There was only one moment of unusable tape because of something the girl had done as opposed to their usual false stops and starts and that was when she dropped the little blonde doll she was holding and stooped to pick it up and the dress she was wearing was so short you could see her white panties which Carole glimpsed briefly and promptly glanced away from, and then wondered why. Was it that the little girl acted and sounded so much like a miniature adult that Carole was embarrassed for her, as you would be for an adult?
It was possible. She’d done and thought sillier things in her life.
The piece was fluff of course but it was good fluff. Not some flower-show or county fair but a real human interest story for a change. Unusual and touching. With a charming kid as its heroine. She could be proud of this one. This one wasn’t going to make her cringe when it was broadcast.
It occurred to her that they could all be proud of this one, everybody involved really, from the dispatchers god knows to the police and EMS team to the grandmother who’d no doubt helped raise this little wonder and finally, extending even to her and her crew. Everybody got to do their job, fulfill their responsibilities efficiently and well. And the one who had made all of this happen for them was a four-year-old.
Quite a day.
They had down all the reactions shots. All they needed now was her tag line.
“This is Carole Bellaver — reporting to you on a brave, exceptional little girl — from Knottsville, Maine.”
“Got it,” Bernie said.
“You want to cover it?”
“Why? I said I got it.”
“Okay. Jeez, fine.”
What the hell was that about? Bernie had just snapped at her. Bernie was the nicest, most easygoing cameraman she’d ever worked with. She couldn’t believe it. It was totally out of character. He and Harold, her soundman, were packing their gear into the van as if they were in some big hurry to get out of there. And she realized now that they’d both been unusually silent ever since the interview. Normally when the camera stopped rolling you couldn’t shut them up.
But the interview had gone well. Hadn’t it?
Was it something she’d said or done?
By now the print media had arrived, some of them all the way from Bangor and Portland and they were talking to Suzy and her grandmother on the front steps where she’d taped them earlier. Flashbulbs popped. Suzy smiled.
Bernie and Harold looked grim.
“Uh, guys. You want to let me into the loop? I thought everything went fine here.”
“It did,” Bernie said.
“So? So what’s the problem?”
“You didn’t see? You were standing right there. I thought you must have — then went on anyway. Sorry.”
“See what?”
“When she dropped the doll.”
“Right, I saw her drop the doll.”
“And she bent down to pick it up.”
“Yeah?”
He sighed. “I’ve got it all on tape. We can take a look over at the studio. I want to know it wasn’t just my imagination.”
“It wasn’t.” Harold said. “I saw it too.”
“I don’t get it. What are you talking about?”
She glanced over at Suzy on the steps. The girl was looking directly at her, ignoring the reporters, frowning — and for a moment held her gaze. She’s sick of this, Carole thought. That’s the reason for the frown. She smiled. Suzy didn’t.
And she had no idea what all the mystery was about until they rolled the tape at the studio and she watched the little girl drop the doll and stoop and Bernie said there and stopped the tape so that she saw what she hadn’t noticed at the time because she’d looked away so abruptly, strangely embarrassed for this little girl so mature and adult for her age so that they’d simply not registered for her — the long wide angry welts along the back of both thighs just below the pantyline which told her that this was not only a smart, brave little girl but perhaps a sad and foolish one too who had drained the tub dry and dialed 911 to save her mother’s life.
Which may not have been worth saving.
Nobody had noticed this. Not the cops, not EMS. Nobody.
She rolled the tape again. Jesus.
She wondered about the grandmother. She had to know. How could she not know?
“What do you want to do?” Bernie said.
She felt a kind of hardness, an access to stone will. Not unlike the little girl’s perhaps. She remembered that last look from the steps.
“I want to phone the reporters who were out there with us, kill the story. Dupe the tapes. Phone the police and child welfare and get copies to them. I want us to do what her daughter evidently couldn’t bring herself to do. I want us to do our best to drown the bitch.”
They both seemed fine with that.
RETURNS
“I’m here.”
“You’re what?”
“I said I’m here.”
“Aw, don’t start with me. Don’t get started.”
Jill’s lying on the stained expensive sofa with the TV on in front of her tuned to some game show, a bottle of Jim Beam on the floor and a glass in her hand. She doesn’t see me but Zoey does. Zoey’s curled up on the opposite side of the couch waiting for her morning feeding and the sun’s been up for hours now, it’s ten o’clock and she’s used to her Friskies at eight.
I always had a feeling cats saw things that people didn’t. Now I know.
She’s looking at me with a kind of imploring interest. Eyes wide, black nose twitching. I know she expects something of me. I’m trying to give it to her.
“You’re supposed to feed her for godsakes. The litter box needs changing.”
“What? Who?”
“The cat. Zoey. Food. Water. The litter box. Remember?”
She fills the glass again. Jill’s been doing this all night and all morning, with occasional short naps. It was bad while I was alive but since the cab cut me down four days ago on 72nd and Broadway it’s gotten immeasurably worse. Maybe in her way she misses me. I only just returned last night from god knows where knowing there was something I had to do or try to do and maybe this is it. Snap her out of it.
“Jesus! Lemme the hell alone. You’re in my goddamn head. Get outa my goddamn head!”
She shouts this loud enough for the neighbors to hear. The neighbors are at work. She isn’t. So nobody pounds the walls. Zoey just looks at her, then back at me. I’m standing at the entrance to the kitchen. I know that’s where I am but I can’t see myself at all. I gesture with my hands but no hands appear in front of me. I look in the hall mirror and there’s nobody there. It seems that only my seven-year-old cat can see me.
When I arrived she was in the bedroom asleep on the bed. She jumped off and trotted over with her black-and-white tail raised, the white tip curled at the end. You can always tell a cat’s happy by the tail-language. She was purring. She tried to nuzzle me with the side of her jaw where the scent-glands are, trying to mark me as her own, to confirm me in the way cats do, the way she’s done thousands of times before but something wasn’t right. She looked up at me puzzled. I leaned down to scratch her ears but of course I couldn’t and that seemed to puzzle her more. She tried marking me with her haunches. No go.
“I’m sorry,” I said. And I was. My chest felt full of lead.
“Come on, Jill. Get up! You need to feed her. Shower. Make a pot of coffee. Whatever it takes.”
“This is fuckin’ crazy,” she says.
She gets up though. Looks at the clock on the mantle. Stalks off on wobbly legs toward the bathroom. And then I can hear the water running for the shower. I don’t want to go in there. I don’t want to watch her. I don’t want to see her naked anymore and haven’t for a long while. She was an actress once. Summer stock and the occasional commercial. Nothing major. But god, she was beautiful. Then we married and soon social drinking turned to solo drinking and then drinking all day long and her body slid fast into too much weight here, too little there. Pockets of self-abuse. I don’t know why I stayed. I’d lost my first wife to cancer. Maybe I just couldn’t bear to lose another.