Read More Than You Know Online
Authors: Beth Gutcheon
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Thrillers, #Suspense, #Romance, #Contemporary
particularly aware of the sun and breeze on my shorn head. I was also
absolutely aware of what Conary had said about our house; I’d been
wanting to ask him why he said it ever since. I was trying to think
how to introduce the subject when he saved me the trouble, as if he’d
been reading my mind.
“I spent the night in that house of yours, one time. Or part of
one.”
I turned to him. “How did you . . .”
“After Miss Hamor died, the house stood empty. People began
to say they saw lights moving inside at night. Some little boys said
they’d heard someone walking around and talking inside. I thought it
was funny.”
He drove on a bit, knowing I was waiting. Waiting . . . I was
barely breathing. He seemed to decide that if he was going to tell it
right, he didn’t want to be doing two things at once. He pulled off the
road near the top of Tenney Hill and stopped the engine. The day was
suddenly very bright and quiet. We looked down the meadow to
the bay.
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He sat for a minute remembering. Or deciding whether to trust
me, although I think he had already decided to do that. Finally he said,
“It was in the spring, two years ago. May, but still plenty cold at night,
and this girl and I were looking for someplace we could . . .” He
paused, looking for the right word.
I said, “Yes.”
“We weren’t planning to hurt anything, we just wanted to be
inside somewhere, and I thought, Well, there aren’t a lot of places
people hide keys. I figured that even if the real estate agent took
one away, Miss Hamor probably left another one somewhere
around. An old lady living alone doesn’t want to go out for wood
late at night and find herself locked out. So, we got in. We found
a room up on the second floor at the front of the house that had a
stove. We figured that if people out on the road saw a light or smoke
from the chimney, it would just add to the rumors. It was a dark
night.”
“That’s my room,” I said, not adding that I was afraid to sleep
there anymore. What an odd feeling, to think of him there. I guess he
thought the same thing. I had to prompt him to go on.
“We got a fire going, and the place started to warm up, and one
thing was leading to another, when I heard this noise.”
I was afraid I knew what noise.
“I thought we were caught. I heard this sound like somebody
thumping on the floor with a stick or cane. At first I thought it must be in
the hall, and yet it sounded closer. As if it was in the room. Then it
stopped. This girl was saying, ‘What’s the matter?’ I thought she must
be deaf. Then there was silence. Then—I swear—I heard the stove door
open and slam closed again. It must have been something metal banging
in the hall, or on the roof, but the sound was weird. You couldn’t tell
where it came from. Well, by this time the girl is just staring at me, like
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she thinks I’ve gone mental, and I’m wondering why the hell she doesn’t
get her shirt on. No matter who’s there, if it’s some caretaker or what,
you don’t want your personal parts hanging out. . . . It seemed like an
hour I sat there waiting.”
It was so real to me, I could barely stand to listen to him.
“Then I realized someone was in the room with us.” His voice
dropped to a whisper as the memory came back to him.
He knew. Finally, someone to believe me.
“Could you see it?”
He shook his head. “I felt it. And then I heard it. It began to
make this noise, like someone crying. Horrible sobbing. The worst
thing was . . . the worst thing was that it wanted something. It was
crying in that angry way a person does when they expect you to drop
everything and make it right . . . But make
what
right? What could
make any difference? It’s
dead.
”
I had felt that exactly. It came around weeping, but then it didn’t
get what it wanted, and found out that you were going to go on liv-
ing . . .
“What happened?”
Long pause. “The door slammed.”
“By itself?”
He shrugged. “And I nearly jumped out of my skin, and the girl
started to yell.”
“Had she seen it?”
He shook his head. “Never saw it, never felt it, never heard a
thing, except the door, and she thought I’d done that somehow, to
scare her.”
I might have laughed at this, except I knew that the only thing
worse than what he’d gone through was discovering you were alone,
even when someone else was beside you.
“Did you ever tell anyone what happened?” I asked him.
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“Are you kidding?”
“Did she?”
He smiled. “I wouldn’t know. We didn’t have a whole lot to say
to each other after that night. She still gives me a pretty wide berth
when we meet.”
9 7
When Sallie Haskell was old, with plenty of time to sort
through the pictures of her life glinting like pieces of beach glass in a jar
of stones, she found she had only two vivid memories from the time
before her brother died.
The first was her mother’s birthday in perhaps ’71 or ’72. It was a
very mild April that year, and Sallie had discovered a meadow full of
snowdrops in drifts across the new grass in a glen beyond the cow pasture.
She was still a very little girl but free to wander where she wanted, and
this was an immense discovery; she had never before been the first in the
family to find these proofs of spring. She knew how her mother longed
and waited for them, impatient at the end of drawn-out winter. She knew
too that everything that happened on her mother’s birthday was important
in some secret way. Claris examined and interpreted the events of her
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birthday like a priestess reading secret runes of a religion with only one
member.
Sallie did not exactly know that her mother didn’t see her, any more
than a fish knows that water is what it swims in. That was simply there.
She was aware, though, of a sense of waiting for the moment she believed
up to then was inevitable, when her mother would turn from Amos to
her, and her face would fill with delight and she would see that she had
a daughter as well as a son. This would take nothing away from Amos.
It would simply be Sallie’s turn; she had reasoned that this must be the
way the world worked.
She began to pick the snowdrops, laying them on the grass in the
shade, and then she found that there were also violets. Her plan grew
more grand, and she left the flowers where they were and ran back to the
house. Her mother was in the parlor at her new loom, making a rag rug
out of scraps of cloth left over from Amos’s and Danial’s winter shirts.
Amos, her adored brother, was down in the yard working on an elver
net. It was warm in the sun. Sallie slipped in the door of the ell and into the
pantry, where she stood on a chair to get a willow basket down from the peg
on which it had hung all winter. Then she hurried out again and ran back to
her flower glen with the basket bumping against her knee.
She picked as fast as she could. The stems of the snowdrops were
tiny, like green threads, and even though it felt as if she’d picked hundreds,
there were still as many as stars sparkling in the new grass, and only a limp-
looking handful in her basket. She pictured herself presenting an armload of
spring to her mother, and the moment Claris would turn to her, and the
light would fill her smiling eyes, and she would say, “Sallie! How beautiful!”
and then it would be Sallie’s turn to matter. She worked and worked.
When she had picked all that she could, and waited as long as she
could wait, she started back to the house with her basket.
As she came into the dooryard, Amos came whistling around the
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corner. “What have you got there, Little Bit?” he asked her. She looked
to him hardly bigger than the basket she was carrying.
She showed him her cargo.
“Little Bit! Look at that! Where did you find them?”
She pointed.
“Look how many you’ve got!”
“They’re for Mother.”
“Of course they are! Come on, come up to the larder. Let’s put
them in water.”
Water. She hadn’t thought of that. Maybe that was why the green
threads were going all rubbery. She went up the stairs behind Amos and
her basket and stood on a chair by the sink while he pumped water into
a pretty goblet with a fragile stem. Then he held the glass for her as she
carefully lifted her limp treasures into it, stem by stem.
She was almost finished when the door to the larder swung open
and there stood their mother. A shaft of afternoon sun fell across the
room from the open door.
Sallie turned to her joyfully. This was the moment.
“Look!” Sallie cried.
“Look what Sallie brought you, Mother!”
“Happy birthday!” Sallie waited for the eyes, aglow with pleasure,
to turn to her.
“Oh, how beautiful!” said Claris, crossing the dark little room to
take the glass full of snowdrops. “Where did you find them?”
Amos was smiling broadly at his sister, happy for her triumph.
Claris had carried the flowers to the window to examine them.
“There are violets too! Snowdrops and violets! What a wonderful
birthday present!”
Just then Danial came in, and Claris turned to him, holding the
glass out. “Look—look what Amos brought me for my birthday!”
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Bythetimewegotdowntothewharf,thewindwasfilling
from the south. Conary’s boat was a beautiful little sailing dinghy that
had been so lovingly sanded and varnished for so many springs that
the deck and gunwales felt like velvet and glowed as if the wood were
still alive.
“My dad bought her for me from some fool who’d let her swamp
and spend a couple of weeks underwater,” said Conary. “She was quite
a mess, but I’ve done some work on her since. He bought her the year
my mother died.”
“When was that?”
“When I was seven.”
The boat’s name was
Frolic.
He kept it in town because there
wasn’t any deep anchorage at Sand Point, where they lived. The shore
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turned into mudflats for half of every tide. We rowed out and loaded
the gear we’d brought onto her and got ourselves aboard.
“All we got to do is hoist sail and cast off,” he said. “You want
to hoist, or steer?”
I took the tiller and he raised the jib; it flapped like a frustrated
gull as I held us into the wind while Connie hoisted the mainsail. He
moved smoothly and swiftly, winching up the sail, cleating the hal-
yard, and then, with one long-armed motion, he unhitched us and
threw the buoy overboard.
“We’re a sailboat,” he said, as I pulled the tiller over to get some
way on.
“Oh gawd no, fill the sails to northward first . . .”
“Why?”
“For good luck. Jeez, you straphangers.”
“If I come about now, I’ll ram the
Molly II.
”
“That’d be all right. George Black puts her on the rocks so often
she’s practically amphibian.”
“I’d rather not. Ready about.” I brought the boat around just
under the fishing boat’s bow, and Conary trimmed the jib. He watched
me and smiled. He didn’t say anything, and that felt good. I liked it
that he assumed I could do what I said I could.
Frolic
’s mainsail was gaff-rigged, so she looked like a tiny pirate
sloop scudding out to sea. A lobster boat we passed gave us a toot
and a wave. As we approached the mouth of the harbor, I expected
Conary to take the tiller, but instead, he handed me a chart. The mouth
was narrow and had a spit of rocks jutting into it from each shore like
pincers waiting to crush a little wooden hull (or a big one). There was
a safe channel, but sailing it was like threading a needle. A drop in
wind or a fighting tide could put you right up on Captain Herrick’s
lawn, and it had happened to plenty. (Before this coast was charted
and marked, so many ships had come to grief trying to enter the elu-
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sive safety of the cove, lying in beyond those jaws, that early maps
left the bay a blank. Just sail past Beal Island and give the whole place
a miss, was the common wisdom. It was a bad-luck stretch of coast;
leave it to the demons.)
“What’s our tide?” I asked. I was looking at the depths noted
on the chart for the channel at lowest tide.
“Middle, ebbing.”
“Good.” That meant the flow would carry me, not fight me.
“How much do we draw?”
“Three and a half.” Feet.
“Could I cut this nun?” There was a red channel marker showing
the outer tip of the rock ledge.
“Could. Won’t need to.”
He lay back against the bulwark, apparently unconcerned that I
might in the next five minutes reduce his boat to splinters.