“Hey,” said Lewis. “I’ll tell your mom what happened, all right? You go on and watch some TV. You’ve been through enough today.”
* * *
—
His heart was pounding and his palms were slick with sweat. Once Jesse was absorbed in the television, Lewis took the phone from the kitchen wall and walked with the long cord until he was in the bathroom. Evelina had indeed taken Dmitri to the beach—she’d left a note for him, a cryptic one, saying they needed to talk. Still, he hid in the bathroom in case Jesse heard him. He shut the door and dialled the phone quickly, his fingers trembling.
“Need to talk to you,” he said, his hand cupped around the phone.
“Lewis? What’s going on?” the detective said. “Why are you whispering?”
“Can you look at the Gusev file for me,” said Lewis. “Leo’s statement from his arrest.”
“Okay,” said the detective. “What do you want to know?”
“Can you get the file?”
The detective told Lewis to hold on. It seemed like he sat in that small pink bathroom for a very long time. He stared at the tile floor, at Evelina’s hairs curled around the base of the sink. He broke off a piece of toilet paper and fiddled with it. He prayed Evelina wouldn’t come home.
“You there?”
“I’m here,” said Lewis. He could hear the sound of the detective flipping through the pages, then taking a loud sip of coffee. His foot tapped uncontrollably on the bathroom floor.
“Okay,” said the detective. “I’ve got Leo’s statement in front of me. What do you want to know?”
“What parking lot did Leo say he picked his son up from?”
Finally, after what felt like an interminable amount of time, the detective spoke. “Statement says it was the first parking lot.”
“The first one?”
“Yeah.”
“Okay,” said Lewis. “Okay, one more favour. Get Jesse’s statement for me.”
“Got it right here,” said the detective.
“Okay. What parking lot did he say his father picked him up at?”
“All right, hold on,” said the detective, and once more Lewis waited. “It doesn’t say. I mean, we didn’t ask him.”
“Read me his statement.”
“It says, quote, ‘I got scared and opened the door, and her dog jumped out and ran into the woods. She ran after the dog and I never saw her again after that. My father came back and he drove us home.’ End quote.”
Lewis took a deep breath and stood, pacing the small bathroom. He didn’t care anymore whether Evelina came home while he was on the phone. All he cared about was why Leo had said he’d picked up Jesse from the first parking lot, and why Jesse was saying the same thing.
They were lying.
For one thing, the first parking lot had no pay phone.
And he had found Vera’s car at the second parking lot.
“You there?” said the detective.
“Yeah,” said Lewis.
“Well?” said the detective.
Could Jesse and Leo have gotten the parking lots mixed up in their minds? Jesse surely could have. But Leo?
“Thanks, man,” said Lewis. “That’s it. That’s all I need.”
“Uh-huh,” said the detective.
Lewis hurried to the kitchen and found a piece of scrap paper. He drew a big circle. That was the lake. He drew a line to the left—that was the trail leading from the lake to the first parking lot. He drew a line to the right—that was the trail that cut through the campground that led to the second parking lot, the one with the pay phone. He drew little circles to represent the two parking lots.
Jesse had said that Vera found him in the woods and took him to her car to get warmed up, then she drove him to the other parking lot to look for his father, called the police, then the dog jumped out of her car and she went after him into the woods, then his father came back for him and they drove home.
So for that to make sense Vera must have originally parked in the first parking lot, then driven Jesse to the second parking lot, where she had made the call.
Jesse had said he hadn’t moved when Vera had gone after Scout. That he’d waited for his father to pick him up.
But if that were true, his father would have picked him up from the second parking lot.
It was a small inconsistency. Could be an error of memory. Leo had been drinking, after all. And the boy could have gotten confused.
Or they were lying. Both of them. A boy who was covering for his father. A boy who was telling his father’s lie.
* * *
—
He waited for Evelina at the kitchen table. He heard her key in the door, then the sound of her and Dmitri taking off their shoes, thumping them against the side of the house to shake out the sand. Their footfalls as they walked down the hall.
“Hello?” Evelina called out. “You guys home?”
Dmitri reached the kitchen first and ran to Lewis, his arms outstretched. “You’re back!” he cried and crawled into Lewis’s lap. Lewis stroked the boy’s hair, tucked it behind his ears and kissed the top of his head. He wished he could prolong this moment forever—this sweet moment, holding this little boy, his sandy hair—instead of the inevitable future that awaited them. He could still be wrong, couldn’t he? It could all be a misunderstanding.
“Hey,” he said to Evelina. “Hey. I need to talk to you.”
“Okay,” she said. She was wearing a long sweater and shorts, her legs covered in goosebumps. Her feet were tanned, sand between her toes. The window was open and a cool breeze blew into the room. “Why don’t you go watch TV with your brother,” she said to Dmitri and he sprang up, ran into the living room, and was gone.
“You look like you’ve seen a ghost,” she said. He could see a kind of steeliness in her eyes.
“There’s a problem,” he said.
“I know,” she said. “Denny called before we went to the beach. He told me what you did to Jesse—”
“Evelina,” Lewis said. “Evelina, wait—”
“You should have talked to me,” she said. “You shouldn’t have made him go over there—”
“I know, look, you’re right—I—you’re right, Evelina—”
“Denny feels terrible,” said Evelina. “He told me he was so sorry. He told me it was his idea but as far as I’m concerned you’re the one responsible.”
“I know, look, I’m sorry—but this isn’t about that,” he said. He rose to his feet and took her by the shoulders.
“What’s it about then,” she said. He could see that she had already hardened herself against him. “So,” she spat and shrugged his hands off her, “what’s it about then?”
“It’s about Leo and Jesse,” he said.
She reached for the countertop, as if to anchor herself.
“Listen,” he began. “Listen to me. I think they might both be lying—”
“What are you talking about?” she said.
“Vera Gusev’s death,” Lewis said. His hands tingled and went numb. His ears rang. He felt the sweat run down his back. Was he doing the right thing? There was a part of him that wanted to forget it. To move on and forget. But Jesse. He had to do this for Jesse. His face—he couldn’t forget the look on the boy’s face. As if his father were going to hunt him down and shoot him on the spot. He understood why he had felt such a kinship with the boy. They shared a secret. They were boys with a secret. They were boys who had to bear a terrible secret about their fathers, and who were utterly alone. But Jesse wasn’t alone. Jesse had him. And so he had to save the little boy, even at the expense of what he had with Evelina.
“I think Leo lied to us,” he said. “And I think Jesse is covering for him. I need to talk to Leo again.”
“I don’t think that’s a good idea,” said Evelina.
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“Why? I can’t ignore this. If Leo was involved and Jesse is covering for him—well, that’s too much to ask a child to bear. Evelina, as his mother—”
“Lewis,” she said, her voice quiet.
“I need to talk to Leo. Get him to tell us what really happened. Evelina, there’s something he’s not telling us. And it’s killing your son.”
“No, Lewis.” She reached for his hand. “Don’t do this.”
“Why not?”
“Because Leo didn’t kill that woman,” she said and took a breath. “Jesse did.”
VERA
Once in the exosphere she is no longer human. The cylindrical mass that she felt herself to be has dissipated, and she emits nothing but a soft buzzing sound.
What effect did she have on the earth? Her death caused six people great pain—Denny, her mother and father, Jesse, Leo, and Evelina—and she can see the energy from that sorrow rise from the earth like water from a geyser. Smaller, imperceptible streams rise from a number of friends and acquaintances, but they dissipate so quickly that it astonishes her.
She watches herself be born, and then she watches her mother’s birth, and her grandmother’s, all the way back until the woman she is watching is covered in coarse hair, alone under a dark sky.
She can see the blue halo that rings the earth, and she can see the satellites orbiting. Up here, there is nothing for her to use as a visual reference, though she knows she is moving. There isn’t a ripple of anything against her, like her shirt would ripple if she jumped out of a plane. The earth appears to be covered in snow, but it is just the clouds. If she reached out her hand, she could use the handle of the Big Dipper to pull herself higher, higher, even higher.
Did her death matter, in the grand scheme of things? Which actions matter, and which actions don’t? The only thing she knows definitively is that acts of kindness go unnoticed, but acts of cruelty do not.
Knowing what she knows now, she could have been a good mother.
She understands, now, why people have children.
It is because we fail as ourselves, all of us fail. But we have a secret plan, a subconscious desire within us to become something astonishing, like the caterpillar that unwittingly becomes a butterfly. And, so, knowing that we will fail as ourselves, what we do instead is make something astonishing. We make our children in an effort to remake ourselves.
Before she floated all the way up here, Vera watched Jesse, as though he were her son. His mother doesn’t understand how damaged he is, although she is a good woman and Vera has some affection for her. But Vera knows his heart is broken in a way that he will never recover from. When you break a child’s heart, their heart is broken forever.
Remember that, she thinks. Remember that you cannot be a good parent—or even a good person—if you have forgotten what it was to be a child. If you remember, keep remembering. Do what you have to do so that you don’t forget.
She hopes he isn’t as damaged as she thinks he is. Maybe all little boys dream of killing their fathers.
Long ago, her husband gave away their dog. He cried in the living room after Lewis picked up Scout and drove away.
Scout slept with Jesse instead of her husband. Her old wonderful dog slept at the foot of the boy’s single bed so that Jesse had to curl his legs to accommodate him.
Long ago, Jesse cried in the night. She doesn’t think anyone should cry like that.
What ultimately concerns her is time. Time looks like a record—a flat black disc, with the earth in its centre. Not unlike the rings of Saturn. When she wants to, she puts the needle down, and she can see whatever it is she wishes to see. She can watch a trilobite move through the waters of Siberia, over five million years ago, and so she does. He emits a kind of clicking sound from his spine.
But all of that is so many miles below her. Long ago, she left the atmosphere. Long ago, she traversed the solar wind and braved the heat of the sun. Long ago, she passed the planets and all of their moons. The universe expands as she moves through it, expands faster than she is travelling, and so her journey is infinite, and she will never reach its end. She feels as though she is floating on the surface of the ocean, buoyed occasionally by the blip of a galaxy, as if going over a wave.
She has been dead for such a long time. She is dead and gone.
In the end, all that remains is her work. She held a mirror up to the world, and still it did not change.
And what is there to say about death?
It hurts physically. It hurts to drown.
The ice shattered beneath her, like the shards of a mirror, and she plunged into the water, black as ink, cold as the edge of the universe. Her lungs filled. She could feel the water behind her eyes.
It took about four minutes for her body to die. As her consciousness faded, it was not unlike being put under anaesthesia. She had no sense of time passing, and indeed she felt as though she had been dying for thousands of years, enough time to float all the way to the edge of the universe, although her death happened in the time it took for the ice to re-form above her head. Once she was gone, she had no sense of self, no sense of her body, no sensations of any kind. There was only nothingness. It was peaceful. As it is in the deepest of sleeps, devoid of dreams.
Above the frozen lake, the clouds were thick and white as lambswool. Above the clouds, the black sky was lit with stars, the moon visible only to a pilot and his passengers on their westbound flight across the ocean, travelling back in time.
JANUARY 1986
CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN
Jesse
“He told me to stand here.”
“Who did?”
“My dad.”
“Where is your dad now?”
“Dunno.”
“How long have you been out here?”
“Dunno.”
“All alone?”
“Yes.”
The woman had on a huge green parka with a fur-rimmed hood, black corduroy pants, and hiking boots. She wore glasses with thick black circular frames that made her look like an owl, and had impossibly long black hair. She did not look like anyone Jesse knew. She looked like a city person. Someone who would smoke long cigarettes. Maybe a spy.
Her dog—a white and grey dog, a fluffy and wonderful-looking dog—ran through the woods behind her, looking up every once in a while to make sure she was still in sight. He wanted to pet the dog more than anything.
“And you don’t know where your dad is?”
“No, ma’am.”
She put her fingers to her mouth and whistled for her dog, and he ran to her side, nosed her pocket for a treat. She patted his head and clipped on his leash. The woman looked about Jesse’s mother’s age, but seemed more confident, more adventurous. He couldn’t imagine his mother going for a walk in the woods alone, with a big dog, though apparently she used to work on fishing boats.
“I think I better call someone,” the woman said.
“He said he’d be back soon,” said Jesse. “Please don’t make me move.” He tilted his head upward so no tears would run down his face. It was snowing harder, and he opened his mouth and let the flakes land on his tongue.
“A little boy shouldn’t be alone out here. It’s freezing. Why don’t you come back to my car and we’ll get you warmed up. Then we can come up with a plan.”
She spoke in the same tone his mother used when she was frustrated with him. He didn’t understand why the woman wanted him to move. His father would be right back. He had told him to stay here, face this tree, and think about what he had done.
“We were supposed to stay right here, on the trail,” he said to the woman.
“Who was?”
“Me and my brother. We were supposed to stay here.”
“Okay, honey.” Her voice was even more impatient. “Where is your brother?”
“With my da
d.”
“But you don’t know where your dad is?”
“No.” He wanted to tell her that it was only meant to be a joke, a mean joke, sure, but only a joke. He wanted to tell her that he knew he had done a bad thing. That he should never have pretended that Dmitri had fallen through the ice.
Her dog was whining, pulling at the leash, wanting to continue. She hushed her dog, then turned to Jesse. She seemed to be rolling something over in her mind. “There weren’t any cars in the parking lot when I got here, love.”
Jesse shrugged. What could he say to get this woman to leave him alone? He didn’t want to tell the truth—that his father had threatened him with a beating if he moved.
“I need to stay by this tree,” he told the woman.
“You know,” she said, “there’s another parking lot about a half mile from here. I wonder if he’s there.”
“Please,” Jesse started, but the woman had decided that she had solved the mystery.
“That makes sense,” she was saying. “Come on. Let’s get you warm. I don’t think he meant to leave you out in the cold. You must have gotten separated, yes? He’s probably somewhere on the trails looking for you.”
Jesse considered this alternative reality for a moment—one in which his father was calling his name, Dmitri perched on his shoulders. Jesse! Where are you?
“My dad said he’d be back soon,” he told the woman.
“We’ll wait a bit in the car, get you warmed up. Then we’ll try the other parking lot, okay? Let’s. Come on now.”
The woman’s dog was whining more forcefully, and Jesse saw that the woman was getting impatient, both with her dog and with him.
He didn’t want her to be angry. He was so tired of people being angry.
How a Woman Becomes a Lake Page 18