Moon Shadow: The Totally True Love Adventure Series (Volume 1) (22 page)

I don’t believe Julie is in any real danger. But that person out there with her, the congressman, I’ve decided, isn’t my father. Frank, you bastard, I’m through, I tell myself. From this moment forward that person is just some evil guy named “Frank.”

“Lie down, Sugar. Here, put these on.”

“Whatever you say, Frank. I want you so bad.”

I hear more moving about, the clicking of metal. It seems Frank and Julie are playing some sort of sick game. They’ll go away soon, I reckon, if Sarah and I can just stick it out a little longer.

“Be right back,” Frank says.

Julie giggles solicitously.

I hold Sarah tightly in my arms. She’s shaking interminably, which adds to my confusion. I hear her thick, tortured breathing.

Then there’s the familiar clack, clack, clack of Frank’s shoes across the hardwood floor as he enters the bedroom again. I hear him say savagely, “Tell me about Mary’s diary, or I’ll slit your throat.”

As Julie begins to whimper, Sarah covers her ears with her hands.

“I wrote things in the diary,” Julie says, “the truth about Mary’s death. I left it for Dan, he must have taken it.”

So now Frank knows I’ve taken possession of my mother’s diary, I tell myself, and that Julie has scribbled “the truth” in the diary regarding my mother’s death. No matter what happens, I must keep the diary from Frank, at least until I’ve been given a chance to read Julie’s version of what took place on the night of my mother’s death.

Suddenly I hear Frank’s voice in a loud, angry taunt: “If you’re lying to me, I’m going to cut you from ear to ear.”

The words of Mr. Christie, “Evil must be encountered, not evaded,” like a supplicating verse from the Torah, bring me to my feet. I can no longer suffer what Frank is doing to Julie. Sarah stands with me. For a moment I hesitate, and then I take a deep breath and throw open the closet door, jump out and shout, “Get the hell off her, you bastard!”

Frank, straddling Julie on the bed, starts. When he sees me, his hand comes away from her throat, and he moves slowly, calmly, from the bed and stands beside it, his carefully groomed hair unruffled. In the other hand he holds a large carving knife.

The menace that darkens Frank’s face causes a quaking in my knees. His eyes seem to glaze over like a rattlesnake’s. With Julie’s hands cuffed to the bed frame, I’m reminded of a scene from a Wes Craven film. She’s lying still, on her back, her hair horribly disheveled. Her skirt is hiked up. She’s wearing the gold anklet. On her face there’s an innocent quality, as of a child who’s quit resisting.

“What’s going on?” asks Frank. “What are you doing in my bedroom, son?”

I point at Julie, who is gaping at the ceiling like a madwoman, and I mutter angrily, “What’s she doing here, and why is she handcuffed?”

“That is none of your business,” Frank snarls. “I want you out of my bedroom!”

“You won’t control me, Frank!” I’m looking at him with hatred so intense it bathes the room in apprehension.

“Daniel, Daniel, calm down ... please. We can clear all this up, if you’ll simply allow me to talk to you.”

If I owned a sword, I am thinking, I would run it through Frank’s heart. There was a time, long ago, when I considered Frank fearless and strong, a modern warrior. But I see clearly now that Frank is a man frightened by his inadequacies. I cannot listen to his flat ugly voice without a twitch of shame. Frank is a man on whom the sky is falling.

Frank puts the knife on his dresser. I anticipate the moment when he will ask about the diary. Sarah is still in the closet, and I’m hoping she won’t come out.

“You never wanted to talk to me before,” I say bitterly.

“That’s because you acted like a kid, still crying for the tit.” Frank’s steely eyes flash with derision. “You were always
her
boy.”

“And you always had your convenient meetings.” If I could reach into the past I would show Frank in living color the pain he caused my mother and I. “I should have been
your
boy, too!”

“So you were lonely?” Frank laughs. “Try it for twenty-two years.”

I stand with my hands in my pockets. “I know about you and Mrs. Hartford, in 1998. You were probably chasing Julie before Mom’s corpse was cold!”

“How would you know? You were gone, Dan. Don’t you remember? And after that I wasted the days here alone, with her, watching the hours tick by, with all her fucking Catholic bullshit, the pills and the booze.” Frank chuckles ironically. “Listen to me you little punk. For years you walked around this house blaming me for your mother’s illness. You concluded I was a self-absorbed, insensitive prick, and you were fucking wrong! I was out there campaigning, working, paying the medical bills, feeding your lazy ass and putting a roof over your head!”

I feel my throat constrict and my eyes moisten. Frank’s anger hurts me. “Why did you have her committed? Why did you let her have all those shock treatments?” I’m aware of the quaver in my voice.

“Because she wanted to take her own life,” Frank says thickly. Then, in a softer tone, “For several years she wanted to die. The only thing that stopped her was you. She lived for you.”

I sense that some of my guilt, some of the burden I’ve carried over Liz’s letters, has been lifted. But if what Frank says is true, my mother took her own life because of Frank, because he had caused her to suffer, because he had withdrawn his love.

“You should be ashamed of treating her like you did,” I say, my voice rising as I experience a moment of dreadful recognition. “You think I don’t know, but I listened to you every night, hurting her for your own selfish pleasure. She suffered because of you, you bastard! She died because of you! You might just as well have murdered her!”

We stare at each other—a few seconds of fierce enquiry. I can hear Frank’s labored breathing, and then Julie speaks, in a flat, lifeless tone: “Mary didn’t take enough pills to kill herself ... she just wanted help ... she found us together ... Frank finished the job ... he held the pillow over her face—”

“Shut up, bitch!” Frank roars. Julie’s accusation seems to snap in a closing circle around him.

I catch my breath. The question lies squarely before me:
Did you kill my mother?
Asking it, I am sure, will cost me my life.

“Don’t you talk to her like that!” I bellow. It occurs to me that Julie has been trying to tell me the truth all along.

Frank taunts Julie. “Tell him what
really
happened. The truth. Tell him what
you
did to his mother.”

Julie giggles under her breath. She seems disconnected from the world, from reality itself.

Sarah shuffles out of the closet and stands next to me. She’s holding the diary in one hand and wiping tears from her eyes with the other.

“What’s this?” Frank seems surprised, but only for an instant. “Give me the diary, Sarah,” he says compellingly.

“No, Sarah,” I say. “Go. Run. I’ll meet you at our hiding place.”

As Sarah hesitates, I feel a surge of panic; my heart beats fearfully. Frank takes a step towards Sarah, a quick predatory gesture, but like a flash of lightning I move between him and Sarah. I stand my ground, prepared to protect her, and the diary. Frank backs away.

I look at Sarah, she looks at me, and then she runs, almost crashing into Mike as he appears in the doorway. As Sarah flies past him, he calls after her, “Your mother’s in the car, down the lane.”

Mike switches on the lamp atop Frank’s dresser. He’s holding his revolver, pointed at Frank. “What the hell? Take those cuffs off my wife before I put a bullet through your heart, Dad.”

The vexed look on Frank’s face changes to a smile that is bright and false and filled with contempt. He takes the key from his dresser drawer and unlocks the handcuffs. He’s laughing, too, and I find it odd to hear him laugh and to be so utterly outside the laughter, as far away from the impulse that caused it as the moon.

Julie massages her wrists and swings her legs off the bed. When she stands, Frank grabs the knife off the dresser and wraps his arm around her throat, positioning himself behind Julie with the blade against her neck. The tip of his tongue protrudes from between his lips like a little pink snake.

Julie is silent for a second, and then her throat shapes a small, wounded squeal.

I should have warned Mike about the knife. How stupid of me, I think, as it becomes clear to me that my life is in danger.

“Put the pistol on the dresser, Mike,” Frank says calmly. “We’re all family here, and if everyone keeps his mouth shut, and I get my hands on that diary, nobody will know anything. Let’s be sensible, we can’t bring your mother back.”

Mike places his gun on the dresser, but at the same time Julie sinks her teeth into Frank’s arm, causing him to lose his grip on her. Julie breaks free. Frank pushes her onto the bed and she screams. Mike is already lunging at Frank. He tackles Frank and together they fall onto the bed, on top of Julie, who lets out a high-pitched wail that pierces the air.

My heart lurches, and I freeze, as Mike and Frank roll to the floor. Mike has a hold on Frank’s wrist, preventing Frank from slashing him with the knife. Their shadows play on the wall, with the blade held six inches from Mike’s neck, until Mike is able to punch Frank in the face. Frank drops the knife; it clatters on the hardwood floor.

Mike jumps to his feet and backs away from Frank, who’s already standing. They face each other with mouths agape, gasping for air like cage fighters in a UFC event. Julie is still screaming as Frank lands a hard right to Mike’s jaw, staggering Mike and moving him backwards. Mike falls to his knees, stunned, and then goes down on all fours, groggily attempting to rise, when Frank kicks him in the ribs. Mike sprawls on the floor.

I yell, “Ahhh!” and fling myself at Frank with fists raised. But Frank comes around with a left that slices across my face and stands me on tiptoes for a second, until I lurch sideways and catch myself against the wall, next to Frank’s dresser. I touch my lip and spit blood; the iron taste of it fills my mouth.

Mike gets to his feet and yells, “Run, Danny, run!” I’m thinking, Not this time, dude! I regard Mike’s pistol on the dresser as Mike brings up a right hook and Frank blocks it, kicking Mike hard in the groin. Mike doubles over. Frank picks up the knife and moves in.

I take up the pistol, release the safety, raise the barrel and point it at Frank. But as my finger touches the trigger I know I will never pull it. I simply do not possess whatever it is that gives leave to destroying another human being. I cannot kill. Cannot.

Then suddenly the gun explodes, seemingly of its own accord with a flash and a loud
Crack
! Simultaneously Mike’s head snaps back and he collapses on the floor with the top of his skull torn away. The blood spreads rapidly over the floor. A reddish mélange of bone and brain matter is splattered on the wall.

Julie is shouting for her husband in a choked nightmarish voice, “Mike! Mike!” She jumps off the bed and lunges at Frank, teeth and nails bared. Frank turns around and punches her squarely in the face. She crumples to the floor and lies still.

I drop the gun. For a moment I cannot draw breath. Then I recoil in horror and howl like a mournful bird. My big brother, Mike, so sturdy and so powerful, now with a dark run of blood from his head, lies on the floor like a puppet abandoned by its master. I hide my face in my hands.

“Yes, he’s dead. You killed him,” Frank says coldly.

I look at Frank, and despite his mean, pinched expression, there’s shame in his eyes. When I try to speak, a sob breaks from my throat and echoes in the room. Then I blurt, with the gloomy submissiveness of one who has surrendered his will, “Go on, kill me, kill me.”

Frank is holding the knife. “I will, if you don’t give me that diary,” he says matter-of-factly.

Vaguely, I hear a voice—my own? In a whisper the voice seems to reply, “If you don’t kill me now, while you have the chance, you’re going to regret it.”

A trembling begins deep inside me and spreads to my chest and legs and arms. My mind is muddled by the absurdness of my act. I’m having trouble deciding what to do next. Slowly, I reach out with my hand, supporting myself against Frank’s dresser. I’m biting the inside of my lip so hard the blood comes again. I know only that my crime is beyond expiation. Then I am seized with a spasm of cold terminal agony, such as the anguish of a fetus when it batters its way into the world, and as I run from the room I sense the emergence within myself of a totally new condition of being, some surprising new emotion that sweeps upwards from the depths of my soul.

21
Daniel
Friday night, August 8
El Cajon Valley

T
he black and silent mountain retains its mystery. It has withstood the wind, the rains, the frost, the heat, the destructive ways of humankind. It is afraid of no one. The mountain does not need redemption; it has already been redeemed.

Nearing the cave I climb like blind Oedipus, guided not by Antigone but only by my instincts. I know my way well enough to move swiftly, with the help of the moon, that indifferent orb overhead, tight as a fist, filling the night with illumination. My vision is bleary as I blink away the tears. I’m certain Sarah will be waiting for me. I trust her. There’s no question, despite her tender age, about my love for her. She’s my girlfriend, my best friend, and I need her, now more than ever. I want to be comforted and consoled by her. I have no one but her.

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