Read More Than You Know Online
Authors: Beth Gutcheon
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Thrillers, #Suspense, #Romance, #Contemporary
like finally shining a flashlight into all the corners of a blackened room.
Curiosity is an underrated passion, in my view. Even if I never knew
the truth about the Haskells any more than anyone else, it was a relief
to finally learn what could be known.
Paul LeBlond emerged as charming, shallow, and weak. That
was clear, and so was the fact that he’d left the island the afternoon
before the murder; one of the Duffys had helped with his trunk and
seen him off on the packet boat. His leaving may have provoked a
crisis in the Haskell house, but it didn’t seem to the men who’d known
him best to have been any crisis to him. He was a rolling stone, a
traveler; he had a useful trade and thought he’d try his luck in San
Francisco. So much for Phin Jellison. I might have felt sorry for Sallie,
if I didn’t have reason to believe she was doing a bang-up job of
feeling sorry for herself.
The prosecution established that Sallie’s passion for Paul was
painfully real, at least. Her childhood friends, the Hortons, Bowdoin
Leach, were also made to describe the anger she’d often expressed at
her parents. They took care to point out that Sallie was if anything
more bitter toward her mother than her father. But then, her friends
didn’t want her to hang.
The friends agreed under oath that Sallie had a wild temper, but
only a waitress at the boardinghouse where she cooked would give
examples. She claimed she’d seen Sallie nearly kill a man with a
blackpan when he wouldn’t stop flirting. She had a good time with
the reporters, the waitress, but was never called as a witness. She was
possibly not the most reliable soul in town.
Sallie never testified at either trial; reporters had to confine them-
selves to describing her clothes and demeanor. There were drawings
of her being led in and out of the courthouse surrounded by sheriff’s
men, more to protect her it seemed than to prevent her escape. A very
2 0 3
B E T H
G U T C H E O N
fat man traveled all the way from Ohio to propose marriage to her,
and give interviews. She got pounds of mail, more proposals, expres-
sions of support, many screeds full of hatred. Her guards at the jail
were the sources for this; Sallie never talked to reporters.
Nor did Mercy or Claris. Mercy was a favorite with the reporters
even so. She was young and almost pretty, with smooth brown hair
and clear skin and the teasing mystery of her pregnancy. Reporters
pointed out that there were very many unwed mothers in island com-
munities, owing to the infrequent visits of justices or clergy, and it
was common for island people to take their own view of their domestic
arrangements. One reporter cited a diary of Rev. Jonathan Friend of
Dundee, who recorded the many cases he found in island households
of children whose fathers were also their uncles, or their grandfathers.
Reporters thought Mercy betrayed an odd sort of sympathy for Danial
Haskell when she was forced to speak of him. She was self-possessed
and not petite. She could well have taken an ax to her host if his
attentions had been unbearable, but if she had, they seemed to hope
she got away with it.
Claris Osgood Haskell was hardest for reporters to read, and to
like, I gathered. Unlike Sallie and Mercy, she didn’t seem to grant that
they had a job to do. She behaved as if they had no right to exist and,
therefore, didn’t. Her testimony was terse and given grudgingly, as if
the murder and its consequence had happened principally to her, not
first to Danial and now to Sallie. Off the record people began to won-
der why Sallie had not killed the mother instead of the father.
Through two long trials, the three women never varied their
story. None of them had done it. None of them had seen it. None of
them had anything more to say.
When I was done with the papers, I asked if there was a copy
of Reverend Friend’s diary on the shelves. There was, a handsomely
bound book published by the Unionville Historical Society. It was
2 0 4
M O R E
T H A N
Y O U
K N O W
almost time to collect Fern at the hospital, but fortunately I knew what
month and year I was looking for, and I found this:
Date: Sept. 22, 1874.
After ten days in the water the body of my nephew Amos Haskell
came ashore on the Neck yesterday morning. Fortunately Claris
stayed on with us after the funeral and is still here on the main.
She asked to have him buried in a place dear to him, where she
says he and our William were used to play. This we have done
this afternoon, with only Claris, Mary and Leander attending.
R.I.P. I hope it has been a comfort to her. I wonder how she will
break this news to the boy’s father.
I wondered too. I copied it out to show Conary, whom I met
every afternoon at the burial ground. Often we stayed there, kissing
and talking and growing closer and closer, but sometimes we grew
bold and drove here and there in the countryside. I never cared where
I was when I was with him. Edith noticed none of this. She was
shaken, and I almost felt sorry for her, up here alone, far from her
mother and her snippy friends.
This was the sunniest time of my summer, and maybe of my
whole life. I thought of Mercy, with her baby that was nobody else’s
business, and felt that Boston and its scolding strictures were very far
away. In Boston there were rules to shield girls who were being fooled
or making fools of themselves. Here there was life, shimmering and
tremendous, and, more important, here for me and Conary was true
union, which has its own rules. There was a wild field strewn with
boulders where Conary and I first made married love to each other.
2 0 5
B E T H
G U T C H E O N
There was a freshwater pond back in the woods where we jumped
naked from a bold granite ledge into warm peat-stained water and
swam, laughing at how yellow our bodies looked under the water.
“This is my private bath,” said Conary. He brought a bar of soap and
we took turns washing each other’s hair.
We stopped fearing or even thinking about our parents’ disap-
proval; together we felt immune, invincible, beloved of God. How
could there be anything wrong with the expansive joy we felt together,
our faith in the future, the communion we felt with the town, the
countryside, the planets in their orbits? How could this be anything
but a blessed thing in the universe?
Not that being recklessly happy had rendered Conary docile,
mind you. In town I was hearing rumors about him; I heard he was
hanging around with the migrant berry rakers in the evenings, drinking
and carrying on. One night he came to my house after midnight and
threw blueberries at my window. They made purple splat marks all
over the pane, and I wanted to scold him, but I couldn’t stop laughing.
I put my head out, listening for Edith, and saw him standing below
me. I’d been about to tell him to shush himself, but he looked so
handsome standing there, all I could do was put a finger to my lips
and try not to laugh out loud.
“Come down,” he said in a stage whisper. I was sure we were
about to be caught, but he was obviously in a wild mood.
“I can’t—keep your voice down.”
“I can’t—I’m in love. Come down.”
I hesitated, wondering if there were some way out of the house
that didn’t take me past Edith’s door.
Connie whispered, “Jump—I’ll catch you.” I pulled my head in
and turned to see if Stephen was awake. He was, but I put my finger
to my lips, and he nodded. I crept to the bedroom door to see if the
house was quiet; maybe I could risk going down the stairs. Instead, I
2 0 6
M O R E
T H A N
Y O U
K N O W
saw a thin line of light beneath Edith’s door; she was still awake. I
hurried back to the window.
“Go away, Connie—she’s awake. We’ll be caught.”
“I want to marry you,” he said in this whisper the whole neigh-
borhood could have heard. What had he been doing all evening? It
looked as if his hair was wet, and I was fairly sure he’d been drinking.
There was a lot more moon than the first night, and I could see pretty
well, but the light seemed really to be coming from Connie’s face
looking up at me.
“Will you?” he asked. I was gazing at him, dumb as an oyster;
I’d forgotten I hadn’t answered. “Will you?”
“Connie, go away, I’ll see you tomorrow. We’ll be caught.”
Of course it didn’t matter what I said. He already knew the
answer.
“Tomorrow,” he said.
I nodded, grinning like a fool.
“Try to be early.” Finally he turned to go. Just before he dis-
appeared into the darkness, I saw that he must have hurt his foot; he
was limping. Minutes later, far up the road, I could hear his truck
start up.
The next day in the library two girls were talking in the stacks
where the magazines were; I heard Connie’s name. I couldn’t hear
what it was about, though it was clear that someone’s feelings had
been hurt.
“I’m sick of it,” said the one who was upset. She was quite
pretty, but with teeth that made her look like a horse. “I’m sick of the
way he treats people.”
“It’ll pass,” said the other one. “He has reasons.” I was dying
to know what had happened. They stopped talking as they took their
2 0 7
B E T H
G U T C H E O N
books to the front desk, and while Mrs. Allen stamped them, I got a
look at their faces. I didn’t know their names, but I knew them; they
both were working at the drugstore that summer.
“I’m tired of him being such a bastard,” said the one with the
teeth, still fuming, as they reached the door.
Her friend sighed. “So is he,” she said. They went out.
I met Connie at the burial ground at four thirty that day. He was
as elated as he’d been the night before, although he had dark circles
under his eyes.
“Do you remember saying you would marry me?” he asked
when we stopped kissing.
“I did not say that. Where had you been? You hurt your foot.”
“It was nothing. I had supper with the Indians, and later we went
swimming at Friend’s Pond.”
“And that made you realize right then that you had to marry
me?”
“Yes. It was the moon. The water was so warm, and there was
a silver ribbon across it that led right to the moon. I wanted you to
see it.”
I understood. I wanted him to see everything beautiful I saw. I
wanted him right beside me, to share everything good.
He began to sing. “There’s a wee baby moon, sailing up in the
sky, with his little silvery toes in the air. . . . And he’s all by himself
in the great big sky, but the wee baby moon doesn’t care.”
“What is that?” I was delighted. His voice was sweet, like every-
thing about him.
“That’s what my mother used to sing. Whenever there was a
new moon.”
“Sing it again.” Every time I learned something new about him
2 0 8
M O R E
T H A N
Y O U
K N O W
I felt as if I had captured another nugget of the only story I wanted
to be told. He sang, unself-consciously. We kissed. It was amazing,
just astonishing, to be so completely happy.
Fortunately we were well back in the grove, hidden by standing
stones and a large maple tree; we had a chance to jump apart and
straighten ourselves when we heard a voice demand, “Who’s in here?”
Standing at the open side of the clearing was an odd apparition.
It was dressed entirely in men’s clothing: baggy corduroy pants, a
man’s shirt under a baggy V-necked cardigan, even a beaten-up fedora
with no hatband. But the gray hair was long and wrapped into a soft
knot behind the head, and the voice was a woman’s.
“Miss Leaf! It’s me, it’s Conary Crocker.”
She peered at us across the grove. “Who’s that?” she asked
again. She was annoyed about something, and her eyesight could not
have been good.
“Conary Crocker, Miss Leaf,” he said, taking my hand and lead-
ing me toward her. He stopped when we stood in bright sunlight before
her, and added, “Tom Crocker’s boy.”
She peered at him. Her eyes were dim, but her expression was
keen.
“Oh!” she said. “You’re Tom Crocker’s boy!” She still seemed
annoyed. She looked at me. “Who’s this?”
“This is Hannah Gray.”
“Never heard of her.”
“You knew her mother . . .”
“Who?”
“Sara Grindle.”
Miss Leaf examined me carefully now, with the same intense
expression.
“Oh, you’re Frances Friend’s granddaughter. Your mother used
to come to my art class. Married that man from Boston, didn’t she?”
2 0 9
B E T H
G U T C H E O N
“Yes,” I said.
“I knew it,” she said, as if I’d been trying to trick her into
believing otherwise. “Are you the ones been stealing my flowers?”
I looked at Conary for guidance.
“Miss Leaf has the beautiful garden just below here. It’s the