The Flowers in the Attic Series: The Dollangangers: Flowers in the Attic, Petals on the Wind, If There Be Thorns, Seeds of Yesterday, and a New Excerpt!

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The Flowers in the Attic Series: The Dollangangers: Flowers in the Attic, Petals on the Wind, If There Be Thorns, Seeds of Yesterday, and a New Excerpt! Page 131

by Andrews, V. C.


  “Why, that’s not at all unusual,” said Chris. “The house is covered by homeowner’s insurance . . . but with two hundred guests, he needed plenty of extra insurance that night.”

  Cindy’s head jerked upward. She stared at her father, then at me. A sigh escaped her lips. “I guess it’s okay then. I just thought maybe . . . maybe . . .”

  “Maybe what?” I asked sharply.

  “Momma, you picked up a handful of that sand that spilled from the columns when they broke. Wasn’t the sand supposed to be dry? It wasn’t dry. Someone made it wet—and that made it heavier. The sand didn’t come pouring out like it was supposed to. It made those columns stand upright—and the sand clumped down on Jory like cement. Otherwise Jory wouldn’t have been hurt so severely.”

  “I knew about the insurance,” said Chris dully, refusing to meet my eyes. “I didn’t know about the wet sand.”

  Neither Chris nor I could find words to defend Bart. Still, surely, surely he wouldn’t want to injure Jory—or kill him? At some point in our lives, we had to believe in Bart, give him the benefit of doubt.

  Chris paced our bedroom, his brow deeply wrinkled as he explained one of the stage crew could have put water on the sand, hoping to make the columns steadier. It didn’t have to be Bart’s order he was following.

  All three of us descended the stairs solemnly, finding Bart outside on the morning terrace with Melodie. With the mountains in the distance, the woods before them, the gardens lush with blooming flowers, the setting was beautifully romantic. Sunlight filtered through the lacy leaves of the fruit trees, slipped under the brightly striped umbrella that was supposed to shield the occupants seated at the white wrought-iron table.

  Melodie, to my surprise, was smiling as her eyes lingered on the strong lines of Bart’s face. “Bart, your parents don’t understand why I can’t bring myself to go and see Jory in the hospital. I see your mother looking at me resentfully. I’m disappointing her, disappointing myself. I’m a coward about illnesses. Always have been. But I know what’s going on. I know Jory lies on that bed, staring up at the ceiling, refusing to talk. I know what he’s thinking. He’s lost not only the use of his legs, but all the goals he’s set for himself. He’s thinking of his father and the way he died. He’s trying to withdraw from the world by making himself into a nothing thing that we won’t miss when one day he kills himself just like his father did.”

  Bart quickly looked at her disapprovingly. “Melodie, you don’t know my brother. Jory would never kill himself. Maybe he does feel lost now, but he’ll come around.”

  “How can he?” she wailed. “He’s lost the most important thing in his life. Our marriage was based not only on our love for each other, but on our mutual careers. Each day I tell myself that I can go to him, and smile, and give him what he needs. Then I pause, flounder, and wonder what can I say. I’m not good with words like your mother. I can’t smile and be optimistic like his father—”

  “Chris is not Jory’s father,” stated Bart flatly.

  “Oh, to Jory Chris is his father. At least the one who counts most. He loves Chris, Bart, respects and admires him, and forgives him for what you call his sins.” She went on while we three hung back, waiting to hear more of why she was acting as she was.

  And all we heard was a concluding statement. “I’m ashamed to say it, but I can’t go and see him like he is.”

  “Then what are you going to do?” asked Bart in a cynical way. He sipped his coffee while staring directly into her eyes. If he’d turn his head just a little, he’d see the three of us watching and listening, and learning so much.

  Her answer was an anguished wail. “I don’t know! I’m coming apart inside! I hate waking up and knowing that Jory will never be a real husband to me again. If you don’t mind, I’m going to move into the room across the hall that doesn’t hold so many painful memories of what we used to share. Your mother doesn’t realize that I’m just as lost as he is, and I’m having his baby!”

  Her sobs started then. Bowing her head, she put it down on the arms she folded on the table. “Someone has to think of me, help me . . . someone . . .”

  “I’ll help,” said Bard softly, laying his tanned hand on her shoulder. His right hand set the coffee aside and lightly he brushed that hand over her spill of flowing hair. “Whenever you need me, if only for a shoulder to cry on, I’ll be there, anytime.”

  If I’d heard Bart speak as compassionately before to anyone but Melodie, my heart would have jumped for joy. As it was, it plunged. Jory needed his wife—not Bart!

  I stepped forward into the sunlight and took my place at the breakfast table. Bart snatched his hands away from Melodie, staring at me as if I’d interrupted something that was very important to him. Then Chris and Cindy joined us. Silence came that I had to break.

  “Melodie, I want to have a long talk with you as soon as we finish breakfast. You’re not going to run away this time, or turn deaf ears, and shut out my voice with your blank stare.”

  “Mother!” flared Bart. “Can’t you see her viewpoint? Maybe someday Jory will be able to drag himself around on crutches, if he wears a heavy back brace and a harness . . . can you imagine Jory like that? I can’t. Even I don’t want to see him like that.”

  Melodie let out a shrieking cry, jumping to her feet. Bart followed suit, to hold her protectively in his arms.

  “Don’t cry, Melodie,” he soothed in a tender, caring voice. Melodie uttered another small cry of distress, then fled the terrace. The three of us sat quietly staring after her. When she was out of sight, our eyes fixed on Bart, who sat down to finish his breakfast as if we weren’t there.

  “Bart,” said Chris in this opportune moment before Joel joined us, “what do you know about the wet sand in the papiermâché columns?”

  “I don’t understand,” said Bart smoothly, appearing very distracted as he stared at the door through which Melodie had disappeared.

  “Then I’ll explain more carefully,” went on Chris. “It was understood the sand would be dry so it would spill out easily and not harm anyone. Who wet the sand?”

  Narrowing his eyes first, Bart answered sharply, “So now I’m going to be accused of causing Jory’s accident—and deliberately ruining the best time I’ve had until he was hurt. Why, it’s just like it used to be when I was nine and ten. My fault, everything was always my fault. When Clover died, you both presumed I was the one to wrap the wire about his neck, never giving me the benefit of a doubt. When Apple was killed, again you thought it was me, when you knew I loved both Clover and Apple. I’ve never killed anything. Even when you found out later it was John Amos, you put me through hell before you said you were sorry. Well, say you’re sorry now, for damned if I’ll take the blame for Jory’s broken back!”

  I wanted to believe him so much tears came to my eyes. “But who wet the sand, Bart?” I asked, leaning forward and reaching for his hand. “Somebody did.”

  His dark eyes went bleak. “Several of the workhands disliked me for being too bossy . . . but I don’t really think they would do anything to hurt Jory. After all, it wasn’t me up there.”

  For some reason I believed him. He didn’t know anything about the wet sand, and when I met Chris’s eyes, I knew he was convinced as well. But in asking, we’d alienated Bart . . . again.

  He sat silently now, not smiling as he finished his meal. In the garden I glimpsed Joel in the shadows of dense shrubbery as if he’d been eavesdropping on our conversation while pretending to admire the flowers in bloom.

  “Forgive us if we hurt you, Bart. Please, do what you can to help us find out who did wet the sand. But for that, Jory would have the use of his legs.”

  Wisely Cindy had kept very quiet during all of this.

  Bart started to reply, but at that moment Trevor stepped from the house and began serving us. Quickly I swallowed a light breakfast, then rose to go. I had to do something to bring back Melodie’s sense of responsibility. “Excuse me, Chris, Cindy. Take your time an
d finish your breakfast. I’ll join you later.”

  Joel slipped out of the shadows of the dense shrubbery and seated himself beside Bart. As I turned to glance back over my shoulder, I saw Joel lean toward Bart, whispering something I couldn’t make out.

  Feeling heavy of heart, I headed for the room that Melodie now used.

  Face down on the bed she and Jory had shared, Melodie was crying. I perched on the side of her bed, thinking about all the right words to say—but where were the right words? “He’s alive, Melodie, and that counts, doesn’t it? He’s still with us. With you. You can reach out and touch him, talk to him, say all the things I wish I’d said to his father. Go to the hospital. Every day you stay away, he dies a bit more. If you don’t go, if you just stay here and feel sorry for yourself, you’ll live to regret it. Jory can still hear you, Melodie. Don’t leave him now. He needs you now more than he’s ever needed you before.”

  Wild and hysterical, she turned to beat at me with small fists. I caught her wrists to keep from being injured.

  “But I can’t face him, Cathy! I’ve known he lies there, silent and alone where I can’t reach him. He doesn’t answer when you speak, so why would he respond to me? If I kissed him and he said or did nothing, I’d die inside. Besides, you don’t really know him, not like I do. You’re his mother, not his wife. You don’t realize just how important his sexual life is to him. Now he won’t have any. Do you have any idea of what that one thing is doing to him? To say nothing of losing the use of his legs, and giving up his career. He so wanted to prove himself for his father’s sake—his real father’s sake. And you kid yourself to think he’s alive. He isn’t. He’s already left you, Cathy. Left me, too. He doesn’t have to die. He’s already dead while he’s still alive.”

  How her impassioned words stung me. Maybe because they were all too true.

  I panicked inside, realizing that Jory could very well do as Julian had done—find a way to end his life. I tried to console myself. Jory was not like his father, he was like Chris. Eventually Jory would come around and make the best of what he had left.

  I sat on that bed, staring at my daughter-in-law, and realized I didn’t know her. Didn’t know the girl I’d seen off and on since she was eleven. I’d seen the facade of a pretty, graceful girl who’d always seemed to adore Jory. “What kind of woman are you, Melodie? Just what kind?”

  She flipped over on her back and glared angrily at me.

  “Not your kind, Cathy!” she almost screamed. “You’re made of special rugged stuff. I’m not. I was spoiled like you spoil your dear little Cindy. I was an only child and was given everything I wanted. I found out when I was small that life isn’t all pretty picture book fables. And I didn’t want it that way. When I was old enough, I ran to hide in the ballet. I told myself only in the world of fantasy could I find happiness. When I met Jory he seemed the prince I needed. Princes don’t fall and injure their spinal cords, Cathy. They are never crippled. How can I live with Jory when I don’t see him as a prince anymore? How, Cathy? Tell me how I can blind my eyes, and numb my senses, so I won’t feel revulsion when he touches me.”

  I stood up.

  I stared down at her reddened eyes, her face made puffy from so much crying and felt all my admiration for her fade away. Weak, that’s what she was. What a fool to believe that Jory wasn’t made of the same flesh and blood as any other man. “Suppose the injury had been yours, Melodie. Would you want Jory to desert you?”

  She met my eyes squarely. “Yes, I would.”

  I left Melodie still crying on her bed.

  Chris was waiting for me downstairs. “I thought if you went this morning, I’d visit him this afternoon, and Melodie can go to him tonight with Cindy. I’m sure you convinced her to go.”

  “Yes, she’ll go, but not today,” I said without meeting his eyes. “She wants to wait until he opens his eyes and speaks—so that’s my plan, to somehow reach him and make him respond.”

  “If anyone can do that, it will be you,” Chris murmured in my hair.

  * * *

  Jory lay supine on his hospital bed. The fracture was so low on his back that one fine day in the far future he might even gain back his potency. There were certain exercises he could do later on.

  I’d bought two huge long boxes of mixed bouquets that I’d put into tall vases.

  “Good morning, darling,” I said brightly as I entered his small, sterile room.

  Jory didn’t turn his head to look my way. He lay as I’d seen him last, staring straight up at the ceiling. Kissing his faintly chilled face, I began to arrange the flowers.

  “You’ll be happy to know Melodie is no longer suffering from morning sickness. But she’s tired most of the time. I remember I was tired, too, when I was pregnant with you.”

  I bit down on my tongue, for I’d lost Julian not long after I knew I was with child. “It’s a strange kind of summer, Jory. I can’t say I really care for Joel. He seems very fond of Bart, but he does nothing but criticize Cindy. She can do nothing right in Joel’s eyes, or in Bart’s. I’m thinking it would be a good idea to send Cindy off to a summer camp until school starts in the fall. You don’t think Cindy is misbehaving, do you?”

  No answer.

  I tried not to sigh, or look at him with impatience. I drew a chair close to Jory’s bed and caught hold of his limp hand. No response. It was like holding a dead fish. “Jory, they’re going to keep on feeding you intravenously,” I warned. “And if you still refuse to eat, they will put tubes in other veins, and use other methods to keep you alive, even if we have to eventually put you on every machine that will keep you going until you stop acting stubborn and come back to us.”

  He didn’t blink, or speak.

  “All right, Jory. I’ve been easy on you up until now—but I’ve had enough!” My tone turned harsh. “I love you too much to see you lie there and will yourself to die. So you don’t care about anything anymore, do you?

  “So you’re crippled and you’ll have to sit in a wheelchair until you can manage crutches, if you ever have that much ambition. So you’re feeling sorry for yourself, and wondering how you can go on. Others have done it. Others have made lives for themselves, and been in worse condition than you are. So you tell yourself what others do doesn’t count when it’s your body, and your life—and maybe you’re right. It doesn’t matter what others do, if you want to think selfishly.

  “Tell me that the future holds nothing for you now. I thought that, too, at first. I don’t like to see you lying there so still, Jory. It breaks my heart, your father’s heart, and Cindy is beside herself with worry. Bart is so concerned he can’t bear to come and see you lying there so withdrawn. And what do you think you’re doing to Melodie? She’s carrying your child, Jory. She’s crying all day long. She’s changing into a different person because she hears us talking about your lack of response and your stubborn inability to accept what can’t be changed. We’re sorry, terribly sorry you’ve lost the use of your legs—but what can any of us do but make the best out of a miserable situation? Jory, come back to us. We need you with us. We’re not willing to stand back and watch you kill yourself. We love you. We don’t give a damn if you can’t dance and can’t walk, we just want you alive, where we can see you, talk to you. Speak to us, Jory. Say something, anything. Speak to Melodie when she comes. Respond when she touches you . . . or you’ll lose Melodie and your child. She loves you, you know that. But no woman can live on love when the object of her love turns away and rejects her. She doesn’t come because she can’t face the rejection that she knows you give us.”

  During this long, impassioned speech, I’d kept my eyes on his face, hoping for some slight change of expression. I was rewarded by seeing a muscle near his tight lips twitch.

  Encouraged, I went on. “Melodie’s parents have called and suggested that she return to them to have the baby. Do you want Melodie to go, thinking she can’t do anything more for you? Jory, please, please, don’t do this to all of us, to your
self. You have so much you can give the world. You’re more than just a dancer, don’t you know that? When you have talent it’s only one branch on a tree full of many limbs. Why, you’ve never begun to explore the other branches. Who knows just what you might discover? Remember, I, too, made dancing my life, and when I couldn’t dance, I didn’t know what to do with myself. I’d hear the music playing, and you’d be dancing with Melodie in our family room. I’d stiffen inside and try to shut out the music that made my legs want to dance. My soul went soaring . . . and then I’d crash to earth and cry. But when I started writing, I stopped thinking about dancing. Jory, you’ll find something of interest to replace dancing, I know you will.”

  For the first time since he’d known he would never walk or dance again, Jory turned his head. That alone filled me with breathless joy.

  He met my eyes briefly. I saw the tears there, unshed but shining. “Mel is thinking about going to her parents?” he asked in a hoarse voice.

  Hope struggled to survive within me. I didn’t know what Melodie would do now, even if he did come back to being himself. Yet I had to say everything right, and so seldom was I adequate. I’d failed with Julian, failed with Carrie. Please, God, don’t let me fail with Jory.

  “She’d never leave you if you’d come back to her. She needs you, wants you. You turn away from us, proving to her that you’ll turn from her as well. Your prolonged silence and unwillingness to eat say so much, Jory, so much to keep Melodie afraid. She’s not like me. She doesn’t bounce back, spring forth, and kick and yell. She cries all the time. She only half eats . . . and she’s pregnant, Jory. Pregnant with your baby. You think about how you felt when you heard what your father did and consider the effects your death will have on your child. Think long and hard about that before you continue with what you’ve got your mind set on. Think about yourself, and how much you wanted to have your own natural father. Jory, don’t be like your father and leave a fatherless child behind you. Don’t destroy us, when you destroy yourself!”

 

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