“Why do people refer to him that way? He wasn’t homeless! We found him a home—”
“Hey, Laurel, chill. I didn’t mean—”
“And why must being homeless be anyone’s sole distinguishing feature? I notice you didn’t describe him as a photographer. Or a veteran. Or a comic. He was very funny, you know. Frankly…”
“Frankly what?”
“Nothing.”
“Tell me.”
“There’s nothing to say. Just…nothing.”
Talia lurched slowly to her feet and narrowed her eyes as if to say,
I’ve had enough of this, thank you very much.
Laurel hadn’t noticed it before, but the girl had a gibbous-shaped bruise the color of eggplant on the side of her neck. “I think I’m going to go take a hot bath,” Talia said quietly. “I can get my own wine.” Then her roommate limped past her into the kitchen, where Laurel heard her reaching into the cabinet for a glass and into the refrigerator for the wine. Laurel waited, unmoving, until she heard their bathroom door close. Talia did not exactly slam it, but she gave the door a demonstrable thwack.
She had a nagging sense that she didn’t feel quite badly enough that Talia and she had snapped at each other—that she just might have overreacted when her friend had referred to Bobbie Crocker as homeless. But this had been a stressful week, hadn’t it? And it had been a very long day, right? And, besides, what did any of it matter when Crocker’s work—when
her
work—might be in jeopardy? When there remained negatives left to print? The most important thing to do now, Laurel decided, was to return to the UVM darkroom and find a secure place for Bobbie Crocker’s negatives and photographs. Just because someone hadn’t tried to take them that afternoon didn’t mean someone wouldn’t try to steal them tomorrow.
The rest—Talia and David and Mr. Terrance J. Leckbruge—would just have to wait. The mess on the living room floor would just have to wait. And so she shouted through the bathroom door that she was leaving again, and then she started down the old Victorian’s creaky wooden stairs.
B
EFORE PACKING AWAY
Crocker’s photos at the UVM darkroom—the finished ones that he had kept with him all those years, as well as the negatives Laurel had printed herself—she ripped a piece of paper from a yellow legal pad and scribbled a time line indicating roughly when they had been taken. Most of the dates were guesswork based on Internet research: The Hula-Hoop had been invented in 1958 and the craze had run its course by the early 1960s. Assuming that the photograph of the two hundred girls with their Hula-Hoops on the football field had been taken at the pinnacle of the toy’s popularity, it had probably been snapped between 1959 and 1961. Laurel’s aunt Joyce had looked at the liner notes of her cousin Martin’s
Camelot
CD and given Laurel the rough years when Julie Andrews had played Guinevere. Other dates were even more imprecise: Eartha Kitt was ageless, but Laurel guessed she was about forty in the portrait of her Crocker had taken outside Carnegie Hall—a guess based entirely on Laurel’s sense that Kitt looked about the age she had been when she had played Catwoman on the old
Batman
TV show, and the performer was thirty-nine that year. Sometimes Laurel gave a picture a date based on nothing more than her profoundly limited knowledge of vintage clothing and cars.
And yet as approximate as the time line was, it was helpful nonetheless.
Crocker Photos: Rough Dates
Mid-1950s:
Chuck Berry
Robert Frost
Jazz musicians (many photos)
The Brooklyn Bridge
Muddy Waters
Plaza Hotel
Late-1950s:
Beatniks (three)
Eisenhower (at United Nations?)
Real Gidget (Kathy Kohner Zuckerman)
Hair dryers
Autos (many)
Washington Square
Train station, West Egg
Cigarettes (in ashtrays, on tables, close-ups in people’s mouths)
Street football underneath Hebrew National billboard
1960/61:
Julie Andrews (Camelot)
Girls with Hula-Hoops
Early 1960s:
Sculptor (unknown)
Paul Newman
Zero Mostel
More autos (a half-dozen)
Manhattan cityscapes (including Chrysler building)
New York Philharmonic
IBM typewriter (three)
Greenwich Village street scenes (four)
Chess players in Washington Square
1964:
World’s Fair (a half-dozen shots, including the Unisphere)
Freedom march, Frankfort, Kentucky
Martin Luther King (at Frankfort march?)
Lyndon Johnson (in big hat in a ballroom)
Dick Van Dyke
Mid-1960s:
Eartha Kitt
Bob Dylan
Myrlie Evers-Williams
Brownstones (in Brooklyn?)
Mustang in front of Marshfield estate (car introduced in 1964)
Midwestern arts-and-crafts house (looks like Wright)
Nancy Olson
Fifth Avenue bus
Modern dancers (a series)
Late-1960s:
Jesse Jackson
Coretta Scott King
Lava lamps (many
—
a series? for an ad?)
Jazz club (a series)
Joey Heatherton (I think)
Sunbathers at Jones Beach
Central Park series (picnics, baseball, the zoo, hippies)
Paul Sorvino (and Mira?)
Love beads and peace medallions
Early-1970s:
Flip Wilson
Unknown rock band
Actors: Jack Klugman and Tony Randall
World Trade Towers
Wall Street (many)
Main Street, West Egg
Ray Stevens (maybe)
Liza Minnelli
Jazz trumpeter
Late-1970s (or later!):
Valley of Ashes office park (not real name)
Plaza Hotel (again)
Jewelry box (may be art deco, but on negative strip with Valley of Ashes office park)
East Egg train platform
East Egg shoreline
West Egg shoreline
My old swim club (Gatsby’s old house)
Crab apple tree (a few prints, one with a little pyramid of apples beside it)
Late 1990s/Early 2000s:
Underhill dirt road scenes (two with a girl on a bike)
Stowe church
Waterfall
Dog by bakery
Mount Mansfield ski trails (in summer)
She noticed that either Bobbie stopped working through much of the 1980s and 1990s, or those images had been lost. She also found it interesting that he seemed to have returned with increasing frequency as he grew older to East and West Egg and the Valley of Ashes. It was possible that he had been returning there all along, annually perhaps—she had that photograph of the West Egg train platform with cars nearby from the late 1950s—and those negatives and prints had simply disappeared over time. But she had a feeling this wasn’t the case. She imagined him in his mid- to late-fifties, retracing his steps and the swath left behind by his parents. She noted how he had photographed the Plaza at least twice, and she was sure that he couldn’t help but see through the walls of the hotel to the steamy afternoon when his mother’s lone (at least Laurel believed it was lone) infidelity had become clear to his father.
She gazed at each of the images before she packed them safely away in the portfolio case. What could have taken ten minutes took close to ninety. Initially, she presumed she was searching each photograph for whatever it was that Pamela Marshfield or Terrance Leckbruge so desperately wanted—the clue to their impenetrable interest. She was looking as well for the devil: a person, an image, a carnival freak. Wasn’t that what Pete Stambolinos had said? There might be a photo of a carny. But there wasn’t, at least not yet. There certainly weren’t any images from the county fair held annually near Burlington. There weren’t even any images that might be considered in the slightest way threatening.
And so, increasingly, she found herself studying the compositions themselves, Bobbie Crocker’s use of light and dark, and the way he was capable of making even the most journeyman subjects fascinating: a typewriter. A cigarette. Men playing chess. She feared that her printing wasn’t doing them justice. He deserved better.
After she had boxed the prints up, she decided she couldn’t bring them back home. Yes, it had only been a squirrel in the apartment today. But tomorrow? Other people wanted these images; Bobbie had understood that. It was why he had shared them with no one. And so she viewed the squirrel as a sign sent by a guardian angel. The message? Put those pictures someplace safe.
And that place certainly wasn’t going to be her office at BEDS. She trusted Katherine, but not the lawyers. David’s co-op was a possibility, but that might endanger his little girls if someone broke in. And while his office would be secure—it was impossible to venture inside the newspaper without either an ID card with a strip that could be read by the scanner or being buzzed inside by the receptionist—that security might also preclude her from accessing the materials when David wasn’t there. She knew some of the receptionists, but not all.
Briefly, she even considered Pete Stambolinos, appreciating the irony of hiding the photos in the very same building in which they had moldered the last year of Bobbie Crocker’s life. But it didn’t seem especially prudent to turn them over to a man who had never numbered levelheadedness among his personal strengths.
She needed an acquaintance, someone who Marshfield or Leckbruge would not associate with her, and decided she should try Serena Sargent. She was going to Bartlett tomorrow to visit the Congregational church that Crocker’s old editor may have attended, but she figured she could leave the prints she had already made with the waitress when she was done. She could visit the woman at her home in Waterbury or, if Serena was working, she could stop by her diner in Burlington in the afternoon. Meanwhile, she would keep the unexamined negatives—and, in truth, there were no more than three dozen strips left to print—with her wherever she went.
P
ATIENT 29873
It would be helpful to know the most recent or pertinent stressor.
In the meantime, it remains difficult to keep a conversation on track. Patient has moments of marked conversational clarity followed consistently by a delusional digression that derails our progress. Still unwilling to discuss treatment and aftercare plans.
From the notes of Kenneth Pierce,
attending psychiatrist,
Vermont State Hospital, Waterbury, Vermont
C
HAPTER
T
WENTY
M
ARISSA TOOK HER
little sister’s hand in hers as they fell into the swarm of people—grown-ups and teenagers and children as young as Cindy—and emerged from the darkened theater into the movie’s lobby Saturday night. She blinked once, then squinted against the brighter lights and the crowds by the concession stands. It was a little past nine o’clock, an hour past Cindy’s bedtime, but the kid was holding up pretty well. And why shouldn’t she? Her big sister and her dad had just endured this completely lamo movie about a circus clown who hated children but had nevertheless wound up having to run his mom’s day-care center. The movie had been Cindy’s choice, and so the kid didn’t dare melt down now just because what their mom’s fiancé liked to call the witching hour was drawing near.
She glanced from her dad, who was on one side of her, to Cindy, who was on the other, struck by the difference between an adult who has his act together and a kid who does not. She saw that her sister had popcorn butter all over her mouth and her bulbous, squirrel-like cheeks—it looked as if she had washed her face in the stuff—and a few small remnants of kernels epoxied like craft pebbles to the corners of her lips. Her hair, never her best feature, was frizzed up on one side like a frightened cat, and—was it possible?—she had a Junior Mint in her ear. Why was the kid putting Junior Mints in her ears in the movie? And how could she not know the candy was still there? Marissa remembered well the time Dad had had to take Cindy to the pediatrician two years ago because the kid had stuck a hard little pea up her nose. They’d been making food jewelry at the preschool—uncooked macaroni and peas and colored sugar—and for reasons no one could fathom, Cindy had wedged a pea high and deep inside her left nostril. According to the doctor, kids did this a lot. Still, as Marissa had watched the pediatrician, a nice woman who was her doctor, too, put a pair of tweezers the length of a pencil up Cindy’s nose, it gave Marissa one more reason to wish that she and her sister weren’t really related.
Recalling that visit to the doctor made her remember her toe. Her doctor had looked at it for about seven seconds, prescribed some antibiotic that tasted like bubble gum, and told her to soak it with her massive amounts of spare time (yeah, right). Still, the appointment had allowed her an escape from math hell. And, of course, it had given her the chance to bring up the idea of getting a professional headshot taken sooner rather than later.
Abruptly she bumped squarely into her dad’s side, which meant that Cindy slammed into her. She looked up and saw that her dad had stopped because he had run into someone he knew—though not in the literal way she had just bumped into him. It seemed her dad was always running into someone he knew. This time it was a woman who he was calling Katherine and kissing once on the cheek, the way grown-ups did whenever they didn’t seem to shake hands. Marissa knew that she herself preferred the shaking hands route. Just imagine if right this second you had to kiss a cheek like her sister’s? Gross. Way beyond gross.
Katherine had a man beside her whose name Marissa didn’t catch, but it was evident they were a pair, and it was clear they had had the good fortune of seeing a different movie from the loser that her family had just had to stomach. Marissa smiled politely when she was introduced and was asked the obligatory questions—she basked for a moment in the woman’s approval—but then allowed herself to fixate on the colorful movie posters for the films that would be arriving next. She was just beginning to fantasize that her name was on one—maybe the one with the hunky young film star who was on the cover of
People
and who had told the magazine the parts of his very hot movie-star girlfriend he liked best (the insides of her thighs, she’d read yesterday in the doctor’s waiting room)—when she heard a name that caused her suddenly to pay attention. Laurel. They were talking about…Laurel.
“I don’t know if it has something to do with her trip to Long Island, or it’s all about the pictures,” this woman named Katherine was saying. “But she didn’t come swimming with me on Thursday or Friday, and she was hardly in the office at all the last couple of days—which doesn’t bother me the tiniest bit as her boss. Really, it doesn’t. I’m just wondering what’s going on as her friend—and whether I made a mistake getting her involved with those photographs in the first place. Do you think I did?”
Her father seemed to consider this, nodding the way he did whenever he was thinking deeply about something someone had said. Marissa knew the look well. Finally, he told Katherine, “She was definitely fixated on Bobbie Crocker last night. Wednesday night, too. But last night was…worse.”
“Worse?”
“More intense. She spent a lot of time researching Bobbie Crocker on the Internet when we were supposed to be going to a movie. And she really didn’t stop talking about him all night long. Then this morning she went to the darkroom, and tomorrow I believe she’s going to Bartlett. To a church that somebody named Reese, a fellow who might have known Bobbie, went to before he died a little over a year ago.”
Katherine stretched out her hands and spread wide her fingers, her elbows pressed against her ribs, in a gesture of confusion. “I don’t get it. She’s going to a strange church miles from here because a dead person who knew Bobbie—”
“Might
have known Bobbie.”
“Because a dead person who
might
have known Bobbie went there?”
“That sums it up.”
The woman reached over and squeezed her father’s arm. “All I suggested she do was print the guy’s old negatives. I never asked her to become a private eye.”
“I understand.”
“You didn’t answer my question,” she said. “Did I make a mistake getting her involved with the pictures?”
He breathed in and out of his nose so deeply that it sounded to Marissa like a small gust of wind. She knew that he was going to say that Katherine had. It all came down to Laurel’s secret. The mystery that Marissa thought Laurel took with her wherever she went. Whatever Katherine had asked her to do with some pictures, it wasn’t helping. It was making that secret even noisier in Laurel’s head.
Marissa found it interesting that secrets made noise. She’d always viewed them as physically heavy—hadn’t she seen people on the street who seemed stooped by the weight of what they couldn’t tell anyone?—but only recently had she concluded that it was actually their persistent thrum that caused people to slouch. Eventually, her father muttered, “Look, I hate to sound patronizing—”
“Oh, stop it. You love to sound patronizing.”
“Because Laurel is an adult. She’s a grown woman. But, yes, Katherine, maybe. Maybe you did.”
“You’re being polite. You think definitely.”
Before her father could answer, the man beside Katherine knelt down and said to Cindy, “I hate to be the one to break the news to you…but I think there just might be a piece of candy in your ear.” The fellow was balding and tall—so tall that even kneeling he had to bend over slightly to speak eye to eye with the girl—and he was wedged a little too tightly into a turtleneck. The result was a very bad fashion statement, Marissa decided: He looked a bit like a turtle himself. Her sister slowly reached up to her ear and ran a pudgy finger and her cork of a thumb over the Junior Mint. It was apparent that she wanted to remove it…but couldn’t.
“It’s an earring,” said Cindy. She spoke with great seriousness to the fellow because it was clear to her now that the Junior Mint wasn’t going anywhere for a while. “It just looks like a piece of candy.”
Marissa smiled, hoping she could salvage a small portion of dignity for both her and her sister, and added, “Cindy has always been her own girl when it comes to fashion and food.”
The man nodded equally as earnestly, and then looked up at her father because of something her dad was saying. Instantly, Marissa looked up, too.
“She’s fragile, Katherine,” her father was telling the woman. “You know that. You’ve known her a lot longer than I have.”
“Which makes it even worse, in your opinion, that I asked her to do this.”
“Yeah, I think so,” her father said, and Katherine seemed genuinely troubled by this idea. It looked to Marissa as if her father were about to say something more. He even went so far as to open his mouth, but at the last moment he must have thought better of it because he remained silent.
“There’s nothing that should have been disturbing in those pictures. Right?” Katherine said. “Some old movie stars. Some snapshots of her old swim club and some nearby house. I guess there were a few Bobbie took up in Underhill, but still…I don’t know, I just saw a project that I thought might be fun for her. And, yes, good for BEDS. That’s all. I would never have suggested this to her if I’d thought the images might upset her. Never!”
Katherine’s discomfort was so tangible that the man she was with stood up, forgetting completely about Cindy and her mint—which, Marissa feared, might result in some serious acting out on the part of her sister—and started rubbing the woman’s back and shoulders in great, slow, circular motions.
“Look, I don’t know what it is about the pictures that got under her skin,” her father said. “I have no idea what she sees in them. But the sooner we can get her off this task and onto something else, the better.”
“I just saw the pictures as publicity, David, that’s all. Maybe a little cash for the organization—assuming the collection is actually worth something. But it’s all proving too much trouble, isn’t it?”
“Could be. It certainly doesn’t seem worth the anguish it’s causing Laurel.”
“As you said: She’s fragile.”
Her father looked down at her and Cindy and smiled, as if he had suddenly remembered they were there. Right away he noticed the Junior Mint.
“Cindy, sweetheart, do you know there’s a Junior Mint in your ear?”
“It’s an earring,” said Cindy, and she offered him what she must have presumed was the cutest, most pixielike smile in the world.
“Yeah,” Marissa said, unable to contain herself a moment longer, “and the popcorn beside your mouth is a lip ring.”
Her sister stuck her tongue out at her. She rolled her eyes, but decided everyone would be better off, including her, if she took the high road and put her arm around the kid. Her sister was as shaken as she was by the reality that soon Mom and Eric were getting hitched. “When we get home, Dad and I will help you take your earrings off—if you want us to. Sometimes, it’s hard, you know.”
Katherine smiled, but it was clear that she wasn’t really focused on them. She was still thinking about Laurel. “Of course,” she continued, “it might be even worse at this point to take the pictures away from her.”
“I think it would be best if we could get Laurel involved in another project,” their dad said. “Another photography project, maybe. No, not maybe. Definitely. And I know one. It’s not very big. But it is important to someone.” His voice had brightened considerably and he sounded almost playful.
“And that would be what?” the woman asked.
“A headshot for my young diva here,” he said, squeezing Marissa. “Laurel offered to take a headshot of my rising young star this Monday. Late afternoon, maybe. Or early evening.”
Marissa felt a surge of electricity, downright elation, and stood up a little taller against her father’s side. She hadn’t realized that her father had taken her idea so seriously. “Really? This Monday?” she asked him.
He nodded. “She offered. I said I’d get back to her. You’re done with singing lessons by four, but since you’d be the subject of the pictures, I figured I should double-check. Will Monday work?”
“Yes, Monday’s perfect! Thank you, thank you, thank you!” She pulled him down by his arm and kissed his cheek. She was already thinking about the headshots she had seen in playbills and beside the résumés of the older girls she knew, and what she would wear. What she would do with her hair.
“David,” Katherine began, her voice absolutely flat. “You’re treating Laurel like a child. I think we need to confront this head-on—not try to distract her like she’s a toddler.”
“I’m simply trying to be efficient. Accomplish two tasks at once.”
“Look, I think it’s very sweet that she offered to photograph Marissa. But you can’t possibly believe for even a nanosecond that taking your daughter’s portrait could begin to replace her interest in Bobbie Crocker.”
“No, of course not. But maybe if we view this obsession a day at a time and keep her busy with other things, we can wean her from the project.”
“Wean? That’s exactly what I’m saying!”
“It’s an expression.”
Almost on cue, as if she knew on an instinctive level precisely how to drive her older sister crazy, Cindy interrupted the grown-ups. “She can take my headshot, too! I want a headshot, too!”
“See,” their father said, much to Marissa’s horror. “The project has already doubled in scope.”
A
FEW MINUTES LATER,
as the two girls were walking with their father down the Burlington street toward their apartment near the lake, Marissa asked, “Dad, is Laurel sick?”
“Laurel is a swimmer, remember? Very healthy. I don’t think you have anything to worry about. Why do you ask?”
“You said she was fragile. That was the word you used when you and Katherine were talking.”
“I didn’t realize how carefully you were listening,” he said.
“I didn’t mean to eavesdrop.”
“Oh, you weren’t eavesdropping. Katherine and I were just, I guess, a bit indiscreet.”
“So why is Laurel fragile?”
He seemed to think about this, his long strides slowing. “Well, I don’t want to scare you. But I also want to be truthful with you. Always. You know that, right?”
“Right.”
“Okay. Seven years ago, she had something bad happen to her. She’s fine now. Mostly, anyway. She’s just been a little delicate ever since.”
“What happened?”
He glanced down at Cindy, who wasn’t listening to a word they were saying. She was far too busy licking the tip of her finger. For a moment Marissa wasn’t sure why, but then her sister brought the finger back to her ear…and then back to her tongue. And then she got it: The Junior Mint was starting to melt, and Cindy was scraping her fingernail against the chocolate and cream and tasting it. She shook her head. On the one hand, she was appalled. There was nothing—
Just nothing!
—this kid wouldn’t eat. On the other hand, at least this meant that she and her dad wouldn’t have to get out the tweezers to extract the piece of candy. Body heat was actually doing the heavy lifting on this one. Thank God it wasn’t a SweeTart or something hard. Then they might have had to go back to the doctor tomorrow.