Read Into This River I Drown Online
Authors: TJ Klune
I stare at him, seeing my reflection in the black of his eyes.
And yet he loves you….
“I’m okay,” I whisper, though that is so far from the truth it’s extraordinary.
“What did he want?” he asks me. “What did Michael ask of you?”
I kiss him again, needing to feel his strength. I hope he has enough to give for what is to come.
“Benji! What did he want!”
I shudder in his hands. “To let us know we don’t have much time,” I whisper. “I think the end is about to begin.”
part iv: the river
The man past the end of his life stood at the edge of the river.
The River Crosser was long gone, having warned him he would not come back.
The man had said he understood this, and that he couldn’t leave. Not yet.
“You may always be lost, then,” the River Crosser had cautioned before he departed.
Alone, the man stared long at his reflection, which had again appeared in the water.
He saw many things flash by about his own life, both the good and the bad.
He saw that he had not taken his life for granted, and that he had been kind.
But above all else, what he saw the most was love.
And it gave him strength.
So he stood, his shoulders squared, his head held tall.
He breathed in the air around him as twilight began to fall.
And at the sounds from above of great wings taking flight,
he cried out for the river to hear, his voice booming through the darkening night:
“If it takes all I have and if it means I will never be found,
then so be it! For my family, for my
son
, into this river I drown!”
michael’s sign
All
over town, the flyers read:
THE ROSELAND CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
PROUDLY PRESENTS
The
52nd ANNUAL
JUMP INTO SUMMER FESTIVAL
MAY
19, 2012
MUSIC~FOOD~CRAFTS~GAMES
LOCAL BAND THE WAYWARD BOYS AT 6PM!
PREPARE TO JUMP INTO SUMMER!!!
The
morning of the festival dawns cloudy and gray, with a promise of rain later in the afternoon that could put a damper on the festivities. A buzz spreads through town, like it does every festival, but it’s muted compared to years past.
What if it rains?
some in the town are asking.
What are we going to do if it rains?
They try to think back to other festivals, if there was a time when a spring rainstorm had fallen on the day of. No one can seem to remember any rainouts. Mid-May is usually a drier time, full of sunshine and blossoming flowers and bees buzzing lazily.
Of course, weather contingencies have been in place for years, just in case. Mayor Walken goes on the local AM radio station morning show (
Terry In The Mornings!
) to reassure Roselandians that the show will go on regardless. Why, he spoke to Pastor Thomas Landeros of Our Mother of Sorrows just this morning, and the pastor assured him the church would be opened up and the pews cleared out of the way so people could set up their tables for the food and crafts. As planned, the festival will take place at the end of Poplar Street opposite the gas station, in front of said church, as it has for the past twenty years. It will be just like God is there with us, he says in that politician’s voice of his, earnest and soothing. And the Shriner’s Grange is only a short walk down a stone path from the church. Any overflow can be set up in there, and The Wayward Boys will be able to play their brand of bluegrass folksy twang inside as well. It’ll be fine, he says. We’ll pray that the rain stays away, at least until Sunday. If it doesn’t, the emergency plan has always been to gather at the church anyway, as it’s set up on a hill, higher than the rest of the town. Surely safe from any flood waters, should they come.
And
should
they come, he says, Roseland will be ready. Heavy bags filled with sand have already been pulled from the town’s storage in case they’re needed to block the river. He knows, he says with certainty in his voice, that everyone will be willing to lend a hand, should it come down to it. After all, Roseland is the greatest little town in the world, and its people always want to help out their neighbors. It’s times like these that we remember just how wonderful Roseland really is. With that, he signs off and
Terry In The Morning
switches over to sports and weren’t the Trail Blazers just
so
close to getting into the NBA Finals this year? Interim Coach Canales certainly rocked this season
out
!
Abe turns off the tiny radio I’d pulled out from the back office. “The greatest little town in the world?” he says. “Walken sure knows how to spin it, doesn’t he?”
I shrug as I look out the front of the store. The gray clouds are thick, looking as if they’re stacked on top of each other, growing darker as they rise in the sky. The wind is starting to pick up, and an errant festival flyer blows down the center of Poplar Street. Peals of thunder echo down the mountains, but the sound is faint and doesn’t seem to be getting any closer or louder. Not yet. We’ll be closing the store at noon (as is tradition—Big Eddie was a big fan of the festival and often sat on the planning committee) and then heading over to help my mom finish setting up her table and bring in all her pies and cakes. She and the Trio are still up at Big House, churning out last-minute cookies and cupcakes in a furious cloud of flour and panic.
It seems oddly domestic and normal, especially given what we now know about the way the world works. It’s been just under a week since Michael knocked on the door and Griggs stopped by for one of his unannounced-threats-disguised-as-a-concerned-visit. I’ve been watching for Michael’s sign, but nothing out of the ordinary has happened since he disappeared in a burst of feathers and a flash of light. I glossed over Michael’s warning when Cal asked what he told me, only because I think I’m protecting him, at least in the best way I know how. I’m no closer to solving anything, whether it be Big Eddie’s death, what exactly Griggs, Walken, and Traynor are doing (or even who their boss supposedly is), or where they’re doing it.
A few days ago, I left a grumbling Cal at the store with Abe under the pretense of needing to run over to the next town to visit a friend of mine. I’d really headed past mile marker seventy-seven and crossed the bridge further down the highway and then doubled back, returning to the spot where he’d crashed from On High. It hit me that what I’d heard that night at Griggs’s house, through the anger in their words, had an undercurrent to it. Not quite fear, but nervousness, especially Traynor.
This whole thing has bad mojo written all over it. First the guy dying in the river. Then that fucking meteor thing falling right near there. Jesus, Griggs! It’s like the universe is telling you to get the fuck out, and you’re saying we need to
wait
?
I parked and hiked through the woods, making sure to keep an eye out on the time. Cal would be expecting me back shortly. He was pissed I’d left without him, and if I was late, I was sure he’d come looking for me. I still didn’t understand
how
I could block him from seeing the pulse of my thread, but it seemed it was possible. I’d prayed for him to come that night with the Strange Men, and he said my thread had lit up like the sun in the sky. I’d prayed for him
not
to see it, to stay away, when Traynor had come into the station, and he hadn’t seen my thread.
So with simple thoughts such as
stay away, Cal
and
I am okay, Cal
and (ridiculously)
I am invisible
, I returned to where he’d fallen. The blowback was still evident, burnt trees lying on their sides, the crater in the middle of the clearing still blackened.
If you knew what you were looking for, you could see the outline of wings in the crater, only instead of charred earth, they were made up of different types of blue flowers, ones that I had never seen before in all my years growing up in the woods. They stretched out along the crater, their design a bit fuzzy but obvious to me. I stared, dumbfounded, before plucking one, and heard the stem snap with a moist crack. I brought it to my nose, and it smelled of earth.
Stay away, Cal. Stay away.
I left the crater and went up the hill, deeper into the forest, looking for any signs of a structure,
anything
that would potentially show some kind of drug lab operating in the trees around Roseland. The air smelled fresh, not acrid. No trash littered the forest. No conveniently high hippie wandered toward me, telling me he’d just bought the most righteous shit from a sheriff, a mayor, and a scary-looking man who smoked.
Michael. You said you’d give me a sign, so… give me a sign.
The only response was the birds in the trees.
So I left.
Cal noticed nothing out of the ordinary when I returned.
I look at him now and find him watching me, like he’s asked me a question I didn’t hear. “Sorry?” I say with a smile that feels fake. All I can seem to focus on is how much more pale I think he looks. I don’t know if it’s my eyes playing tricks on me, if I’m overreacting, but all I can hear in my head is that he’s
dying
, that staying here is
killing
him, that God thinks this is just some test, some goddamn game. It’s up to
him
, Michael had said. Only God can change his fate.
And you better,
I think as Cal returns the smile, showing teeth.
You just better change his fate or I’ll hunt you down and find you myself. I don’t care if you’re his Father or if you are God. You take him from me and I will do my best to take everything from you.
They seem empty, these thoughts. I’m sure God is used to being threatened.
“What’d you say?” I ask him, trying to keep my voice even.
He walks toward me slowly, as if he’s stalking me. He might very well be doing just that. I want to look away, sure he can see right inside my head and know what I’m thinking, but I don’t. Even if he is becoming more like the rest of us, there is still something unfathomable about his eyes, something not quite human, a certain awareness, almost alien in its intensity. I know if he asks me to tell him everything I am thinking right at this moment, I’ll tell him. I’ll give him all my secrets and ask for nothing in return. I’ll do anything for him because I lo—
Oh.
Oh
shit
.
“You okay?” he asks me as he stands in front of me. I look up at him, and for a moment I allow myself to imagine his wings behind him, blue and beautiful, the feathers like silk, whispering as they rustle against each other. Blue lights shoot everywhere and the feathers (like the one in my desk at home that is
mine
) rise as he stretches his wings. The feathers (like the one in my father’s dead, floating hand, because that one is
his
) rise to block out the overhead lights. But that’s not real, because they aren’t there, they aren’t in front of me. I don’t know if he can even pull out his wings anymore. No further threads have called for him, and where once that might have made him restless, nervous that he hadn’t been called, now he seems almost at peace. There is still strength there, exuding from him, a reservoir I don’t think has even been tapped, but it’s not the same as when he first arrived.
For some reason, he’s happy.
“I’m good,” I manage to say. “You okay?”
He grins. “I’m awesome.”
I should have never taught him that word.
The bell rings overhead.
“Oh, thank God you’re here, Rosie,” Abe drawls. “Gives me someone to talk to so these two can continue to gaze into each other’s eyes.”
Cal and I both flush at the same time, but it doesn’t stop him from leaning down and kissing me sweetly on the lips. I sigh to myself and wonder if it matters anymore, all the things I tend to think are important. Maybe all that matters is right here in front of me. Maybe that’s the thing I should be focused on. All the rest will still be here weeks from now, but Cal might not.
He pulls away and watches me for a moment. Then, much to my dismay, he says with a knowing smile: “You’re looking at me differently.”
Shit.
“I….” Have no idea what to say.
He shakes his head and kisses me again before stepping away.
Rosie is grinning at him like he’s the greatest thing she’s ever seen (to be fair, Rosie’s lived in Roseland all her life, so he just might be). “I am so very glad you decided to come to town,” she tells him without so much as a look at me. I don’t know if she’s saying this on my behalf or for her own nefarious purpose. I almost tell her to back off my angelic boyfriend but I think the reference would be lost on her, so I resign myself to the fact that I’ll be stuck in Cal’s shadow for the rest of the time I know him. This splits my train of thought two ways, the first of which is thinking there’s no place I’d rather be than in his shadow; the second is wondering just how long I will know him.
You can’t take him from me. You just can’t. He’s here for me, not for you. If you really are his Father, then you should love him enough to let him go.
Much like I love my father
too
much to let him go.
Dammit.
“Heard about that storm?” Rosie asks. “Or should I say storms?”
I nod. “Radio.”
“Sounds like a doozy! Haven’t had one of them probably since….” Her voice trails off as she realizes her faux pas.
But it’s not like I can blame her. It’s been almost five years. People are still sad, yes, and everyone knows the hole that Big Eddie left in our lives, but I seem to be the only one still fixated on it, the only one still drowning. I almost allow myself to feel anger about their perceived callousness, how quickly they were able to toss him aside like he was nothing, but that’s not the case.
I’m
the one with the problem.
I’m
the one people are tiptoeing around like I’m made of so much glass that even a whisper could see me break.