When She Was Gone (8 page)

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Authors: Gwendolen Gross

BOOK: When She Was Gone
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Reeva met with the school social worker once a month or so. Things were under control. They didn't even know at camp, hadn't
needed
to know, which she considered a coup. The neighbors didn't know; her mother-in-law didn't know. Her sister knew, but her sister had breast cancer, which had murdered their mother, so she was deep into her own battle
and didn't help or hurt much for knowing. The Group didn't know. She'd thought about telling them, but it felt like giving away a part of Johnny, her golden boy.

By the time the women rang her doorbell and came in, not waiting for Reeva to open the screen door for them, more comfortable in her house then their own (or at least that was her intention), Reeva had vacuumed, put brownies none of them would more than nibble in the oven (except maybe Christine, who was getting a little rounder than her usual plump size fourteen these days), emptied the dishwasher, set out cups and half-and-half in a pitcher and pink and blue packets in a bowl, and dusted invisible cobwebs from the mantel and the windows. She'd noticed the margins of dust behind the couches and made a note to tell the cleaning lady to be sure to clean there. She was a wonderful Brazilian woman, but she was a bit bossy—easier to instruct by note than in person. When Reeva was working, she had someone come in twice a week, but now once was enough. She never got the panes on the built-ins in the dining room clear enough to suit, no one ever did except Reeva. Charlie called her obsessive-compulsive. It used to be a loving joke.

The women started talking about the time the sewer main burst and the street was closed for a week. The men had parked the cars on Lake and they'd all trudged on the snowy sidewalks holding their noses and cursing the neighbors who shoveled thin pathways instead of investing in snow blowers.

“And Beth's car got sideswiped,” said Christine.

“You know,” said Reeva, handing out mugs, wishing it
wasn't too early to drink wine. “I don't think Beth Boris lived here then.”

The women sat around her new kitchen table, admiring the newly landscaped backyard—the weeping cherry with its tag still festive around the narrow trunk, the spindly, hopeful forsythias—and accepted their mugs. The “I Love Mommy” mug Tina made when she was five went to Helena; Two Mexican daisy mugs from Reeva's honeymoon for Andrea and Mazie, who were about equal in her affections; the slightly-too-heavy mug with the cracked copper glaze that had appeared in their house, too beguiling to toss, too mysterious to like, about a month ago, to Christine. It hadn't just appeared, in fact, this mug: she'd somehow acquired it from Jordan, strange and desirable, living in that little carriage house behind the Hopsmiths' until he decided what he wanted to do with his college degree. It seemed so bizarre from this angle, her body with his.

“Oh no,” said Christine. “Beth did, she's been here longer than any of us.”

Reeva didn't like it when the women tried to tell her neighborhood history. Especially about people like Beth. They'd had a little falling-out, Beth and Reeva, so she would prefer not to hear about her neighbor with the pool except when said pool was clogged with tannic oak leaves, or when her toilets backed up. Not that she was vindictive, not really. She looked at the half-and-half she'd set out for her friends, but didn't pour any. Black coffee gave her a horrible acid stomach, but she couldn't afford to gain right now.

“No,” said Reeva, “I don't think so. Beth moved in after us.” But now she was going to be gracious and let it go. This was the weekly meeting of the Group. They were meant to be working out schedules for playdates, the very lax and unofficial babysitting co-op; they were discussing the teacher assignments for the fall again—something that bored Reeva at this point, having sent three through already.

“I can't believe they haven't replaced Mr. Leonard with a full-time music teacher,” said Helena. Helena played the harp in a professional orchestra. She performed at the Episcopal church and had her own recitals in a series in Upper Saddle River. Reeva always went, though she didn't love harp music. She did enjoy watching her friend transformed from the straggly ectomorphic mother of three, who looked like she fed them all her food and went hungry, into an angel in a halo of hair, a pale, almost colorless blond. She wore soft makeup that made her eyes dramatically cerulean.

“I can't believe they're giving Jordan Miss Elephant. I just finished her with Chuck,” said Christine.

Reeva had started when she said Jordan, though Christine's Jordan was a common topic. She'd been anxious lately. About Jordan, about Charlie, about the mugs and the landscaping. She missed checking the new multiple listings. She shouldn't have retired.

“She's not so bad, Miss Elephant
en,
” said Helena, kindly.

Even if there were teachers she liked more than other teachers, Reeva wasn't the kind of mother to put up a fuss—not anymore, anyway. When Steve had been in first grade, he
had the vindictive Mr. Peterson—the man had simply mistaken Steve's shyness for reticence or rudeness. A few meetings with the principal had straightened that out, at least enough. They were all happy when June came, but at least Mr. Peterson had stopped giving Steve completely inappropriate detentions, and Steve had never lost his place on the football select league for absence after school.

“No,” said Andrea to Mazie, privately. They were a little too quiet, talking together and not for everyone, but Reeva let it go.

Mazie looked up. “This woman I called to sit Janey?” she explained, caught out. “I told her I couldn't pay eighteen an hour for a sitter. Twenty an hour for a cleaner is fair, after all, toilets and everything, but sitters don't have that much to do. Especially at night.”

“Who do you use now?” Mazie turned to Reeva. Reeva sighed. She was tired of this conversation, too. “Cleaner or sitter?”

“Or dentist!” Christine was slightly hysterical. “I'm looking for a new one. Dr. Needleman—I should have known just from the name! He didn't match my color very well with this veneer.” She bared her teeth. Reeva was
this close
with Christine. Ever since Christine had asked her for Linsey Hart's number, and then booked Linsey for the dinner they were both going to at Indian Trails Club for the Cancer Research Society—calling her as soon as she opened the invitation. It was morally reprehensible. Friends don't steal friends' babysitters. Christine had had a live-in for six years and she'd just
let her go, since her boys were eight and ten now, and Christine wasn't
really
working. She was an agent, too. Sold mostly condos, so they'd never really been competition. Christine looked annoying in her little white BMW, too small for anything except work—her enormous boys, and Reeva meant enormous, Christine should've stopped trying to feed them so much once they passed the one-hundred-pound mark; they couldn't fit in the little jump seat at the back of the Beemer.

“Actually, I use Dr. Needleman,” said Reeva. “I gave you his name.”

“I'm happy with Schwartz, in town,” muttered Helena, but with a sweetness that allowed Reeva to forgive her.

“Oh, I heard he had an affair,” said Christine.

“Why would he do that?” Helena looked up from her cup. She glanced at Reeva; they were in collusion for less than a second. “His wife works in the office, doesn't she?”

“Accounting,” said Reeva.

“It just isn't right,” said Christine, tapping her teeth, then opening her mouth for everyone. She looked slightly feral. “Don't you just hate making your kids brush? I know we're supposed to, but don't you all just let them get away without sometimes?” She looked around the table. This is where the women were supposed to say
oh, I know
. This is where they were supposed to open the arms of normalcy to make Christine feel less alone in her oversight, in her negligent parenting.

“God, no,” pronounced Reeva, relishing the
no
.

“That's really not fair to them, is it?” said Helena. Reeva knew she was on her team.

Andrea and Mazie looked nervous, as if they'd just witnessed a hit-and-run. The old lady was down. Should they come to her rescue, or call 911, or just pretend they hadn't seen and let someone else cope with the blood, the broken drugstore sunglasses?

“And considering their diet—my God, no brushing . . .,” said Reeva, going in for the kill. “You wouldn't want them toothless by twenty, now would you?”

Mazie laughed nervously. She looked at the clock—an antique, Charlie's mother's bequeathal. Too tinny, the tick. Christine went orange under her makeup. Reeva never trusted her color, always wondered about tanning booths. The self-tanners were enough, even if they faded fast. No one used tanning booths now—such an indulgence. And skin cancer. She thought of her sister and softened for a second.

“I have to go,” said Mazie. “Sorry. Allergist.”

“Me, too,” said Andrea. She didn't get up, though. She sipped her coffee again. Reeva made delicious coffee.

“I know a dietician for children,” Helena said to Christine, and Reeva adored her.

“Never mind,” said Christine. She was getting up. She hadn't said why she had to leave, which was the Group's convention.

Suddenly all the women were leaving, except Helena, who was clearly going to stay for the deconstruction after
they'd gone. At the door, holding her purse like a weapon, Christine turned to them, Helena and Reeva, the new team.

“Did you hear about Linsey Hart?” she asked. She'd saved something. It was going to be the big coup at the end of the meeting, when everyone was leaving for lack of conversations. She had planned to be important, Reeva could see.

“She was supposed to sit yesterday—I can hardly ever book her, and then she didn't even show up, or call,” Reeva said. She couldn't let that go.

“No, I mean, she's disappeared.”

“What?” Helena leaned in. She did the unthinkable; she wiped a crumb off Christine's shoulder, an act of forgiveness.

“Might have run away. It's only been one day, but I heard from Beth Boris at the Whole Foods that the police came and everything.”

Beth Boris, Reeva thought, I should've known. They had probably
planned
to meet up at the Whole Foods. Then it hit her—
disappeared
. Her chest suffered with the effort of breath. Linsey didn't show here—or anywhere. This was not a girl who would run away, though honestly, Reeva didn't know much about her family, just that she was hard to book as a sitter, just that she had been reliable and then failed to show. This didn't happen to teenage girls in this town—they got in trouble for smoking pot, or they had sex too young, or they crashed Mommy's Prius, but they didn't disappear. All the dangerous possibilities closed in on her as the group digested this idea and fiddled with their key chains. Rape, murder, kidnapping—beautiful Linsey Hart, whom Steve had secretly
loved since he hit puberty. She knew by the way he swiveled in the backseat of the car when they passed her on her bike, her long hair like a flag, waving under her helmet. She wore a helmet, Linsey—she wouldn't get in a car with a strange man. She was going to some good college, wasn't she? She never overcharged for babysitting.

Perhaps her mother wasn't particularly neighborly, but little-girl Linsey had come to the door at Halloween: a cat, a puppy dog, a bird—always an animal. She'd opened her own door for Reeva's kids as she grew older—handing out three mini Snickers, a whole handful of M&M's packets, generous with chocolate and grins.

What do we know of any of our neighbors? Reeva wondered, as she stood in her doorway, seeing off the Group. She imagined Linsey Hart, who was beautiful, who was young, who had parked out in front of Reeva's house sometimes in her boyfriend's little car and kissed and kissed as if there were no windows on Reeva's house. For a second, her heart hurt for Linsey's mother, a tiny, loud woman she didn't particularly like. Divorced. Remarried to a Jewish man, remade herself a bit, as if being Jewish could be acquired. Someone she would never have invited to the Group, but still. She stuffed awful ideas back in their box—the girl was about to leave for college; that time made kids vulnerable and brash, a final senior skip. Probably Linsey had just gone overnight to friends. Her heart closed again. But she forgave Christine, just the tiniest bit. It was big news, after all; she'd be watching for that tiny car in front of her house, she'd think about it
until the girl came home. Or was found. Which had to be soon. She shivered, refusing to allow thoughts of search dogs and bones.

Reeva felt a special connection to Linsey, not only because she was patient when she babysat, not only because she saw Linsey taking Johnny for a nature walk through the woods that afternoon when Linsey was babysitting and Reeva was looking out the window of the carriage house at 6
1
/
2
Sycamore and maybe, just maybe, the young woman had seen her through the glass. Reeva wasn't sure whether she should hire her more or less after that; she went for more. Linsey wasn't the kind of girl to get into trouble, and even if she did know more about Reeva than Reeva might like, she was an excellent babysitter. Responsible. Safe as houses, she thought. Safer, probably, than her own Tina. She wondered about her own girl for a minute, off at high school, more concerned with her friends than anything in her home. Reeva went back inside and shut the door.

26 SYCAMORE STREET

T
he detective had just looked like a policeman to Toby, a policeman with a big head and a sweaty pink nose, and no square plastic hat. He loved the plastic hats; last year he'd been a policeman for Halloween and his brother had been some stupid Mortal Kombat character
again,
even though you were supposed to be someone different every Halloween, and Toby wore a great hat, square and shiny with a thick blue fabric, from a collection of costumes Dad had bought them when they were really little, like four or something.

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