“I’ve heard some of you say it. I’ve heard that question fall from the trembling lips of the elderly as I held their fragile hands. I’ve heard it from the rosebud lips of little children and from the lipsticked mouths of the mothers who only want the best for them. I’ve heard it from parents and teachers who have held Maggie up as an example of righteousness, an example of someone who put the needs of others before her own needs, someone who gave up everything to do what she thought was right.”
Now the pastor adopted a conversational tone. “It sounds good, doesn’t it? Self-sacrifice. Duty before pleasure, others before self. Following the still, small voice instead of the crass and shouting crowd.
“Don’t get me wrong—I believe in those things. But whose version of the story are we listening to?”
Now he let his tone become honeyed and intimate, as if he were gossiping to a circle of friends. “Haven’t you ever been in a situation where one friend tells you something her spouse or another friend did to her, and you come away hopping mad that such a kind and beautiful person could be treated so unfairly? You’re ready to shun the lout who did this to your friend. You’re ready never to talk to him or her again. And your righteous anger lasts…oh, maybe it lasts all the way until you hear the other person’s side of the story, at which time you are equally outraged and convinced.
“Well, whose story are you listening to now? To Maggie’s story or the Lord’s?”
The pastor waited—one beat, two beats, three.
“Those of you who aren’t from our community might well wonder who I’m talking about.” Here, Pastor Price gave a nod to each corner of the church, where the television cameras were barely visible poking out through the acoustic slats, and then to the adjustable boom that was being operated from a control room on the balcony. He raised his eyes to the heavens—there was a camera there too—and said, “But Maggie’s story isn’t so special. We all know people who are put on a pedestal, people who are revered because they were blessed with wealth or athletic ability or good looks or charisma. We all know people like that, people who are considered good and righteous only because of superficial things and without regard to the truth of their characters.
“So what would Maggie Rayburn do?
“Apparently she’d leave her husband and her son. Apparently she’d leave her job without giving her employer so much as a chance to replace her. Apparently she’d take from her workplace things that were not hers to take.”
The pastor’s voice lacked emphasis. He let the facts speak for themselves.
“And the truth is that Maggie Rayburn took it upon herself to tell the judges and the prosecutors they were wrong. And to the juries made up of people just like you, she said, ‘You don’t know your business.’ Why, I bet she’d walk right up to the president if she got a chance and say the same thing. And I don’t mean the president of the Ladies’ Auxiliary. I don’t mean the president of the PTA.”
Pastor Price let this sink in, and then his voice boomed out again. “I am referring to the President of the United States! I have no doubt she’d say the same thing to all of us who are sitting right here today. She’d say we don’t know our own business. But Maggie Rayburn does. There’s a word for this, and the word is ‘hubris.’”
Price knew the word was foreign to many listening ears, but he didn’t define it. He wanted people to ask each other about it at the coffee hour. He wanted them to look it up in their dictionaries and on the Internet. He wanted the conversation to reverberate long after the ringing of the end-of-service bell. And then, if Maggie dared to say anything about any of the other secrets she had stolen, people would remember the word and say to themselves, Hubris! This is exactly what the good pastor was talking about.
“So if you hear any of our lovely elderly people or any of the scions of our town or any of our beautiful little children ask each other, What would Maggie Rayburn do? you are not to sit silently by. You are not to let the question go unanswered, for silence in this case is the worst kind of lie. You are to tell them, Maggie Rayburn would spit in your eye. Maggie Rayburn would open the doors of the prisons and loose the murderers and rapists upon your sons and daughters. Let’s just hope there aren’t any terrorists locked up in there, for no doubt Maggie Rayburn would let them out too.
“You tell them that not because I told you to. You tell them that because it is the truth.”
The sweat was pouring down inside the pastor’s cassock. It was dripping from his neck and burning the skin behind his ears. His hair, which he had grown a little longer on the advice of his stylist and over his wife’s objections, was slick against his collar. He gloried in the animal strength of his body, flesh and blood lit by the spirit, and he thrilled with the truth of how God and man had come together in Jesus Christ. When the choir started up, it was as if the holy waters had broken and an ocean of sound engulfed the room. The new blue satin choir robes shimmered like quicksilver, and when the arc lights went out, their metallic piping caught the light from a thousand candles that had been lit for the Church of the New Incarnation’s television premier.
9.5 Tula
The studio audience was holding its breath while the girlfriend, who had clearly been coached to draw out the delivery of her lines, turned her poker face to the camera before opening her lips to declare, “Yes, Gary, you are the father!”
“Didn’t I say?” Tula sighed. She had known it all along.
After Maggie left, Tula went to the house most Sundays to keep Will company, and now they were sitting on the couch watching TV. “Didn’t I say it when she first came on?”
“You were right.” Will was staring at the screen, but he didn’t seem to be paying attention either to it or to Tula.
The announcer blared, “Next up on our program: an obese teenager confronts the mother she believes is sabotaging her weight loss attempts in order to keep her daughter for herself.”
“It’s cold in here,” said Tula.
“You can borrow one of my mother’s sweaters if you want. I think she keeps them in the chest.”
Without Maggie, the house seemed dirty and defeated. The kitchen counter was littered with empty soda cans and fast-food wrappers, and someone had left a pile of laundry on the floor near the washing machine as if it would magically wash itself. Tula’s instinct was to gather everything up and either put it in the trash or wash it, but she stopped herself and made her way down the narrow hallway toward the bedrooms.
Only in Will’s room was everything tidy and clean. A few of his Transformers robots remained on the bureau top, but they were lined up against the mirror instead of positioned for an attack. It seemed that things were missing from the walls too, even though she couldn’t remember how the room had looked before. The closet was similarly spartan: shirts arranged by color; baseball uniform neatly folded; mitt freshly oiled, a new ball in its jaws.
Lyle’s room was as chaotic as Will’s was neat. Clothing had been flung here and there, and most of the bed coverings were on the floor. The blinds at the windows were cocked, and dead flies littered the windowsills. The drawers of a small chest were open to varying degrees, and a tipped-over chair hadn’t been righted. Tula opened the drawers of the larger chest one by one, starting at the top: socks and underwear, nightgowns, T-shirts, shorts. The bottom drawer stuck on its tracks, so she had to kneel to open it. But when she reached beneath a blue cardigan, her hand hit a stack of magazines. She pulled one out at random and opened it, but instead of finding an article revealing the identity of the sexiest man alive, she found a government document with TOP SECRET written in red letters across the top. Folded inside it was a letter from Dolly Jackson introducing herself and asking Maggie if she had ever come across a report linking munitions to birth defects. Stapled to the letter was a photograph of a baby with a huge purple tumor growing from its mouth.
Tula sat on the floor and took out the magazines one by one. Then she looked through the house until she found a large cardboard box. As she packed
the documents into it, she was thinking how the secret cache explained the recent changes in Maggie. She was also thinking how it would serve Mrs. Winslow right if she finished what Maggie had started and exposed whatever the great men of Red Bud were trying to keep quiet. It would serve Sammi Green right too—not that Sammi had ever done anything bad to Tula. In fact, it would teach a lesson to the entire town. You couldn’t clean house without getting your hands dirty. You couldn’t make an omelet without breaking some eggs. Purity, she thought, as she carried the box out to her mother’s car. What did purity even mean?
Tula was trying to decide whether or not to show Will what she had found, but when she returned to the living room, Will didn’t seem to notice that she had been gone for nearly an hour. He was still slumped on the corduroy couch, his eyes glassy and his ears red with cold. “Hey,” said Tula, peering from Will to the television screen. “Isn’t that the pastor from your church?”
Will didn’t say anything, and it took a moment before it dawned on Tula that the pastor was talking about Maggie. “Hey,” she said again. “Isn’t he talking about your mom?”
Instead of answering her, Will got up and turned the television off. “Where would you go if you could go anywhere?” he asked her.
“Somewhere warm,” said Tula. “Somewhere with turquoise water and white sand.”
“I’d go to the Middle East,” said Will. “To Afghanistan or Iraq.”
“No you wouldn’t,” said Tula.
“Yes,” said Will. “I would.”
After that, Will grew more distant. He started to miss school. Every so often Tula went by his house to look for him, but most of the time he wasn’t there. Why had he mentioned Afghanistan and Iraq? But there was only one reason to mention them, or only one she could think of.
Tula, too, was restless. One evening she stood outside and watched a star shoot across the November sky, thinking, Where there’s a will, there’s a way. But the familiar phrase failed to comfort her, and the future, which she had always thought of as nestled in a sunny valley at the end of a pretty country road, no longer seemed so easily reached. The weather had turned cold, but when she thought about going back inside, her thin shoes felt heavy on her feet, as if the dense clay soil of the yard were pulling at her, and beneath the clay, the earth’s magnetic core.
9.6 Lyle
Without Maggie around to tame it, the house started to make demands on Lyle. Great flakes of paint curled off the metal fretwork that held up the sagging roof of the porch, and a gutter rattled loosely in its bracket whenever the wind blew. A window cracked, seemingly without reason. The bathrooms sprouted mold. Even as they disintegrated, the objects around him seemed to have more life in them than they’d had before, if only because a thing first had to have life to lose it. The connection between the broken boards of the porch and the trees they had once been announced itself every time he mounted the front steps, and when he looked closely, he could see that the rusted screws that had held the boards in place for so many decades were slowly loosening their hold, as if the job was finished or they had somewhere else to be. Everything had a place in a grand scheme that was slowly making itself visible to Lyle, and the grand scheme was death and decay. The jagged piece of gutter, the rutted driveway, the rotting leaves, the screen door that had started to sag and whine. “Even the house misses your mother,” he said.
“It’s always been like that,” said Will, but Lyle didn’t think it had. Bills were piling up on the desk, and after brooding about it for a few days, he discussed the idea of paying them with Will.
“Go ahead and do it, Dad,” said Will.
“But your mother was always the one…”
“Well she’s not here now, is she?” Will’s usually placid face bloomed white in the darkened kitchen, where both lightbulbs had blown at once.
It wasn’t like Will to lose his temper. “I think Will’s drinking beer,” Lyle said to Jimmy Sweets when they met at the Merry Maid one evening after work.
“Jeezus, the kid’s seventeen,” said Jimmy. “It’s not as if he’s motherless. And he still has you, doesn’t he? He still has that hot little number he’s dating. What more does a growing boy need? Three squares and a little cha cha cha.”
“Don’t be crude, Jimmy,” said Lily, but everyone in the bar was laughing at the way Lyle’s ears were turning red.
“Jeezus, Rayburn,” said Jimmy. “You’re as sensitive as a girl.”
After that, all anyone had to say was “cha cha cha” and Lyle would slap a fiver on the bar and storm out the door.
“What’s eating him?” Jimmy would say loudly enough for Lyle to hear.
Sometimes Lily ran after him and they would sit in the front seat of Lyle’s truck and talk for a while before Lily got out and Lyle went home. It occurred to Lyle that he was being tested and he was failing the test. It was clear he had relied too much on Maggie, that she had sapped his strength in some way and it was up to him to get it back, but that seemed beyond him.
“I know what it’s like,” said Lily one evening when Maggie had been gone for almost three months. “Two years ago, my husband left me.”
“Maggie didn’t leave me,” insisted Lyle, but he wondered if she had. And not only had she gone, but she had left behind a great suitcase full of responsibilities. For the first time, a little tendril of blame wrapped around his heart. “Do you think it’s safe for her to come back?” he asked Lily. “I never heard from the police again, but I don’t know what that means.”
“No news is usually good news. If they wanted to go after her, they probably would have done it by now.”
“Probably,” said Lyle.
“But I guess you can’t ask without opening it all up again,” said Lily.
“No,” said Lyle. “I guess I can’t.”
Lyle thought about how he had followed Lily home and how she had said, “You might as well come in,” and how for a split second he had thought she was saying it to him. Now her eyes were filled with soft question marks, and he figured he had come to one of those moments where he got to decide something important about the future. He tried to look down the various roads that pinwheeled away from the truck where he and Lily were sitting, but all he could think about was how MacBride had said he wasn’t a visionary. He guessed MacBride had been right about that, for try as he might, he couldn’t see down any of the roads or even through the door Lily seemed to be holding open for him.
“MacBride told me I wasn’t a visionary,” he said, explaining his hesitation.
“Who the heck is?” asked Lily. “‘Visionary’ is just a word they slap on people who turn out to be right about something. For instance, if you come home with me now, I’m a visionary, and if you don’t, well then, I’m not.”
Lyle wondered if there was a way to go through a door and simultaneously not go through it, just so he’d know what he was getting into. “I guess I could come for a little while,” he said.
“Aw heck, Lyle,” said Lily. “Nobody’s forcing you. Maybe you and I are better off as friends.”
When Lily got out of the truck and started down Main Street, Lyle’s first instinct was to run after her. But his second instinct was to stay put. The two impulses held a battle in his imagination, and by the time he decided he should follow her after all, it seemed too late to do it gracefully, not that he’d ever been particularly graceful. Then he had to argue with himself about whether there was such a thing as too late in this case and if it was just habit that kept him from acting decisively. It was too late, anyway, to be decisive. That much he knew. And being indecisive was probably insulting to any woman, Lily included, which meant he was probably better off waiting for the future to come to him rather than rushing wildly off to meet it.
Of all the things Lyle had learned to do over the course of his life, the thing he did best was to blend in. So he sat in the truck as the lights in the shop windows went out one by one and the citizens of Red Bud hurried past him as if he wasn’t there until
the only beacon for the weary left in Red Bud was the blinking neon BEER AND CHEER sign in the window of the Merry Maid.
After that, he did what was expected of him the best he knew how to do it, and when people asked him how he was doing, he mostly said, “I can’t complain.”
Early one morning two weeks before Christmas, Ben and Reilly returned with a warrant to search the house. When Lyle protested, Reilly pushed in through the glassed-in alcove as if Lyle were just another jacket hanging on the row of hooks. Lyle watched silently as the two men turned everything upside down before leaving empty-handed.
Ben said, “Be seein’ you, Lyle,” as if the visit had been a social call, but Reilly stormed out without a word, rattling the windows and slapping the screen door against the side of the house.
“Hey,” Lyle called out. “Are you happy now?”
Reilly didn’t turn back, but Lyle heard him mutter, “What about the phone records? Do you reckon we could get a warrant for those?”
It was almost eight-thirty when they left and Lyle was already late for work. Still, he waited for an hour in the Redi Mart parking lot, dialing the attorney’s office every few minutes until Maggie picked up the phone.
“The good news is that the police came back with the warrant, but they didn’t find anything,” he told her. “The bad news is that we can’t use the house phone anymore. If you can get to the office early on Mondays, I’ll try to call you then.”
“How’s Will?” was the first thing Maggie always asked when Lyle called. Then Lyle would tell her the local gossip and Maggie would tell him about her work. “That series of articles about innocent prisoners has sparked new interest in Tomás’s case,” she said now. “Did they ever figure out I’m the one who took his records?”
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