by Anna Quinn
“[Quinn] made me care about Nora and identify with her. That’s a very wonderful and difficult accomplishment.”
—DOROTHY ALLISON, New York Times bestselling author
“A powerful, heart-wrenching psychological tale… The Night Child’s gentle dealings with heavy subjects highlight the fragility of the human mind.”
—Foreword Reviews
“The Night Child is a remarkable, gutsy, beautifully written journey through darkness and into light, frightening and thrilling, a freight train of a read!”
—Bill Ransom, author of Burn
“A wondrous journey into the heart of survival, and our power to save our own lives…This is a remarkable book.”
—Rene Denfeld, author of The Child Finder
“The galvanizing story of how the world ends and how it begins again: child by child.”
—Rikki Ducornet, author of Brightfellow
“Quinn’s debut novel is stunning in its profound emotional authenticity and the luminosity of the prose…Nora’s quest for truth is, ultimately, transformative.”
—Sue William Silverman, award-winning author of Because I Remember Terror, Father, I Remember You
“Shows us that on the other side of harrowing there is healing. Anna Quinn writes for those who have been silenced and gives them a voice in Nora.”
—Erica Bauermeister,
bestselling author of The School of Essential Ingredients
“A flat-out page-turner that will have readers riveted.”
—Adrianne Harun, author of A Man Came out of a Door in the Mountain
“Anna Quinn has created a story that reads like a thriller, one with the beating heart of a vulnerable child, and with the urgency of a woman unlocking her own psychic drama.”
—Sonya Lea, author of Wondering Who You Are
“An incredible book…Beautifully, artfully, and poetically carries each of us into the profound layered mysteries of our own minds and hearts.”
—Susan Wooldridge, author of Poemcrazy: Freeing Your Life with Words
“This book captivated me…Tremendous empathy,
propulsive storytelling, and great reverence for the
complexity of healing.”
—Melissa Febos, author of Whip Smart
The
Night
Child
A Novel
Anna Quinn
Copyright © 2018 by Anna Quinn
E-book published in 2018 by Blackstone Publishing
Cover design by Kathryn Galloway English
All rights reserved. This book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the publisher except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
Trade e-book ISBN 978-1-5384-3433-8
Library e-book ISBN 978-1-5384-3432-1
FICTION / PSYCHOLOGICAL
CIP data for this book is available from the Library of Congress
Blackstone Publishing
31 Mistletoe Rd.
Ashland, OR 97520
www.BlackstonePublishing.com
For all the children waiting for us to save them.
The
Night
Child
CHAPTER ONE
November 27, 1996
Nora glances at the clock above the classroom door. Thirteen minutes until she will retreat with her husband and daughter to the Washington Coast. Every Thanksgiving since she and Paul have been married, fifteen years now, they’ve rented a room at the Kalaloch Lodge, a 1930s inn standing on a bluff above the rocky shore. Though it’s only a few hours from Seattle, it feels as if they’re visiting a distant relative, and it’s better than sitting together, alone in the city.
“This book has no plot, no conflict,” mumbles Jason, a sixteen-year-old underachiever who surprised everyone, including himself, when he passed the AP English test and secured a place in Nora’s class. Now it’s her job to get him into an Ivy League school—God, the way his mother hovers and pushes!
“You’re an idiot,” Elizabeth says to him. Gorgeous, brilliant Elizabeth, the girl who does everything possible to disturb. The girl who smears black around her eyes, dyes her hair an unnatural obsidian, and cuts it into angry asymmetrical lengths that hang over half her face.
They are discussing Woolf’s To the Lighthouse, and they are distracted—impatient for the weeklong break. “What do the rest of you think?” Nora asks in an unusually quiet voice, walking between the rows of desks. She knows she should say more—she loves this book. She wants to discuss daring writers—how they sometimes veer off traditional plot trajectories, that not every story has a beginning, middle, and end, and yes, Jason, there is conflict! Look at the power the father exerts over the son, the need of the mother to keep her son a child forever, how badly Lily wants to paint. There’s so much Nora wants to say, so much she wants to ask them, but a headache is growing from the base of her skull, like someone piling stones in her mind, flattening her thoughts, weighing her down.
“Plot means action,” Jason says.
“God, the action’s in their heads, you cretin,” Elizabeth says, drawing skulls on the cover of her notebook and darkening the eye sockets, her fingers thin as pencils, her nails bitten to the quick, the stubs of them painted pitch black.
“No wonder she killed herself,” Jason says with a smirk.
Darkness falls across Elizabeth’s face then, but before Nora can say anything, the bell rings, the bodies bolt out the door, and Elizabeth is gone.
Nora walks slowly to her desk and collapses into her chair. She looks at the empty desks. “I don’t know any of you,” she says, wearily. She used to be energized by teaching, awakened and alive, used to go home and say, “How did I get so lucky, that this is what I get to do?” She used to allow students to write what they wanted, what they needed to, recommended books to them, offered options until their faces opened and their defenses dropped. But now, so many kids crammed in a small space, so many government requirements and ulterior motives—she has grown depleted and a bit hopeless.
It happens then.
A subtle movement of air behind her. More than a quiver of wind, more like someone exhaling. She turns around quickly. No one. But again, in front of her, another whisper. Her skin tightens and a chill shoots through her. She turns around. No one. Another movement. “What is it?” she says, aloud.
Oh, God. Panic tightens her chest and chokes her breathing. In front of her, a girl’s face, a wild numinous face with startling blue eyes, a face floating on top of shapeless drapes of purples and blues where arms and legs should have been. Their eyes meet and terror rushes through Nora’s body—the kind of raw terror you feel when there’s no way out, when every cell in your body, your entire body, is on fire—when you think you might die.
A moment later, the face is gone.
Nora sits for a few moments, heart beating fast, still in its grip. What the hell was that? Did some little asshole put something in my coffee? Am I so tired I’m hallucinating? Shit.
She takes deep breaths, rubs her eyes hard with the heels of her hands, and stares at the place where the face had floated moments ago. Nothing. Nothing is there any longer. The face has gone. Okay then. You are fine now. You are fine. You just need rest, that’s all. Just some rest.
A man’s voice behind her says, “Ready for the break?”
She turns around, blood still pounding in her ears. “John,” she says, her voice a whisper. John in his slouchy tweed blazer, his hands plunged into his jean pockets as if he were just a teacher killing time between classes, not the principa
l of Lincoln High. The strength and warmth of him as he leans against the doorframe. The broad set of his shoulders, the ease of his grin, touch her and, in this moment, calm her racing heart.
“You okay?” he asks, closing the door and walking into the room.
She blinks fast, tries to blink away the blue eyes still bright at the edge of her mind. For a moment she considers telling him, telling him what happened—they’ve been friends for so long. She considers telling him, but her mouth doesn’t feel right, doesn’t feel like it can move enough to describe what she saw, but she tries to speak anyway, though only two words, “I’m fine,” come out and the words seem muffled, seem far away, not her voice at all, and she doesn’t attempt to say more. She stands then, even though her legs tremble and for a second she holds onto the desk and John reaches for her with both hands, clutches her arms, asks her again if she’s okay and she says again that she’s fine, just tired, and she smiles a little to reassure him. He drops his hands when she reaches for her coat on the back of the chair. She pulls her coat on, buttons it slowly, watches her fingers push each black button into its hole, aware her fingers don’t feel like they belong to her at all. And now, his hand touching her arm again.
“Nora,” he says. “What is it?”
She wants to say something but she can’t, and she plucks up her book bag and rushes out of the classroom and down the orange-tiled hallway and out the front door. The cold November air like a slap. She stops. Draws in the cold air deep, and it’s the cold air, the startling sharpness of it, the white puffs from her mouth, that begin to anchor her to the present. Thank God. She doesn’t want to have to explain to Paul what happened—he would only worry, might use it as a reason to stay home rather than travel. He is not one to relax all day long, let alone an entire week.
“Nora! Nora! Over here!” Paul shouts from the rolled-down window of his black Saab.
She walks, speeds up her pace, wants to appear normal, speeds toward him, speeds toward the concrete noun of him, so real and specific in his black car, the car reorienting her even more, and the shock of what happened has almost completely subsided now, though she can still feel the residual fear of it, a light dusting of it throughout her entire body.
“Just your imagination,” she whispers, her mouth working better now, and by the time she opens the car door and slides in, she feels almost completely normal.
“You okay?” Paul starts the engine. It’s started to drizzle, and he flips on the windshield wipers.
“Yeah.” She drops her book bag on the floor between her legs.
“Hi Mommy!” Fiona shouts from the back seat. “Are you excited to go on our trip?”
Nora takes one more deep breath and turns toward Fiona with a smile. Her daughter’s small freckled face flushed with excitement, her arms wrapped around a stuffed orca. “Absolutely,” Nora says, clicking her seatbelt. “Absolutely.”
CHAPTER TWO
November 28, 1996
In the hotel, Nora pulls open the heavy curtains and is immediately comforted by the wide expanse of beach, water, and sky. The tide plunges in, silver-colored water flashing whitecaps like a thousand gulls who might at any moment lift up to the sky, light meeting light. Fiona, already on the beach, happy to be alive, laughing and chasing a white feather, her blonde hair flying wild. Paul strides behind her, hands in his pockets. He moves differently here than he does at home. Here, in the beach grasses, he is easier, but at home, when she sits with him at the kitchen table, the purple lupines in a vase between them, his tranquility vanishes behind his preoccupations and she feels an overwhelming urge to knock the vase over.
Lately, the way he is makes her (and Fiona too, Nora can see it on her face) feel unnecessary and alone. Fiona often asks her why Daddy is so busy, but Nora’s explanation is nebulous, and she’ll say, “It’s a big job to sell big buildings.” But he’s acting like someone who’s having an affair.
They’d met when Nora was searching for a small house to buy in West Seattle and Paul was her Realtor. He’d patiently shown her house after house until she’d suddenly changed her mind—realized she wasn’t ready to buy an entire house, and rented a forty-foot houseboat named Mucho Gusto with bamboo floors on Lake Union because it was something she’d always wanted to do—live on the water, live in a floating home. Paul had warned her that houseboats required a lot of upkeep because water is corrosive and accelerates deterioration—she’d be constantly painting and varnishing. She’d moved there anyway, lived contentedly, felt more connected to the world than ever before, until marrying him a year later. They’d moved into a bungalow then, on Capitol Hill, because the constant rolling back and forth of the houseboat made him nauseated.
Paul was five years older than her, steady and ambitious. At the time she liked that—he had a life of his own and didn’t need her for validation or inspiration, but now it seems, he doesn’t need her for anything. Not even sex. Not that their sex life is great, or was ever great—it isn’t. It wasn’t. But still. Red flag waving high in the sky.
She hasn’t told him about the hallucination. She’s convinced herself it was a dream brought on by exhaustion, a freakish moment that’s over now. There’s no sense in telling him about it. She can’t deny though, she is still disturbed by the girl’s face, the blue eyes. Yes, the blue eyes bother her. There was something significant about them, something more than a random fleeting remnant of a nightmare.
She pushes a worn upholstered chair closer to the window, sideways so she can hear the waves and avoid the glare. Sinking into the plump cushions, she leans her head back, closes her eyes, and breathes in rhythm with the ebb and flow of the ocean. Her grandfather told her once, as they sat on the shore of Galway Bay, that on the ebb, the waves gathered up secrets and carried them away to other places, and on the flow, the secrets spilled into new places until they were heard. She’d asked him if he had ever heard any secrets but he’d just put his finger on her lips and said, “Listen.”
In this moment, she is content.
But breathing like this, letting her guard down, is a mistake, for it is only a few minutes later when again she feels rising panic, the same agitation of air she’d felt in the classroom. She opens her eyes. There, less than ten feet away, inches above the bed, the girl’s face forms out of nothingness. Oh, my God, not again. Please, not again. The face, obscure and veiled in blues and violets, hangs there for a few seconds and then, as quickly as before, disappears. And now here is a voice, a perfectly clear child’s voice, a voice that is not in her mind, but above her, saying, “Remember the Valentine’s dress.”
Nora’s heart seizes for a moment, then races and pounds loud, and before she has a chance to calm herself, to even consider what has happened, shoes bang on the stairs and Paul and Fiona burst through the door. Fiona rushes in, flushed and eager to show Nora her treasures. She holds out her yellow pail and tilts it so Nora can look inside.
“See! Aren’t they pretty?”
Her daughter’s voice slips around her like a lullaby, and her heart rate slows. She leans over and peers into the pail. It’s hard to resist reaching in and touching the feathers and sea glass, but her hands are shaking, so she keeps them folded on her lap. “Beautiful honey, just beautiful,” she says.
“I’m going to sort them into sizes and colors,” Fiona says, rushing into the alcove where she will sleep.
“Honey,” Nora calls to her with effort, “close the door behind you please. Mommy wants to talk with Daddy for a moment.”
Fiona pauses in the doorway and looks at Nora nervously. “Mommy—is everything okay?”
“Yes, honey. Everything’s fine,” Nora says lightly, though of course everything is not.
“What’s going on?” Paul says, once Fiona’s door is closed. He sits on the edge of the bed and unties his hiking boots.
“I don’t know,” she whispers, drawing in a deep breath.
�
�What do you mean, you don’t know? What’s up?” He stands, pulls his T-shirt over his head, and walks over to his suitcase. He opens it and grabs a blue wrinkle-free shirt.
“I don’t know. God, I … I … feel like I’m having a nervous breakdown or something.”
He turns to her, buttons his shirt. “C’mon, Nora.” He pulls off his jeans, pulls on his tan khakis, zips the fly. “You’ve just got too much on your plate, that’s all. You never should have taken that department-chair job.”
“Paul—”
He checks his watch. “Reservations are in fifteen minutes. Get dressed up, you’ll feel better. Eat something. Christ, you’re so thin! Probably half your problem.” He pulls on his brown dress socks while he says all this.
She wants him to be different, to be concerned, but she knows he can’t be. He’s in the middle of a huge business deal and the anxiety and the pressure of it (and seductive thrill of it too, he loves this kind of stuff) is off the charts and he can’t let anything distract him. In the beginning of their relationship, his ambitious nature—a promise of a halcyon future, more “Clair de Lune” than “Ride of the Valkyries,” his focus and drive, attracted her, but in this moment, she wants more. Kind words. An embrace. Something. But he has already walked away from her toward the mirror across the room, picked up his comb. The salty air makes his blonde hair unruly, and it’s hard for him to smooth it.
“I saw something, Paul, an apparition or I hallucinated or I’m going crazy or something.” She hears the instability in her voice and knows she is dangerously close to crossing a line. Still, she has told him.
He turns toward her, the comb midair. He holds her gaze longer than he has in a long time. “What the hell are you talking about?”
“I saw something. A face. A girl’s face. Twice.” Nora shivers and crosses her arms tightly across her chest.