Carnival of Shadows (18 page)

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Authors: R.J. Ellory

BOOK: Carnival of Shadows
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“No, sir. I’m just fine.”

“Of course, we would understand perfectly if you were not fine. I mean, taking into consideration the fact that you have had a very difficult start in life—”

“Did someone say I was not fine, sir?”

“Well, not in so many words, Michael, but your teachers have noticed that you spend a great deal of time alone, that you do not mix easily with your contemporaries, that you don’t seem to have a girlfriend… or even a male friend, for that matter.”

“Is that a crime, sir?”

“No, Michael, of course it’s not a crime. I think we’re getting off on the wrong foot here. No one has complained about your behavior. In fact, your grades are excellent, and the speed with which you seem to be getting a grip on your work has been truly astonishing. It’s just that… well, it’s just that we are concerned for your mental and emotional welfare, Michael, not just your academic achievements.”

“Am I in trouble, sir?”

“No, Michael, of course you’re not in trouble.”

“Okay.”

“Do you have anything to say about this?”

“What can I say, sir? The other kids act like they are scared of me. They don’t know why I was in State Welfare. No one has asked me. I haven’t told anyone. People believe what they want to believe, and often it’s very far from the truth. I can’t help it if they are narrow-minded and ignorant.”

“I would think that a little harsh, wouldn’t you, Michael?”

“Harsh? I think they have been harsh, sir. They call me Juvy Boy and Michael Tragic. They don’t know that my mother killed my father and now she is going to be tried and executed.”

“Who calls you these things, Michael?”

“It doesn’t matter, sir. Really, it doesn’t matter at all. I am fine. I am here to get my high school diploma, and I want to go to college if Mr. Redding can arrange it.”

“So I do not need to have any concern about you?”

“No, sir, you don’t.”

“Well, Michael, you certainly seem to be a levelheaded and responsible young man, and I must say that your teachers consider you bright and diligent and well mannered. You are respectful of your elders, and as far as I can see, you have never been in any trouble here at the school.”

“No, sir.”

“Very well. Off you go now, and if there is anything you wish to talk about, any personal matters, anything that’s troubling you, then don’t hesitate to come and find me, okay?”

“Yes, sir. Thank you.”

And that, as they say, had been that. Or so Michael thought.

Somehow word got out, word regarding the real reason that Michael Travis had been in juvy, and in some strange way that made things worse.

Now he was the son of a killer. Now he was someone who may very well have inherited his mother’s homicidal tendencies. Now he was potentially more dangerous than he’d ever been.

Michael, however, had long since decided to stoically weather whatever may have been directed his way, and when those who were attempting to upset him saw that their efforts came to naught, they directed their efforts elsewhere. Michael did not become the cowed and timid victim that they wished him to be, and thus they grew bored. Michael existed as a student, but not as a friend, as a school attendee, not as a participant. He was just there, going on about the business of studying and learning as best he could, and it was only when he returned home that he found some slight degree of solace in the company of Esther Faulkner.

However, things became awkward between Esther and Michael after their first visit to see Janette at the State Reformatory outside of York. Unbeknownst to Michael, Esther had been working with Howard Redding on obtaining visitation rights for Michael and herself. Those rights were granted in the early part of September 1943. York was due west of Grand Island, no more than sixty or seventy miles. Thus, on Friday, September 17, 1943, Michael Travis and Esther Faulkner boarded a bus for the journey to York, Nebraska. Here they would find a car waiting for them, courtesy of Howard Redding of the State Welfare Department, and that car would take them out to the State Reformatory.

Michael had not seen his mother since that fateful day in August of the previous year. The very last words she had uttered to him were still imprinted in his mind:
Now come here and hug me good, and then off with you, boy. You go get Sheriff Baxter and tell him I done killed your daddy with a table knife.

He did not know what to feel or how to feel it, but as he stepped from the back of that car and walked toward the gate of the reformatory, Esther Faulkner clutching his hand as tight as could be, he knew that this was going to be difficult.

The visit itself lasted no more than thirty minutes. Janette cried a lot, and all the time she cried she was trying desperately not to. Esther cried as well, simply because there was just too much emotion to be borne by Janette and Michael alone.

“I did what I had to do,” Janette told Michael. “He was a violent man, Michael, a truly dangerous and violent man, and I just got to the point where I couldn’t take it anymore. And the thing that frightened me most… the thing that terrified me more than anything else in the world, was that I knew you couldn’t bear to see it, and one day you might just up and kill him. Or maybe he would have killed you. Either that, or you would spend so long listening to his lies and deceptions that your mind would turn. Truth is, I was deeply afraid that you might become like him one day, Michael. I thought that whatever drove him to do the things he did were already inside you, and the more it went on, the more likely…”

She looked down and shook her head. “The truth is, Michael, that I don’t know what I thought.”

Michael sat and listened, watching his mother as she wept and explained and justified and apologized.

He felt for her, there was no doubt about it, but he struggled to feel for himself. He kept looking at Esther, watching this scenario unfold before her eyes, perhaps trying to imagine how she must have felt, trying to come to terms with how the unpredictable and unrelated action of some distant relative had impacted upon her life in a way that was immeasurable and irreversible.

In a strange way, Michael felt closer to Esther, even though he had known the woman a bare handful of weeks. They were the effect of a common event, an event caused by Janette. Janette would stay behind, whereas he and Esther would walk away together. He and Esther would spend the next weeks and months, perhaps even years, living under the same roof, talking to each other, sharing meals, whereas he would see his mother as and when he was permitted by law.

When they finally parted company, it was to Janette as if her son were being wrenched out of her arms a second time. For Michael, it was different. He did not react in the same way, not immediately. He did not feel the full force of what had happened until he sat at the back of the bus with Esther and they headed out of York toward Grand Island.

It was then that he cried, and he did not simply cry; he sobbed. He sobbed uncontrollably at first, pulling away from Esther and burying his face in the crook of his arm, uncaring as to who saw him or heard him in his grief.

Esther, believing herself unable to do anything to really help him, just sat with her arm around his shoulder. She would listen when he spoke, and that was all she could do. She could not even begin to appreciate what he was experiencing, but she knew that it broke her fragile heart just to hear him.

Finally, the emotional tidal wave spent, he turned to her, and she pulled him closer against her, and they seemed to console each other wordlessly with the simple fact that at least they were not alone.

“Her trial will be soon enough,” Esther told him.

“I know.”

“Before Christmas, I think,” she said.

“Yes, before Christmas.”

“Do you want to go?”

Michael was silent for a time. “I don’t know,” he finally said.

“I don’t either,” Esther replied.

“I think it will be a short trial.”

“Yes. And if you want to go, I will go with you,” she said, hoping that he would decide not to.

They did not speak of it again, seated there at the back of the bus, the road spooling out like a black ribbon behind them, holding each other as if each sought nothing but an anchor in this sea of madness.

Esther could not see it, and Michael did not speak of it, but the words his mother had uttered had burned through to the very core of his being.

Truth is, I was deeply afraid that you might become like him one day, Michael. I thought that whatever drove him to do the things he did were already inside you…

That day, that very same Friday, was the day that everything changed between them.

They arrived back at her Grand Island house as evening fell. Michael said he was tired.

“Not physically,” he added. “Tired in my mind, I think.”

“Take a bath,” Esther said. “That will relax you. I will make some dinner for us. Maybe we could have a glass of wine.”

Michael went upstairs. He drew the bath. He took off his clothes and stood naked in the bathroom, looking from the small window into the yard behind the house.

The season had turned; the air was crisp and chill, and fall was settling in for the duration. Those few plants and shrubs that Esther managed to maintain in the dry topsoil had conceded defeat until spring of the following year.

Once the bath was full, Michael lay in the water and closed his eyes.

He let the warmth envelop him, and he tried hard not to see his mother’s face as she had looked that day. It was not his mother, at least not as he remembered her. She was frail and exhausted and scared. Perhaps, of all things, the greatest difficulty he faced was accepting that he could do nothing to help her. Not now. Not ever. Her fate was sealed, and she had sealed it by killing his father and confessing to the premeditative intent. Perhaps if she had not said that…

“Michael?”

Michael sat up suddenly. Water splashed over the edge of the tub onto the floor. The door was unlocked, and through the two- or three-inch gap between the edge of the door and the jamb, he could see Esther standing in the hallway.

“I’m going out on the veranda to have a glass of wine,” she said. “When you’re finished, come down and join me.”

“Yes, of course,” Michael said. “I won’t be long.”

An awkward silence hung in the space between them for just a moment, and then Esther said, “Good… I’ll see you downstairs then…”

Michael did not stay long in the water. He felt a little self-conscious. There were thoughts in his mind, thoughts that he’d had before, but Esther’s presence at the bathroom door had brought them very much to the fore. He got out, dried himself, put on a clean pair of pants and a T-shirt, and then headed downstairs, barefoot, his hair still damp. He found Esther on the back veranda. She was seated in a chair, her back against the wall of the house, a glass of wine in her hand.

“Tough day,” she said.

“Yes,” Michael said. He walked toward her, perched on the railing facing her.

“How’re you doing?”

Michael glanced sideways, a little less awkward now, but still aware of what he was feeling.

“Good as can be,” he replied.

“Hurts me to see you so sad.”

“Hurts me to be so sad.”

“You miss your father, Michael?”

Michael didn’t know how to answer the question. He was silent for a time, and then he looked back and smiled at Esther. “I miss the man I thought he was, not the man he was.”

“That’s a very profound comment.”

“I didn’t mean it to be.”

“I didn’t mean that critically,” Esther said. “I meant it as it sounded. It’s a very profound statement for someone—”

“So young?”

She smiled. “You’re not so young, Michael Travis.”

“Sixteen is pretty young.”

“Well, you might be too young to buy a drink, but you’re old enough to deal with one of the most difficult things I ever did hear of.”

“Can I ask you a question, Esther?”

“Sure, sweetheart. You go right ahead and ask me whatever you like.”

“Why did you take me in?”

That was not the question she’d expected, and she coughed as she swallowed. A drop or two of wine spilled on the front of her housedress.

Gathering her thoughts, she made a fuss of dabbing those spots of wine away with her handkerchief, and even as she was done, she realized that she was not going to get away with anything but the truth. There was something about Michael Travis that made you
want
to tell him the truth. You just had to look into his eyes, and before you knew it, you were talking.

“Honest?” she asked.

Michael smiled. “What else is there, Esther?”

She wondered if he actually believed what he was saying, as if he really believed that there was nothing but the truth.

“At first,” she said, “I thought I was agreeing because of the money. Mr. Redding said the state would pay me to feed you and house you, you know? It isn’t a fortune, but it isn’t peanuts. But then, after I agreed, I realized that I didn’t do it because of the money. I was doing it because I wanted to make a change in my life…” She smiled, shook her head as if questioning what she herself was about to say. “It seemed to be—”

“Fate?” Michael asked.

Esther laughed suddenly, almost as if she had been caught out in a fib and there was no denying it.

“Do you believe in fate, Esther?” Michael asked.

“I think that sometimes things happen simply because you believe they will.”

“I think you’re right,” Michael said, and he looked back toward the yard and smiled so artlessly, so sincerely, that she couldn’t help but smile back.

“All I know now is that I want to help you,” she said. “Having gotten to know you, if they told me they were going to stop giving me that money, it wouldn’t matter. I’d want you to stay here.”

“I feel like I need to tell you something, Esther,” Michael said, and there was a presence, a tension in his voice, that made Esther feel immediately on edge. He looked at her, then turned sideways, almost as if to face her while he was speaking was more than he could stand.

She set down her wineglass on the veranda and steeled herself for whatever was coming.

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