“I don't know.”
“Has he heard your mom died?”
“I have no idea.”
“He know about Cameron?”
I thought about that for a moment. “Yeah, because some of the newspeople tracked him down and talked to him when she went missing.”
“He never came to see . . .”
“No. He was incarcerated. He wrote me a few letters. My foster parents gave 'em to me. But I didn't answer. I don't know what happened to him after that. More of the same, I expect. I never heard from him, or about him, until he got so sick. Then the prison chaplain wrote me.”
“And you just . . . didn't answer?”
“I just didn't answer. Tolliver, can I have a bite of your sweet potato?”
“Sure,” he said and slid his plate sideways toward me.
He always orders one when we're at a Texas Roadhouse, and I always have one bite. I swallowed it. It wasn't as good as it usually was, but I didn't think that was the staff's fault. I thought it was Mark's.
He was shaking his head, his eyes turned down to his plate. He looked up, meeting first Tolliver's eyes, then mine. “I don't know how you two do it,” he said. “When Dad comes calling, I have to answer. He's my
dad.
If my mother was alive, it'd be the same way.”
“I guess we're just not as good as you, Mark,” I said. What else could I say?
He'll drain you and leech off of you. He'll break his word and your spirit.
“I don't guess you've heard anything from the police since the last time I talked to you?” Mark said. “Or from that private eye?”
“You're determined to push all the buttons tonight, Mark,” I said, and now it was a struggle to sound even civil.
“I have to ask. I keep thinking someday there'll be news.”
I let my anger go, because I sometimes thought the same thing. “There's no news. Someday I'll find her.” I'd said it for years, and it had never happened. But one day, when I least expected itâthough on some level I always expected itâI'd feel her nearness, like I'd felt the proximity of so many dead people before. I would find Cameron, and I would know what had happened to her that day.
She'd been walking home alone after helping to decorate the high school gym for the prom. I had become the kind of girl who doesn't do things like that, by that time. The lightning had done its job on me. I was still settling into my new skin, terrified of my new and weird ability, recovering from the physical damage. I was still limping, and I tired easily. I'd gotten one of my terrible headaches that day.
It had been in the spring, and we'd had a cold snap. The night before, the temperature had dropped below forty. That afternoon, it was only in the sixties. Cameron had been wearing black tights and a black and white plaid skirt and a white turtleneck. She looked great. No one would have guessed she'd pieced the outfit together at the thrift store. Her blond hair was long and shiny. My sister Cameron had freckles. She hated them. She made all As.
While Mark and Tolliver made conversation, I tried to imagine what Cameron would look like now. Would she still be blond? Would she have gained weight? She'd been small, shorter than me, with thin arms and legs and a will of iron. She'd run track with some success, though when the paper had called her a “track star” after she'd vanished, we'd all looked at each other and rolled our eyes.
My sister hadn't been a saint. I'd known Cameron better than anyone else. She was proud. She could keep a secret till it screamed. She was smart. She studied hard. Sometimes she resented our situation, our fall from affluence, with such anger that she screamed out loud. She hated our mother, Laurel, hated her passionately, for dragging us down with her. But Cameron loved our mother, too.
She couldn't stand Matthew, who was Mother's second husband but her hundredth “boyfriend.” Cameron had had this persistent delusion that our father would return to his pre-drug self, and that he would show up at the dismal trailer someday and take us off with him. We would go back to living in a clean house, and someone else would wash our clothes and cook our meals. Our father would show up at the school for PTA meetings, and he'd talk to us over the supper table about where we might want to go to college.
This was Cameron's fantasy, her happy one. She had some that were darker, much darker. She told me, one morning on our walk to school, that she also dreamed one of our mother's dealers would show up at the trailer while we were gone and kill our mother and stepfather. After they were dead, we'd be put in a nice foster home. Then, when we'd graduated from high school, we'd get jobs and rent an apartment and work our way through college.
That was as far as Cameron's dream had gone. I wondered what she'd imagined would happen after that. Would we each have found a good and prosperous man, and lived happily ever after? Or maybe instead we'd have continued living together (in our modest but clean apartment), wearing our new clothes (a very important part of Cameron's tale), and eating our good food that we'd learned how to cook.
“Honey?” Tolliver said. I turned to him, startled. He'd never called me that before.
“Do you want dessert?” he asked. I realized that the waitress was waiting, smiling in that pained way that said she was being so, so patient.
I almost never eat dessert. “No, thanks,” I said. To my irritation, Mark ordered pie, and Tolliver got coffee to keep him company. I was ready to go; I wanted to get away from all this remembrance. I shifted a little to a more comfortable position, stifling a sigh.
When Tolliver and Mark resorted to talking about computers, I was once more free to think about other things.
But all I could think about was Cameron.
Three
WHEN
we were back in our room, we were both reluctant to start talking about Mark's perfidy in renewing contact with their dad. Tolliver booted up the laptop and went to a fan website that tracks my activities; he monitors it regularly because he's worried that I might acquire a crazy stalker. I never look at it, because there are posts from guys who want to do things with me and to me; and that's scary, not to say repellent. Now, I was worried that Matthew might be reading it at the same moment Tolliver was; he'd be looking for clues on how to find his son.
A nagging pain interrupted my worry session.
I rummaged through my medicine bag to unearth some Icy Hot to rub into my right leg. That's where I feel the long-term effects of getting struck by lightning most of all. I pulled off my shoes and jeans and sat on the bed, stretching out the aching muscles and joints. My right thigh is covered with a tracery of red linesâbroken capillaries or something. It's been like that since I got hit, when I was fifteen. It's not pretty.
I worked the cream into my skin for a while in silence. I rubbed hard, trying to get the muscles to give up the discomfort. After a few minutes of massage, I felt some relief. I lay back on the pillows, telling each muscle group to relax in turn. I closed my eyes. “I'd rather be out in the snow finding a corpse than talking to Iona and Hank, just in general,” I said. “And sometimes talking to Mark is just as hard.”
“Last night at Iona's . . .” Tolliver said, then paused. When he resumed, he sounded cautious. “Hank pulled me aside while you were in the bathroom and asked me if I'd gotten you knocked up.”
“He did
not.
”
“Oh, yeah. He did. He was serious, too. He was like, âYou gotta marry her if you got her pregnant, boy. If you can't do the time, don't do the crime.' ”
“Great perspective on marriage and fatherhood.”
Tolliver laughed. “Well, this is the guy who calls Iona his âball and chain.' ”
“Married, not married, I don't care,” I said, before I realized this was a less than tactful way to put it. “I do care,” I said hastily. “I mean, I love you and being with you is what I want. I don't care about the marriage part of it. Shit, that wasn't right either.”
“We'll do what's right when the time comes,” Tolliver said, in a voice heavy with elaborate unconcern.
Apparently he
did
want to get married. Why couldn't he just say so? I put my hands over my face, which felt strange because they were tingling from the Icy Hot.
Of course I would marry him, especially if it was a make-or-break issue of our relationship. I would do almost anything to get him to stay.
That wasn't a romantic realization. I lay there thinking, listening to Tolliver's fingers touch the keyboard. I thought,
If anything happens to him, I might as well die.
I wondered if that said a lot for Tolliverâor not much for me.
There was a knock at the door of our room. We looked at each other, puzzled. Tolliver shook his head; he wasn't expecting anyone, either.
He got up and pulled the curtain back a little. He let it drop back into position. “It's Lizzie Joyce,” he said. “With her sister. Kate, right?”
“Right.” I was as startled as he was. “Well,” I said. “What the hell?” We gave each other little shrugs.
Tolliver, having decided they weren't armed and dangerous, let the Joyce sisters inside. I pulled my jeans back on and rose to greet them.
You'd think they'd never seen a middle-of-the-road motel before. Kate and Lizzie examined the room with nearly identical slow scans. The sisters looked a lot alike. Katie was a little shorter than Lizzie, and maybe two years younger. But she'd colored her hair the same blond as Lizzie's, and her brown eyes were narrow like Lizzie's, and her lean build was the same, too. They were both wearing jeans, boots, and jackets. Lizzie had slicked her hair back into a ponytail at the nape of her neck, while Katie's was loose and bouncy. Between necklaces, earrings, and rings, I figured they each were wearing a couple of thousand dollars' worth of jewelry. (After a subsequent trip to a mall store, I revised that figure upward.)
Katie's eyes were avid as she examined Tolliver. She wasn't so enthusiastic about our paraphernalia: our clothes, his crossword puzzle book, the open laptop, his shoes put neatly by his suitcase.
“Hello, Ms. Joyce,” I said, trying to inject my voice with some warmth. “What can I do for you?”
“You can tell me again what you saw when you stood on Mariah Parish's grave.”
It took me a second to recall. “Your father's caregiver,” I said. “The one who had the childbirth problems. The infection.”
“Yeah, why'd you say that? She had complications after her appendectomy,” Lizzie said. She was issuing a very low-level challenge.
Oh, for goodness' sake. This was hardly my fight. “If that's what you're calling it, okay,” I said. It made no difference to me. Mariah Parish wasn't the one I'd been paid to read, anyway.
“That's what
happened,
” Katie said.
I shrugged. “All right.”
“What the hell do you mean, âall right'? She either did or she didn't.” The Joyce sisters were not going to let go of this bone.
“Believe what you want to believe. I already told you what she died of.”
“She was a good woman. Why would you make that up?”
“Exactly. Why
would
I make that up?” And what was wrong with a woman having gone through childbirth?
“So who was the father?” Lizzie asked, as abruptly as she'd asked about the death.
“I have no idea.”
“Then . . .” Lizzie floundered to a halt. She was a woman who wasn't used to floundering. She didn't like it. “Why'd you say it?”
I really had to restrain myself from rolling my eyes. “I said it because I saw it, and you wanted me to find your grandfather's grave myself,” I said, with fabulous diction. “To give you your money's worth, I went from grave to grave, as you obviously wanted me to.”
“Everything else you said was right,” Katie said.
“I know.” Had they expected me to be surprised at my own accuracy?
“So why'd you make up that one?”
If they hadn't been so agitated, this would have been boring. My leg hurt, and I wanted to sit down. But I didn't want to invite them to, so I felt obliged to remain standing. “I didn't. Believe me or not. I don't give a damn.”
“But where's the baby?”
“How should I know?” I'd reached the end of my patience.
“Ladies,” Tolliver said, just in the nick of time, “my sister finds the dead. The baby was not in the grave she scanned. Either the baby is alive or it's buried somewhere else. Or it might have been miscarried.”
“But if the baby was my granddad's, that baby inherits some of what he left,” Lizzie said, and suddenly their agitation became understandable.