Authors: Michael Marshall
Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Suspense, #Mystery & Detective, #General
staring unseeingly out into the yard. She had turned away, but
only by a few degrees, as if she’d done what she could before being
turned to stone by whatever force had gripped her. The veins were
standing out on the side of her temples. She swallowed every two
seconds, and kept blinking, as if fi ghting to keep this thing inside.
As I stared at her, bewildered, I realized she was listening to
the radio. The song got to the fi nal chorus and I knew I couldn’t be
found watching. I dragged my gaze back to the homework on the
table, and waited it out.
I kept my eyes down after it had fi nished, when my mother
walked out of the kitchen into the hallway for a few seconds. I heard
362 Michael Marshall
her cough several times, as if clearing her throat, and the sound of a
blouse sleeve wiped hard across her eyes.
Then she was back in the room, doing whatever she’d been doing
before. When I eventually did look up, it was as if none of it had ever
happened: though the next time our eyes met, what took place on
her face was the fl attest and emptiest thing I think I’ve ever seen. It
looked like a dead person’s smile.
I was young and so by the next day it was history. I never asked
her what that had been about, and I’m sure she wouldn’t have told
me—but I had something similar happen to me last year when I was
sitting alone in a bar in Portland, eight years after she’d died. A song
came on the bar’s jukebox, a song I’d listened to with Jenny Raines,
and I suddenly had an inkling of what my father might have been
weathering when our walks ended; what had accidentally caused a
distancing between him and me that culminated in me running with
bad kids, joining the army, and perhaps everything that happened in
my life after that.
I sensed a presence in the shadows of my life, and I believe a
song grabbed my mother by the heart that afternoon and yanked her
back to a period she never allowed herself to think about, to emotions
walled away but still alive—that it took her into that parking lot in
the back of all our heads and kicked her in the guts until she bled.
When it happened to me I did exactly what she had done. I
coughed, and wiped my eyes, and carried on.
I live in New York now, in a small apartment in a pocket of the East
Village that is sturdily resisting becoming fashionable, and remains
home to people who are old and do not speak English as a fi rst lan-
guage—and some of whom, I have heard it said, do not own a sin-
gle iPod. It has narrow streets and trees that are bare, now that it
is winter, and it feels like a place should. I have a job ten minutes’
walk away at a restaurant and bar called the Adriatico, a few turns off
B A D T H I N G S 363
MacDougal. I earn even less than I did in Marion Beach but at least I
am the offi cial pizza guy, so don’t let anyone tell you there’s no hope
of progress in the world.
When the bar shuts at the end of the night I hang out with the
other staff for a while, and then walk home through streets in which
there’s generally something still happening and our light and sound
and chatter make it impossible to believe that this area, like all others,
was once a wilderness.
I’ll sit out on the stoop and smoke a last cigarette, enjoying the
feeling of cold stone and the sound of distant traffi c, before fi nally
going upstairs.
To my continual surprise, I do not live here alone.
From what I hear, the restaurant in Marion Beach is very quiet now.
I know Ted toys with the idea of shutting down completely for the
off-season, but the cost of that pizza oven still pecks away at him, and
so he does not.
I returned to Oregon with Becki and Kyle to fi nd a state of crisis.
The night I wound up in Murdo Pond had seen the local police being
called out to the Pelican, to try to catch someone who was trying to
set fi re to it. On the back of this, Ted found out what Kyle had done,
and went biblical, forbidding him from seeing his daughter. I expected
Becki to put up a fi ght but it seemed she’d had enough of Kyle, too.
Turns out when Bill had left them at the Robertson house to follow
me into the woods that night, Kyle just ran away, abandoning her.
She threw him out, but Kyle didn’t get it. He didn’t seem to get
any of it. He didn’t understand that Becki was no longer his girl, that
he no longer had a job. He tried once more to get into the drug indus-
try. He quickly found his level, that of consumer.
The situation has since been resolved. The restaurant ticks over
during the quiet season, and Ted is letting Eduardo have his head
with a few novel items on the menu, as an experiment. Becki has a
364 Michael Marshall
new boyfriend and is now e-mailing me convincingly about going
back to college, this time to study for a business degree—so she can
come back and franchise the living daylights out of the Pelican.
Stranger things have happened.
I have also been in regular contact with Carol, by e-mail and once by
phone. She put Tyler on the line, at my request. We did not have a lot
to say to each other, but I tried, and will keep doing so. Whether I’ll
ever be a real father to him I have no idea. You do what you do and
wait and see how it turns out, and by then it’s all but done.
Carol still swears that the ser vice she paid Brooke Robertson
to broker wasn’t supposed to act against me, and I believe her. She
wanted no more than to make Jenny uncomfortable and sad, but as
soon as you unleash bad things into the world you lose control. They
have their own agendas and demands, bigger and more powerful
than any individual can comprehend. The last thing Carol wanted
was for harm to come to Scott, but he was the most valued thing in
the life of the man with whom another woman had committed her
punishable sin.
And so something happened, because.
We try to blame others for our misfortunes, point fi ngers, to seek
mitigation for our actions in the behavior, creed, or color of strangers,
but two plus two never equals fi ve. Sometimes it doesn’t even make
four. Often you’ve just got two of one thing, and two of another, and
they cannot be combined to create anything meaningful at all.
I cannot explain all of the things that happened while I was in
Black Ridge, but I know why they occurred. They happened because
of me.
Carol is lighter as a result of this calculation. I am heavier. That
is fair.
B A D T H I N G S 365
I understand some of the rest a little better now, too. Have parts of
a story, at least, put together from talking to Carol and one other
person.
I believe Brooke caused something to be set upon her father, af-
ter he confi ded in her that he was going to accede to Ellen’s wishes
and start a new family. I’m sure she told herself she was doing it to
preserve the legacy of her forefathers, and that Ellen’s demands were
forcing her hand, but I suspect the real reason was far more personal
than that. For I have also been told how the story about Brooke got
mangled in its way into school legend: that she came to this teacher
one night, brimful of adolescent love, and he had sex with her against
her will, and the secret and incompetent abortion that followed de-
stroyed any chance of her ever having children—that she might even
have died, were it not for the intervention of Marie Hayes.
Cory had been the Robertsons’ last chance of continuing their
bloodline stewardship of Black Ridge, but he was no longer capable of
that or anything else by the end of the night at Murdo Pond. Their
infl uence is over, unless what his sister did to herself at the end com-
pleted the fate begun by the deaths of their father and mother. Brooke
knew what she was doing, and her will was strong. What she felt for
Black Ridge was, I suspect, as close to love as she was capable of, and
so it is possible that enough blood has been spilled, for the time being,
to re-mark the forest’s tracks with the dead.
The Robertsons were a family, too, after all, and now they are
gone.
Every time I think of the name Murdo Pond now I kick myself for not
realizing what it had come from, but they had hidden the history well.
Soon after arriving in NYC I managed to fi nd a one-line reference
to a woman called Bridget Hayes, in Fort and Reznikoff’s
History of
Witchcraft in New England,
acquired through the Strand bookstore’s
rare-books ser vice. She was tried in Murraytown, Massachusetts, in
366 Michael Marshall
1693—and acquitted on the basis of character references from key
locals, including the Evans and Kelly clans. The Robertsons were not
cited in the court reports, though records demonstrate there was a
prominent family of that name in town at that time. They also show
these four families leaving together for the West, nearly two hundred
years later. This event is noted in the slim volume of Murraytown
history I subsequently found through AbeBooks, though the author
doesn’t speculate as to why three prosperous families should leave for
the unpredictable frontier, taking with them a lowly dairy farmer and
his red-haired wife, whose surname was also Hayes.
The book was creditably thorough in most other ways, including
specifying the number of children in each family. The Kellys had two
when they left Massachusetts. It is possible they had another en route,
I suppose, but unlikely it would have had time to grow to the size of
the third child I believe I glimpsed with them.
I think, or perhaps I hope, that was Scott.
I do not like to think of him being lonely in those woods, and
while Ellen could have made the pattern of branches and twigs on
the forest fl oor near the picnic area, I don’t think she made the marks
on the back of my motel-room wall. I like to believe that Scott’s spirit
was attempting to defl ect the forces that live in those woods, not onto
me, but
away:
making signs that I have come to realize bear a strong
resemblance to the arrangement of the streets in Black Ridge. I have
subsequently seen the pattern in other places, too, or something like
it, including in photographs I found online of cave paintings and cer-
emonial designs in Europe. I have wondered whether those prehis-
toric engravings were not maps after all, but attempts to ward off
creatures our ancestors could feel but not see.
Or perhaps, in some cases, to pay homage to them.
To tap into their power.
I’ve also wondered whether Brooke was telling the truth about
one thing, at least, and that it was not her who had called my motel
room during the night after I found the marks on the back of the
B A D T H I N G S 367
motel. When I think back now, it seems to me that the noise I heard
on the line could have been that of a child, trying to call out from a
very long distance.
Naturally I have no explanation for how that could be, but one
morning recently I took down the small pottery vase that had been
on my shelf and walked over to the East River Park. I waited until
there was no one in sight and then poured Scott’s remains into the
water. In a vase—or a lake—you can become trapped. From here I
hoped his ashes would make it to the sea.
Switch survived. He refused to accept his colleague’s portion of the
money I had promised them, though he did take twenty-fi ve.
Two weeks before I left Marion Beach I took a drive over to
Portland early one evening. Kyle was in the passenger seat. I had
tracked him down in Astoria, crashed out on the couch of one of
his remaining friends. In previous weeks he had made persistent at-
tempts to visit Becki, accosting her on the street, increasingly aggres-
sively. He simply wouldn’t leave her alone, seeming to believe that if
he could bend her to his will, then the rest of the world would fall
back into place, too.
So I made a deal with him. I told him that he was going to come
with me to Portland. There I would straighten out his problems, us-
ing more of my money if necessary, after which I would drive him to
the airport and pay for a ticket to anywhere in the USA. In return,
he’d leave Ted’s daughter the fuck alone.
He perched on the couch and twitched and sniffed and eventually
agreed, perhaps sensing that the deal I was offering was the best the
world had left to give.
When we got to Portland I left him in a bar sucking back Bacardi
and walked a couple of blocks to where I’d agreed to meet representa-
tives of the gang from whom he’d originally bought his drugs—guys
I’d made contact with through a number Switch had given me. There
368 Michael Marshall
were three men waiting. I explained I would like them to no longer
pose a threat to Ted, his business, or his daughter, and outlined the
nature of the deal I was proposing.
They stepped back to discuss it, and then the shortest of them—it
generally is, for some reason—came forward again.