The Hour Before Dark (15 page)

Read The Hour Before Dark Online

Authors: Douglas Clegg

Tags: #thriller, #horror, #suspense, #murder, #mystery, #paranormal, #supernatural, #psychological, #island, #family relationships, #new england, #supernatural horror novel, #clegg

Or you can just fess up right now. Risk it. Throw it out there.

Live up to it.

“I never stopped caring about you,” I said, and I felt my face go red, and for perhaps the first time in a long time I felt it down to my toes. I felt my being. I felt as if this was the first time I’d ever stood up for myself in anything.

I expected her to laugh in my face, and I was willing to take it.

The look of astonishment that crossed her face soon turned into a slowly building smile and a damp sparkle to her eyes—a light glaze of tears. She wiped at the tears. “Don’t say that.”

“I know it may not matter now,” I said. “I don’t care. You may not care for me in the same way. I don’t care.” Joe Grogan’s phrase came to me again, seeming completely accurate: It’s the damnedest thing.

“Do you know I had to fight myself just to let you go?” she asked.

“What?”

She offered up a sad half-smile. “You would’ve died if you’d stayed here. You were too in love with me. And I was too immature. And I’d cheated on you, with my body and heart, and I did it because I knew you needed to leave. I couldn’t fight my parents then. I couldn’t fight anyone. And I let you go. I just let the best thing in my life go. I let it go for some stupid sense of what my parents wanted. And what everyone wanted except for me. And I didn’t want you stuck here, with me.”

A chill went through me when she said it. Something seemed to smash against my innards, and for a minute I thought I would be sick. Jumblies, indeed. But that feeling quickly passed as I stood there in the barest moment that seemed to be an hour. I stood and looked into her fare, and something within me fought against what I was feeling in the pit of my stomach. It was an awful feeling of fluttering and slight dizziness, as if she’d caught me off-guard and had tripped me up.

Then she said, “If you knew that someone intentionally lied to you so that you would have a better life, even if that lie was the worst thing in the world, how would you feel?”

I thought for a moment and said, “If I understood the reason, it wouldn’t bother me. A lot of people lie for no good reason. If the reason’s good, it’s understandable.”

She closed her eyes, opened them again, and looked at me as if she had just said a prayer.

“It’s the stupid past,” I said. “Just like you said. Don’t let it hurt you now. I’m here. I don’t care about any of it. I’m here right now.”

I was about to say something more, but I decided not to talk at all. I wanted to kiss her tears away. I leaned forward and kissed her eyelids, and then her nose, and then without even realizing where this might lead, my lips were over hers, and she opened her mouth gently. Her breath was sweet and felt like home as I inhaled it. I wrapped my arms around her, and drew her to me. Part of me was afraid she might pull away, but she embraced me before I had locked my arms behind her back.

“This is crazy,” she murmured. She pressed her face against mine, and then under my chin, and then against my cheek.

“I know, I know,” I said. I resumed kissing her as much as a woman could be kissed beneath a streetlamp. I reached up and drew out the twist of cloth that held up her hair, and it cascaded around her shoulders, and she opened her coat so I could put my arms inside it for warmth as I held her.

“We can’t do this here,” she whispered.

“The store,” I said, glancing back at the darkness of Croder-Sharp-Callahan. “The lunch counter.”

She laughed, looking up at me to see if I were teasing her. “You’re serious?”

“Like when we first made love,” I said, and my throat caught on those words: made love. It was the first time in my adult life I had ever said them. I had said all the other words that seemed truer in the past; I had used the profanity and the blunt language and the clinical talk, but not those words that had seemed both precious and mysterious.

"This is mad,” she whispered, but her body betrayed a passionate urgency, and we held each other’s hands like kids again and ran through the fresh snow, back to Croder-Sharp- Callahan.

 

4

 

Once inside, she locked the door behind us.

She kept the lights off, and we stumbled into stools and chairs and around the cash register. Somehow, our clothes fell away, although there was a good deal of tugging and unsnapping and unbuttoning and unzipping and boots that took a while to come off. I felt just as I had at seventeen, the fumbling numbskullery of a boy in love without a brain in his head, the explosion of the senses as we rolled together, and tasted and felt and burned against each other.

Somehow, from there, we went up to the empty apartment above the store, through the back stairs, half-dressed, the snow still spinning gently downward, giggling and passionate and me in my boxers and socks, bounding up the steps after her as she wrapped herself in her coat, but with nothing else underneath.

The apartment was one room, with a bathroom and a small kitchenette by the window. The window had a tattered and yellowed shade drawn down. An overhead light flickered. A mattress lay back against one wall. “It’s clean, don’t worry,” she said. “We use it for naps at work.”

I didn’t care if it was dirty or newly washed. I leapt onto the mattress, and she came tumbling down on top of me.

I felt an energy within me, a renewal of forces stronger than personality or sustainable life. Something more than what I had been before that night. I wanted to give her so much, everything I had, every ounce of love and care and physical pleasure; I wanted to mold myself against her and her against me until you couldn’t tell one from the other.

Afterward, I didn’t even crave a cigarette.

 

5

 

“I’ve been wasting my life,” I said, my lips against her hair, holding the scent of her for just a moment longer.

“You have not,” Pola said.

“I have,” I insisted. “I’ve wasted these years. I let go of my family. Of you. We could’ve been building a life together.”

“You’d have been bored here. With me. It wasn’t right, not then.”

“I guess we had separate paths for a while,” I said. And I knew it. Sorrow had held its sway over me for too long. The sorrow was not just my father’s murder. It was a sorrow that had somehow crept its way into my soul and had burrowed there. It all seemed ridiculous now, in the arms of the woman I loved, on the island I had abandoned for no good or genuine reason.

“Maybe this was the way it was meant to be,” she whispered, lazily and sweetly.

I held her longer than I had ever before held a woman in my arms. I felt her heartbeat against my chest. That peculiar and unfamiliar feeling of being bound to another human being in a way that breaks down all barriers and intimate territories. We made love with the energy of first-timers, and the sloppiness, too. She laughed when I tried to hold her in a way that made her leg cramp; and I began laughing when she took me inside her, not from silliness, but from a joy I hadn’t even known could exist between two people, between a man and a woman in a secret of love that had been protected over several years. It was as if I had unlocked doors within me. She smiled afterward and told me that when we were in the throes of it, she enjoyed my laughter. “You sounded like the old Nemo. The one I fell in love with when we were children. The one who had joy.” She kissed my lips, then my cheek, and neck. “Are you back, Nemo?” She looked into my eyes as if someone might be hiding somewhere in them.

Without realizing it, I had held my breath as she spoke. I had held on to a breath as if I were holding on to the years. I let out a sigh, the likes of which had not passed through my lungs or throat in all my life.

“Yeah,” I said, like some idiot, a gust of my breath escaping and taking with it a great burden. “Yes. I am back”

Outside the window, the wind howled, the beginnings of a storm, perhaps, but I didn’t care. I felt safe, for once in my life. I felt safe with Pola.

I lay there with her, looking at the window, the snow, and for a brief second, I thought I saw a woman’s face at the window.

I sat up, started.

But it was gone.

It’s in your mind.

“What is it?” Pola asked, looking from my face, back to the window. “Nemo?”

“Nothing,” I said, settling back into the mattress with her, arms around her again.

 

6

 

“I want you to forgive me,” I said a bit later.

“For what?”

“What I did to you back then.”

“I didn’t blame you,” she said. “Like I don’t need forgiveness myself.”

“How I ever deserved even knowing someone like you ...” She held a finger to my Ups. “Don’t make me out to be a saint.”

“But I was the one—”

“Don’t. Leave the past where it belongs. All the bad things are in the past. We were barely more than children then.”

“I don’t even wanna talk,” I said. “My dad used to tell me that the sun shines on a dog’s ass now and again. And I just want to bask in the sunshine a little.”

We kissed again, and lay there until we both knew it was time for her to go pick up her son at her ex-husband’s. I didn’t want to leave her side at all, but we parted, regardless. I told her that we’d have lunch the next day.

The separation of old lovers who discover a new love between them has got to be the most agonizing. You know what it’s like, you know how much you want the other person, but you also know that things can get in the way of love. How I wished that two people in love could always be together, every minute, every hour, and never grow bored or tired or distracted—or worse, out of love by the familiarity of love. These were the crazy abstractions I thought about on my walk back to Hawthorn, down the snowy road at sometime after ten P.M.

And that’s when I saw Carson McKinley in his truck, parked alongside the darkened storefronts, but beneath the red and blue of Christmas lights, masturbating.

 

7

 

Truth was, I didn’t know if he was choking the chicken, but the truck vibrated, and I saw his sweaty face in the truck, so I assumed he was performing his favorite public pastime.

I never begrudged Carson his compulsion. Many a man has dreamt of doing just what Carson did in broad daylight or beneath the streetlamps, but few have the balls to follow through. As long as he was in his truck, the island sheep and horses were safe.

As I walked by the truck, I averted my gaze. The last thing I wanted to see after being with Pola, was a fifty-four-year-old with a beard and eyes like a crazed moron jacking off. But as I passed, he called out my name.

Now, with anyone else, I would’ve ordinarily turned to see who wanted to get my attention. But this was Carson McKinley.

“Hey, Nemo!” he called out again, his shout echoing slightly because of the cold and snow and emptiness of the street I turned. He looked out at me with his trollish face, half in darkness.

“Storm’s comin’,” he said.

“What?”

“I saw her. Storm’s comin’.”

The truck continued to vibrate.

Perhaps Carson McKinley might’ve somehow spied on Pola and me as we had our marathon of sex. I felt a disgust for all mankind. The memory of seeing my dad’s porn collection didn’t help. Women were right, most of the time we were dogs and pigs, and perhaps not even as good as anything that walked on four legs. Sure, there were men who did great things in the world, but in the ordinary things, we were completely the lowest of lows. Even my father, I thought—even Gordie Raglan, war hero, survivor of prison camps, who led the other prisoners to safety at great odds: Even his life came down to a stash of porn stuffed in the walls.

I didn’t want life to be just this. Finding Pola again, not knowing if I could even feel that innocent love you get to feel as a kid, seemed like a miracle in need of protection. I stood there for a moment, judge and jury of Carson McKinley, who seemed the prototype of all that was dysfunctional of my gender. It was my puritan blood rising, I guess. Who was I to judge anyone else? I felt bad for Carson. I asked him if he was okay.

“She’s a bad storm comin’ down on us,” he said. The truck began to bounce up and down. I turned away. He shouted after me, “SHE’S COMIN’! OH LORDY, SHE’S A-COMIN!" This was followed by what I can only assume were orgasmic moans of McKinley pleasure.

“Merry Christmas to you, too,” I said.

 

8

 

As I approached Hawthorn, feeling weary and frozen and in need of sleep like a drunk in need of the last drop from a bottle, I saw a light on in Brooke’s room toward the back of the house.
You’re up. You’re always up. You need more life. You need more than Hawthorn, Brooke. You need to open some doors.

Bruno’s light was off, but this didn’t mean much. I wasn’t even sure if Bruno was in his bedroom asleep or across town with his boyfriend.
Well, good for him. At least he’s got love. Hang on to it, Bruno, for as long as you can. It’s a small miracle that needs protection. I didn’t protect my miracle when I was a teenager, and I lost some years. Luckily, Pola protected it. Luckily, Pola loved me, too. So, Bruno, just make sure it’s love and then hang on for dear life.

I dropped onto my bed, and only then realized that I had left my boxer shorts in the apartment above Croder-Sharp-Callahan.

That night, I awoke to Brooke walking through my room at some ungodly hour. Unfortunately, I had that now-expected impression that it wasn’t Brooke. I sat up and flicked on the light.

No one was there at all.

Both doors to my bedroom were shut.

 

9

 

The next morning, I discovered that Carson’s fertility rite had indeed brought a storm.

We were buried under snow, not the most unusual occurrence for the island in December. By the time I’d trudged downstairs to the kitchen to the smell of a rich dark roast of coffee, Bruno and his boyfriend had already dug out most of the driveway. Not that it mattered: The village plow, also known as Johnny Sullivan, had yet to reach Hawthorn. There’d be no driving that day.

Cary and Bruno started a snowball fight out front. As I watched them from the kitchen window, it reminded me of us all as kids. How we played all over the fields, how the winters were rich with ice skating on the pond or snow forts along the hill.

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