“I can’t believe it… don’t know how to say it.”
“Say what? Rainey, you’re scaring me.”
“George.” He managed to say between whimpers. “Oh, my God,” he wept.
“What’s wrong with George?”
“Dead. He…”
The curtain that the vodka had closed over her nerves was jerked open, and Doris howled so loudly that the next-door neighbor, Ted Broom, a retired policeman dressed only in a strap T-shirt and boxer shorts, came running over with his. 38 in hand. He came right into the kitchen with the gun in the air, his bare feet squeaking against the linoleum. The Lees stared at him through their tearstained eyes.
“Sorry, I thought it was a rapist…,” he said, apologizing. His face was English bulldog, his chest barreled, his arms too long and his legs too thin and rudely veined.
“Everything okay, Rainey?”
“No, George is gone.”
“Camping. Aw, guys, he’ll be back on Sunday. Boy has to get out.”
“Dead!” Doris shrieked. “My babies are both dead!”
Doris’s eyes rolled toward the back of her head, and some invisible magician jerked the skeleton out of her frame. It was Ted who dropped his gun and moved to catch her. Rainey never moved a muscle nor even looked at her. He didn’t seem aware that his wife had fallen to the floor in a cold faint. Ted lifted her up like a sleeping baby, her arms and legs so much wet rope. He abandoned the pistol where it lay on the shiny antique-white floor tiles, and Rainey stared at it as though it might start spinning in place and playing music out through the barrel.
“Should I put her on the couch?”
Rainey looked up at Ted, his eyes clouded. “Bed, I think.”
“Maybe you should call a doctor…,” Ted said. “… Minister or something?”
“She likes the Episcopal minister Hodges.” Rainey stood and began looking out through the window, where birds were watching him, tilting their heads here and there and shuffling their feet.
“Which church is it?” Ted had returned.
“Something…,” he said. Two cardinals were trying to decide if they should go for some of the seed that Doris had put out or if Rainey might be about to pounce at them through the glass.
“Are you all right? I mean, is there anything I can do? Anything at all?”
“I don’t…”
“What happened?”
“Happened?”
“To George.”
“Murdered.”
“Murdered? But he’s on a camping trip-saw him leave myself.”
Rainey looked at the old policeman. Rainey’s eyes were moist from tears but dead as mica. “I have to go make the arrangements for my boy. He’s coming… in a couple of hours.”
“Shouldn’t you and Doris go together? I mean, she’s his mother, would she want to…”
“George fell into rocks. They picked him up with shovels. Nobody’ll ever see him again because he doesn’t exist.” Rainey squeezed his eyes shut. “I wish to Christ I hadn’t… seen him. Sweet Jesus, how could anybody hurt George?”
“I’ll call Mary over here and I’ll go with you. Drive you.”
“Stay here for me. I’ll call the preacher from the office. I just can’t be here right now. I’ll be back in a couple of hours. I appreciate…”
“Don’t mention it, Rainey. We’d do anything to help. What’s that smell?” Ted asked. He turned to the stove, shoved his hands into oven mitts, and opened the oven door. While Ted was pulling the blackened game hens from the oven and the kitchen was filling with angry smoke, Rainey stood and took his leave.
Special Agent Rainey Lee was stuck in a dream with walls of albumen, curtains of clouding. He felt no more substantial than a ring of cigar smoke as he floated out into the evening air, was absorbed by his Cherokee and… found himself at the office. The elevator delivered him up like Jonah to his floor, and then… he was in his office drinking bourbon and looking out the window. He found himself locked on to his children’s faces, where they were fixed in the silver frame on his desk beside the image of their mother. The smile, Eleanor’s missing front teeth, bright-blue eyes; George’s face, the freckles, the elfin smirk. They seemed almost alive to him. He didn’t cry again. He took his Smith amp; Wesson automatic from the shoulder holster, put the barrel into his mouth, cocked the hammer, and tasted the gun oil, but the fabric of his resolve had holes in it large enough to climb through. He fell back into the chair, alive and disappointed. He laid the pistol on the desk. He found the second pint of bourbon in the deep drawer among the files, resigned to screw up his courage with the bottle. A walk to the roof, a minute under the evening sky, and then he’d be out there in the stars. The idea was drawing at him, pulling him along as he spun the top from the bottle and turned it up so whiskey flowed into the cup that read “Daddy’s Coffee.”
3
Ted Broom, retired, dressed now in a knit shirt and sansabelt slacks, opened Rainey’s front door to a distinguished older man in a navy blazer and a knit polo shirt. Ted’s eyes ran over the steel crutches with the stainless bands that circled the man’s forearms. Polio most likely, he thought. The crutches that had been so common at one time were now rare, and Ted hadn’t thought about polio in decades, but his brother had a son who’d had it in the early fifties. The doctor carried his bag by hooking the handle with the tips of the fingers of the hand on the right crutch grip.
“Dr. Evans. Rainey sent me. To see after Doris.”
“Come in,” Ted said. “Please.”
The doctor followed Ted like a shadow, the crutch tips chirping as the old man moved in fluid, one-way pendulum strides. Ted opened the bedroom door, where his wife, Mary, was sitting on the bed holding Doris’s hand, cooing to her sobs. It had been less than half an hour since Rainey had abandoned the house.
“Tom Evans,” the older man offered, his voice surprisingly vital.
“This is Dr. Evans,” Ted said, introducing the man to the two women.
“Rainey sent me,” he explained to Doris.
“Where is he?” she asked, the words trembling out. Doris was on her back with her hands over her eyes when the doctor sat on the side of the bed and propped his crutches against the wall.
“Please excuse us,” the doctor said as he opened his bag. By the time he looked up from its depths, the door was closing behind the couple.
Doris stared up like a frightened fawn. The doctor smiled at her, his eyes soft through darkened lenses. Her own eyes were points of horror. Get me out of here! Get me away from this place, now!
His face floated above her, the peppermint breath washing her as he spoke. “I understand how you feel,” he said. “I lost a child years ago.”
Her hand flew to his forearm and was like a claw. “I want to go to him,” she whimpered. “I’m his mother.”
“Have you been drinking?”
“Some vodka-before.” She started crying again. She knew drinking was a sin, and she a sinner. Her mind was running from one place to another and touched on the thought that God was perhaps punishing her for that sin among many. Or punishing Rainey for something she didn’t even know about. Hadn’t Rainey cursed God, questioned his worth?
“Now, now.” The aged physician removed a syringe and filled it from a vial of clear liquid, the bottom pointed at the ceiling as he pulled back the plunger. “Doris, are you allergic to anything?”
“No,” she said, “just dairy products.”
“This’ll sting a little, but it will help you get through the next few hours.” He inserted the needle, but it didn’t hurt at all. Doris was numb to the needle because she was overwhelmed by real pain. Immediately after the shot she closed her eyes.
“What’s that?” her words slurred.
“It’s succinylcholine. It’ll force you to relax. I want you to close your eyes and remember a good time with your children. Imagine their smiles. They aren’t in pain now. They’re in a far better place. Do you believe that?”