my name. Same as yesterday. Some flight attendant who got fired for throwing hot tea on a passenger; the mug shot of a woman arrested for obstructing justice; some teenage Mormon girl’s blog; an adjunct professor of environmental science; then me, insurance adjuster, one-time Daisy girl, one-time honor student, dean’s list, et cetera. I live far from the top of the search engine results. This is my cross to bear.
If I plotted a map of every person named Cora Sykes on planet Earth, what would the map look like? What secret history would be revealed? Maybe better not to know.
I check the headlines. I check the traffic. I check on Lord’s wife, Janine, again. No change, she’s still not dead according to the Internet. I leave for lunch.
Outside a bunch of starlings sit on a wire above the parking lot. I italicize them with my eyes. Copy and paste them right down the phone line. My computer and I spend a lot of time together. Like a dog and its master, I’m starting to look like it, act like it. I ask Google, “Why do I suck?” or “Should I break up with Lord?” I think I can edit/undo things with my mind, say, a cup of spilled coffee or an unintended pregnancy.
Lord is my boyfriend. Weird name, I know. Lord is married to Janine. Lord has romantic delusions about things like girls, hunting, marriage, honor, poetry, the ocean, America, facial hair. He used to be a Marine. Janine, Marine. I could write a poem. He once left a wild turkey on my doorstep, imagining I’d truss it up and serve it to him for dinner. I covered it with a black garbage bag and dragged it out to the curb. Lord grew a mustache to fool me into thinking he’s actually a man. Like a real, real man, as in a human male who takes care of someone besides himself. I am the child of a single mom. I don’t believe in real men. I also don’t believe in the lottery or God. They are stories we tell ourselves at night when we’re scared. I’m not scared of anything anymore. I know no one else is going to take care of me.
Lord’s in my driveway when I get home from work.
“You want to go camping tonight?”
“Is your wife coming?” I regret that I cannot stop myself from asking these types of questions.
He grips the wheel. “You want to go or not?”
I check with the sky. “All right,” I tell him. “All right.”
We drive over to the Finger Lakes. We fill his packs with food, clothes, beers, and start our hike as the sun sets. All the while Lord quizzes me about birdcalls, bird species.
“What’s that?”
“I don’t know, Lord. I just don’t know.”
“Pileated.” His disappointment reeks. “Who doesn’t know the pileated woodpecker? Mercy. Were you raised by wolves?”
I shrug.
“No,” he says. “Even a wolf would know the pileated woodpecker.”
I was raised by Eleanor, my mom. She’s not a wolf, but she was pregnant, homeless, and alone at eighteen, so almost a wolf. She still works at least two jobs. She never trusted babysitters so I raised myself. Maybe I’m the wolf.
We hike a mile. It gets dark. Lord’s wearing a headlight. I follow along behind, stumbling some. I use the screen of my smartphone to see until the battery goes dead. We build a fire in the woods and eat stew dinner from a can with hunks of cheddar cheese melted on top. Then a few bites from a chocolate bar. Lord belches. “‘Let me not to the marriage of true minds admit impediments. Love is not love which alters when it alteration finds, or bends with the remover to remove. O no. It is an ever-fixed—’”
“How’d you learn that?” I’ve got to tamp him down sometimes.
He coughs. Spits. “I read books. Ever heard of ’em?” Lord’s got a hateful streak here in the forest. At home too. But I’m trying to improve myself so I listen to him.
“Some.”
“What’s that mean, computer girl? What kind of books do you read?”
It takes me a second to say it. Not because I don’t know who I am but because Lord throws off a lot of interference. “I like ghost stories.”
“Ghost stories suck.”
“Why?”
“They aren’t real.”
“Oh yeah?”
“Yeah.” He drinks his beer.
“All stories are ghost stories,” I tell him.
“Is that right?”
“Yup.” He’s making fun of me. I don’t care. “You want to hear one?”
“A ghost story?”
“Yeah.”
“Fine.”
“OK. Ready?”
“Sure.”
“Sure. Here we go.” But then I don’t start yet. I want it quiet, real scary and silent, before I say anything. Let Lord listen to the woods. OK. OK. OK. “You know West Lane, the twisty road that heads out to the highway?”
“Sure.”
“Well, it was dark out there one night. It’s always dark out there, right? Raining. You know. A dark road. Wet road. No one around.” I put plenty of space between each small description. Slowly, slowly. “A man, fella around your age, was driving home on that road, squinting through the raindrops on his windshield when all the sudden there’s a pretty girl standing in the street, eight years old, wearing a summer dress, wrong for the weather. Think she was in my cousin’s class at school, but I don’t remember her name. Maybe you knew her. Anyway, guy slams on the brakes. Right?”
“Right.”
I look into the woods. I look at my hands in the firelight. “He tells her to get in. It’s freezing, wet, cold. ‘Climb in,’ he says. ‘I’ll take you home.’ Right?”
Lord nods. “Right,” like I’m wasting his time.
“‘Thank you,’ she says, and I know,” I tell Lord, “if you’re like me, you think that’s the scary part, right? Young girl, bad dude? That’s not the scary part. Just hold on. Girl says, ‘My mother will be worried.’”
I’m doing my best with the voices, girl’s voice high, man’s voice low. And both voices slowly, slowly. Scary.
“Then he asks her, ‘What are you doing out here alone at night?’ The girl was so young and brave, acting like she had no reason in the world to be scared, like she’d never even imagined the bad things men do to girls every moment of every day.” I am required to apply guilt to Lord, remind him how much he and, really, all men suck. “‘There was a party,’ the girl tells the man, or a recital, something like that. I can’t remember where she was coming from. But she climbs in his car. ‘What address?’ he asks. ‘Just up over the ridge. You know Horseshoe Hill? Half a mile past that.’
“The two drive on, and it’s quiet in the car. He notices she’s shivering. ‘Take my coat.’ He wraps it over her shoulders, a tan windbreaker, a real gentleman or maybe not. Maybe that’s what a total creep would do, hard to say because, you know, it could have been a bad situation.
“The rain picked up, lashing the windshield, and he had to concentrate again just to keep the car on the road. It’s dark out that way. Finally the girl stops him. ‘Here it is. Just there.’ And you’re like, phew. The little girl made it home safely. A small white cape. Very tidy. You know it? I’ve looked for it, but I’m not totally sure which one it is. You know it?”
“No.”
I watch the fire for a bit, saying nothing. I rub my thighs, pushing them open just the slightest bit to remind Lord what’s between them. I look off again into the dark woods beyond our fire. I know Lord’s horny because he’s always horny, old guy, young girl. But I can’t tell if he’s scared. I want him to be scared. I watch the woods. I let the story percolate.
“So. The guy pulls over, and the little girl dashes out of the car, darting across the road into the darkness and rain. He can’t see where she went or if she made it safely inside because of the rain. For a minute he thinks, ‘Forget it. I did my job.’ Turns out the guy’s not a creep, turns out he’s OK. He had parents who loved him. But he’s so OK that he can’t help it. He’s worried about the girl. Plus, she has his coat, so he gets out. It’s late but the lights are on downstairs in the little house. He rings the bell, and almost immediately an older woman answers the door like she’d been waiting for him. ‘Don’t say anything,’ she tells him, which seems pretty weird. ‘Come in.’ Still he tries, ‘Ma’am,’ he says. ‘Ma’am, did a young—’ She doesn’t let him finish. ‘My daughter. Yes. Thank you. Please.’ She hurries him in. ‘Follow me.’ The guy is starting to freak out. Everyone’s acting weird and all that rain. Still, he follows her. The old woman leads the man upstairs and into a bedroom, a girl’s bedroom. He stumbles in and there’s a photo of his hitchhiker there on the bureau. ‘My daughter,’ the old woman says again, but it’s impossible that such an old woman could be the mother to such a young girl. He starts to question, ‘But—’ Again she interrupts. ‘Twenty years ago, on a night like this one,’ she says, and the hairs on his neck rise. The storm blows. He doesn’t want her to go on. Fear’s making, you know, static in his head. ‘My daughter was killed,’ she says. ‘Struck down by a car as she walked home. The driver never even stopped to see if she was all right. Now, when it rains, she returns. She comes back, finding a ride with some kind driver. She’s home,’ the woman said. ‘She’s home. She’s come back again.’
“‘No,’ he says. ‘No. No!’ The guy, he runs down the stairs, out the back door. The rain’s blinding him and he’s lost his bearings. ‘I don’t believe in ghosts,’ the guy keeps telling himself — just like you — clenching his fists. He’s terrified, stumbling, trying not to see that right there in front of him, what he thought was a garden is a small graveyard, and in the graveyard is a tombstone and a low rusted wrought-iron fence. ‘No. No.’ He shakes his head, crazy because there, on top of the grave, is a tan windbreaker, his tan windbreaker, half buried in the muddy churned-up dirt.”
Then I get real quiet, watching the fire, nodding my head. Finally, I add the clincher. “Ghosts don’t care if we believe in them or—”
“Cora.”
“Yeah?” I smile. I scared Lord.
“That’s the oldest story in the world.”
“What?”
“It’s been told a million times. We used to tell it when we were kids. Different location and all, different item of clothing hanging out of the grave, but same story. It’s not real.”
I straighten my spine. Fucking jerk. “Doesn’t mean it’s not scary.”
“Yup.” Lord gives me a wink. “Pretty scary. Pretty, scar — BOO!” He pounces on me and bites into my cheek. Lord smells like boiled pasta. He digs his face into my chest, toggling between my boobs.
“You weren’t scared?”
Lord walks away from our campsite as if he’s going to take a pee. I shout into the woods. “It’s not real?” But Lord doesn’t answer and then Lord doesn’t come back, so I think it’s something a little more involved than pee, but he still doesn’t come back. A really, really long time passes, so I know what he’s trying to do. He wants me to think the bogeyman got him, think I’m all alone in the woods with a psycho on the loose.
I’m not going to let him do that to me. I put away the dinner dishes, strum his guitar, and later when I can’t think of anything else, I just sit there by the fire perfectly still with a fucked-up-looking clown smile on my face. I’m good at that. Lord’s too big a jerk to scare me. Orange light flickers on the underside of the tree branches. I think about the little girl who can’t stop coming back. I wonder what would make her come back. Love for her mother? Anger at the driver who killed her? Why keep coming back? Why not just stay dead?
Lord doesn’t explain anything when he returns. We do it like wild beasts for an hour right there in the dirt, like I’m the innocent little girl and he’s the big bad man with the car come to run me down.
Afterward he asks, “Do you want to shoot the gun?”
“Sure.” I’m still naked except for my hiking boots. The kick of his gun throws me three feet back. He thinks that’s the funniest thing ever. Lord opens more beers. I rub my arm. My shoulder will be bruised yellow for days.
“Janine was nineteen when I met her.”
His wife. Every freaking time the man comes, he starts feeling guilty. Every freaking orgasm.
“She was giving haircuts at a house party. Had no idea what she was doing, but the men lined up. Hatchet jobs. Including mine. Janine’s so beautiful, like a model almost. I’d let her do anything. She’s just so beautiful.”
He means: She is; you’re not. I want to tell him that she’s just normal-looking, nothing too special, but I’ve never met her and I don’t want him to know I stalk her on the Internet. He already thinks he’s better than me because he doesn’t use the Internet.
“We fell in love in a bloody way, thorns and hooks.”
Lord’s wiry and strong. “You must have been something at nineteen.” I hope that hurts. Lord’s old now. Forty-five, at least.
“Yeah. We got hitched and tangled together.”
This never stops him from sleeping with me.
“Well,” I say. “I can’t wait to meet her!”
He keeps a hand on his mustache. “We’d been married a year when she started screaming about men from the K.C.G. controlling people with solar panels and jet trails.”
“What’s the K.C.G.?”
“Kancer Containment Guard. Usually they’re harmless old men, bumbling and sweet, but sometimes they’re evil. They fill juice boxes with strychnine.”
Lord looks at me, disappointed again. I put my clothes on. He makes me miss my faithful computer.
“I believed every word she said. I’d even make stuff up myself to confirm it for her. Wall vents, I’d tell her. Suspicious-looking cars. I created bullshit evidence. But then Janine told me my sister Emilia was the head of the K.C.G. and that we needed to kill her.” Lord looks at me sideways. “You know my sister?”
I’ve never met his family.
“Emilia has spina bifida. She was twelve when Janine said that.” Lord reaches for another branch for the fire. He pauses for drama. He does that a lot. “I kept Janine home until she brought scissors to bed and tried to use them on my neck. ‘I’m cutting your hair!’ That’s what she was screaming.” Lord wraps both hands around his neck, choking himself. “She’s in the mental ward of the VA. Take your pill, watch TV, and sometime this afternoon an orderly will change your diaper.”
No wonder the Internet doesn’t have much to say about her. She’s in the loony bin. Lord’s wife is locked up like all the wives in a public television British miniseries. No wonder he’s so in love with her.
Lord looks up into the dark trees. He’s learned a lot from the movies. “Love of my life.”
“Well,” I say. “That’s real nice you love someone, even if it’s not me.”
And he nods. Like I mean it. Like I actually mean it.
The next day Lord drops me off at the end of my driveway. “I’ve got to get to the hospital before visiting hours are over.” I head up the drive. Purple loosestrife is beginning to bloom.
Eleanor and I live in the caretaker’s house on a larger property. The cottage belonged to El’s mother. She’s dead now. I still live with El. I pay rent. I buy food. I went to college. I cook and clean. I have a job. El and I get along fine.
She’s always working, and work has made her large, strong. She gets mistaken for a dyke or a biker or a dyke biker. She never tells me that I am alive because of her, but I know I am and I’m grateful, since it turns out that getting born is the best thing that can happen for your life.
Sometimes my mom and I go to a bar together, and the man she has her eye on has his eye on me. Though this opens up an unnatural seam between us, El has never turned against me. She’s had a couple boyfriends. She lets men visit, but they don’t stay. She says, “I like men.” But then she’ll say, “I like dogs” or “I like toast.” The truth is El likes me and not much else.
When I was a girl, there was so little to do around here. We lived with my grandma, a nasty woman. I avoided her, so before I was old enough for school, I was alone much of the time. I’d walk to the end of our driveway, a place of great opportunity where you could go one way or the other. Our street was quiet. Nothing much happened that I remember. No accidents or incidents of road rage. With the noise of other people gone, the sky could open up. The air, the grass, the asters, the stones on the road would take what they wanted, a little blood or breath, some nightmare or earwax. I didn’t mind. Nature would nibble, thinning my body out like a piece of burnt film, light streaming through the holes of me. I was as much a part of the natural world as a shredded brown leaf gnawed on by a grub. I’d wait for El to get home from work. She’d join me out on the driveway. She didn’t like my grandma either. I’d sit on her lap, and she’d sit on the gravel. She’d pat the skin of my hands, my arms. I’d tell her what I was thinking about holes and nature, and she’d say, “I know just what you mean.”
On Monday I head back to Erie Indemnity. “Hello, computer.” It never answers me. A girl I know from high school has posted new photos of her husband, her kid. Pictures of her drinking from the lip of a champagne bottle. Headlines say: STOCKS ARE DOWN. GOLD NAIL POLISH IS BEING WORN BY WOMEN IN THE KNOW. A war is being fought. Another girl I know posted footage of her C-section. I watch the doctor slicing her abdomen open. Her fat looks like last month’s ricotta. A guy I knew in college posts a photo of his kid bent over the toilet, vomiting. #puke #sickkid #dayoffwork. Another guy I know posts: “Not much to report here.”
I call Lord from the stairwell. There’s an elevator in my office building so only total freaks use the stairwell. I leave a message on his cell. “I’m pregnant.”
I’ve known for three weeks, though I have no idea how far along I am. I wasn’t paying attention, and I’ve never had regular periods anyway. Two months? Three months? Maybe even four. I was stuck with some stupid idea that Lord being married to someone else would stop me from getting pregnant. “I’m going to keep it,” I tell his voicemail, and after I hang up, I sit alone in the stairwell. I put my hands on my stomach. Somewhere inside there is my baby. I don’t care about Lord at all. I don’t think I even like him, but this baby, even though it’s barely here — some half-dead, half-alive thing — I feel it, and it’s something big. To me at least, in all my smallness, this baby is really something very big.
A few days later, Lord calls me back at home. I can hear cars rushing by on his end of the line as if he’s standing beside a highway. “You know anything about Safe Haven laws?” he asks.
“Homeland Security?”
“No. You drop a baby off at a hospital or police station. No questions.”
“Oh,” I tell him. “I’ll be fine. I won’t need that.”
“You don’t understand what I’m saying. Anyone can drop the kid off. It doesn’t have to be you. You don’t need ID. The baby just gets lost, becomes a ward of the state. Say someone were to take your baby. There’d be no way for you to find it again. It disappears into the system because it doesn’t have a name. See what I’m saying?”
“You can’t stop me from having it.”
“And you can’t stop me from getting rid of it.”
Two weeks of nothing goes by. When Lord calls again, he says he wants to make me dinner.
“You kill something?” The only times he’s made me dinner before is after he killed it. Venison with cranberry sauce, roasted duck, squirrel soup.
“No.”
One good thing I can say about Lord — like if we were in couples counseling or something and I was required to provide one good quality about him — is that he isn’t marked by the fever for documenting each chicken he roasts. He’s old enough to have escaped social media. For people my age, including me, if we don’t post it, it never happened. People’s children will disappear if every ounce of magnificence is not made public and circulated widely. Lord’s not like that. He kisses me without considering if we’d look better under a Lo-Fi or Kelvin filter.
“I don’t know,” I say.
“I’ve done some thinking, Cora. I’ve had a change of mind. OK?”
He shows up with a bag of groceries and some wine. I tell him no thanks to the wine. “Right,” he says. “Right. You’re pregnant.” He goes back to the kitchen. He makes spaghetti and meatballs. It’s just fine. Store-bought meat. I ask about his sister, and he says, “You ever seen Rosemary’s Baby? The movie?”
“No. Why?”
“It was on the other night. Good movie.”
He clears our plates and brings out two cups of tapioca pudding, one for him, one for me. “Your favorite, right?”
No, but he’s trying.
Lord feeds me the first bite. This is strange. “I can feed myself.” Tapioca is the unborn eggs of an alien fish species. Someone should design a video game called Tapioca Pudding. Still, he’s trying, so I eat some of this disgusting stuff.
He does the dishes, puts everything away, and pulls on his coat, ready to go. “You’re leaving?” I figured he was looking for some action. I figured that’s why he’d called since I know there’s no way Lord wants this baby. He couldn’t be a father and keep his drama intact.
“Yeah.”
“OK. Bye.”
“You mind if I come back to see you again, say, tomorrow or the next day? El will be at work?”
“She’s working every night this week.” I queer my eyes at him. “Sure, Lord. That’d be fine.” I have no idea what’s going on in his head, but I think, OK, maybe everything is OK. He wants me, he wants this baby to be fed nutritious food. His wife is locked up in a psycho ward. Good. We say good night, and I go to sleep.
Lord doesn’t come back the next night, and do I sit around waiting for him like an idiot? Yes, I do.
But the next, next night, he comes.
“Hi.”
“Hi.”
He has me undressed in minutes flat. He lays me down on the couch and drops down onto his knees. His tongue is like an infant thing, innocent and damp. I look up when he stops. Lord pulls something out of his pocket, unwraps it. “You don’t need a condom. I can’t get pregnant twice.” He gives me a smile and pushes whatever it is inside me.
I sit up. “What are you doing?”
Lord leans back on his calves like a preschooler. He smiles, guffawing through bucked teeth.
“What’d you put inside me?” I reach down and stick one finger in. “What the fuck is that?” I pull out a slippery white bullet. “What is it, Lord?”
He starts to back away on his knees at first. Then up to his feet.
“Lord?”
He’s smiling, laughing into his neck. “It’s an abortion.”
“What?”
“You took the first part the other night. In the pudding. This is just a follow-up. Probably unnecessary.”
“You gave me an abortion?”
“Yeah,” he says, and laughs into his shoulder again. “That’s pretty fucked up, huh? Right?” he asks. “Right?”
The Internet tells me what’s supposed to happen — cramping then bleeding, then no more baby. So I wait, one day, two days, three days. I wait a week. No change. No cramp, no blood. I still feel pregnant. Maybe Lord mixed up the puddings and gave himself an abortion.
I tell the doctor everything. He confirms that I’m still pregnant but can’t say how far along. “Well,” he tells me slowly. “Your baby will either live or die.”
“Right.” But what a stupid thing to say. Everyone will either live or die.
“It’s wait-and-see or termination. If the fetus survives, there might be damage. The decision is yours.” He finishes his exam. “Give it some thought and come see us in a week.”
On the drive home, I check the back seat for bad guys so many times, I almost crash into an HVAC truck. I’m alone in the car, but this baby is so small, I cover it with my coat just in case. I wrap my arms around my middle before I dash from the car into our house.
El’s not home yet. Tonight I’m going to tell her, just going to say, “Mom, I’m pregnant and Lord’s a crazy M.F.” The only reason I haven’t told her yet is because I’m afraid she’ll say, “Get rid of it,” and even if that’s really good advice, her saying it will mean that all these years she’s been wishing she’d been able to get rid of me before it was too late. I don’t want to know that.
The house is dark. I try to quiet my mind. I comb my fingers through my hair. It’s nighttime in America. Here is a room, my room. There is a bed with a worn spread that has a small hole in it. I haven’t any idea what made the hole. A cigarette. An errant spring. A gunshot. There is a shallow closet in the room, a chest of drawers, and a desk lamp with a pale blue glass shade. A framed print of a hunting party hangs on the wall.
The house is still.
What is the scariest thing that can happen? A child can disappear without a trace. A man could follow you at night. Someone could hide behind your bedroom door. There is a small throw rug in the room. There is a wooden chair by the darkening window. There is someone hiding behind my bedroom door.
Anything solid in my neck snaps, and I’m screaming, looking into this hideous face, like some dark mold, a toxic messy thing. There is a person hiding behind my door. A monster. I cover the baby, backing myself away and into a corner, thinking, Please, Lord. No. I scream, but the monster doesn’t grab me. She lets me scream. She stares into the hole of my mouth, and it is a long howl, so much terror, before I recognize her, before I know she won’t eat my liver, drink my blood, kill my baby.
I haven’t seen my aunt Ruth since I was a kid, but I know it’s her because she’s got a nasty scar on her face, brown dots and bubbles. My scream turns into a whimper, winding down, shaking off the shock. “Fuck! Fuck! Fuck! You scared me.”
When Scout finds Boo Radley hiding behind her bedroom door, she says something that is scary because it is calm. Something like, “Why, there’s the man right there, Mr. Tate.” Or whatever his name is. Scout’s not surprised to find a hollow-eyed monster in the form of Robert Duvall behind her door. She opens a line into magic, possibility. Or mystery, that’s a better word than magic. Like an open hole in the ground no one noticed until Scout pointed it out, a place where men with dark secrets live behind every bedroom door. Scout’s calm voice says, “The rest of you are blind.”
Last time I saw Ruth she was seventeen. She was young then, and she seemed so powerful and tough because looking at her, I wondered how she’d survived her life. How was she there, hair glistening like it had been oiled with star shine, looking like she could box down a mountain?
Their car pulled into our driveway, and I stepped out to see who it was. Wintertime and awfully cold.
“Who are you?” she asked me. At my house. “El’s girl?”
“Yeah.”
“El had a baby.”
“I’m not a baby. I’m eleven. I’m Cora. Who are you?”
“Cora, I’m your aunt Ruth. He’s Nat.”
El hadn’t seen her sister in twelve years. That was a long time to grow apart, and the way my mom spoke of her sister, it was clear El still thought of Ruth as a little girl. I was surprised when she showed up a woman with a beautiful man, a man I couldn’t stop looking at.
El opened her arms. “Ruth? Ruth?” she kept saying, like it was impossible, like Ruth should be dead, not standing there looking like a teenage queen. Twelve years ago El left her sister behind in a group home. Ruth hugged El back. Ruth let a lot slide in that hug.
The first thing she did when she came inside was take off her coat and change the radio station in my mom’s kitchen. She wore a tight T-shirt and a pair of new jeans. “Happy New Year,” she said. She was amazing. It was January 1st. I remember that. Everything was new. Ruth asked me to dance, and her moves were as confident as a big American car. I was a kid. I flexed my knees to the beat. Ruth could really dance, not in a practiced way but as a person who genuinely felt the music and offered up her own interpretation. There was nothing fast in her actions, slow as a soul singer. She didn’t even have to keep time to the music. It stuck to her. I was no match.
Nat, the guy she’d brought, started dancing too, and I thought I’d stop breathing. I was in love with them both. These were human beings, fresh and new, seventeen years old and different than anything I’d ever known. Like I’d never seen color before and then, suddenly, there’s blue and green and purple standing in my kitchen on New Year’s Day.
Ruth didn’t want to dance with Nat. She shoved him when he got close, playing with him. She pulled me onto her lap and took cover behind my body when he tried to partner up with her. I was getting squished in between them and I loved it. Ruth was only six years older than me, but those six years were the difference between eleven and seventeen, a continent’s worth of distance. Ruth knew stuff.
El watched from the kitchen table, nodding like the mother of us all, pretending she didn’t feel bad doing nothing to look out for her little sister for twelve years. Nat danced and finally Ruth joined him on the linoleum. They started to move like this was the moment they’d practiced for since the dawn of time. I almost had to look away, look away or be ruined, wrecked, unsatisfied forever.
Nat cleaned out my mother’s gutters even though it was freezing. I watched him do the whole thing. Ruth and my mom were in the hall. “It’s not like that, El. It’s not like that between us. He’s my sister,” Ruth said, which must have hurt El, even if she deserved it.
I went through the things in Ruth’s bag, touching holy relics. Soft shirts and pajamas. I held them to my face. A silk purse with cheap gold jewelry inside and all of it brand-new. I stared at her comb, and my heart got seared by what she was. Her toothbrush and a small blue jar of hydrogen peroxide. I swallowed just the tiniest sip. It burned badly, but I knew I’d have her inside me now forever. Ruth was not my mother. I liked my mother fine, but Ruth was like being close to thunder. And then Nat. Lightning.
El cooked hamburgers that night as if we were a family. Things would be different with Ruth around. She’d be my auntie, and my life would be improved by her attentions. She would teach me how to do things El knew nothing about, enjoy music, attract boys. At dinner Ruth said, “So, El,” and she giggled. “I got myself emancipated.” Leaving unsaid that El never took custody of Ruth.
“How? You marry this guy?”—pointing to Nat.
“No. Nat’s too young. Someone else.”
El nodded, had a bite.
Ruth changed the subject. “I’ll tell you something else funny.”
“What?”
“Nat can talk to dead people.”
I started to think maybe Ruth was on drugs. Maybe that was what made her shine.
“What?” El looked at Ruth.
“Just like I said. Nat talks to dead people.”
El scowled. “How do you manage that?”
He smiled at me. Ruth buried her head in her arm on the table, lifting her eyes to El like she was flirting. El raised her burger to her mouth. “You talk to dead people? I’ve got an oceanfront lot in Missouri.”
“I could probably sell it for you.” Nat winked.
“Have you got any dead folks you want him to get in touch with?”
El pushed back from the table. “Sure. Sure.” She wiped her lips with a cloth. “You ever try to talk to our mom?”
Ruth sobered, all the light extinguished. “Our mom?”
“Yeah.”
“No.” Ruth wrinkled. “She’s dead?”
“She passed over a year back. I thought they would have told you.”
“Nope.”
“This is her house. Was her house.”
Ruth thumbed her lips. “Is that right? You inherit it?” Ruth looked around with new eyes. “You saw her after you got out?”
El nodded yes, slowly. “I lived with her. Here.”
“Then why’d she give us up in the first place?”
El dropped both her feet to the floor, exhaling hard. She shifted forward to stare at the ground. “She didn’t give us up, honey. We got taken away.” El raised her fingers to her lips as if she held a cigarette there.
“Why?”
Night chirped. Bodies digested.
“You weren’t, uh”—she made twinkling fingers around Ruth’s face—“born like that. Our mom did that to you.”
“My face?”
El nodded. “She splashed you with bleach, then left you there for a couple hours. You were a baby, and she was a bad drunk. I called the ambulance, they called the cops, and the cops called the State.”
Ruth lifted both hands to her face. “She gave me that?”
El nodded. “Barely missed your eyes.”
“Why?”
El shakes her head. “I don’t know.”
“Come on,” Nat says. “That’s not true. Your mom was CIA, FBI, KGB.”
But Ruth knows the truth when she finally hears it. “And you went back to her when you got out? You went to live with her? Guess that’s why you never came for me.”
El nods. “Where else was I supposed to go? I was eighteen and pregnant.”
“Yeah, I guess you were,” Ruth says. “But you haven’t been eighteen for a long time now.”
I crept downstairs that night to watch them sleep, hiding in the dark with the devotion of a zealot. They weren’t asleep. Nat took a cigarette lighter and kept it burning for a long time. It made their skin glow gold. The flame went out, and he touched the metal part of the lighter to Ruth’s back and arms. Her body tensed and shivered. She slurped as though drooling. He asked, “Is that better, Ru?”
“I feel it.”
When he was done, she thanked him. The room smelled like barbeque, like they had a secret way inside each other down a path no one else would ever know.
Ruth and Nat were gone in the morning, and it took me a long time, a week or two, to get back into my dull life. Took me a month to forgive El for scaring off Ruth.
But now Ruth is here again, fourteen years later, and she’s different. No Nat. No beauty. No power. No shine. Skinny as death and even older. Thirty-one years old around here usually means a mom with a dirty minivan and a bad job. Ruth’s nowhere near that. She’s hollowed out. Miles and miles of hard road. Someone sucked the life from her face and neck. It takes a minute to get my breath and understand that my aunt is back. “Ruth?”
She nods.
“God, you scared me.” I put a hand on my heart to show her. “How’ve you been?” I’ve only met her once, but I’ve wondered where she is so often, picturing her on a map of America in Delaware, Texas, California, Alaska. Here she is. I step forward to hug her, and she hugs me back like she’s forgotten how to and she’s following an instruction manual: open arms, wrap arms around other person, squeeze.
Something I’ve noticed about being pregnant is that scents land differently. Everything smells like old meat or vinegar or blood. But Ruth hugs me and my face is so close to her, resting on her shoulder, in her hair, and immediately I notice it. Ruth has no scent at all. That’s nice.
“El’s going to be happy to see you. I’m so glad you came back. Last time,” I start to explain. “I’m sorry. I know El has a lot of regrets, and I was so sad when you left. But here you are, and it’ll be better this time.” I smile.
She smiles back.
“El’s really going to be happy,” I say again.
But Ruth grabs my arm. She shakes her head no.
“Huh?”
She shakes her head no again.
“You don’t want to see her?”
More nos.
“Why’d you come?”
She points at me, right at my sternum.
“For me?”
Nods of yes.
“What’s going on?”
She points outside. She points to me. She points to her. She points outside. And it dawns on me that there’s something wrong with my aunt Ruth.
“Can’t you talk?”
No. Folds of skin around her eyes tighten like a person in pain, in labor.
“What happened to your voice?”
Ruth looks right at me, and there it is, the solid fact of silence.
She points outside again.
“You want us to leave?”
Yes.
“Where are we going?”
This time she points straight up.
I look up to the ceiling. “Up?”
No.
“North?”
Yes.
“Why?”
Ruth stares at me again because anything that cannot be explained with a pointing finger or a yes, no, will remain a mystery.
“I have a job.”
More staring.
“Up north? Why? You left something there?”
Yes.
“Shoot. What’d you lose?” And then, “What’s wrong, Ruth?”
Ruth moves in close. She takes my cheeks in her hands as if to kiss me but looks at me instead. She has the smallest smile on her face, and for a moment she’s young Ruth again, all power and light. Like she knows I need to get out of here, away from Lord for a couple of days. I think of my job and feel very little, a dull gray fuzz. Summer’s ending and the closest thing I’ve had to an adventure was a Google search of Baja California. I don’t think of El, not just then. “OK,” I tell Ruth. “I’ll come.”
She smiles wider.
“I’ll come with you.”
She looks down at her hands a moment, nodding yes, pleased even.
“Right now?”
Yes.
“Where are we going?”
No answer.
I suppose I don’t really care where we’re going. Away from here. “Now?”
She nods.
“Right now?”
She nods.
In those years of not seeing Ruth, my imagination had time to do a number on memory. I carved her into something perfect, and even though that’s clearly not true, even though she looks like a dirty junkie, I want her. I want to know what she knows, even if it means following her into places unknown. “One second.”
It’s tough to pack because how long will we be gone? Where are we going exactly? “I need clothes?”
Yes.
“OK.” Comfortable shoes, a soft sweater. I fill a small canvas bag. Some socks, a hair comb, an extra barrette, underwear, one hundred twenty-three dollars in cash from my bureau. I wear two shirts and a hoodie. I think of the baby, but right now the baby has everything it needs.
I consider leaving El a note, but I don’t do it. I won’t be gone long. Ruth opens the front door, and I feel the dark air out there. Lord, bears, all the terrors, and irresistible Ruth cutting through them, unaware of danger, braiding a lifetime of people’s mean looks and cruelty into a smooth path that leads from my door to her waiting car.
The lights of Lackawanna are shutting down as we pass through town, a woman removing her jewels. Electric Avenue to Cazenovia Creek, past Holy Cross Cemetery and Red Jacket, to the outskirts of Buffalo.
“Are we heading to the Falls?” I ask, but Ruth doesn’t look from the road. No answer. Fine. I’m tired and the car is warm. Shut up, I tell myself. Stop asking questions that don’t have answers.
Twenty-five minutes later, the car breaks down north of Tonawanda in a place called Cambria. Not much has happened here since they found a meteorite back in 1818. Something snaps. Chain dragging. Rusting. Rattling. Twenty-seven miles away from El’s house. My phone still has a charge. GPS even.
“What?” I ask. “No gas?”
The car coasts to an efficient end by the side of the road.
“Should I call someone?”
Ruth doesn’t even look under the hood. She’s as calm as if she’d seen the car breaking down in a dream, knew it was coming. She grabs a small backpack.
“What?”
Ruth starts to walk. Turns to see if I’m coming.
“Walking?”
Ruth doesn’t answer.
“Back to El’s?”
No.
My foot is up on the dashboard. “How far is it?” But like the car, Ruth is broken. She’s got her reasons for being messed up. I’ll give her that. Ruth has not had a good life, but what would make her stop talking? Maybe there’s a reservoir of words we get, and hers is empty now. Maybe if we walk, some of her reservoir will fill back up. “What are we going to do?”
And there’s that damn finger again, pointing, pointing. Ruth starts walking down the road away from me.
I spend a hard moment with the dashboard before collecting my things. I follow her. The road is blue as a vein under skin. Ruth and I begin our walk into the blueness, into the black of the coming night.