When Denise and McKenna died, time stopped.
I lost track of the months after their deaths. The days, the endless hours of darkness when I was afraid to sleep — almost as afraid as I am now. But back then, I didn’t fear visions. I feared dreams.
New, unlived, frighteningly real dreams. Wishful dreams of scenes of a life I would never have with them. Scenes of a secret life played out under the cover of sleep.
I feared the disorientation of waking from those dreams. Waking to find that it had all been an illusion. A vanished, vanquished dream.
A lie born from the inherent cruelty of the subconscious.
Was I punishing myself? For what? For not saving them? For not dying with them?
I lost track of time. Time I’d measured by other people’s lives.
When Denise was due home from work.
When McKenna was due home from school.
When I had to be home for dinner if I was out on my bike.
When McKenna had to turn off the TV if it was a school night.
When Denise and I would go to bed.
When Denise and I would make love.
An hour after I dialed 911 that first time there was a knock at my door. Two men in tired suits standing on my front stoop.
“James Enright?” said a tall, thin man in a concrete gray suit. His hair was closely cropped and receding, leaving a black, wispy peninsula that reached down to the top of his forehead. His upper lip protruded slightly over his bottom lip, which made his face look unusually long. His teeth never showed when he talked.
I opened the door wider. “That’s right.”
“I’m Detective Phelps.” He turned his torso in the direction of the man standing behind him on the step but kept his eyes on me. “This is Detective Lewis.”
Where Phelps was maybe fifty, Lewis was no more than thirty, still bearing a youthful pudge on his cheeks. He combed his brown hair straight down. His suit was a slightly darker gray than his partner’s.
Phelps stuck out his arm as an afterthought. We shook hands like children, weak and awkward.
“I understand you phoned in a tip this afternoon regarding the whereabouts of a missing person.”
I nodded. “I know it sounds crazy, but it just came to me. I thought I should call.”
“May we come in?”
“Certainly.” My heartbeat quickened. Was I a suspect? When I had called, I hadn’t considered the likely assumption that knowing the location of a body meant I might be the killer. It hadn’t even crossed my mind. I’d simply called because I thought it was the right thing to do.
Then again, what did I have to hide?
I opened the door to let them in.
Denise and McKenna did not drown.
They died on solid ground.
They had just reached the north end of the bridge heading south when the main span gave way, leaving the span they were on with nothing to hold up its south end. That end fell, but the north end held, creating a sudden, sharp incline toward the ground.
Not a long incline, maybe fifty feet, but nearly vertical.
The medical examiner determined that they had survived the initial fall — the steep slide down.
What killed them had come after.
From above.
An SUV.
A semi.
Other vehicles.
Other people.
It wasn’t until I let the detectives in that I first took a good hard look at where I was living. Took the time to see what others saw.
The outside was three stories of bricks, tall arched windows, and a front stoop. Part of a new building fronted to look like old rowhouses. Rowhouses that had never been a part of the area. Never a part of the true history of the milling district and its skid-row environs of railroad yards, bars, and flophouses. The rowhouses creating the facade of a mythical time. A mythical place.
But while the outside was designed to look old, the inside reflected the new.
Modern.
Spare.
So spare that it seemed lifeless. One big open room of concrete and ventilation pipes. It was supposed to look like a loft or converted warehouse, but instead it just looked cold. A hollow imitation.
The kitchen was open, exposed, marked off by a granite-topped, elongated island and filled with large swatches of stainless steel that covered the refrigerator, dishwasher, and stove. In what passed for the living room, a large television filled one wall opposite a dark green sofa. A green wing chair sat ninety degrees to the sofa and faced the front, curtainless windows.
The only items out of place with the modern interior were the vestiges of my old life. A Schwinn mountain bike leaning against the wall near the front door. A pair of oak bookcases filled with hardcovers, spines exposed, some standing, some on their sides. The tired green couch and wing chair. A forties-era Baldwin spinet piano. And a tan, square coffee table stained with dark brown water marks and the rainbow spectrum of McKenna’s crayon ticks that had run beyond the edges of the paper. The table that had been her favorite place to color.
I’d bought the rowhouse before I’d even collected the insurance money. We’d lived in the safety of the suburbs in an Arts and Crafts bungalow.
The perfect home for a family.
The worst place to live after your family has died.
I sold it so fast I hardly remember the closing.
Or moving out.
Or moving in.
The subconscious has a way of blocking those things out.
I’m a professor at the university. Was. Am still, I guess. Music Department. The dean of the department was kind enough to approve a sabbatical after the bridge collapse. It was his idea. The students needed a teacher. I’d stopped coming in.
After Denise and McKenna died, there didn’t seem much point to music anymore.
During that first visit, Phelps settled on the front edge of the wing chair. I sat on the couch. We had to turn our heads to look at each other. We each faced a side of the coffee table, little more now than a receptacle for my debris: a dozen empty bottles of Summit beer, a glass, emerald-green ashtray stuffed with a bloom of short, bent Winstons, and, open but facedown, a book of poems by W. H. Auden. The marks on the table from McKenna’s crayons looked like fading confetti amid the debris.
Lewis stayed on his feet, perusing the few details of my life that were on display. He shuffled past the bookcases, the bloodless kitchen, and the urban view out my front window. But he stopped at the photographs on top of the walnut-colored piano, my shrine to Denise and McKenna: half a dozen photographs in frames amid McKenna’s drawings and Denise’s handmade pottery. Who they were and what they were.
To me.
Phelps rested his elbows on his thighs. His folded hands hung down into the empty space between his knees.
“We appreciate your help in this matter. And nothing sounds crazy to me, Mr. Enright. I’ve been on the force long enough to know that anything that might help us solve a crime is worth checking out.”
My mouth opened as I began to understand. “Was the body there? Where I said it would be?”
The detective pushed his lips together and nodded.
It was in that nod that my life changed. What I’d seen in my mind had not been a dream or an illusion. It had been a view of reality. A reality beyond my own.
More than a memory of a dream.
More a dream of someone else’s memory.
Icarus.
That’s what they are calling him now. I saw it in a headline in the newspaper after the third death. The media always need a catchy name for everything murderous. The Green River Killer. Jack the Ripper. The Boston Strangler. Son of Sam. They need the name and the fancy graphic, the Pavlovian trademarks they flash on the screen to draw in viewers to the latest gruesome details.