Authors: Michael Marshall
Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Suspense, #Mystery & Detective, #General
Kristina has become the newest of a long line, stretching back into
family history.
Slowly, with the fear only just beginning to build in her breast,
the long-ago fourteen-year-old turned from the track, and started to
walk into the forest.
In every way that counts, she never came back.
After that, there are supposed to be years of becoming accustomed,
tuition, practice. Kristina never had those. When her father died her
B A D T H I N G S 275
mother came into even sharper focus, and Kristina decided she did
not want to be like her, a peasant with power, her life controlled by
someone else. The rich own the farm, the peasants till the soil. It
works that way with this as everything else.
Kristina rejected everything, all at once, as children do. Just as
adults sometimes change their minds.
Was her decision to drive into the forest the night before, after
the bar closed, entirely to do with a man she had met? Was it
honestly
centered on the idea of helping him, trying to stand in the way of
what was heading his way? She doubted it. Nothing could happen
there, after all. Especially, she realized dismally, now that she’d al-
lowed herself to accept the mantle that had been waiting for her all
her life. If you like someone, you do not cast them into that role, make
them spear carrier to a town’s dirty little secret.
Perhaps it was just like taking the drink you know will send you
off the wagon. Lifting the phone and making that drunken call.
Scratching that burning itch to do wrong, to allow the bad things
out, and by doing so, become alive.
She had driven into the woods and found the place from that long-
ago night. It should have been hard to fi nd, but it was not. It was like
swirling down a drain to the center of the world, and she could have
driven there with her eyes shut.
She left the keys in the ignition and got out, and as an after-
thought, took off her coat and left that in the car as well. Then she
closed the door and walked straight into the forest. She did not feel
cold. After a few hundred yards she unbuttoned her dress and let that
fall behind her. In the patchy moonlight, by the glow that seeped in
and around the snow which managed to make it down through the
trees, her skin already looked blotchy and blue. But on the inside she
felt very warm.
After a while she found the trunk of a tree which, though now
276 Michael Marshall
fallen, she recognized. An important tree, and one which she had
spent a portion of a long-ago night clinging to. She stood by it, head
lowered, for a period of time it was hard to measure.
Then suddenly she raised her head.
Slowly she turned around.
Out of the darkness between the trees she saw a shape approach-
ing. The shape itself was limitless, unbounded, but it chose to co-
alesce a tiny portion of itself into a form she could understand.
She watched the big, dark dog as it came toward her. And it felt
like coming home.
As she sits in her alien apartment the next morning, she doesn’t know
how much the night will have changed. She doesn’t know what she’ll
now be able to do. But amid the feelings of nausea, and guilt, and self-
hatred is a massive dose of relief.
So strong that it almost feels sexual.
When she fi nally stands up to get her shit together and go to
work—she still has to function in the real world, after all—she real-
izes something else.
She wants a cigarette.
I was lying on my side. The back of my head hurt and the inside felt
black and twisted. My face was pressed into something that smelled
dusty and scratched against my cheek.
When I opened my eyes it made no difference, so I closed them
again.
A little while later I became aware once more. I was on my back,
and my neck hurt. My head now felt merely brittle instead of bro-
ken, and so I opened my eyes and kept them that way. It still didn’t
change anything. I gingerly slid my hands up toward my shoulders
and used them to lever my upper body away from the fl oor. This
took longer than I would have expected. When it was almost done
I pulled my feet back until I was sitting in a hunched position. I
reached behind my head and found a bump there which hurt to
touch. So I stopped touching it.
I gave my eyes a few minutes to adjust to the light but there ap-
peared to be nothing for them to adjust to. My vision stayed milky
black, the only variation coming from the waves and mists of chem-
icals fi ring in my retina as they tried to fi nd something to grab onto.
278 Michael Marshall
I rubbed them and my face with my hands, hard, but that only made
things worse.
I made a slow check of my pockets, and found that although I
no longer had my cell phone, I retained my wallet and cigarettes. I
stuck one of the latter in my mouth and sparked the lighter in front
of my face. The cigarette was half lit before I realized I could see
someone.
Sitting three or four yards away, crossed-legged on the fl oor, was
Scott.
“Christ,”
I shouted, the cigarette falling out of my mouth. The
world went black again, all the darker for the moment of light.
“Hey, John,” said a female voice. “Welcome home.”
I was on my feet without being aware of doing it. The back of my head
still hurt and I nearly fell straight back down but I held the lighter up
in front of me and fl icked it again, three times before I got a light.
Carol was sitting on the fl oor close to the boy. She looked a lot
thinner than when I’d last seen her, and older. I took a step forward
and looked at the other person, as he looked up at me.
It wasn’t Scott, of course.
After a couple of seconds I realized the planes of his face were dif-
ferent, and his eyes. The resemblance was strong, but whereas people
always said Scott looked like me, this boy without question took after
his mother.
“Is that Tyler?”
He kept staring up at me as if I was a monster, and he’d been told
that if he stayed real still, I might not attack immediately.
“Yep,” Carol said. “Tyler, this is your dad.”
The lighter got too hot to hold and I let it go out. For a moment
I was glad of darkness.
I took another pace forward and carefully lowered myself back
down to the fl oor. I held the lighter in my other hand and lit it again,
B A D T H I N G S 279
and looked with incomprehension into the face of the woman who
had been my wife.
“Carol—what the hell is going on?”
She told me that they had been snatched from her rented house in
Renton, in the middle of the night before last. Two men had come for
them, one of whom she recognized from having delivered a message
at the library where she worked. Since then they had been stashed
here, inside our old house. She had already tried to fi nd a way out, but
whoever sealed the house had done a good job.
“That’s not what I meant,” I said. “I meant
what is going on?
”
She didn’t reply. I could hear the sound of her and Tyler breath-
ing in the darkness, almost in unison. Now that I understood where I
was, I could feel the shape of the place where we had lived for several
years. The lighter got too hot again and I reached behind on the fl oor
and found the cigarette I’d dropped.
I lit it, and each time I took a drag it glowed just enough to show
their faces looking at me.
“You shouldn’t have come back here,” Carol said.
“Why?”
“You just shouldn’t.”
“I only came because someone told me they might know what had
happened to Scott.”
“And did they?”
“I don’t know,” I admitted. “A lot of the time it seemed like she
wasn’t altogether there.”
“She?”
“Her name was Ellen Robertson. She was Gerry Robertson’s
wife.”
“Was? What happened to him?”
“He died, a few months back. How come you even know the
name?”
280 Michael Marshall
“I grew up not so far from here, remember?”
“You knew him?”
“Not really. I knew Brooke.”
“You know
Brooke
? How?”
“We went to school together.”
“Were you friends?”
“Brooke’s not anyone’s friend. She’s just Brooke. She’s a
Robertson.”
“Funny. Bill Raines said something similar to me this morning. I
still don’t understand what it’s supposed to mean.”
“You’ve seen Bill?”
“Yeah.”
“How is he?”
Now it was my turn to be silent. I took another pull on my cigarette
and saw Carol’s pinched face, six feet away from me in the darkness.
“Have you got something to tell me?” I asked.
“I don’t know what you mean.”
“Bullshit.”
“That a naughty word,” Tyler said quietly.
“I’m sorry,” I said. I knew I should probably be reaching out to
him, giving him a hug, doing something fatherlike. In the glimpses
I got of his small face I could see the ghost of a baby I had held, and
fed. I also knew that he hadn’t seen me in nearly three years and that
I had no idea how much time we had, and that there were things I
needed to know.
“Ellen’s dead,” I said. “Someone murdered her and left her with a
message to me.”
Silence.
“You want to know what the message was?”
Silence.
“A shirt I ran in when we lived in this house. A piece of jewelry I
was given. And an e-mail. An e-mail to me, from Jenny, which I never
saw.”
B A D T H I N G S 281
Another drag on the cigarette, and I saw a tear rolling down
Carol’s cheeks, one from each eye.
“Tell me,” I said. “Carol, it’s been long enough. I have a right to
know.”
She said she’d had no prior suspicion and maybe that was true, but
it wasn’t clear what else would have made her go into my study one
morning after I’d gone to work, or to go look at my computer. There
shouldn’t have been anything on there anyway. Jenny and I were not
in contact at the time, and even when we had been, e-mails had been
removed immediately: this is Having an Affair 101, as I’m sure you know.
I had my software set to automatically check for mail on schedule,
however. Once at midday, and prior to that at nine a.m. When I was
working from home I tried to stick to this routine, to avoid the day
clogging up with the constant back-and-forth of replying to people
and then replying to their replies. When things were on between me
and Bill Raines’s wife, I disabled this schedule and collected e-mails
manually. On the day in question things were
not
on between us, and
hadn’t been for several months, and so it was enabled again.
The point is the nine a.m. sweep had done its thing that morning,
and downloaded an e-mail sent in the middle of the night. It was sit-
ting right there in my in-box when Carol looked at the screen. Pure
bad luck, though you make your own luck, I’ve been told.
Carol read it, the message I had now seen printed out. She stood
over the desk light-headed with emotions for which there are no
names, and considered what to do. In the end she printed the e-mail
and then deleted it from my machine.
She spent most of the day on the lawn with the baby, reading and
rereading the e-mail, turning it over in her head. It was open to only
one interpretation. Strength of emotion was evident, as was a prior
history of indeterminate length. Carol eventually also put together
282 Michael Marshall
that the inscription on a bracelet another man’s wife had made, and
then given me for my birthday, could be interpreted as a way of con-
necting two
J
s. Jenny and John.
In a court the jury wouldn’t even bother to leave the room. The
question was . . . what happened in real life?
It was evident from the e-mail that whatever had happened be-
tween this woman and her husband was over, or at least in abeyance.
Carol was a lot wiser than she ever gave herself credit for, and knew
right away that one option would be to simply let it go. Swallow the
pain, let matters take their course. People do things, after all. Not all
of them last, or change the world forever. A single hurricane doesn’t
mean you have to dismantle your house and spend the rest of your life
living underground. Carol also understood that just because Person
A might be—or might have been—intermittently fucking Person C
didn’t mean they didn’t still owe their heart and life to Person B.
But it hurt. It hurt in the way that it hurts when people die. It
hurts how it can only hurt when the world is redefi ned in an instant,
when countless moments implode, when memories are undermined
and smiles turned into lies.
“How could you, John? I mean, how could you
do
it? When I was
pregnant
? And afterward? Tell me, because I have spent three years
trying to understand and still I just don’t.”
“I don’t know, either,” I said.
When I returned from work that evening, I was by all accounts