by Jodi Picoult
When a witness recalled seeing a wood chipper near the Housatonic River, police searched the Crafts home. Blood found on the mattress matched Helle’s. A letter addressed to Helle was found near the Housatonic, and divers recovered a chain saw and cutting bar, which still had human hair and tissue in its jaws. Based on this, a more thorough evidence search was begun.
Here’s what they found:
2660 hairs.
One fingernail.
One toenail.
One tooth cap.
Five droplets of blood.
(A fingernail in a U-Haul rented by Crafts chemically matched nail polish in Helle’s bathroom, too, but it was thrown out of court because of the lack of a search warrant.)
From this evidence, in 1989, Crafts was found guilty of his wife’s murder and sentenced to ninety-nine years in prison.
This case made Dr. Henry Lee famous. Leave it to him, a forensic hero, to secure a murder conviction … even without a body.
10
Emma
For just a moment, I am certain that I’m hallucinating. My ex-husband is not standing in my kitchen, is not coming forward to awkwardly kiss my cheek.
“What are you doing here?” I demand.
He looks at Jacob, who is pouring chocolate soy milk into a glass. “For once in my life, I wanted to do the right thing,” Henry says.
I fold my arms. “Don’t flatter yourself, Henry. This has less to do with Jacob than it does with your own guilt.”
“Wow,” he says. “Some things never change.”
“What’s that supposed to mean?”
“No one’s allowed to be a better parent than you are. You have to be the gold standard, and if you’re not, you’ll cut everyone else down to make sure of it.”
“That’s pretty funny, coming from a man who hasn’t seen his son in years.”
“Three years, six months, and four days,” Jacob says. I had forgotten he was still in the room. “We went out to dinner in Boston because you flew in for work. You ate beef tenderloin, and you sent it back because it was too rare at first.”
Henry and I look at each other. “Jacob,” I say, “why don’t you go upstairs and take the first shower?”
“What about breakfast—”
“You can eat it when you come back down.”
Jacob hustles upstairs, leaving me alone with Henry. “You have got to be kidding,” I say, furious. “You think you can just show up here like some white knight and save the day?”
“Considering that I’m the one who cut the check for the lawyer,” Henry says, “I have a right to make sure he’s doing his job.”
That, of course, makes me think of Oliver. And the things we did that were not job-related.
“Look,” Henry says, the bluster falling from him like snow from a tree limb. “I didn’t come here to make things more difficult for you, Emma. I came to help.”
“You don’t just get to be their father, now, because your conscience reared its ugly head. You’re either a father twenty-four/seven or not
at all.”
“Why don’t we ask the kids if they want me to stick around or leave?”
“Oh, right. That’s like dangling a brand-new video game in front
of them. You’re a novelty, Henry.”
He smiles a little. “Can’t remember the last time I’ve been accused of that.”
There is a commotion as Theo clatters down the stairs. “Wow, you are here,” he says. “Weird.”
“It’s because of you,” Henry replies. “After you came all the way to see me, I realized I couldn’t sit at home and pretend this wasn’t happening.”
Theo snorts a laugh. “Why not? I do it all the time.”
“I’m not listening to this,” I say, moving around the kitchen. “We have to be in court by nine-thirty.”
“I’ll come,” Henry said. “For moral support.”
“Thank you so much,” I say drily. “I don’t know how I’d get through the day if you weren’t here. Oh, wait. I’ve gotten through five thousand days without you here.”
Theo skirts between us and opens the refrigerator. He pulls out a carton of grapefruit juice and drinks directly from it. “Gosh. What a happy little family unit we are.” He glances overhead as the water in the pipes stops running. “I call the shower next,” he says, and he heads back upstairs.
I sink down into a chair. “So how does this work? You sit in the courtroom and act concerned while your real family is waiting just outside the escape hatch?”
“That’s not fair, Emma.”
“Nothing’s fair.”
“I’m here for as long as I need to be. Meg understands that I’ve got a responsibility to Jacob.”
“Right. A responsibility. But somehow she’s neglected to invite him to sunny California to meet his stepsisters—”
“Jacob won’t get on a plane, and you know it.”
“So your plan is to just come step into his life and then step out of it again after the trial?”
“I don’t have a plan—”
“What about afterward?”
“That’s why I came.” He takes a step closer. “If … if the worst happens, and Jacob doesn’t come home … well, I know you’ll be there for him to lean on,” Henry says. “But I thought you might need someone to lean on, too.”
There are a hundred comebacks running through my head—most of which ask why I would trust him now when he has a track record of abandoning me. But instead, I shake my head. “Jacob’s coming home,” I say.
“Emma, you have to—”
I hold up the flat of my hand, as if I can stop his words midstream. “Help yourself to breakfast. I need to get dressed.”
I leave him sitting in the kitchen, and I go upstairs to my bedroom. Through the wall I can hear Theo singing in the shower. I sit down on the bed, clasp my hands between my knees.
When the boys were little, we had house rules. I’d write them on the bathroom mirror when they were in the tub so that the next time the room steamed up, they would magically appear: commandments for a toddler and his painfully literal autistic brother, laws that were not to be broken.
1. Clean up your own messes.
2. Tell the truth.
3. Brush your teeth twice a day.
4. Don’t be late for school.
5. Take care of your brother; he’s the only one you’ve got.
One night Jacob had asked me if I had to follow the rules, too, and I said yes. But, he pointed out, you don’t have a brother.
Then I will take care of you, I said.
However, I didn’t.
Oliver will stand up in court today, and maybe the next day and the next, and try to accomplish what I have unsuccessfully tried to do for eighteen years now: make strangers understand what it is like to be my son. Make them feel sympathy for a child who cannot feel it himself.
When Theo’s done in the bathroom, I go in. The air is still thick with heat and steam; the mirror’s fogged. I can’t see the tears on my face, but it’s for the best. Because I may know my son, and I may believe viscerally that he is not a murderer. But the odds of a jury seeing this as clearly as I do are minimal. Because no matter what I tell Henry—or myself, for that matter—I know that Jacob isn’t coming home.
Jacob
Theo is still getting dressed when I knock on his door. “What the fuck, dude?” he says, holding up a towel to his body. I close my eyes until he tells me it’s okay to look, and then I walk into his room.
“I need help with my tie,” I say.
I am very proud of the fact that I got dressed today without any issues. I was a little freaked out by the buttons on the shirt, which felt like hot coals on my chest, but I put on a T-shirt underneath, and now it isn’t quite as painful.
Theo stands in front of me in his jeans and a sweatshirt. I wish I could wear that to the courthouse. He straightens my collar and starts to loop the ends of the tie around and around so that it will be a tie, instead of the
knot I’ve managed to make twice. The tie is like a long, skinny knit scarf; I like it a lot more than the striped thing Oliver made me wear yesterday.
“There you go,” Theo says. Then he hunches his shoulders. “So what do you think about Dad?”
“I don’t think about Dad,” I say.
“I mean about him being here.”
“Oh,” I say. “I guess it’s good.”
(In reality, I don’t think it’s either good or bad. It’s not as if it’s going to make much difference, after all, but it seems like normal people would have a more positive reaction to seeing a close family member, and he did travel 3,000 miles on a plane, so I have to give him credit for that.)
“I thought Mom was going to blow her stack.”
I don’t know what he means by that, but I nod and smile at him. You’d be surprised at how far that response can get you in a conversation where you are completely confused.
“Do you remember him?” Theo asks.
“He called on my birthday, and that was only three and a half months ago—”
“No,” Theo interrupts. “I mean, do you remember him from back then? When he lived with us?”
I do, actually. I remember being in bed between him and my mother, and holding my hand up to his cheek while he slept. It was scratchy with incoming beard, and the texture used to intrigue me, plus I liked the sound it made when he scraped it. I remember his briefcase. He had floppy disks inside in different colors that I liked to sort by spectrum, and paper clips in a small container that I would line up on the floor of his office while he worked. Sometimes, though, when he was doing programming and got stuck or excited, he yelled, and that usually made me yell, and he would call for my mother to take me so that he could get some work done.
“He took me apple picking once,” I say. “He let me ride on his shoulders and showed me how the apple pickers get the apples out of their baskets without bruising them.”
For a while, I kept a list of apple facts as I learned them, because what I remembered about my father was that he at least had a passing interest in pomology, enough of one to take me out to an orchard for the day. I know, for example, that:
1. The world’s top apple producers are China, the United States, Turkey, Poland, and Italy.
2. It takes about thirty-six apples to create a gallon of cider.
3. Red Delicious is the most widely grown variety in the United States.
4. It takes the energy of fifty leaves to produce a single apple.
5. The largest apple ever picked weighed three pounds.
6. Apples float because a quarter of their volume is air.
7. Apple trees are related to roses.
8. Archaeologists have found evidence of apples being eaten as early as 6500 B.C.
“That’s cool,” Theo says. “I don’t remember anything about him at all.”
I know why; it is because Theo was only a few months old when my father left. I don’t remember that day, but I do remember a lot leading up to it. My mother and father often fought right in front of me. I was there, but I wasn’t there—those were the days when I would find myself completely entranced by the static on the television screen or the lever of the toaster. My parents assumed that I was not paying attention, but that isn’t the way it works. I could hear and see and smell and feel everything at once back then, which is why I had to focus so hard to pay attention to only one of the stimuli. I’ve always sort of pictured it like a movie: imagine a camera that can record the entire world at once—every sight, every sound. That’s very impressive, but it isn’t particularly useful if you want to specifically hear a conversation between two people, or see a ball coming toward you while you’re standing at bat. And yet, I couldn’t change the brain I’d been born with, so instead I learned how to narrow the world with makeshift blinders, until all I noticed was what I wanted to notice. That’s autism, for those who’ve never been there themselves.
Anyway, this is also why, even though my parents might have assumed my attention was otherwise occupied, I can remember the fights they had verbatim:
Do you remember me, Emma? I live here, too …
For God’s sake, Henry. Are you really jealous of the time I spend with your own son?
And
I don’t care how we’re going to pay for it. I’m not going to pass up a treatment for Jacob just because—
Because what? Say it … You don’t think I make enough money.
Your words, not mine.
And
I want to come home from my fucking job to my fucking house and not have ten fucking strangers on my living room floor. Is that so much to ask?
Those strangers are the ones who are going to bring Jacob back to us—
Wake up, Emma. He is what he is. There’s not some miracle locked inside him waiting to come out.
And
You’ve worked late every night this week.
Well, what have I got to come home to?
And
What do you mean, you’re pregnant? We said no more. We already have too much on our plate—
I didn’t exactly get pregnant by myself, you know.
You’d know. You’re the one who takes the pills.
You think I tricked you? Jesus, Henry, I’m glad to know you think so highly of me. Just get out. Get out of here.
And one day he did.
Suddenly, my father knocks on Theo’s door and pokes his head into the room. “Boys,” he says. “How, um, how are you doing?”
Neither of us says a word.
“Jacob,” he asks. “Can we talk?”
We sit down in my room, with me on the bed and my father on my desk chair. “Are you … okay with me being here?”
I look around. He isn’t messing anything up on my desk, so I nod.
This makes him feel better, I think, because his shoulders relax. “I owe you an apology,” he says. “I don’t really know how to put this into words.”
“That happens to me,” I tell him.
He smiles a little and shakes his head. Theo looks so much like him. I’ve heard this all my life from my mother, but now I can also see that there’s a lot of my father that reminds me of me. Like the way he ducks his head before he starts a sentence. And how he drums his fingers on his thighs.
“I wanted to apologize to you, Jacob,” he says. “There are some people—
like your mother—who just won’t give up. I’m not one of those people. I’m not saying it’s an excuse, only a fact. I knew enough about myself, even back then, to understand that this wasn’t a situation I could handle.”
“By this,” I say, “you mean me.”
He hesitates, and then he nods. “I don’t know as much about Asperger’s as your mother does,” he says. “But I think maybe we’ve all got something in us that keeps us from connecting to people, even when we want to.”
I like the concept: that Asperger’s is like a flavoring added to a person, and although my concentration is higher than those of others, if tested,
everyone else would have traces of this condition, too.
I make myself look my father in the eye. “Did you know apples can rust?” I say.
“No,” he says, his voice softer. “No, I did not.”
In addition to the list of apple facts, I have kept another list for my father, of questions I might ask if the chance arose:
1. If it hadn’t been for me, would you have stayed?
2. Were you ever sorry you left?
3. Do you think one day we could be friends?
4. If I promised to try harder, would you consider coming back?
It is worthwhile to note that while we were sitting in my room we discussed apples, the medical examiner’s testimony of yesterday, and the article in Wired magazine about whether Asperger’s was on the rise in Silicon Valley due to the preponderance of math-and-science genes in the geographical area. Yet I did not ask him a single one of these questions, which are still on a list in the back of my bot
tommost left desk drawer.
We all ride to the courthouse together in my father’s rental car. It is silver and smells like pine trees. I am sitting in my usual seat in the back behind my father, who is driving. My mother sits next to him, and Theo’s beside me. As we drive I look at the spaces between the power lines on the telephone poles, which narrow at the ends and then widen in the middle, like giant canoes.
We are five minutes from the courthouse when my mother’s cell phone rings. She nearly drops it before she manages to answer the call. “I’m fine,” she says, but her face gets red. “We’ll meet you in the parking lot.”
I suppose I should be nervous, but I’m actually excited. Today is the day that Oliver gets to tell everyone the truth about what I did.
“Now, Jacob,” my mother says. “You remember the rules?”
“Let Oliver do the talking,” I mutter. “Pass him a note if I need a break. I’m not a moron, Mom.”
“That’s a matter of opinion,” Theo says.
She twists around in her seat. Her pupils are large and dark, and a pulse beats in the hollow of her throat. “It’s going to be harder for you today,” she says quietly. “You’re going to hear things said about you that might not make sense. Things that maybe you even think aren’t true. But just remember, Oliver knows what he’s doing.”
“Is Jacob testifying?” my father asks.
My mother turns to him. “What do you think?”