No Mercy
Page 7
‘Dad, I’m full. This is my second helping.’
‘That’s your first helping,’ his father responded. ‘And don’t think I didn’t notice those two beans on the floor next to Alex, too.’
‘I dropped them. Honest. It was an accident.’ He looked over at his mother for support.
Ben shook his head. ‘Give me at least some credit, son.’
‘How about if I eat three beans?’ Joel suggested.
‘How about if you eat all of them?’ his father responded.
‘Okay, I’ll eat half,’ Joel agreed, and shoveled the appropriate number of beans into his mouth, chewed them up, and swallowed them in one giant gulp followed by a milk chaser. ‘Now, may I be excused?’
‘Yes, you may,’ Susan said. ‘The rest of those beans will be waiting for you at breakfast.’
‘Thanks, Mom.’ He jumped out of his chair and darted from the room. Alexander the Great immediately got up and followed him, the boy’s 180-pound shadow. Joel’s parents watched him go. For a moment they sat in silence at the table, enjoying the sudden tranquillity that their son’s departure had left in its wake.
‘I’m going to go talk to Thomas,’ Ben announced.
Susan placed a hand on his sleeve. ‘I don’t think that’s such a good idea.’
‘He needs to check his attitude,’ Ben said. ‘I’m not going to have him yelling at his parents and slamming the bedroom door just because he can’t go out with his friends.’
‘Let him be,’ Susan advised him. ‘He’s sixteen. You remember what that was like? He’s got so many emotions churning around inside him that he can barely see straight.’
‘I still don’t like the yelling. We’ve never tolerated that before. I don’t see any reason to change course now.’
‘That’s true. But he’s right, Ben. What are we doing telling him he can’t go out with his friends on a Saturday night?’
‘We’re trying to keep him safe, that’s what we’re doing. A young boy Thomas’s age was just murdered in our own neighborhood. I don’t think it’s unreasonable to ask him not to go out at night for a while.’
‘That was eight weeks ago, and it happened in broad daylight,’ Susan reminded him. ‘Should we be keeping him home during the day, as well?’
‘It’s a parent’s responsibility to act in their child’s best interest. The first priority is keeping our boys safe.’
‘But we can’t always do that,’ she pointed out.
‘We can try,’ he told her. He stood up, filled a kettle with water and placed it on the range to boil. ‘Maybe we should think about getting out of town for a while.’
‘We have responsibilities – obligations, Ben.’
‘A few weeks is all I’m suggesting.’
Susan shook her head. ‘I have a private practice to run – a full schedule of patient appointments. You have a job. The kids have school. We can’t just pick up and leave.’
‘You might think differently if you’d seen the body of that boy, Susan. He’d been ravaged – his features mutilated. The person who did that to him is still out there somewhere. Do you get that?’
Susan looked at him from across the room. Her face was a mask: set, composed and completely unreadable. Ben didn’t care. Right now all he could think about was the safety of his children.
‘It won’t make any difference,’ she said at last.
‘What?’
‘You want them to run like cowards? Is that what you want to teach them?’
‘I don’t care about teaching them anything right now,’ he said. ‘I want them safe.’
‘But you can’t make them safe, Ben.’
‘I can try,’ he replied. He could feel the emotions warring inside of him: anger, fear and frustration. He almost didn’t say the words that came next. If he hadn’t – if he’d taken a moment to think before speaking – things might have turned out differently for them.
‘Someone has to,’ he said.
The room was very quiet for a moment.
‘What is that supposed to mean?’ she asked finally, her voice low but rock steady. ‘You think I don’t care about the well-being of our boys?’
‘That’s not what I said.’ He was backtracking now, a little too late.
‘You think that you actually understand what love and protection are? Do you?’
‘I …’
‘You have no idea about the measures I am prepared to take – that I have already taken – to safeguard the lives of those children. You have no idea, Ben.’ She shook her head in exasperation. ‘I would do anything – anything – for them. Do you really mean to stand here and tell me that I wouldn’t?’
‘I didn’t mean to imply …’ He trailed off, not really knowing what he’d meant to imply.
She stood there, regarding him with a look of defiance and contempt. ‘I believe that we both would do whatever we could to protect our children, at whatever cost is necessary.’
Ben sat down in a chair, or rather collapsed into it. His fingers kneaded his right temple where a dull headache had begun to blossom. ‘And how do you plan on fighting this?’ he asked.
‘As a family,’ she replied. ‘We have to take care of each other. Just as we always have.’ She studied him from across the table for a moment. ‘They’re safer here with us than they would be anywhere else without us.’
‘Are you sure?’ he asked.
‘I’m certain.’
She took his hand in her own and held it. ‘You know I love you.’
‘Yes, I know th—’ he began, but she held up her hand, indicating for him to be quiet.
‘You know I love you,’ she said again. ‘And I would never break up this family.’ Her eyes continued to watch him, and Ben knew enough this time to be silent. ‘I will fight for them. I will do whatever it takes to protect them. And I would fight for you. Do you know that?’
‘Yes.’
‘Good.’ She glanced down at their hands, folded together on the kitchen table, then looked up at him again. ‘And Benjamin?’
‘Yes?’
‘Don’t you ever think or imply otherwise. I won’t tolerate that form of betrayal from you.’
She watched him for a moment to make certain he understood, then slid her hands away from him, stood up, and left the room.
Chapter 12
That night Ben went to bed early, feeling broken and exhausted from his arguments, first with his son, and subsequently with his wife. His interactions with Joel at the dinner table hadn’t been particularly stellar, either, now that he thought about it. Susan had told him that they didn’t take sides, that they were a family. That was all well and good if you weren’t the one on the outside looking in, if you weren’t the odd man out. But that was exactly how he had felt lately, with all of them. The problem was, none of them had seen that boy’s body that night. None of them had tried in vain to sew up the boy’s face so it didn’t look like someone had taken a huge bite out of it – which, in fact, they had. His wife and children had the luxury of thinking about that violence in an abstract way. He did not.
Despite his best efforts to keep the lines of communication with his family open, things had been strained between them over these past two months. How could they not be? To make matters worse, Ben hadn’t been sleeping well, and he felt perpetually fatigued and irritable. Last Wednesday, he caught himself dozing off at work right in the middle of reviewing a pathology slide of a needle biopsy from a breast mass. He was looking at the specimen under the microscope and started to hear the sound of snoring. When he glanced up, he realized that he was the only one in the room and that the snoring had been his own. The slide had fallen off the microscope’s stage and onto the counter, cracking the cover slip. What in the hell was I doing catching a few winks in the middle of a cytology exam? he’d flogged himself. Sorry about your invasive Stage IV breast cancer, ma’am. It probably could’ve been properly diagnosed and treated five years earlier if I hadn’t been taking an afternoon siesta while ex
amining your biopsy. That had been completely unacceptable.
The thing of it was, he kept going over the kid’s autopsy in his mind: driving to work, walking up and down the aisles of the local supermarket, having dinner with his family and certainly lying awake at night, staring for alternating periods at the ceiling and the bedroom clock. He kept picturing the postmortem examination – his mind running over the details repeatedly in the same way that his gloved fingertips had traced a line from puncture wound to puncture wound that day. It seemed to him that there was something he’d seen but not quite noticed, some detail he had overlooked. The consequence was that the small frame of a young boy now lay still and muted beneath the ground without, at the very least, the justice his death demanded.
Ben turned onto his left side and stared at the empty space in the bed next to him. It was still early, but Susan would be coming to bed soon. They didn’t play that one-of-us-sleeps-on-the-couch-after-an-argument game. She would come to bed and, when she did, he would apologize for being such a jerk. Tomorrow morning he would apologize to Thomas, as well. Susan was right. He couldn’t lock his boys away in a vault for the rest of their lives just because he was afraid for their safety. Thomas was a sophomore in high school. By next spring he’d be driving, and in a year and a half they’d be poring over undergraduate catalogs together, planning visits to college campuses and filling out admission forms. Ben only had a short period of time left with his oldest son before Thomas headed out into the broader world for good. Now was the time to be bolstering his son’s confidence and encouraging his independence, not stomping all over it. Things could be better again, he reminded himself. We just have to stick together as a family, that’s all.
He lay there for another half hour, listening to the sounds of the house. He could hear music coming from Thomas’s room down the hall. Susan was on the phone downstairs, giving admission orders to a nurse for one of her patients who required hospitalization tonight. Joel was giggling as he played with Alex in the living room. The big dog’s thudding tread echoed through the house as he chased down whatever object Joel was throwing for him.
Twenty minutes later, Ben heard the sounds of Joel preparing for bed. Water ran in the upstairs sink as his son brushed his teeth, and a few minutes later he could hear his wife tucking Joel into bed. The sound of music coming from Thomas’s room continued at reduced volume after Susan asked him to turn it down just a bit. No protest there. Thomas responded differently to her than he did to Ben. The two seemed to have a special connection, and for a moment Ben felt a surge of jealousy and resentment. It seemed like it had been that way for as long as he could remember.
The bedroom door opened, and Susan’s silhouette appeared in the entrance. ‘You still awake?’ she whispered.
‘Yeah,’ Ben spoke up. ‘Still here.’
She crossed the room and sat on the edge of the bed. ‘I thought you’d be asleep by now.’
‘Me, too.’
She brushed back his hair and planted a kiss on his forehead.
‘I’m sorry about tonight,’ he told her.
‘You don’t need to be sorry,’ she replied. ‘You’re worried about the kids. That’s your job as a parent.’
‘No, but lately I’ve been afraid to even let them out of my sight. That’s not good for them, it’s not good for me and it’s not good for our relationship as a family. I can change that. I’m going to try to loosen up a little.’
‘Okay.’ She nodded. ‘I’m going to get ready for bed.’
He watched her proceed to the doorway leading to their bathroom, watched her pass through, shutting the door behind her.
Somewhere in the midst of the next few minutes, while he waited for her to return to their bed, thinking that perhaps they would make love, the stress and exhaustion that had been chasing him over the past eight weeks finally caught up with him, and at last he slept. In his dream, he was standing with his family on the platform of a vast subway station. A flurry of passengers scurried around them, making their way toward a massive steam locomotive, which waited silently on tracks that passed into the tumescent mouth of the subway tunnels at either end of the platform. Fastened to a wall high above the platform was a large clock whose minute hand emitted an audible clunk with each sixty-second progression, and the train’s conductor watched it from his position with strained intensity.
Although they stood together, Ben and his family, the crowd seemed to pull at them with the momentum of a brisk stream. Already he could see Joel wandering off a few paces to his right. An old man in ratty clothes sat on one of the platform’s few benches, holding a small piece of glass – a specimen slide with a transparent cover slip on top – pinched between his thumb and forefinger. A small biopsy of tissue was trapped beneath the slip, and it appeared to writhe and struggle as Joel reached a cautious hand in its direction.
‘Joel, don’t touch that!’ Ben called out, moving quickly toward his son. ‘It’s dirty!’
But already Joel had grasped the slide in his small, delicate hand and was examining it with fascination as the thing beneath the slip – pink and vascular and pulsating slightly – continued to squirm.
‘No! Put it down!’ Ben yelled as Joel began to lift the cover with his careful fingers. Free of the slip, the specimen shot up the slide toward the boy’s hand with horrible, blurring speed. His son dropped the slide, but not before the thing disappeared beneath the sleeve of his jacket. A moment later, he began to scream.
Ben lurched forward and spun the child around to face him. Staring back at him was the tattered face of Kevin Tanner. The sutures Ben had placed in the autopsy room had sprung loose, and the gaping bite wound hung half open once again, seeping some yellow, putrid fluid from its recesses. ‘Joel!’ he called into the boy’s face, but Joel was gone and all that remained in Ben’s arms was the corpse he had examined in the CO two months before.
He lifted the dead child into his arms, unable to leave him lying crumpled and deserted on the subway station’s floor. Ben turned back to what remained of his family, but the spot where they’d previously stood was now empty.
‘Aalll abawwwed!’ the conductor called into the crowd, and the pace of the foot traffic quickened. People began running toward the waiting cars, jostling with one another on the steps for purchase. An old woman was knocked to her knees by the surge of would-be passengers, and Ben watched helplessly as she was trampled underfoot in the mounting stampede.
‘Aaaalll abawwwwed!’ the conductor called out again, and this time the remaining crowd on the station’s platform erupted in panic. The stairs leading into the passenger cars were hopelessly clogged, and people began climbing on top of one another in an effort to squeeze through the cars’ open windows. A middle-aged man with a developing paunch grabbed a lady of perhaps seventy by the hair and yanked her from the steps in order to make room for himself. She went flying backward and landed gracelessly on the platform, the back of her head striking the tile with a sickening crack.
Ben continued to scan what was left of the crowd for his wife and son. Did they make it onto the train? He began walking along its length, looking into the cars as he went. The body of the boy grew heavy in his arms. A piercing whistle filled the station and steam spewed upward from the locomotive’s smokestack. The coupling rods began to move, driving the massive steel wheels that propelled the train forward.
Finally, at the second-to-last car, Ben spied a familiar face hanging out through one of the open windows.
‘Sam!’ he yelled, craning his neck backward. ‘Sam, it’s Ben!’
Chief Garston looked down at him casually. ‘Oh. Hi, Ben.’
‘Sam, I can’t find Thomas or Susan. Have you seen them?’
‘No, I haven’t seen them,’ he responded. Then, with more urgency: ‘Hey, you’d better get on the train.’
‘I can’t find my family,’ Ben repeated. The train was starting to pick up speed, and he had to walk quickly along the edge of the platform – stepping over several bodi
es as he went – in order to keep pace with the car Sam was in.
‘Oh, I wouldn’t worry about them,’ Sam chuckled reassuringly. ‘I’m sure they’ll be fine. But – say! – you’d better worry about yourself. You don’t want to be left standing here when this train leaves the station. That wouldn’t be good at all.’
With growing unease, Ben realized that Sam was right. He didn’t want to be left behind – but now the train was moving too fast for him to climb aboard. If he tried, he would be swept neatly beneath the wheels and crushed in an instant.
Ben’s feet slowed, and he came to a shuffling halt. The last car was past him, heading into the tunnel. He stood alone on the platform, except for the dead boy in his arms and the few scattered bodies lying motionless around him. As the train began to disappear, he saw Sam Garston’s receding face looking back at him, hanging half out of the open window. His friend looked a little sad.
‘So long, Ben,’ Sam called out to him, his voice small against the background of the rumbling machine. ‘Take care of that boy of yours.’
The last passenger car vanished into the darkness. For a few seconds Ben could still hear the sound of the wheels moving along the tracks. Then all was still. He stood holding the dead boy and wondering what was next for him, until a tentative voice floated up to his ears. It was little more than a croak, and it came from the lifeless thing that he held in his arms.
‘Father?’ it said. But Ben was too afraid to look down.
PART THREE
The Girl
Chapter 13
Thomas lay in bed listening to music. He kept the volume low so he could also hear the sounds of footsteps in the hall, should they approach. He didn’t think they would, though. Now that his parents had gone to bed, it was unlikely they would get back up to check on him. Still, he’d locked the door just in case. Saturday night. Sixteen years old. And here he was, trapped in his own bedroom. Which was total bullshit, by the way. He’d been going out on his own for three years now. He’d never wound up drunk in the bushes, and he didn’t use drugs. He hadn’t knocked up a girl yet, either, which was more than he could say for at least one of his friends. And he knew how to protect himself. So what was the big deal about going out all of a sudden?