I didn’t realize that, during my speech, I had grabbed both his hands as if that act would reinforce my words and make him believe me. I so wanted him to believe me.
I looked into his eyes, searching for a hint of what he was thinking. The anticipation was unbearable.
To me, it seemed as if he were coming to some kind of conclusion, but was hesitant to lock it down.
“Can you…?” he started to say, then ran out of words. I saw him struggle. Finally, he asked, “Can you make it happen whenever you want?”
My elation faded. “No. That’s the problem. I can’t control it at all. It controls me.”
Neil made the connection. “Those words you spoke at the bar.”
“My mantra. It’s supposed to calm me down, distract me or something. A friend of mine taught that to me.”
“And does it work?”
“Most of the time. But lately, it’s been getting more difficult to stop it from happening. This power overcomes me when I’m extremely angry, or if I feel my life is in danger. And it just, I don’t know, replaces me. I literally see red.” Then I laughed. “You probably think I’m nuts. I tell you I have a superhuman power, but I can’t prove it. I’d think I was nuts. I almost can’t believe that you believe me.”
“Well…” he began. “Other than making you angry to find out the truth, I guess I just have to trust my instincts. As I said before, I’ve seen some fairly inexplicable things in my time.”
“Really?”
Neil seemed to become uncomfortable with the question, and gestured at the report I had dropped on the top of the filing cabinet. “So, was that what you wanted to research? Were you hoping to find something in there that would tell you where this is coming from?”
“Yeah, and maybe a way to control it. My aunt said my great-grandmother had this ability—or curse, or whatever you want to call it; but she was somehow able to control it and hide it from everyone.”
“How did your aunt know, then?”
“Apparently, my great-grandmother Beatrice kept a secret journal.”
“A journal?” Neil asked, and something in the way he asked piqued my interest.
“Yeah.”
He snatched up the report and flipped through a few of the pages. Finally, he found what he was looking for, and turned the folder around for me to see. When I shook my head, he pointed.
At the bottom of the report, Chief Hrzinski had written:
As instructed, will keep personal effects in lockup until case is inactive.
“What does that mean?” I asked.
“It means there’s a possibility what you’re looking for is right here in this building—in the lockup.” He reached into his pocket and withdrew a key ring. “Let’s go see if anything is still there.”
Chapter Seventeen
The fire hall had a caged storage room where they kept evidence gathered from various investigations. Neil explained that the police were usually required to keep evidence as long as a case was open, and in arson-related investigations the fire department had a similar policy. Although I was out on parole, my case was technically still active until I’d fully served my sentence.
Neil unlocked the cage and we both went inside the storage area and started our search.
“Here it is,” he said when he found a carton with my name on it.
We ripped it open and I saw the journal for the first time. It was bound with a leather cover and a small lock—the strap was busted off. A pattern of flowers was etched on the face in gold relief, and stamped in the center was the word ‘Journal’ in fancy lettering. My excitement got the better of me, and I plucked it out of the box and started to flip through the pages. My heart beat fast and my breathing came in such a rush, I could barely get out my words.
“This is fantastic! I can’t believe it didn’t burn up.”
I started to walk out of the room with the journal, but Neil stopped me.“Darcy, I’m sorry. That’s still official evidence. We can’t remove it from this room.”
“Oh.” My disappointment was crushing. “Well, can I read it here?”
“Sure, but you’ll have to have someone with you when you do. It’s the rules. But I have to get back upstairs, soon. Sorry,” he repeated.
“You don’t have to be sorry. It’s no problem. Listen, I have to get home now anyway. My aunt’s going to be furious with me for making a scene at church this morning. Can I come back later?”
Neil checked his watch. “Yeah. I’ve still got that paperwork to do. It’s going to take me a couple hours. Maybe we could grab some dinner? We could come back here afterwards.”
I looked at him to see if I could tell from his body language if he was asking for a date, but he waited for my answer with that calm smile of his. “Dinner?” I echoed. “Sounds great. Here, let me put this back and we can get out of here.”
When Neil turned around and headed for the door, I mimed putting the journal back in the carton. Then, using my body to block his line of sight, I slipped the journal under my arm inside of Neil’s jacket, which I still wore. I wasn’t proud of it; but I couldn’t wait to read the journal. I had to know what my great-grandmother wrote.
We exited the basement and, before I left the fire hall, I said, “Thank you again, Neil. It means more to me than you can guess. I’m glad you listened and glad you didn’t automatically think I was a lunatic.”
“Not at all. I’ll see you at the motel later?”
“Yes.” On impulse, I leaned in and gave him a peck on the cheek. Before either of us could succumb to any additional awkwardness, I asked, “Can I keep the jacket for the walk home?”
“Yeah, no problem.”
I left him there, both of us smiling.
* * *
I couldn’t walk back home fast enough. Aunt Martha was going to be livid with me, and I quickened my pace.
When I got two blocks down, an odd thought occurred to me. I was so preoccupied with the discovery of the journal, and with Neil asking me to dinner, that I hadn’t wondered at how easily he had believed my story. I’m sure if someone told me what I told him, I would think they were off their rocker.
Perhaps I subconsciously wanted Neil to believe me so badly that when he did, it felt natural. Now two people in the world shared my secret with me. That I didn’t have to bear this burden entirely alone gave me something I didn’t have yesterday after the incident with Barry at The Trough: it gave me a sense of belonging, a sense that there might still be a place for me in the world.
I made a note to follow up on that thought later at dinner. As I got near the motel, my thoughts turned to more pressing issues: What had my great-grandmother written in her journal? There were a few things missing from the puzzle of my power: the why of it, and the how of it. I hoped the journal might shed some light on the mystery.
I had never met Great-Grandmother Beatrice. My mother had a few photographs hung in frames on the stair wall, old dusty sepia renditions of a sour-faced matron.
Like a repentant puppy that ran away from home and finally returned, I entered my aunt’s house later that afternoon. I knew there would be hell to pay for running out of church and embarrassing her in front of the other parishioners.
I braced myself for the impending storm, but to my surprise, no one was there. After poking my head into the bedroom and the cellar stairwell to be certain, I made my way to the kitchen for something to drink.
I dropped the journal on the kitchen table and raided the refrigerator for a glass of orange juice. I drank it down in a rush, and then poured another. This time I sipped at it while I sat at the table and flipped the journal open to the first page.
The first third of the journal contained entries from my great-grandmother’s teenage years. Like most young girls, Beatrice talked of clothing, of community socials, and everyday gossips. She wrote how Nancy Trillian spilled ink over her dress on purpose one day, and that she would get her back if it was the last thing she ever did.
Beatrice exce
lled in school, and often wrote about her thoughts on God and religion, and how she wanted to become a nun. Her parents forbade it, however. They thought she would be better off married.
Being mostly self-sufficient on their ranch near Sedona, the family had come through the Great Depression without feeling the worst of its effects, but they were by no means wealthy, and could not afford to keep Beatrice indefinitely.
When she turned sixteen, her parents began to introduce her to eligible bachelors from surrounding towns.
One such gentleman caller was a rancher nearly twenty years her senior—Walter Gordon from outside Middleton. He had been widowed a year earlier and had four sons. When he heard Beatrice was of marriageable age, he came calling, looking for someone to keep his home and raise his boys—the oldest of whom was only two years younger than his would-be bride.
Beatrice hated the thought of marriage, but she had no other choice.
While I told myself I would re-read those passages later to get a better sense of my family’s history through her words, I skimmed over them until I found the first reference to the fire.
While the beginning passages were written in a very fine, controlled hand, the entry the morning after her wedding night was written in an angry scrawl, the letters jagged and rushed, the pages torn in places where the pen pushed through.
* * *
March 14
How can I bear the shame? How can I ever face my priest to confess this sin? It must be a sin, what that evil man forced upon me. The pain was unbearable, and continues today. Is this what all women must endure? Is this our penance for the wickedness of Eve? Is this what they call Original Sin?
I cannot look upon my face in the mirror. My skin is on fire, as if I am taken by fever.
If I am to die because of this evil occurrence, so be it.
Though I may be destined for hell for thinking so, I also wish Mr. Gordon to die.
* * *
The next entry was dated under two months later:
* * *
May 5
I wish I had died that evil night. I have not been myself since, and have barracked myself in my room. I swear upon all that is holy I will never let that man near me again. But I fear his evil has infected me. I have not been able keep my morning meal down these past three days. I feel I am wasting away. Perhaps I am dying of consumption, like Saint Thérèse of Lisieux.
Mr. Gordon continues to attempt entry to my bed chamber, but I have barricaded my door with a very heavy dresser I had to move by pushing it with my legs. I will never let him in this room so long as I have breath in my body.
* * *
May 12
Doctor Smith left me today with joyous news. I am not dying. I am with child. He tells me my reactions are normal, and not to worry. His prescription is a tonic of vitamins, as much as I care to eat, and plenty of fluids. Mr. Gordon was furious when Doctor Smith ordered that I was to remain untouched for the duration of my time, and that the boys were to serve me. I am not to lift anything heavier than a pail of water.
I will have a baby of my own.
God loves me.
* * *
August 28
Something is wrong. My belly is swollen so tight, and it hurts much more than it should. The ache in my back has increased to the point I can barely rise from bed.
My mother has arrived to attend me. She and Mr. Gordon often have words in the hall with the door closed to protect my young ears, and I cannot tell what they are saying, but my mother always comes back into the room flushed and angry.
* * *
September 1
Doctor Smith visited. He has told me the bad news: there is a complication with the pregnancy. He is concerned for my health and my ability to take my child to term. He has ordered complete bed rest and promises to visit on a weekly basis.
Mr. Gordon often curses at me and Mother.
* * *
September 19
The pain! I cannot—
* * *
There was only more entry in the journal that year, and it was the longest account my great-grandmother had written so far. With hungry eyes, I devoured the words. As I read, I could feel everything she went through as if I were there in her place.
* * *
December 24
She is my angel, my salvation. I named her Edna, after my mother. She is also the only other survivor of the night of flame over a month ago.
My labors had come earlier than Doctor Smith predicted, and I only had my mother there to aid me in my time of distress. As the good doctor feared, something happened inside me. I cannot explain it. I can barely remember the events that took place, and I have no account of that night except for angry words from Mr. Gordon.
The first birthing pain took me late in the afternoon while I was making water. My mother reacted when the water turned crimson and I shrieked in agony.
Immediately, she called for help, and Mr. Gordon and his eldest, Timothy, raced in from the fields to aid us. They were worse than useless, and my mother yelled at them to fetch Doctor Smith.
I know I lost my wits several times over the course of the next few hours. I prayed to God, I swore at Him. I yelled out unholy words that I had only overheard men say when they thought women were not present.
Consciousness left me more than once, but when the worst pain hit me, I was fully awake, though I think at that moment I was unaware of anything other than the ripping through my center as my daughter struggled to escape my womb.
Exhausted, I wanted nothing more than to succumb to the torture and retreat from the suffering. I vaguely remember my mother screaming at me to stay awake, that my trials were far from over.
I know I was not myself. There was a wrenching sensation deep inside me, and I knew, at that moment, something had gone terribly wrong. I screamed like a tormented soul, and I felt as if I carried death within me.
Mr. Gordon swore that if the child died, he would have no further use for me, and would be happy to let me follow the child to hell. My mother yelled back at him and made as if to scratch his eyes out. I saw him swing his fist at her. She fell to the floor, her head bent at an unnatural angle.
The world became flame and I felt the deepest rage, as if I were possessed by a demon from hell. I was the Devil himself that night, and Timothy and Doctor Smith arrived only minutes after my sinner’s body unleashed the greatest sin imaginable. The rest of the night remains lost to my memory.
When I confronted Timothy, who had inherited his father’s ranch, he told me in a hushed voice that there was nothing left of his father and my mother except for outlines of ash on the floor. No one knew I was a murderess, and how could they suspect a woman in the midst of childbirth? Even so, no one could explain what had happened.
Timothy has allowed me to stay at the ranch. The child is his sister, after all.
If not for my daughter, though, I know I would commit another mortal sin. But I must be strong for her. I must protect her from the world. If it is in my power, I will shelter her forever from the evils that men do to women.
I miss my mother.
If you can hear me in heaven, Mother, I am truly sorry for what I did. I will most likely suffer an eternity in the flames of hell for killing Mr. Gordon.
Please forgive me.
* * *
At the end of that passage, I had to take a deep breath and compose myself. This was a history of my family that had been kept from me. I wondered why my own mother never talked to me about her grandmother’s tribulations.
Focusing back on the journal, I saw that there was only one more entry, dated nearly fifteen years after the last.
* * *
January 15
To my daughter:
Should you ever chance to read this journal, let me tell you I have no idea if the trials of evil will ever beset you as they have me. God has cursed our bloodline. I have studied the scriptures and I know what it is.
As Genesis tells us: ‘…the sons of Go
d, looking at the women, saw how beautiful they were and married as many of them as they chose…’
The offspring of humans and angels led to the corruption of mankind. God saw this and created the Great Flood to wipe us from the Earth. In His mercy, he spared a few, and banished the offending angels from His realm.
I believe these fallen angels blame us for their fall, and seek to punish those of us who break the bond of blood. My mother is dead because I tormented Mr. Gordon. Now, a simple trespass will cause me to unleash angel’s fire on those close to me.
I keep myself apart from others, and I keep myself distant from you for your own protection.
I have found a way to suppress the rage of the fallen angels. After years of desperation, I think I have stumbled upon a means, and I bow before God every night in the hope that you do not require this lesson.
Alone one day last week, while I thought to run from you, lest my power take you as it took my mother, I bade the fire to consume me and end my suffering.
I embraced the flame.
…And I did not end.
That, I believe, is the salvation. When you finally give yourself over to God completely, body and soul; that is when he forgives you. To save yourself and save others, take God into your heart.
* * *
There were no more entries in the journal. I closed it with more force than I intended, and the pages slapped together with a sharp sound.
Give yourself to God? What did that mean?
I didn’t have time to unravel the puzzle because Aunt Martha opened the front door and called out, “Darcy, are you here, my dear?”
The cordiality in her voice sounded forced. I barely had time to hide the book under a stack of newspapers before three people entered into the kitchen.
Chapter Eighteen
Aunt Martha entered the kitchen first, Uncle Edward a step behind.
Like a child who got caught with her hand in the cookie jar, I flashed them a guilty smile.
I was about to return the greeting when I saw who accompanied them: Sheriff Burke, dressed in his badly fitting uniform, zeroed in on me like a predator scenting blood. My stomach tightened. It was that automatic reaction to authority ingrained in me since my first night in prison. I fought my instinct to cower, and stood to meet him.
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