“That’s all right.”
“I was afraid I’d lost you too.”
I shifted on the cold metal. “Don’t say that, Daddy.”
He coughed. “No, you’re right.”
Then we heard the scream, long and high pitched, from the direction of the Waterhouses’ house. I shivered.
“What in God’s name was that?” Daddy asked.
I shook my head. I had not told him about Ivy May going missing.
A throat cleared behind us. The doctor had come downstairs to get us. Now that the waiting was over I did not want to move from the steps. I did not want to see my mother. I had been waiting for her all my life, and now I preferred to be waiting for her always, if that was the only alternative.
Daddy flicked his cigarette into the garden and turned to follow the doctor. I could hear it sizzling in the dewy grass. After it stopped I went inside too.
Mummy was lying very still, her face pale, her eyes open and unnaturally bright. I sat down next to her. She fixed her eyes on me. I knew she was waiting for me to speak.
I had no idea what to say or do. Lavinia and I had rehearsed such scenes many times when we were playacting, but none of that seemed right now that I was actually here with Mummy. It felt silly to say something melodramatic, ridiculous to say something banal.
In the end, though, I did resort to the banal. “The garden smells nice tonight. The jasmine especially.”
Mummy nodded. “I’ve always loved jasmine on a summer’s night,” she said. Then she closed her eyes.
Was that all we were going to talk about-jasmine? It seemed so. I squeezed her hand tightly and looked hard at her face, as if that would help me to remember it better. I could not bring myself to say good-bye.
The doctor touched my shoulder. “It’s best if you go now, miss.”
I let go of Mummy’s hand, and went downstairs and back out into the garden, wading through the wet grass down to the back fence. The ladder was still there, although Lavinia and I did not meet each other over the fence so much now. I climbed to the top of the wall. The Waterhouses’ ladder was not up. I balanced there for a moment, then jumped, landing in the wet grass and smearing my dress. When I got my breath back I walked up the garden to the French doors that led directly into the Waterhouses’ back parlor.
The family was arranged in a semicircular tableau that a painter might have set up. Ivy May lay across the chaise longue, hair spread around her face, eyes closed. Lavinia lay at her sister’s feet, her head resting on the edge of the chaise longue. Mrs. Waterhouse sat in an armchair near Ivy May’s head, holding her hand. Mr. Waterhouse leaned against the mantelpiece, a hand covering his eyes. Simon hovered near the door with his head bowed.
I knew just from looking at them, gathered together yet so separate in their grief, that Ivy May was dead.
I felt as if my heart had been hollowed out, and now my stomach was too.
When I came in they all looked at me. Lavinia jumped up and threw herself into my arms, weeping. I gazed over her shoulder at Mrs. Waterhouse. It was as if I were seeing myself mirrored in her face. Her eyes were quite dry, and her expression was of someone who has been struck a blow from which she will not recover.
Because of that, I spoke the words directly to her. “My mother is dead.”
Kitty Coleman
All her life Maude was a presence at my side, whether she was actually there or not. I pushed her away, yet she remained.
Now I was holding on to her hand and did not want to let go. It was she who had to let go of me. When she did at the last, I knew I was alone, and that it was time for me to depart.
Simon Field
Next day Mr. Jackson went out and shot that white horse through the head.
Later, as our pa and Joe and me was digging, the police came to take me away for questioning. Our pa didn’t even look surprised. He just shook his head and I knew what he were thinking-I should never have got in with them girls.
The police asked me all kinds of things about what I did that day-not just about looking for Ivy May, or finding her, but about the horse and Kitty Coleman and Mr. Jackson. They seemed way off the mark to me, and none too nice about it neither. It were like they wanted to make their lives easy and say I did the crime.
When it sounded like they was ready to accuse me I said, “Who would be stupid enough to do that to a girl and then bring her home to her parents?”
“You would be surprised what criminals do,” one of the policemen said.
I thought of the tall man with the specs at the end of the mews. But when it came time to describe finding Ivy May I didn’t tell ‘em about him. Would’ve been easier on me if I had-given ’em someone else to look for.
But I knew he was long gone-them bumblers would never find him.
I would, though, someday. Find him. For Ivy May.
John Jackson
I arranged to meet Miss Coleman at her family grave. I’d considered asking her to come to Faraday, where her mother and I used to meet. But it was a silly, sentimental thought, and risky besides-questions might be asked if we were seen alone in the Dissenters, whereas in the meadow we could be thought to be discussing burial arrangements.
She was dressed all in black, with her hair up under a black straw hat. I had never seen her before with her hair up-she looked several years older. She has no idea but she is beginning to resemble Kitty.
“Thank you for coming, Miss Coleman,” I said as we stood side by side next to the grave. “I’m so sorry for your loss. It has been a great shock to us all. But your mother is with God now.” I blinked rapidly at the ground. I often express my condolences to mourners at the cemetery, but this time I felt the inadequacy of the words.
“My mother did not believe in heaven,” Maude said. “You know that.”
I wondered what those last three words were meant to signal. How much did she know about my intimacy with her mother? Her expression was so guarded that it was impossible to guess.
“Simon didn’t tell me what you wanted to see me about when he delivered the message,” she said. “I assume it is to do with my mother’s burial, which I thought my father went over with you.”
“He was here yesterday, yes. There was something I wished to discuss with him but did not. I thought that perhaps you and I might do so.”
Maude raised her eyebrows but said nothing.
There was no easy way to say it-no stock expressions or careful euphemisms to smooth the shock of the idea. “Your mother told me she wished to be cremated rather than interred.”
Maude looked up at the Coleman urn, studying it as if she had never seen it before. “I know that. She was always worried she might be buried alive.”
“Then perhaps you could tell your father what she told you.”
“Why didn’t you tell him yesterday?”
I paused. “She spoke of it only unofficially-she did not put it in writing or tell her husband. It would not be appropriate for me to tell him.”
Maude pursed her lips. “Daddy already knows she wanted to be cremated. They used to argue about it. He feels we should do what society dictates concerning the disposal of-of bodies.”
“He won’t agree to it even if he knows it was his wife’s fervent wish?”
“He’ll do what looks best.” Maude paused. “He lost her, and now he has got her back he will be sure to keep her.”
“What people do with their dead is usually a reflection of themselves rather than of their loved one,” I said. “Do you think all these urns and angels mean anything to the dead? It takes a very unselfish man to do exactly what his wife wants without his own-or society’s -desires and tastes entering into it. I had rather hoped your father was that man.”
“But surely if all these monuments mean nothing to the dead, then nothing we do to them does?” Maude replied. “If they don’t care, shouldn’t we then do what is important to us? It’s we who are left behind, after all. I’ve often thought this place is really for the living, not the dead. We design the grave to remind us of the dead, and of what we remember of them.”