Authors: Nova Ren Suma
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Runaways, #Horror & Ghost Stories, #Visionary & Metaphysical
Burke had been hurt, from falling down a
set of steep stairs, maybe—or on
purpose, by hanging herself off the end
of a rope.
Things must have happened after that
involving my mom trying to reach the
Burkes at the hotel where they were
staying in Baltimore, and the police
being called, and Fiona Burke’s school
picture—with the pearl earrings and the
carefully clasped hands—showing up all
over the news.
Mr. and Mrs. Burke may have at first
wanted to believe she’d been abducted,
that she’d never leave home by choice—
but the police saw the truth without
needing to do any digging. She’d taken
her things from her room. Even without a
good-bye note, they could see she’d run
away.
The last words Fiona Burke had said
to me were
Stay quiet, okay?
And I
think I took that command too literally,
as if something would happen if I spoke
up or even uttered her name.
Keeping my mouth shut all those years
meant swallowing information like little
kids swallow LEGO pieces, which can
have a way of growing like plastic teeth
into your organs and never making their
way back out. I would let the Burkes
search for their daughter for years,
blindly, having no idea what she said
about them. Or about the two men and
what they looked like. Or how I thought I
knew where Fiona was headed—she’d
said she was getting a ride to LA.
I choked it all down. When I heard her
name on the car radio, I told no one.
When the policewoman asked me, and
when Mrs. Burke herself asked me, even
when my mom asked me—which
happened more than once—my mouth
stayed wired shut. I revealed none of it.
—
21
—
THERE
is one last piece that isn’t
technically a part of Fiona Burke’s story,
though at the time, in the way one
memory can latch itself on to another
memory and then forever after trail the
first one, it felt that way to me. In my
mind, the two events were connected.
This would have been weeks after
Fiona Burke had run away, months even,
though no more than a year. She hadn’t
tried to contact her parents, and we
didn’t yet know that she’d never reach
out to them. She would never place a
collect call from a pay phone and ask
them to accept the charges. She would
never open a free e-mail account to send
an anonymous assurance that she was
fine. There would be no blank postcard
dropped in a mailbox in a city she was
only
passing
through.
No
communication. No word.
Until the fire.
I woke in the middle of the night to the
piercing scream of the smoke detector,
which somehow had been set off by the
smoke coming off the house next door.
My mom and I were afraid at first that
the smoke was from inside our own
house, and we looked for candles and
ran to check the stove, but then we
looked out the windows. Out there the
smoke was thicker, a visible charge in
the night, its source a ferocious spot of
light over the dividing hedge between
the Burkes’ main house and ours.
The fire truck would arrive within
minutes and the flames would be doused,
damaging only their laundry room and
the hallway between that and their
kitchen. An electrical fire due to faulty
wiring, it was said, not arson.
I knew different.
We watched for some minutes from
the windows, my mom and me. Two
firemen had forced themselves into the
Burkes’ house and pulled them out the
door and off their grand front porch. The
firemen wrapped the two hunched
figures in wool blankets and made them
stand at a distance from the smoking
house, on the lawn.
Mrs. Burke was wearing slippers, but
Mr. Burke’s feet were bare. His pajama
pants were too short, and I noticed his
hairless, spindly legs and how he
favored the left one. We watched them
as they watched the east end of their
house burn.
We were watching as the fireman
went to talk to them.His words washed
over Mrs. Burke, and we could see it in
her face, how what he said took a very
long time to settle, as if she were
translating to herself so she could
understand, and once she did she let out
the cry. We heard it across the hedge that
divided their paved driveway from our
gravel one. The sound of it made me
think of Fiona Burke, wondering if that’s
how Mrs. Burke sounded in Baltimore
when she got the news that her daughter
had gone missing.
We didn’t hear a thing from Mr.
Burke, but we watched him wobble on
his bum leg, thin and pale as a sucked-
clean toothpick. We were watching as
the smoke thinned and no more flames
could be made out and as the hoses left
the whole side of the house sopping.
And we were watching as Mrs. Burke’s
eyes traveled over the hedge to our
house,
perhaps
involuntarily,
remembering one disaster that had been
connected with us and now connecting
us to another.
“Should we go get them?” I said.
“Ask if they want to come inside?”
But my mom had never forgiven them
for the way their daughter had treated me
that night, locking me in the coat closet.
She hadn’t known how to confront them,
seeing as Fiona had disappeared, but she
held it in, and didn’t forget it.
“They’ll be fine,” she said. “The
fire’s out. You should go back to bed.”
But she didn’t move toward her
bedroom, and I didn’t move for mine. It
had come true, what Fiona had
threatened with her wet mouth shoved up
against my ear. The fire she’d joked
about setting in her parents’ house? It
had been set.
And though I didn’t know how she’d
done it from far away, I was convinced,
then and all the more now, that she had.
She’d tried to burn down their house,
and she’d failed.
Years passed. Eight years. No more
fires, and no letters, and no phone calls.
My mom and I stayed put in the carriage
house because the Burkes never once
raised our rent. They didn’t adopt
another kid. I grew too old to need a
babysitter. I entered my junior year in
the same high school Fiona Burke had
once attended, and I dyed my hair black,
the color hers would have been if she
hadn’t dyed it flame-red. I turned 17.
And that’s when a missing girl named
Abby Sinclair would lure the ghost of
Fiona Burke back here to Pinecliff.
When the noise would wake the others.
And it’s when I’d feel the first crack
inside me, the fracture that started small,
with one name, and then broke off into
more names, and more names still, and
left me gaping.
If I counted all the girls who ran away
at the age of 17, starting with girls who
lived close to me and then casting my net
wider, spreading out along the East
Coast in ever-growing circles, then
adding girls who may have met more
sinister fates, who didn’t go by choice,
whose bodies still had not been found,
I’d be nowhere. There’d simply be too
many.
Which terrified me.
To know a girl was one, I had to
sense it. Something would compel me to
stop over a certain page online or in the
newspaper microfiche in the library.
There’d be a humming in my ears, a
chorus strengthened by a new, added
voice. Then the warmth, below my heart,
gaining heat until I had to take off the
pendant or else it would burn me and
leave a lopsided almost-circle of a
mark. The edges of the room would
swim with shadows, and those shadows
had arms and legs and mouths that
opened. They had shoulder blades and
they had elbows and they had knees.
They came out when I discovered
another, to crane their shadowy necks
around corners, to see who it might be.
This was how I found Natalie
Montesano, 17, of Edgehaven, Vermont,
missing for the last seven years. Or, I
should say, this was how she found me.
ICE STORM
WREAKS
HAVOC ON
MOUNTAIN
ROADS;
LOCAL
GIRL,
17,
MISSING
Jan. 3, 2006—EDGEHAVEN—
Friday’s heavy snow turned to ice
on Saturday and left treacherous
driving conditions throughout the
high-elevation mountain roads.
There were reports of power
outages across the county. In
addition, in connection to a car
accident on Plateau Road late
Saturday, a female Edgehaven
Central High School senior, 17,
was reported missing.
Witnesses say the girl had
been a passenger in a car that
collided with the guardrail, but she
could not be located in the
wreckage. “We can’t help but
hope someone came along and
pulled her from the car. But she
hasn’t been checked into any local
hospital and her family hasn’t
heard a word,” Sheriff Arnold F.
Wymes said in a statement to the
public on Monday. “If she
wandered out on her own . . . it’s
not likely she’d have survived the
elements.” A search is still under
way.
The public is asked to report
any information to the Edgehaven
Police Department. The northern
pass of Plateau Road is closed to
nonemergency traffic until further
notice.
—
22
—
THE
new girl, Natalie, had inherited
the eyes. The ones on her mother’s side,
paler than a pair of eyes should be. They
looked to be coated in a thick layer of
ice, and only if you chipped through
would you find the person they belonged
to, the girl shivering beneath.
These eyes were exactly like her
mother’s,
who
was
serving
two
consecutive life sentences at a women’s
correctional facility four hours away,
and would never get out, not in her
lifetime.
Natalie had not once gone to visit the
prison to look into the frigid eyes of the
woman responsible for bringing her into
the world. Even if those eyes would be
held back behind a wall of clouded glass
lathered on both sides by the links of the
metal cage that encased it. Natalie was
afraid it would be like looking off into
the far distance, into a future she didn’t
want to see. Like mother like daughter,
people always said. They assumed, but
they should have asked, because looks
are deceiving sometimes. Eyes can be.
I first saw Natalie’s eyes for myself
on a cold January morning while I was
combing out the rat’s nest of my hair.
That was the first day of the new
semester, and I had to get to school.
I was looking in the mirror, trying to
get the comb in and the knots out, but the
knots had caught themselves on the teeth
of the comb, getting more tangled the
more I tried to pull it through.
I’d had the dream again in the night.
Fiona Burke hadn’t been there. I didn’t
see Abby, either. But there’d been
someone in the smoky house with me, up
a set of stairs, around a corner, a
shadow that leaked out from the other
shadows, reaching out one beckoning,
outstretched hand.
I’d woken in my bed as if I’d spent the
night clawing my way up a riverbank—
drenched through my clothes, muscles
sore, hair tangled in sweat—though the
dream had been very dry. Dry and hot,
as if somewhere the fire was still
burning.
I took one last look at my tangled head
in the mirror and decided to do
something about it. With the comb still