Read The Dark End of the Street: New Stories of Sex and Crime by Today's Top Authors Online
Authors: Jonathan Santlofer,Sj Rozan
Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Anthologies & Literary Collections, #General, #Short Stories, #Anthologies, #United States, #Anthologies & Literature Collections, #Genre Fiction
Murder, it turned out, was a lot easier in the movies.
I woke up on the Wednesday morning without an idea in my head. When I went through to the kitchen and turned on the light, a bulb popped, tripping the fuse in the main box. And a light went on inside my head.
Back when I bought my house in Devon, I didn't have much money. I'd only been able to afford the house because it was practically derelict and I learned enough of all the building trades to do the restoration and renovation myself. I can lay bricks, plaster walls, install plumbing, and do basic carpentry.
I also know how electricity works.
Cerys may be able to last overnight without eating and drinking. She won't be able to make it without going to the toilet. My cabin on the loch has been fitted out in retro style, with an old-fashioned high-level toilet cistern with a long chain that you have to yank hard to generate a flush. It turned out to be a simple task to replace the ceramic handle with a metal one and to wire the whole lot into the main supply. As her fist closes round the handle, two hundred and forty volts will course through her body, her hand will clench tighter, and her heart will freeze.
Part of my heart will also freeze. But I can live with that. And because nothing is ever wasted, I will find a way to make a script out of it. Such a pity Cerys won't be around to see that movie too.
JOYCE CAROL OATES
F
OUR YEARS OLD
she'd begun to hear in fragments and patches like handfuls of torn clouds the story of the stabbing in Manhattan that was initially her mother's story.
That morning in March 1980 when Mrs. Karr drove to New York City alone. Took the New Jersey Turnpike to the Holland Tunnel exit, entered lower Manhattan and crossed Hudson and Greenwich Streets and at West Street turned north, her usual route when she visited an aunt who lived in a fortresslike building resembling a granite pueblo dwelling on West Twenty-seventh Street, but just below Fourteenth Street traffic began abruptly to slowâthe right lane was blocked by constructionâa din of air hammers assailed her earsâvehicles were moving in spasmodic jerksâMadeleine braked her 1974 Volvo narrowly avoiding rear-ending a van braking to a stop directly in front of herâa tin-colored vehicle with a corroded rear bumper and a New York license plate whose raised numerals and letters were just barely discernible through layers of dried mud like a palimpsest. Overhead were clouds like wadded tissues, a sepia glaze to the late-winter urban air and a stink of diesel exhaust and Madeleine Karr whose claim it was that she loved Manhattan felt now a distinct unease in stalled traffic amid a cacophony of horns, the masculine aggressiveness of horns, for several blocks she'd been aware of the tin-colored van jolting ahead of her on West Street, passing on the right, switching lanes, braking at the construction blockade but at once lurching forward as if the driver had carelesslyâor deliberatelyâlifted his foot from the brake pedal and in so doing caused his right front fender to brush against a pedestrian in a windbreaker crossing West Streetâcrossing at the intersection though at a red light, since traffic was stalledâunwisely then in a fit of temper the pedestrian in the windbreaker struck the fender with the flat of his handâhe was a burly man of above average heightâMadeleine heard him shouting but not the words, distinctlyâmight've been
Fuck you!
or even
Fuck you asshole!
âimmediately then the van driver leapt out of the van and rushed at the pedestrianâMadeleine blinked in astonishment at this display of masculine contentionâMadeleine was expecting to see the men fight together clumsilyâaghast then to see the van driver wielding what appeared to be a knife with a considerable blade, maybe sixâeightâinches longâso quickly this was happening, Madeleine's brain could not have identified
Knife!
âtrapped behind the steering wheel of the Volvo like a child trapped in a nightmare Madeleine witnessed an event, an action, to which her dazzled brain could not readily have identified as
Stabbing! Murder!
âin a rage the man with the knife lashed at the now stunned pedestrian in the windbreaker, who hadn't time to turn awayâstriking the man on his uplifted arms, striking and tearing the sleeves of the windbreaker, swiping against the man's face, then in a wicked and seemingly practiced pendulum motion slashing the man's throat just below his jaw, right to left, left to right causing blood to spring instantaneously into the airâ
A six-foot arc of blood at least
as Madeleine would describe it afterward, horrifiedâfor never had Madeleine Karr witnessed anything so horribleânever would Madeleine Karr forget this savage attack in the unsparing clarity of a morning in late Marchâthe spectacle of a living man
attacked, struck down, stabbed, throat slashed
before her eyes. The victim wore what appeared to be work clothesâwork bootsâhe was at least a decade older than his assailantâlate thirties, early fortiesâbareheaded, with steely-gray hair in a crew cutâonly seconds before the attack the victim had been seething with indignationâhe'd been empowered by rageâthe sort of individual with whom, alone in the city in such circumstances on West Street just below Fourteenth Street, Madeleine Karr would never have dared to lock eyes. Yet now the burly man in the windbreaker was rendered harmlessâstrickenâsinking to his knees as his assailant leapt back from himâvery quick, lithe on his feetâthough not quick enough to avoid being splattered by his victim's blood. Making no attempt to hide the bloody knife he heldâhe seemed to be visibly brandishing the knifeâthe van driver ran back to his vehicle, deftly climbed inside and slammed shut the door and in virtually the same instant propelled the van forward head-on and lurchingâwith a squeal of tires against pavementâaiming the van into a narrow space between another vehicle and the torn-up roadway where construction workers in safety helmets were staringâknocking aside a sawhorse, a series of orange traffic cones scattering in the street and bouncing off other vehicles as in a luridly colorful and comic simulation of bowling pins scattered by an immense bowling ball; by this time the stricken man was kneeling on the pavement desperately pressing both handsâthese were bare hands, big-knuckled, Madeleine could see from a distance of no more than twelve feetâagainst his ravaged throat in a gesture of childlike poignancy and futility as blood continued to spurt from him
Like water from a hoseâhorrible!
As if paralyzed Madeleine stared at the stricken man now writhing on the pavement in a bright neon-red poolâstill clutching desperately at his throatâamid a frantic din of hornsâtraffic backed up for blocks on northbound West Street as in a nightmare of mangled and thwarted movement like snarled film. Nothing so mattered to Madeleine as escaping from this nightmareâin a panic of thudding heart, clammy skin and dry mouth thinking not of the stricken man a short distance from the front bumper of the Volvo but of herselfâyearning only to turn her car aroundâreverse her course on accursed West Street back to the Holland Tunnelâthe Jersey Turnpikeâand so to Princeton from which scarcely ninety minutes before Madeleine had left with such exhilaration, childish anticipation and defiance
Manhattan is so alive!âPrinceton is so embalmed. Nothing ever feels real to me there, this life in disguise as a wife and a mother of no more durability than a figure in papier-mâché. I don't need any of you!
So strangely Madeleine had seemed to be watching the spectacle a few yards away through a kind of tunnelâthrough the wrong end of a telescopeâcuriously drained of light and color; now she could see other peopleâfellow pedestrians approaching the fallen manâworkmen from the construction siteâon the run a police officerâand a second police officer.
Soon then there came a deafening sirenâseveral sirensâemergency vehicles could come no closer than a side street peripheral to Madeleine's visionâMadeleine saw figures bent over the fallen manâa stretcher was lifted, carried awayânothing to see finally but a pool of something brightly red like old-fashioned Technicolor glistening on the pavement in cold March sunshine.
And the nightmare didn't end. The police questioned all the witnesses they could find. They came for me, they took me to the police precinct. For forty minutes they kept me. I had to beg them to let me use the women's roomâI couldn't stop cryingâI am not a hysterical person but I couldn't stop cryingâof course I wanted to help the police but I couldn't seem to remember what anything had looked likeâwhat the men had looked likeâeven the “skin color” of the man with the knifeâeven of the man who'd been stabbed. I told them that I thought the van driver had been dark-skinnedâmaybeâhe was “young”âin his twenties possiblyâor maybe olderâbut not much olderâhe was wearing a satin kind of jacket like a sports jacket like high school boys wearâI think that's what I sawâI couldn't remember the color of the jacketâmaybe it was darkâdark purple?âa kind of shiny materialâa cheap shiny materialâmaybe there was some sort of design on the back of the jacketâOh I couldn't even remember the color of the vanâit was as if my eyes had gone blindâthe colors of things had drained from themâI'd seen everything through a tunnelâI thought that the van driver with the knife was dark-skinned but not “black” exactlyâbut not whiteâI mean not “Caucasian”âbecause his hair wasâwasn'tâhis hair didn't seem to beâ“Negroid hair”âif that is a way of describing it. And how tall he was, how heavy, the police were asking, I had no idea, I wasn't myself, I was very upset, trying to speak calmly and not hysterically, I have never been hysterical in my life. Because I wanted to help the police find the man with the knife. But I could not describe the van, either. I could not identify the van by its make or by the year. Of course I could not remember anything of the license plateâI wasn't sure that I'd even seen a license plateâor if I did, it was covered with dirt. The police kept asking me what the men had said to each other, what the pedestrian had said, they kept asking me to describe how he'd hit the fender of the van, and the van driverâthe man with the knifeâwhat had he said?âbut I couldn't hearâmy car windows were up, tightâI couldn't hear. They asked me how long the “altercation” had lasted before the pedestrian was stabbed and I said that the stabbing began right awayâthen I said maybe it had begun right awayâI couldn't be sureâI couldn't be sure of anythingâI was hesitant to give a statementâsign my name to a statementâit was as if part of my brain had been extinguishedâtrying to think of it now, I can'tânot clearlyâI was trying to explainâapologizeâI told them that I was sorry I couldn't help them better, I hoped that other witnesses could help them better and finally they released meâthey were disgusted with me, I thinkâI didn't blame themâI was feeling weak and sick but all I wanted to do was get back to Princeton, didn't even telephone anyone just returned to the Holland Tunnel thinking I would never use that tunnel again, never drive on West Street not ever again.
In that late winter of 1980 when Rhonda was four years old the story of the stabbing began to be told in the Karr household on Broadmead Road, Princeton, New Jersey. Many times the story was told and retold but never in the presence of the Karrs' daughter, who was too young and too sensitive for such a terrifying and ugly story and what was worse, a story that seemed to be missing an ending.
Did the stabbed man die?âhe must have died. Was the killer caught?âhe must have been caught.
Rhonda could not ask because Rhonda was supposed not to know what had happened, or almost happened, to Mommy on that day in Manhattan when she'd driven in alone as Daddy did not like Mommy to do. Nothing is more evident to a child of even ordinary curiosity and canniness than a family secret, a “taboo” subjectâand Rhonda was not an ordinary child. There she stood barefoot in her nightie in the hall outside her parents' bedroom where the door was shut against her daring to listen to her parents' lowered, urgent voices inside; silently she came up behind her distraught-sounding mother as Madeleine sat on the edge of a chair in the kitchen speaking on the phone as so frequently Madeleine spoke on the phone with her wide circle of friends.
The most horrible thing! A nightmare! It happened so quickly and there was nothing anyone could do and afterward â¦
Glancing around to see Rhonda in the doorway, startled and murmuring
Sorry! No more right now, my daughter is listening
.
Futile to inquire what Mommy was talking about, Rhonda knew. What had happened that was so upsetting and so ugly that when Rhonda pouted wanting to know she was told
Mommy wasn't hurt, Mommy is all rightâthat's all that matters.
And
Not fit for the ears of a sweet little girl like you. No no!
Very soon after Mrs. Karr began to tell the story of the stabbing on a Manhattan street, Mr. Karr began to tell the story too. Except in Mr. Karr's excitable voice the story of the stabbing was considerably altered for Rhonda's father was not faltering or hesitant like Rhonda's mother but a professor of American Studies at the University, a man for whom speech was a sort of instrument, or weapon, to be boldly and not meekly brandished; and so when Mr. Karr appropriated his wife's story it was in a zestful storytelling voice like a TV voiceâin fact, Professor Gerald Karr was frequently seen on TVâPBS, Channel 13 in New York Cityâdiscussing political issuesâbewhiskered, with glinting wire-rimmed glasses and a ruddy flushed face.
Crude racial justice! Counterlynching!
Not the horror of the incident was emphasized, in Mr. Karr's telling, but the irony. For the victim, in Mr. Karr's version of the stabbing, was a
Caucasian male
and the delivery-van assailant was a
black male
âor, variously, a
person of color.
Rhonda seemed to know that
Caucasian
meant
white
, though she had no idea why; she had not heard her mother identify
Caucasian, person of color
in her accounts of the stabbing, for Mrs. Karr dwelt almost exclusively on her own feelingsâher fear, her shock, her dismay and disgustâhow eager she'd been to return home to Princetonâshe'd said very little about either of the men as if she hadn't seen them really but only just the stabbing
It happened so fastâit was just so awfulâthat poor man bleeding like that!âand no one could help him. And the man with the knife justâdrove away â¦
But Mr. Karr who was Rhonda's Daddy and an important professor at the University knew exactly what the story meant for the young black man with the knifeâthe young
person of colorâ
was clearly one of
an exploited and disenfranchised class of urban ghetto dwellers rising up against his oppressors crudely striking as he could, class vengeance, an instinctive “lynching,” the white victim is collateral damage in the undeclared and unacknowledged but ongoing class war.
The fact that the delivery-van driver had stabbedâkilled?âa pedestrian was unfortunate of course, Mr. Karr concededâa tragedy of courseâbut who could blame the assailant who'd been provoked, challengedâhadn't the pedestrian struck his vehicle and threatened himâshouted obscenities at himâa good defense attorney could argue a case for self-defenseâthe van driver was protecting himself from imminent harm, as anyone in his situation might do. For there is such a phenomenon as
racial instinct, self-protectiveness. Kill that you will not be killed.