Authors: L. R. Wright
In a few more minutes the old woman was finished. She pushed herself to her feet, reached toward the cage, and pulled. A chunk of the wire cage came away. The old woman looked steadily at Annabelle for a minute. And then she walked away.
Annabelle sat quiet in her chair, sipping coffee, watching the broken cage, and eventually the squirrels crept to the opening, and scurried out. They sat on their haunches for a moment, looking around. And then they raced toward the woods.
Annabelle closed her eyes and let her head drop to her chest, as if she had fallen asleep.
“O
H BOY,” SAID Hugh McMurtry, studying the photograph Alberg had handed him. “That was a while ago.” He laughed. “It's one of Steven's, I guess. He must have taken, oh, dozens of pictures of me, and the rest of the staff, too.”
“Any particular reason for this one?”
“I can't even recall the occasion, whatever it was.”
“How about this picture?” said Alberg.
“Why, that's Bobby Ransome. Looks like it was taken in the boys' locker room. Where did you get these, anyway?”
“What can you tell me about him?”
“Bobby?” McMurtry sat back and spread his arms along the top of the sofa. The glass doors were open and every so often a cool breeze from the sea drifted into the room. “Basically, he was a good kid. But he got into troubleâjoyriding, drinking; you know the kind of thing. And he dropped out of school in grade ten. Usually that's it. A kid drops out, and you lose him for good. But four years later, Bobby came back.”
“Why?” said Alberg.
McMurtry grinned shyly. “Well, I think I had something to do with it. I'd see him in town, working as a laborer, and I'd put the bug in his ear. He started coming up to the school, hanging around after classes. Finally he came in to see me, asked how it would work, if he came back. It took another year, but eventually, he did.”
“How'd he make out?”
“Fine. Just fine. Everybody admired him for having the guts to sit in a grade ten classroom with kids four or five years younger than he was. But thenâhe was a powerful presence, Bobby was.”
“How do you mean?”
McMurtry shrugged. “He was the kind of person people are aware of. Charismatic, I guess you'd call him.”
“So what happened?”
“Well, he graduated. And he married his girlfriend. And then I think he planned to take a heavy-duty mechanics' course.”
“Uh-huh.”
“I went away that summer, I remember,” said McMurtry absently, looking out at the roses growing on his patio. “And when I got back, Bobby had been arrested for selling drugs, and sent to jail.” He glanced at Alberg. “He's back in town now, so I've heard.”
“Was this arrest a big surprise to everybody?”
McMurtry looked uncomfortable. “Yes. No. I don't know. I mean, he was kind of a wild kid, from time to time. Maybe,” he said wearily, “maybe we should have kept a closer eye on him.”
Alberg studied the photograph. “How well did he know Steven Grayson?”
McMurtry shook his head. “I have no idea. Probably not well at all.”
Alberg had to wait a long time before Hetty Willis opened her front door.
“I'm sorry to bother you again.”
She clung to the edge of the door. Several cats swirled languorously around her feet.
“I'd like to talk to you about your nephew. Bobby.”
Her expression remained unreadable, and for a long time she didn't move. Some of the cats slithered out onto the veranda. Alberg willed himself to relax. He tried smiling inside his head. And maybe that worked; finally she pulled the door open and allowed him to enter.
They stood in the entrance hall, Hetty looking up at him, blinking behind her glasses.
“You were upset, I think, when I showed you that photograph.”
He had the feeling that she was waiting patiently for him to finish, and leave.
“Can you tell me why?”
She made no response. Alberg remembered an old man he'd known saying that once you get to a certain age “the whole shitteree is fast wearing outâany minute, something essential could go on you.” Maybe Hetty's hearing has suddenly gone on her, he thought.
Hetty was flipping rapidly through a mental list of her relatives and friends. She began with Rachel, her sister-in-law, because Rachel was Bobby's mother, after all. But Rachel's attention was still riveted upon the failing health of her second husband. And there was nobody else Hetty knew who cared about Bobby.
She looked despairingly at the policeman. Her responsibility for her nephew lay heavily upon her.
If she was wrong, she thought, confiding in the policeman would do no harm. And if she was rightâwell she had more responsibilities than one.
She took Alberg into her sitting room, and handed him the scrapbook.
H
ERMAN HAD BEEN beside himself when he awoke Friday morning and found Annabelle ostensibly asleep in the lawn chair and the squirrels gone. “First the skunks, then the raccoons, now this,” he'd hollered. “Well there for sure goes my damn zoo,” he'd said, almost in tears about it, and he raged off in the truck, forgetting all about Arnold.
Annabelle had kept to her plan, though. She'd walked into town, when it was time, and gone to Bobby's house, just as they had arranged it.
He'd been waiting for her in the living room, his face striped with light that sifted in through the blinds. “Jesus, I thought I wasn't ever gonna see you again,” he said, taking her hands, pulling her upstairs.
“You said you wanted to talk to me, Bobby,” she said, trying to sound stern. He slipped her bag from her shoulder and reached behind her to unzip her dress and there was such hunger in her that she was trembling.
“Oh Jesus, Annabelle,” he said, and took her breast in his mouth, and they tumbled onto his bed.
Oh she loved his eyes, double-lashed, outlined by nature as if with a dark smudgy pencil. They were as green as the green water in a lake Annabelle had been to once; as green as seawater sometimes is. Even Erna had remarked enviously upon his eyes.
And oh she loved the mole next to his hipbone. She liked to touch it with the tip of her tongue. It was not merely a dark spot of skin but a protuberance; an entity that had come to rest there alongside his hipbone: maybe it even moved around, exploring the surface of his body with the same tactile curiosity that possessed Annabelleâalthough she had never seen it anywhere but there, alongside his hipbone.
She liked the way he touched her; not soft, tentative brushings like feathers or a summer breeze but strong, bold strokes that made her muscles ripple, setting up inside her the beginnings of tumult.
She liked the way his lips grazed her body as though it were a pasture of sweet grass.
And after they'd made love she pressed her face into the warm dampness of his hard belly and felt between her breasts his erection begin to return; she liked that, too.
She reached out to stroke Bobby's brown back, which was shiny with sweat; he was sitting, naked, on the edge of the bed. He turned to give her a smile. He had more than one smile, and some of them were scary, but this particular smile was so open and winning that it made her heart ache.
Annabelle sat up and looked on the floor for her clothes.
“I'll get them,” said Bobby. He scooped up her panties and sundress and put them on the bed. Then, as Annabelle watched disapprovingly, he reached for his jeans and pulled them on. A man who wore no underwear, Annabelle believed, was not a man to be completely trusted. It might have been the only thing about Bobby that she didn't like.
She watched as he thrust bare feet into his sneakers.
“I'll be back in a minute,” he said, and went down the hall to the bathroom.
She got dressed and found her purse, which he had tossed upon the room's only chair, and was brushing her hair when he came back. She smiled at him in the mirror as she pulled back her hair and fastened it with an elastic band.
“Annabelle,” he said, putting his hands on her waist. “I've got something to tell you. I don't wanna tell you this. But I need to, Annabelle.”
Annabelle glanced at the window. The blind was down but the window behind it was open; the shade fluttered every time a breeze blew in, and then bounced softly against the windowsill. Annabelle would have liked to know what time it was. She'd forgotten to wear her watch again.
“I wish you'd change your mind,” she said, looking kindly at him, “and stay in Sechelt.” She pulled strands of hair from her brush and looked around halfheartedly for a wastebasket, then scrunched up the hairs in her hand and placed them neatly on top of Bobby's dresser. She moved to the chair and put the hairbrush away. “I can't be late getting home,” she said, slinging her purse over her shoulder. He was a pretty sight as he stood there, tall and tanned, with wide shoulders and a smooth strong hairless chest; there was a thicket of hair under his jeans, though, a splurge of coarse, reddish hair; it made Annabelle sigh to think about it.
“I can't stay in Sechelt,” said Bobby, grim-faced, “because of what happened last weekend.”
Annabelle crossed her arms, frowning. “What?”
“You know about my temper,” he began. And all of Annabelle's alarm bells went off at the same time.
“I can't stand around here any longer, Bobby,” she said quickly. “I have to be getting home.” With a glance back at the disheveled bed, she headed for the hall.
Bobby stepped between her and the doorway. “Don't run away from me, Annabelle.”
“I'm sure I don't know what you're talking about.” She looked into his green eyes. “I have to go now. I really do.”
But Bobby blocked the doorway. “Annabelle please, just listen.”
“Bobby stop this, stop it immediately.” She recognized the tone of her voice as the one she used on her children when she was correcting their table manners. She didn't do that often enough, she thought, looking blankly at Bobby. She couldn't, when Herman was around. Annabelle wiped her forehead with the back of her hand. She didn't want either of them. I don't want anybody at all, she thought, turning toward the window, where the blind tapped gently at the sill, I only want me, she thought, and the notion of being alone speared her chest with sudden, unexpected longing.
Bobby pushed himself away from the doorjamb and put his hands in the pockets of his jeans. “Yeah,” he said bitterly. “Okay. Fine. Go.”
She pushed past him, into the hall, and ran down the steps. Then she came to a halt, staring at the dirty glass panes in the front door.
“Bobby,” she said.
“I'm here.” He was right behind her.
With profound reluctance, she turned, slowly, and took his hands, which were square and brown and clean.
“Tell me, then,” she said.
“W
E GOT NO EVIDENCE, you know, Karl,” said Sokolowski.
“I know it.”
“Even if he did it, we can't prove anything.”
“We can get his picture out to Thormanby,” said Alberg. “Put him on the island at the time Grayson died, at least. It's a start. Then we can bring him in, talk to him, and take it from there. Maybe the camera will turn up.”
Hetty Willis's scrapbook lay on the desk in front of him. It contained mimeographed programs from school concerts. An invitation to Bobby's high school graduation. Photographs of Bobby in Halloween costumes. Photographs of Bobby with his parents, and with Hetty. Notes that he'd written her, thanking her for Christmas and birthday presents. Newspaper clippings about his arrest, trial and sentencing. And letters he'd sent her from prison.
Photographs had been entered as evidence of a drug transaction between Ransome and two fourteen-year-olds who had later testified for the prosecution.
Bobby had received a sentence of seven years, because the drugs he was convicted of having sold had been imported over the U.S. border.
But he actually served eight and a half years, Hetty had told Alberg; eighteen months had been added to his sentence after he escaped and was recaptured.
The photographs that sent him to jail had been mailed to the RCMP anonymously. But Bobby knew who'd provided them. “Steven?” Alberg had said, and Hetty Willis had nodded.
“What I don't understand,” said Alberg to Sokolowski, “is who the hell died? That Steven felt responsible for?”
The sergeant shrugged. “I guess that part of it's wrong.”
“I
THOUGHT YOU could give me a sandwich,” said Bobby, “and then we could go to the bank together.” He was very restless in his body, and kept looking out the window.
It was astonishing, thought Hetty, what fixes a person can get into in a lifetime.
She shook her head.
“No, what?” said her nephew. “No sandwich?”
“Money,” said Hetty quickly, before she lost her nerve. “No money.”