Authors: Edith Pattou
I could have stopped all this
from happening.
MAXIE
When I entered
the police station
Anil was leaving with
his parents.
They had brought
him a fresh shirt,
to replace the bloody one.
I could see
ironed creases
crisscrossing
the front of the
white shirt.
I could also see
brown-red streaks
on his forearms.
Our eyes met.
His were deep black pools of
fatigue and shock.
Mine felt sandpapery red,
swollen, and I had to
look away.
I was at the police station
until four in the morning.
It seemed impossible
at first
to put what had taken place
that night into a
this-happened,
that-happened
narrative.
But Police Chief Delafield
led me through it,
with a no-nonsense
gentleness
that at least kept
the tears from
starting
up
again.
It was weird how
I’d remember a tiny detail,
like the smell of
sage
in the cemetery,
but forget big things,
like:
what happened to
Brendan’s gun
(under the seat),
how far from the house
we were when the
windshield cracked and split
(not far),
did Emma hold up the
rubber crow
before or after
Walter Smith pointed his rifle
at her
(before).
They took
(confiscated)
my camera.
I watched them put it
in a plastic bag,
put a label on it,
seal it,
drop it in a bin,
and for a moment
I had trouble
breathing.
That camera is almost
always
with me,
or has been for the
past four years.
A best friend,
a part of my body.
And now it is
flecked with blood
and sealed in plastic
with a label
that reads
EVIDENCE.
After we got home,
I took
a shower,
burning hot,
went to bed and
let sleep,
faceless and blank,
pull me under.
Sunday, August 29, 6:45 am
POLICE CHIEF AUBREY DELAFIELD
I put in a call to Jeremy Sisto,
Principal of George Washington High School.
I’ve known Jeremy twenty years.
And he knew right away
it wasn’t a social call,
not this early on a Sunday morning.
He’s a good man, Jeremy Sisto,
and a good principal.
He’ll handle what needs to be done
with efficiency and intelligence.
Crisis-management teams
will be poised and ready
to swing into action on
Monday morning,
when kids arrive at
George Washington High School
for their first day of school.
Their first day in a world
that will surely feel a whole lot
less safe,
less predictable
than it did
the day before.
ANIL
1.
Finally I get out of bed.
And even though I’ve
already washed
and scrubbed my arms
and hands until they’re raw,
I go into the bathroom
and do it all over again.
Then,
grabbing car keys,
I slip out the back door
of our house.
2.
The sun is about to rise,
an eyelash of bright light
on the horizon.
The hospital entry is quiet.
I can smell breakfast
being cooked somewhere.
A tired-looking receptionist
with pinched lips informs me
that she can’t give out any
information.
I stare at her, frustrated.
Maybe if I told her I was there,
in that SUV, holding Felix’s head in my arms.
Maybe then she’d tell me if he was still alive.
But she ignores me standing there,
unsmiling, cold.
As if fatigue and fear
have erased her ability
to be kind, at least in this moment.
3.
I stand paralyzed.
Then a nurse, sturdy,
with blonde hair cut short,
comes up to me.
She takes my arm, leading me
away from the pinched receptionist.
Her name tag says
GEORGIA,
and in a quiet voice she tells me
that Felix is still in surgery.
Same for Faith and Emma.
She doesn’t know anything
about Brendan,
thinks maybe he was airlifted
to another hospital.
She points me to
a waiting room,
then surprises me
with a hug.
For a moment
I am afraid I will collapse,
fall to my knees and sob,
out of control
right here in front of
this nurse named Georgia.
But I manage to keep myself still,
face blank,
and thank her.
4.
I find the room and enter.
The only people there are
a man and woman,
looking exhausted,
frightened, holding hands.
I know right away they are
Emma and Faith’s parents.
The dad looks up,
about to say something,
when the door behind me opens.
A doctor in surgical scrubs,
his face gray with fatigue,
moves past me, toward the couple.
They stand, stricken, wobbly,
like they can barely stay upright.
Just finished surgery. Emma’s in ICU,
I can hear the doctor say.
Even though I want to hear more,
I feel like I’m intruding,
so I move toward the door.
She’s critical but stable . . . concussion . . . leg fractured in several places . . . will need more surgery
are the words I can make out.
Then the woman asks,
her voice cracking,
And Faith?
Still in surgery. Sorry.
POLICE CHIEF AUBREY DELAFIELD
The inside of that SUV
was a secondary crime scene
so we towed it to the station.
The pools of blood
and car windows with bullet holes
told the broad outline,
but the gun under the seat,
with four spent rounds,
the cooler of illegal booze
disguised as a harmless sports drink,
the burnt end of
a couple of reefers
filled in the rest of the story.
The statements we took
from Anil Sayanantham
and Maxine Kalman, and later,
Chloe Carney
all dovetailed.
Even the words that came out of
the boy’s mouth, the boy named
Walter Smith,
told the same story.
But from a very different
point of view.
Trespassers.
True.
Potential home invaders.
Not true.
A gun fired toward the house.
True.
Had to protect myself and my mother.
Not true.
No. That was not true at all.
Sunday, August 29, 10:15 a.m.
EMMA
The sun is a blazing ball
of pulsing white
in a vivid blue sky.
The soccer field
is emerald green,
brighter than I’ve ever seen it.
I’m dribbling a ball down the field.
Defenders are little buzzing dots
Far, far behind me.
The goal is wide open, waiting.
I feel that exhilarating,
familiar rush of certainty.
I swing my leg back
and,
thunk,
the gleaming
black-and-white ball soars.
It traces a perfect arc over
the goalie, landing smack
in the center of the goal.
A roar from the bleachers.
I look up, see Mom and Dad
on their feet, cheering.
Then I look for Faith.
She’s not there.
Fear stabs me in the gut.
And that’s when I wake up.
Faith!
I feel a hand take mine.
Honey, Emma,
a voice says.
It’s Mom.
I open my eyes.
Sunday, August 29, 2:35 p.m.
MAXIE
When I wake up
the house is
quiet.
I lie in bed,
groggy from such a long sleep.
Not knowing if it’s morning or afternoon.
Not remembering.
And then I do.
I stumble out of bed
to the bathroom.
Leaning over the toilet,
I heave
and heave
until nothing more
comes out.
Mom hears me
and runs in,
wrapping her arms
around me.
Wiping my hot face
with a cool washcloth.
Later
we’re sitting at
the breakfast table,
Mom and Dad and I,
and they tell me what
they know
so far.
That Emma is in
critical condition,
but expected to
survive.
That the last they heard,
Faith was still in surgery.
And it didn’t
look good.
That nobody seems to know
about Brendan.
They think
he’s at another hospital,
in Chicago.
And Felix?
I ask, my heart pounding.
And that’s when
they tell me.
That Felix survived.
He came through
surgery,
but he lost
his right eye
(like an eye was something
you could carelessly lose).
And now,
he
is in
a
coma.
Brain trauma
is a tricky thing,
they say.
He may never wake up,
they say.
And if he does wake up,
he may never be
the same.
Or he could be
fine.
At least as
fine
as you can be
with only
one
eye.
POLICE CHIEF AUBREY DELAFIELD
His name is Walter Smith.
Nineteen years of age.
Five foot seven inches,
barely 130 pounds,
brown hair.
He was born at 6 a.m.
on a Sunday morning,
January 16.
No father listed
on the birth certificate.
Mabel Smith
is listed as the mother.
No known address
for a Mabel Smith,
though she has a record:
several arrests
for drug possession,
public intoxication,
and disturbing the peace,
but that was all
twenty years ago.
Walter Smith was
raised by his grandmother,
Adeline Smith,
the woman he calls
Mother.
She’s homeschooled him since
the age of eleven,
in the house she inherited
from her sister.
The two,
Walter and Adeline Smith,
have always kept to themselves.
But according to neighbors
there have been escalating
signs of dementia
in the grandmother:
-sitting on the front stoop, arguing loudly with her dead sister
-wearing a winter down parka as she gardens in the hot summer sun
-dancing in her nightgown in the tangled undergrowth of the neglected property.
Numerous complaints
by neighbors
about the deteriorating house and yard.
Numerous complaints
by the grandmother
about being harassed
by neighborhood kids.
And even though I didn’t know
it was called the “ghost house”
and that neighborhood kids
used it to scare themselves,
I can’t say I wasn’t aware
of the house, of these people.
I was.
But I confess I thought
they were harmless.
Eccentric.
And that the people around them
should just
live and let live.
God’s truth,
I was blind.
Well, that’s something
I’m going to have to
live with until the day
I die.
Sunday, August 29, 8:00 p.m.
MAXIE
Word spreads fast
about what happened
at the
ghost house.
And Sunday night,
the night after it happened,
there is a vigil
at the school.
For Brendan,
for Emma and Faith,
and for Felix.
Hundreds of kids
fill the
football field.
I hadn’t wanted
to go–
not at first.
But Mom and Dad
said they’d go with me.
Wanted
to go with me.
And so I said
okay.
There are news trucks
and camera crews,
which Mom and
Dad hurry me past.
I sit in the bleachers
with Mom on one side
and Dad on the other
and hope no one will
recognize me.
And because I am
the new/old girl,
they don’t.
The whole thing is overwhelming,
but somehow beautiful, too,
all these people
gathered together,
shaken to the core,
mourning,
and frightened.
And then they start
lighting
candles.
First one,
then a few,
then more and more.
Till the field is
filled with
flickering candles.
I don’t have
my camera (still confiscated),
but Dad has loaned me his,
and Mom smiles
when I click a photo
of that
winking,
sparkling
sea of light.