Over our lunch of fish sticks—I had
one; Harriet, a lot—we gradually fell into our old familiar ways of being with
each other. And I realized I’d missed it—this closeness with her. I looked over
at her—her cheeks pudgy, full of fish—and could tell she was feeling much the
same. I could always read Harriet’s emotions so easily—like a page in an
illustrated children’s book.
“Have you been following the
exploits of the mighty Blue Boyle this fall?” I asked.
Harriet stopped in mid-chew, then
finished, swallowed. “Creepy,” was what she said. “I don’t even understand what
happened with him,” she went on. “I
mean, last summer, out on Green Island, he was a monster … there didn’t seem to be anything human about him. And now …”
“And now he lives on the sports
page every week,” I said. “A hero.”
“A hero who tried to kill us last
summer.”
“Yes.” We looked at each other.
“But no one really believed us last
summer, did they?”
“Our parents kinda did.”
“They don’t count. They love us.” I
laughed after I said that, realizing how odd it must sound, those two sentences
lined up together. “Well, anyway, he doesn’t live here anymore, so maybe we won’t see him again.”
Harriet looked at me closely. “You
really think we won’t?
Silence. Then … “Think may be too strong a word,” I said.
How about wish?”
Silence. Then Harriet said, “And wish rhymes with Bysshe—and with fish, and
I’m ready for more!”
While Harriet’s mouth once again
began to fill and fatten, I decided to tell her about the voice I’d heard in my
house—and about how this house of ours had been a funeral home—and about the
story that there’d possibly been an unexplained murder here. I waited until she
swallowed, though. I didn’t want her to choke.
She didn’t take a single bite while
I was talking—just stared at me as if I were insane. Which, as I think about
it, may not be all that inaccurate a diagnosis. When I finished, she asked
for a few more details—like what the voice had said to me—and what the voice had sounded like.
I told her. About the dream I’d had
after I’d worked on my poem for class. The words that voice had said: I’ve never found death amusing, Victoria.
About the rotting smell of death in
my room afterwards.
“Vickie,” she finally said. “Please
don’t tell something awful is going to happen again.”
“Something awful is not going to
happen again,” I lied.
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