by Anne McAneny
Probably the latter. Seemed to be the choice of most everyone in Lavitte.
“Ding, ding!” A little girl, so Gerber perfect that she looked like a hologram, rang her bicycle bell at me. “Excuse me, Lady.”
“Mattie,” her mom said, “it’s ‘excuse me, ma’am’.”
Thanks, but I’ll take lady over ma’am any day. Christ, I was only a few years older than the mom. Still, I couldn’t fault the teaching of proper manners in good ol’ Lavitte. Manners were our foundation, our sidewalk. Until they were discarded altogether and replaced with rage.
“Sorry about that,” the mom said, her mineral powder make-up and bright denim jeans mirrored by every other mother at the park. “She’s still wobbly. Just got her training wheels off. I didn’t think she was ready, but you know how dads are, always ready to push ’em out of the nest a little earlier than we are.”
I looked around, desperate for her to be talking to anyone other than me, but her reflective lenses aimed squarely at mine whenever she wasn’t scanning the area for her daughter.
“Which one is yours?” she said.
It took me longer than it should have to realize she thought I was a card-carrying mom. “I don’t have one. Or any, for that matter. I’m not a mom.”
“Oh, I’m sorry.” Her eyes strayed to the ground before she lifted her slim face back up, a plastered smile concealing her grief. For what? The possibility that my ovaries lacked viable eggs? The presumed melancholy thump of my heart over not having a vulnerable child to screw up for the next eighteen years? If anything, she should be sorry if I did have a kid. But I couldn’t afford to alienate anyone on my first day back, so I played nice. Besides, odds were I knew this chick in some capacity or other. It’s not that Lavitte wasn’t big enough for two big guns; it’s that Lavitte wasn’t big enough for any two people to remain strangers. If you didn’t know a person directly, you sho’ly knew their cousin.
“I grew up here and used to play in this park,” I said with more saccharine sweetness than my mother’s Sweet Sunday Sugar Fudge. “I’m back to, uh,”—uh oh, hadn’t worked out an excuse for being back in town yet, but as it turned out, I hardly needed one.
“You’re visiting family, of course.” She proffered a hand, all bird bones and stickiness from the freeze-pops she’d served the kids earlier. “I’m Abby. Abby Westerling. You probably know the name.”
She meant the Westerling part, no doubt. The original Mr. and Mrs. Westerling had owned the big general store in town, then sold some land to a developer and used that money to buy up half of Lavitte. They had a penchant for naming things after themselves, so we were saddled with Westerling Medical Center, Westerling Children’s Museum, and Westerling Theater. For all I knew, a raunchy truck would pass by boasting Westerling Trash and Disposal. Why not? Plenty of garbage here in Lavitte.
“Yes, I’m familiar,” I said. “You married a Westerling?”
“Unfortunately, not a direct one.” She giggled. “Well, that sounds plain wrong. What I mean is, I married a Westerling cousin. We’re the poor relations.”
The three-carat diamond on her left hand screamed otherwise, but might also suggest a desperate cousin, scrambling to keep up with his surname.
“I was a Murphy before that,” she said.
I knew a huge Murphy family in middle school. Nine kids, with several delinquents among the academic standouts. The boys were mostly ugly, the girls auburn-haired and cute. More than a few hated my family. She might be one of them. I didn’t pursue it as she seemed the type to volunteer plenty.
“So, who are you visiting?” she asked.
“My mom still lives here but she might put her house on the market. My dad passed away a while back, so I try to come and see her a little more often.”
Hey, it was almost the truth. More than the local sidewalks offered.
“Sorry about your dad. Your mom must appreciate the visits. What’s your name, by the way?”
I realized I hadn’t introduced myself. Guess it was time to watch the dark shadow crawl over pretty Abby Murphy Westerling’s face as she tried to recall the outcome of the trial. She’d have to sort the truth from distorted childhood memories. Surely, her recollection of events had grown sinister and inconceivable, like a cancer, until it was something best not spoken of, best not acknowledged, treated as folklore. But here it was in the flesh. Or at least its descendant. I could lie. No skin off my back. But I had come here to do exactly the opposite. Might as well start the ball rolling through the dirt, muck, gossip, and disgust, dredging up all the denials until it snowballed into a big pile of rottenness, untenable and best disposed of at the Westerling Dump. The very ball I’d come here to stick a big fork in. Dig in, everybody!
“I’m Allison.”
The first name alone gave her a small start as she searched my face for clues. The nose, definitely the same perfect nose as the mother, so elegantly sloped and dimpled at the tip that even mannequins envied it because theirs looked so plastic. But I was never envied by other humans. At least not in Lavitte. Not after that night.
Abby repeated my name, possibly without realizing it. “Allison.” Quietly, it slipped from her lips, like a secret, a whisper of a memory. I took off my sunglasses and wiped them with the thin blue tee-shirt I’d thrown on this morning, giving her a glimpse of my eyes. That usually did it for people. The eyes. Because my father’s eyes had been nothing less than mesmerizing, right up until the day he died, when they bulged a bit more than usual. Regular pieces of onyx, his eyes were, shined to brilliance. And they were big. Big as puddles. Disproportionately large for his face. Doe eyes, the ladies used to say. Unexpected, one of the Charlotte newspapers had reported. And I’d inherited them as if they’d been transplanted. At least they fit on my face somehow. Balanced by my full lips, my mother would retort in the old days when I complained I looked like an alien. Nowadays, peering into the endless pools of chocolate liquid swirling deliciously on my face, my mother probably felt sick to her stomach. She never made her Sweet Sunday Sugar Fudge anymore. Who would eat it if she did?
“Allison Fennimore,” I said, my plump lips framing a smile. “You probably know the name.”
Abby Westerling found a quick, urgent excuse to leave my company. She gathered her Gerber Peas baby, murmured an apology to the other mothers, maybe with a cautioning nod in my direction, and skedaddled. Whatever. Nothing could hurt me now. I was Lavitte’s favorite Teflon Daughter.
Chapter 2
Allison… present
I pulled into the two-car, detached garage of my childhood home, wondering why I’d driven to the park in the first place. It was only a mile away and the exercise would have done me good. Being out of the city was already costing me a good thirty blocks a day of serious hoofing.
The brakes on my mother’s Buick squealed as I pressed them, so I added Fix Brakes to the mental list of things I needed to accomplish before returning home. Ironic that my mother had to pay to get her car serviced.
“Car brakes,” I repeated to myself in an effort to remember the task long enough to write it down in the kitchen. Hopefully my mom hadn’t thrown out the list I’d started this morning, which included Leak in Basement, Stuck Shower Door, 60-Watt Bulbs for Back Porch, and Call Realtor. The types of things the man of the house might do, especially if he was good with his hands. Like a mechanic.
As I walked toward the house, I tried to envision the structure the way a buyer would: two-story colonial with a basement; lots of windows for sunlight; fresh marigold paint; flowered patio; stone walkway; cute and homey; cursed. I sighed. Maybe it had been long enough that it would finally sell.
Couldn’t believe my mother had stayed here all these years, like a wound begging for salt. Even if she’d been forced to take a loss, she could have started over again in a town where the Fennimore name was less notorious, where images of little Shelby Anderson didn’t crop up like a fated internet search the moment people heard Artie Fennimore’s name. Or pictures of Bobb
y Kettrick’s golden mug, with the too-white teeth and the square jaw that looked like it came from anywhere but Lavitte. Heck, there might be dozens of Arthur Fennimores out and about in the country whose name conjured joy in people’s minds. Imagine that. An old children’s game of word association popped into my head. You say horsey, I say ride. You say Fennimore, I say joy. Ha! Too far-fetched even for me.
I entered through the back door into the kitchen, staring at the list I’d made. What was it I wanted to put on there? Something to do with the house? With transportation? Oh yes, the brakes. I wrote it down. This was how my mind worked lately. In circles. Between my brother going to mandatory rehab, my mother dabbling in dementia, and the recent airing of Big Crimes, Small Towns on cable, I felt trapped on a mental merry-go-round, the gears grinding against the bones of my inner ear, the music stuck in a dissonant minor chord. In the old days, Lavitte residents would have jotted down Artie’s Autos, but nowadays they simply wrote Fix Brakes.
“You’re home already, honey?” my mother said. “Did school get out early?” She shuffled into the kitchen as if her legs didn’t have the energy to lift her feet. Odd the way the dementia came escorted by physical weakness. As if the mind told the body to match the message. Other times, she was her old self and walked with a smooth gait that looked youthful compared to her sixty years, as if her hips contained springs and her feet could negotiate clouds.
“Hey, Mom, it’s me, Allison. I’m here visiting from New York, where I live. I’m all grown up.”
If only. I guided her to one of the wooden chairs I’d always found too heavy for the kitchen, more suitable for a dining room. But the dining room had been forever cluttered with my mother’s projects—ranging from a collection of wreaths for the Christmas Bazaar to the infamous scrapbooking attempt during which she’d hot-glued half a dozen photos to her fingers before giving up. Oh well, it was never boring and a few of her projects had turned out okay, like the pressed flowers, the knitted hats we never wore or needed, and the intricate jewelry she’d beaded for years after my father’s death. It had kept her busy and, most of all, alone—away from the judgment of so-called friends.
“You didn’t get in trouble with the principal, did you, Allison? You’re usually so good.”
Yes, that was Allison Fennimore. Sweet girl. Teacher’s pet. Good listener. Hell, any 15-year-old who could sit quietly though a day of testimony in which her father was called a sociopathic slaughterer out for revenge over the theft of a few screwdrivers had no choice but to be a good listener. But good and a quarter’ll get you a cup of coffee. Lousy coffee at that.
I’d lost the reputation overnight, of course. Because a good girl couldn’t possibly come from a man who shot people in cold blood or yanked young girls off their bicycles. The same man who couldn’t even get up the nerve to do whatever it was he wanted to do to the girl in the first place, who killed without rhyme, reason or remorse. Of course, who could show remorse for something they denied doing? To show remorse was to show guilt. And my father never felt guilty about anything, at least not that I knew of. Arthur “Artie” Fennimore was famous for putting it all in God’s hands and believing that if God was at the wheel, then He knew what He was doing and there must be a gold-plated and indisputable reason for it. If Artie Fennimore took his fist to his wife on the occasional, drunken Saturday night, that was God’s fist. God must have been trying to teach Justine Fennimore a thing or two about pleasing her man. If God every so often felt the need to withhold affection from a socially awkward young girl, He might as well use Artie Fennimore to do His bidding.
Always seemed like an excuse to me.
“Everything’s okay, Mom,” I said. “No call from the principal coming your way. Can I make you some tea?”
“No thanks, honey, I think I’ll just rest. I’m so tired. Must be that time of the month.”
My mother hadn’t had a time of the month for eight years, but if she wanted an excuse for a good nap, let her enjoy it. If anyone deserved an altered state of consciousness, it was Justine Fennimore. She shuffled toward the spare room I’d converted to a bedroom so she wouldn’t have to manage the stairs as often. Then she turned back to me and tilted her beautiful face, framed by dark hair worn in the same, short coif since her twenties. Her lips parted to say something, but then a slow shock crescendoed on her face as she rejoined reality. Not a fun place to be.
“Kevin,” she said, the two syllables of my brother’s name carrying enough weight that it made her shoulders slump.
“Yes, Mom, Kevin should call today. Around three.” Precisely at three, actually, because that was Kevin’s allotted time for his five-minute call.
I waited for my mother to lapse into concerns about Kevin getting off the school bus at three, hoping for her sake that she was still in Dementiaville, but no such reprieve today. Clarity had come and she knew full well why he would call at three. It must break her heart, at least what was left of it.
“I’ve got to go out again, Mom, but Selena’s in the sunroom if you need anything.”
Selena, a tall, muscular, Guatemalan woman I had hired as my mom’s caretaker, made out like a bandit. Twenty bucks an hour to make sure her charge didn’t wander off or do anything dangerous. Not sure how Selena accomplished these responsibilities while napping on the couch most afternoons, but so far so good. Whenever I walked in on her, she swore she wasn’t asleep, but rather, she suffered from a bad case of dry eye syndrome and needed to minimize her corneal exposure to air. After explaining this the first time, she’d tried to sell me the Brooklyn Bridge.
“I’ll be back in time for Kevin’s call,” I said.
I could have told my mom where I was headed, but it would have ripped out another piece of her soul and forced it through the shredder. That’s how it had been for me when I got the call from Kevin a few weeks ago. My landline phone, silent for months at a time, had rung early in the morning, throwing me for a dreaded loop. My friends knew I worked until 3:00 a.m. and they were forbidden to call before noon...
*** Twenty Days Earlier***
“Hello?”
“Allison, it’s Kevin.”
I breathed a sigh of relief. At least it wasn’t someone calling to report a death or an arrest for murder—distinct and precedented possibilities in the Fennimore family. “Kevin? Thought you could only use the phone—”
“Look, I don’t have a lot of time,” he said. “Cashing in a favor to call this early.”
“Cash me in a favor and don’t tell me what you had to do for your favor.”
“Can you get in here tomorrow? I need you to do something for me. It’s big.”
I sat upright, not an easy accomplishment on my cheap mattress. “Is it legal?” I asked, realizing too late that eager ears were probably monitoring his call and would perk up at the mention of skirting the law.
“I want to reopen the case,” Kevin said. “You know, against Dad.”
I laughed and slumped back. “Kevin, please. You get a few sober months under your belt and you suddenly have time for deep reflection? Oh, I know what’s going on here. What’s the title?”
“Of what?” he said, his patience with me often a surprise.
“The book you’re writing about Dad. Going with Lavitte Lasher? The Fennimore Fiend? No, too reticent. I’ve always been partial to Maniac Mechanic myself.”
“Stop screwing around,” Kevin said. “Although those titles aren’t bad.”
“What’s this about then? Seeking closure?” My tone mocked him for even considering the concept. Children of convicted murderers, guilty or innocent, had no relationship with such psychological malarkey.
“This is the longest I’ve been sober, Allie. Give me a chance.”
“A chance to what? Open old wounds? Make Mom miserable? Step into the insanity of claustrophobic Lavitte? No thanks.”
“Something’s rolling around in my head,” he said.
“Teachers used to call that your brain.”
“You�
�re going to Lavitte, anyway, right?”
“To put Mom’s house on the market. Not to reminisce about Bobby Kettrick.”
Kevin sighed. I could picture him now. Callused hands, dark, shiny hair, and a scruffy growth on his face that the women loved. At least women who also enjoyed leather jackets, flea-bitten mattresses, and cheap, imported beer. But above the stubble, the same full, crooked lips as mine, the scar on his left cheekbone from the playground seesaw, and the vibrant olive eyes—when his brain wasn’t swimming in alcohol.
“I need you to talk to some people,” he said. “I got it all coordinated. You wouldn’t believe how the stars are aligned.”
“Please don’t go all stars-aligned on me, Kev. Besides, Dad is dead. What does it matter?”
The confluence of discussing my dad’s case while staring at the bland piece of art on my wall called Possibilities actually made me tremble. I forced myself to close my eyes and fight the impulse to slam the phone as loudly as I could in my brother’s ear. He was supposed to be the mellow one, the cool, distant guy who didn’t talk about the case, the one who let me know it was okay to gloss over it.
“I gotta go,” Kevin said. “Favor’s up. Come by tomorrow. It’s your day off anyway.”
“I’ve played this record too many times,” I said, tugging at a piece of hair with my hand. “Only scratches left. Sorry you wasted your favor.”
I reached the heavy phone receiver out toward its cradle. Slowly. Part of me didn’t want to disconnect from the bizarre fantasy that I could storm into Lavitte, rip through its healed skin, and reveal the infection still lingering there. But most of me wanted to move forward, away from a past with tentacles so tangled in my soul that to completely disconnect might be to die.