Quiet Dell: A Novel

Home > Other > Quiet Dell: A Novel > Page 42
Quiet Dell: A Novel Page 42

by Jayne Anne Phillips


  “I hadn’t thought, but of course. We’re going together?” She smiled at the thought.

  “No, but on the same train, three compartments, and we shall meet for meals, like acquaintances who have survived the same peril.” He touched her hair that trailed down from under her hat.

  “And take separate cabs on arrival,” Eric said. “William must see to his bank in Park Ridge, but I will go home with you, to help you with the luggage, and the three of us will dine.”

  Emily looked at Eric in his lamb’s-wool fedora and realized that he would take them to a celebratory dinner somewhere near, and go home to Charles O’Boyle.

  “I’ve bought Mason a trunk; he knows to expect it this afternoon, at the hotel.” William looked at his watch. “The jury has been out . . . forty minutes.”

  They stood and began walking back, silent, quickly, until they could see, from the end of the street, the opera house marquee lights glowing pale pink in the snow.

  “William, please sit with us for the verdict. I want you near.” Emily pulled them both to her and linked her arms in theirs. She could not imagine who she was before she stood between them, these tall men in their big coats and snow-covered shoulders. Life was merciless, and then briefly miraculous, for all was so brief. Their own lives, together and apart, would last the blink of an eye.

  “Whatever happens,” William said, “you both must know—no one could have done more, so constantly, than you have done.”

  The statement was oddly mournful. Emily was suddenly afraid. “We must get back. We should not have left. We—”

  “Emily, we are a block away.” Eric was ushering them through groups of spectators that seemed to flow from one end of the street to the other.

  Emily supposed the car to whisk Powers away was waiting as usual at the rear of the opera house. Police drove through the Central Garage, up Fifth Street to the jail, avoiding drifted snow, crowds, and enterprising photographers at the stage door.

  Inside, time crawled. Emily waited, William to her left, Eric to her right, watching Powers, who sat with his back to them and occasionally looked around like a man waiting for a bus. Law paced, or sat by Powers, legs crossed, shaking his foot nervously. He borrowed a newspaper from a reporter in the front row and perused it intently with Powers, as though reviewing the coverage.

  It was nearly five; the audience had begun to dwindle. Rumor had officers bringing in supper and bedding for the jury, and the jury requesting a minister, or summoning the minister who’d counseled Powers after his “confession” in August.

  Another half hour; nearly two hours. Judge Southern came to the bench, seemingly to adjourn for the night. Three loud raps suddenly rang out, almost like a theatrical effect.

  The jury was signaling their entrance from the dressing room. Powers remained expressionless. The jury walked in. They didn’t look at him, and took their seats.

  The court clerk intoned: “Harken to your verdict, gentlemen.”

  The jury foreman read: “We, the jury, find the defendant, Harry F. Powers, alias Cornelius O. Pierson, guilty of first-degree murder as charged in the indictment within.”

  Emily listened for the additional phrase, but the clerk read the verdict again immediately, inserting the indictment number. Cheers rang out from the lobby and the crowd in the street. She felt William take her hand as state troopers rushed the prisoner from both sides of the stage. Powers merely waited as his various chains were fastened. Law stood to make a formal motion for a new trial as the audience raced for the exits and the lobby doors opened wide to applause and shouting. A wild glee seemed to pour down the aisles. Emily looked behind her. Spectators rushed out as others rushed in, finally allowed entrance.

  “We will not embrace,” Emily said, “we will not shake hands.” She felt William pulling her to her feet.

  “No, but we must leave by the back.” Eric led them toward a rear exit as the houselights flashed rapidly. All was confusion until they were through a narrow passage onto a metal fire escape. Others had cleared the snow, and they walked down into an alley.

  “I must file immediately at the Gore.” Eric set off.

  William caught her arm. “Emily, this will take time to be over.” He touched his warm mouth to her forehead. “You must try to push the sadness away, for Mason.”

  For you, she thought, looking up into his warm brown eyes.

  Snow fell in the gathering dark. All was before them, but she pulled him back, under the snow-shrouded fire escape, against the sheltered wall of the opera house. They must end in embraces after all.

  XVI.

  State Prison, Moundsville, March 18—Harry Powers went to the gallows here tonight protesting his innocence. . . . It is reported that [he] received $600 for the story to be “sold to the highest Bidder” after his death. . . . A half-smile played on the lips of the man who lured women to their deaths with love correspondence. . . . A few seconds later, the black death hood was placed over his head.

  Among the men crowded at the foot of the gallows were Sheriff W. B. Grimm, Chief Deputy Simeon C. Bond, Police Chief C. A. Duckworth. . . .

  Powers’ body was not claimed by his widow, and will be buried . . . in the prison Potters Field.

  —The Clarksburg Telegram, March 19, 1932

  March 18, 1932

  Moundsville and Quiet Dell, West Virginia

  An Execution

  Annabel, borne up, sees lantern light amidst the valleys and rumpled mountains. The prison potter’s field is marked, a name and a box for the murderer, but those gathered above Quiet Dell are nameless. Taken, they fell apart like fruit in muck and water, barely hidden or never found. Now they lift and swirl, a cumulus of air and cloud, a charged flow drawn to that place, below. Night furls down over the dirt road and abundant hills, the runnel of creek, the hunched garage.

  The black hood over his head eclipses the fixed blue stare, the cunning shift of gaze. The spring of the trapdoor, the click of the hinge, the taut drop of the rope are like claps of thunder.

  Annabel sees him falling in his own dark hole. He plummets in air that tosses and whirls like water dredged with earth, thick air dense with the soil of the ditch. He drowns, never to stop falling or drowning. No pain, only terror; he remembers this thickened water and reaches, thrashing, lungs bursting, for his father. He is in that moment: his father hesitates, plunges toward him in the lake. He reaches, flailing, and the fire in his hands ignites. Now he burns, long and bright in the black air, for the speed of his descent feeds the flames, lengthens the crackling roar. He cannot die and so he burns.

  He burns through winter’s end and a slow cold spring, through summer and harvest and another winter of ceaseless storm, into spring and summer and a clear October week.

  The blond grandson walks home from the field. Annabel walks with him to the white farmhouse. She sees smoke curl from the upstairs window, a winding tendril like a scrap of slow-burned curtain; the boy, nearly a man, runs up the stairs to his grandfather’s room, into the acrid smell.

  Instantly, the plummeting fire is taken up: the endless fire is nothing, only smoke, curling from a window in Iowa.

  Annabel hears a cold storm of many whispers, a sea of drifting, flurried tears. The snow on the giant trees is falling. Slides and shifts, a pounding fall, a cloud released, white as the long silk scarf she pulls about her.

  He brought them here, all of them, even those who never saw this place, who slipped from him elsewhere and were found or never found; all are gone beyond him and are only aware of some disturbance ended, folding into itself in endless penance.

  The stream meanders, shines with snowmelt; the water, shaken in ripples, warms suddenly, as though some seismic shift deep in the earth moves time forward. The air breathes and the trees stir, tossing their limbs, opening every bud and folded leaf.

  The bells on the wind are calling her, and she goes.

  XVII.

  People come and people go

  The earth goes on and on

/>   the wind blows round, round and round

  it stops, it blows again

  these things make me so tired

  I can’t speak, I can’t see, I can’t hear

  what happened before will happen again

  I forgot it all before

  I will forget it all again

  —“again (after ecclesiastes),” words and music by David Lang

  That which is Below corresponds to that which is Above, and that which is Above corresponds to that which is Below, to accomplish the miracle of the One Thing.

  —Hermes Trismegistus, The Emerald Tablet, translated from the Latin by Dennis W. Hauck

  For love is strong as death . . .

  like a seal upon thine arm . . .

  like the best wine for my beloved

  that goeth down sweetly,

  causing the lips of those that are asleep to speak.

  —“for love is strong,” words and music by David Lang

  October 18, 1933

  Chicago and Park Ridge, Illinois

  Coda: The World Is Air

  Emily meant to stop in the office only briefly, and so had Duty with her on the leash. She paged through her Tribune mail to find a special delivery letter from Marta Baertman, postmistress, Oran, Iowa. It was a clipping from the Sumner paper; the note enclosed said simply, “I thought you would want to know. He was much respected and the funeral well attended.” Emily read the clipping through once, and then again, conscious of the floor beneath her feet; she was so taken aback that the room seemed to swim around her.

  Sumner Gazette, Sumner, Iowa

  12 October 1933

  A Suicide by Using

  . 38 Caliber Rifle

  Fires Shot into Chest

  at Home of Son-in-Law

  in Leroy Township, Friday

  Wilko Drenth, 71, who has made his home with his son-in-law, Evert Schroder in Leroy Township for the past four years, committed suicide Friday afternoon by discharging a .38 caliber rifle bullet through his chest. First intimation that he had taken his own life was gained about 3:15 when Evert Schroder, Jr., who was returning home from a field, noticed smoke coming from one of the upstairs windows. He rushed upstairs and found the body of his grandfather slumped on the floor and clothing surrounding the wound smoldering from being ignited from the shot, which was apparently fired at close range. Coroner F. C. Koch of Waverly was called, but considered there was no need for an inquest, the circumstances being clearly that of suicide. The aged man came in for some notoriety about two years ago when his name was connected with that of Harry Powers of West Virginia, who was accused of numerous killings of wives whose bodies Powers is said to have buried under the floor of his garage. It was quite definitely established at the time that Powers was Mr. Drenth’s son, who he had not seen for a number of years after the boy ran away from home. While Mr. Drenth is said to have brooded somewhat over the waywardness of his son, relatives do not believe that this had any connection with his suicide. He had been enjoying good health and had experienced no financial difficulties. He and his son-in-law had been planning a trip to Michigan with the expectation of leaving Saturday. Drenth had been a widower for five years, living in the vicinity of Oran until he moved to the Schroder home about four years ago. Surviving are his son-in-law and two grandsons. His daughter, Mrs. Evert Schroder, preceded him in death. Funeral services were held Monday afternoon from the Schroder home.

  He’d waited two years since the September she found him, a year and a half since the execution. No one would bother the family now or address the facts. Private misfortune, private grief, and the glorious flat land bathed in Indian summer. News of Wilko’s death was front page in Sumner, the larger town near Oran, but Marta Baertman knew no one would hear of it from Emily.

  She looked up from her desk to see Eric at his, across the room.

  He saw her expression and came over immediately. “Emily? I’m surprised to see you in the office. Aren’t you and William going to Paris tomorrow?”

  “Yes, but I wanted to check the mail. I’ve had a letter from Iowa.” She held it out. “I don’t want it known. Here, pull a chair next to me. There, Duty.”

  He read the clipping through. “I would not have thought—”

  “Eric, we started the clock ticking.”

  He put his hand on her wrist, as though to delay an action already begun. “We do not start clocks, Emily, or stop them.”

  “It’s dated October twelfth, last Thursday, and happened on Friday, the sixth.”

  “The date is not in question,” Eric said, “but why.”

  “We will not know,” Emily said.

  He looked up at her. “I will say what you’re thinking. For a man so concerned with shame—he said that word, in Dutch—to do this. Small towns know such histories for generations.”

  “The town will not blame him, or the family. See her words, there? The whole town, towns around, I shouldn’t wonder, went to the funeral . . . at the home. Respect. They did not believe him guilty of anything. He was visited by misfortune.”

  “He believed himself guilty. That is clear.” Eric paused, as though to be certain. “He said, ‘I knew it then,’ but what did he know?”

  “Wasn’t it ‘God help me, I knew’—or words to that effect?”

  “Yes. As though he knew things he should have told, or could not tell. But the phrase implies not what Wilko did, but what the son did, before Wilko saved him that day in the lake, and afterward. He didn’t send the boy to the Midwest until Harm was eighteen.”

  Emily let the dog jump down to his basket under her desk, and moved her hand across the page. “A suicide cannot repent, in most religions. It’s as though he sacrificed himself, in shame or despair or—”

  “Or he simply couldn’t live with what he knew, and took the burden with him.” Eric folded the clipping and note back into the envelope, and held it out to her. “What will you do with this? You will tell William?”

  “Of course, but not today.” She put the envelope in her purse. “Oh, Eric, it’s quite odd. William and I are meeting at the children’s graves in Park Ridge. The footstones, with their names and dates, have been set. It seemed long enough after, that the graves might be quietly marked.”

  He took her hand. “Have you been there, since the service? No need to answer; I see it in your eyes. Not often, I hope.”

  “No, but I have no church but St. Luke’s graveyard. I take Duty there, near Christmas, in thanks for Mason. And on her birthday.”

  “You mean, Annabel’s birthday. Which is?”

  “It is today.” She was putting on her hat, a straw hat with a brim, and a light sweater, for the warm afternoon was cloudy.

  “Emily, let me take you for a drink, or a coffee. Don’t rush off, into all this.”

  “I must. We have an appointment. William will be waiting.”

  “Then I’ll walk you to the train, and ride out with you, and take the next train back.”

  “Eric, not necessary. But you may walk us to the train, and if we have time, there’s that outdoor place in the Loop, just by the station.” She gave him Duty’s leash, and the dog ran before them.

  • • •

  The station in the Loop was a mere three blocks. They tied the leash on a café chair and Duty claimed his own cushion. Eric insisted on coffees with shots of whiskey. They sat with steaming cups and doll-size glasses.

  “It’s a beautiful day, really, just brisk enough.” Emily looked above them, at the lifted canopy of a fenced tree. “A day with such news must be windblown, to give one hope, to compensate.”

  “Emily, what we cannot know, we must accept. It is the end of the story.” The dog rested his head on the table. “You see? Duty rests. Coffee, Emily, but first the whiskey, together.”

  They touched glasses and drank, one go.

  “It’s good that you’re leaving tomorrow, Emily. The timing couldn’t be better. You remember we have a date at nine tonight; Charles and I will be collecti
ng Duty and his baggage.”

  “Oh yes. The visit to the graves is a brief ceremony, of sorts. It’s very pretty, the graveyard, wooded and small.”

  “If I remember, it’s just across the park from William’s several acres. You’ve never seen his wife, or the house?”

  “Nor do I need to. Catherine is his first obligation. I benefit by the man he became, in loyalty to her.”

  “It’s a bit too Mr. Rochester for comfort.”

  “Not at all, Eric. He says she’s very placid, like a child, doesn’t know him, doesn’t speak, anymore; it’s the course of the disease.”

  “He’s lucky in that, at least.” Eric took her arm. “Don’t listen to me. It’s no one’s luck; it just is. What happened to her could happen to any of us. He’s lucky in you, and Mason, and he knows it. You’ll stop off to visit Mason at school, on the way to New York, and the crossing?”

  “Yes. A train to Mason, then on to New York. William has business in Paris. We’ll take Mason for a month, in the summer. You and Charles must come and stay.”

  “We shall, cousin.” He leaned back in his chair. “As for school, I feel responsible, as the alum who suggested the place. Mason does like it, doesn’t he? He tells me so.”

  “Are you surprised?”

  He clasped his hands. “I try not to have expectations. We can’t imagine what it’s like for him, or where he came from.”

  “I know exactly where he came from.” She saw for a moment, very clearly, the snowy alley behind the Gore. “And you were there, Eric, with us.”

  “That was our passage, one world to another.”

  “Perhaps. I’ve come to believe it is one world, as they say. Mason worked very hard with his tutors. And thank you again for coming with us to the interview, when he applied.” She tapped Eric’s shoe with hers. “And your pistons helped, of course.”

 

‹ Prev