“You're blind.”
“I don't understand.”
“I didn't expect you would.”
The general boarding announcement, everyone in rows sixteen and higher. Some passengers close books and reach for bags, walk lazily to the gate.
“I could have
died
,” he says.
She says nothing.
“What about our trip? We can stay longer, you know. I'll need the healing time.” Something resembling a smile on his mouth.
She sees Lynette approaching, stuffed giraffe in her arms. She starts running when she sees him. “Daddy!”
Kent turns. It causes him pain to lift her. “How's my girl?” He kisses her on the lips.
“Mommy drove past and I couldn't say hello.”
“I know, baby.”
Lynette leans back, eyes all large. “Your face is bruised.”
“It's worse than it looks, sweetheart.”
“What happened, Daddy?”
He looks at Emily. “Mommy didn't tell you?”
“No.”
He looks back at Lynette. “Daddy had a little accident in his truck.”
“You did?”
“Yes. But don't worry, I'm okay.”
Lynette lightly touches one side of his face. “It looks like it hurts.”
“Does it?”
“Yes.”
He kisses the tips of her fingers. “It does hurt a little.”
“Are you coming with us, Daddy?”
“I don't know. Where are you going?”
“On the plane, Mommy says.”
“Does she?”
“Yeah.” Then, “Where's Jeremy?”
“Waiting for us.”
“Where?”
“Outside.”
Emily leans forward. “Come sit with me, honey â ”
“She's fine where she is. Aren't you baby?”
Lynette nods, then touches the bandage around her father's head.
He gently removes her hand and then says, “You've got to make a decision, sweetheart.”
Emily goes to stand but doesn't. “She's just a youngster.”
“Old enough to make up her own mind if you ask me.”
“She shouldn't have to choose.”
He laughs now â loud with an open mouth. Then says, “At least
I
give her the choice.”
She says nothing. Watches the last few passengers in rows sixteen and higher filter past the gate and then looks back at him. His eyes are right on her, have been the whole time, she bets. “You don't see me here, do you?”
“What are you talking about?” he says.
“What choice have you given me?”
It's him now who says nothing. Bounces Lynette lightly in his arms.
“You think my being here has nothing to do with
you
?” She struggles to keep her voice down, to keep her eyes, despite them burning, from watering. “Everything's because of you. All of it.”
Another announcement, the remainder of the passengers can board now.
She looks at the gate, then back at him. The gate. Him. Their boarding passes in her pocket, their suitcase already on the plane â freedom just outside the window, close enough to breathe in, to taste.
“Don't want to miss your flight,” he says.
Him. The gate. Him.
“You can go, but not with her.”
“But I want to go on the plane,” Lynette says.
“Give her to me, Kent.”
“No.”
“Please.”
“No.”
“I'll scream, I swear to Jesus I will.”
“Go ahead. You still won't get her.”
The final boarding call for Air Canada flight 8535 to Halifax.
“All you're good for is bagging groceries. What can you give her?”
“I want to go on the plane,” Lynette says again. “I want to go with Mommy.”
“There,” Emily says. “She's chosen.”
“I've changed my mind. What kind of father would I be if I gave her to a woman who can't make anymore than minimum wage?”
Lynette starts to cry softly.
“And don't think I don't know what you've been up to with that Terry Hodder either.”
She needs a moment to process his words. “
What
?”
“I'm surprised you didn't ask him to go with you.”
“I don't know what you're talking about â ”
“Or maybe he's waiting for you on the other end already, is that it?”
She nearly laughs out loud. “The shit you dream up.”
“No wonder you were always in such a hurry to get to work.” He pauses for a second, then says, “Frankly, I'm surprised that you would stoop so low. Not the best looking fella' on the block, is he?”
“You're crazy, you know that. Terry's been nothing but a gentleman. You're not even in his league.”
“Is that right?”
“That's right.”
“Well, perhaps I'll pay him a visit when I get back.”
She remembers her nightmare from the other morning: Kent standing over Terry's body, blood all over Terry's shirt. She shuts the image out. Doesn't say anything. Can't. Cold all over. Sweating, but cold all over. Empty, that's how she feels, a pumpkin with a scooped out centre. Finally, she says, “I'll call the cops if you so much as touch him.”
“Protecting your boyfriend now, are ya?”
“He's not my boyfriend.”
“Call the cops, will ya? And what do you think they'll say when I tell them that you were trying to kidnap my kids?”
“They'll say I should have done it ages ago.”
“Is that right?”
“That's right, once they hear what you're like.”
Lynette rests her chin on her father's shoulder.
“A slut's all you are. A slut in high school and a slut now.”
“Don't say that in front of my daughter,” she says, the words coming from somewhere outside of herself.
The pale attendant at the gate looks in their direction.
“Oh,” he says, “it's
my
daughter now, is it?”
“You can say what you want to me, just not in front of her.”
“I think this is something that a daughter might like to know about her mother.”
“Kent!”
Lynette lifts her head in order to wipe her eyes, then looks at her father. “Put me down.”
“Give her to me,” Emily says.
“Stay with your dad for now, sweetie, okay?”
“Will passengers, Emily Gyles, Lynette Gyles, and Jeremy Gyles please come to the gate for boarding. Passengers, Emily Gyles, Lynette Gyles, and Jeremy Gyles. Thank you.” The attendant's looking right at her, charcoal eyes in a milk-coloured face.
She can hear her own breathing. There's a thumping in her inner ear, as if the pulse in her neck has relocated there. Those wandering behind him have gone blurry, out of focus, their movements slowed, their voices metallic. All that's clear is him: the colours of his clothes like fresh paint, bruises seemingly darkened, cuts suddenly re-opened and gushing thick blood, even the few hairs in one of his nostrils are visible.
She lays her good hand, palm down, on one side of her, tries to suck in enough breath to speak. Nothing comes.
She manages to unclamp her jaw. Perhaps some words will come now. Nothing does though. That's when she sees Jeremy standing just outside the security gate. He lowers his eyes when he sees her watching, his hands in his pockets.
Kent calls out to him. “I told you to wait in the truck.”
“You were taking forever.”
Kent puts Lynette down. “Take your sister out to play the video game.”
“That game's ancient, Dad.”
“Then buy yourselves something at the restaurant.” Kent squats down and hands Lynette ten dollars. “Go on, sweetheart,” he says. “Go out with your brother.”
Lynette takes the money, but doesn't go. She stares at her mother.
Emily stares back, wishing there was some way to scoop her youngest into her arms and run to the plane without Kent catching them.
“Go on, sweetheart,” Kent says. “All sorts of yummy things in the restaurant.”
Stay, baby, stay!
She thinks to herself.
Mommy can't lose you too
.
“Come on, Lynette,” Jeremy says.
Lynette looks at her again, then goes and joins her brother. Jeremy snatches the money fromher hands as soon as she gets there. He heads to the restaurant. Lynette follows.
The terminal is practically deserted now. Emily looks at the plane, then at the attendant, the plane, the attendant, resisting the urge to get to her feet and burst through the gate. How can she though, without her children?
Kent's looking down at her.
The attendant's staring too.
She turns towards the window. A man wearing a backwards baseball hat stands beside the plane holding what looks to her like an orange baton. The now-empty baggage car goes past him, its driver lifting a few fingers from the steering wheel as if to say,
The show's all
yours
. The baton-holding man cocks his head and gives the âthumbs up.' She imagines the captain and first mate in the cockpit putting on headphones and talking into little mouthpieces, pressing buttons above and in front of them. Then the captain looking out his window directly at her.
What are you waiting for?
she hears him say.
She thinks it's Kent speaking to her first, but when she looks up, it's the attendant. Taller close up, longer face too, a twig-like neck. Hardly any breasts.
“Sorry, what did you say?”
Kent's standing in the same spot. Looking at the both of them now.
“I said the plane's not going to wait forever.” She looks at him, then back at her. “You're Mrs. Gyles, right?”
Emily nods.
The lady looks at Kent again, then bends over and puts her mouth close to Emily's ear, breath like peppermint Certs. Whispering now, she says, “Is everything all right?”
Emily nods.
“All's I need to do is make a call, you know. He can't stop you from getting on board.”
Kent's still looking, big pupils, and a grin so slight that she doubts anyone other than herself can see it.
For a second she considers getting the lady to help get the children on board, but then changes her mind. No sense in it so long as Jeremy wants to stay with his father. And Kent's already warned her about trying to take Lynette.
You can go, but not with her.
Besides, he's right, taking the children
would
be kidnapping. Even if she did manage to get away, how long before the cops tracked her down? How long can you hide two youngsters? Stick out like boils the three of them would in Vancouver. What does she know about city life, any- way? She thinks that
St. John's
is too big. All those cars and one-way roads, the crowds down on George and Water Streets. Never off the island in her whole life and yet, somehow, she was silly enough to convince herself that she could make her way in a city like Vancouver. Over two million people. Four Newfoundland's.
“Two minutes and I won't be able to stop it, Mrs. Gyles,” says the thin attendant. She straightens up to full height before adding, “Decide quick.” Another look at Kent before walking away: blue tights and flat bum beneath a blue skirt, hair bobbed and bouncing, heels too long for skinny, on-the-cusp-of-breaking ankles.
How could a plan that had seemed so practical a few short weeks ago now feel as likely as changing the colour of her skin? She can't think straight. Something else Kent has taken from her. In her mind, all she'd wanted was to get away. So far away. Off the island and past Halifax and P.E.I. and Toronto and Manitoba and Saskatchewan and Alberta. And farther still. Even Vancouver seemed too close. She'd have chosen Japan if she could have. Another planet. Away. That's all she'd desired. Desired it so much in fact that she didn't stop to consider the consequences. And now here she is with the plane about to take off without her and him standing over her. Always over her. A prisoner now. Forever. If he doesn't kill her, she'll lose her mind. Or perhaps she has already.
Kent comes closer so that he's standing between her parted legs.
She lets him.
“Come home,” he says.
She doesn't speak.
“Won't you?”
All you're good for is bagging groceries. What can you give her?
He's right. What can she offer? No trade, no university â nothing. And what happens when the money runs out? Cause it will, eventually. What then?
“Or else they'll be picking up pieces of Terry Hodder all over Lightning Cove.”
“They'll be anyway whether I do or not.”
“Not if you come back.”
She manages to hold his gaze for a second before turning to look once more at the gate, into the eyes of the Air Canada attendant, eyes longing to give her more time even though there isn't any.
“I love you,” he says.
She turns back to him.
“I said I love â ”
“Yes, I heard you.”
“You don't believe me?”
She goes to say something, but stops herself.
“Say it,” he says.
She breathes and tries again. “Love me one second, then hate my guts the next.”
“What?”
“Grip my throat with the same hand that you lay over my belly button.”
“What are you talking about?”
“I'm so sick of being
scared
⦔ She almost cries, but manages to stifle it. “â¦when I hear your truck in the driveway, when you twist the handle of the door, when you lie down beside me.”
He just looks at her.
“I'm so stupid, so
fucking
stupid.”
He takes half a step forward, but she brings her knees together, stopping him.
He stares at her for a long time before turning to look at Lynette and Jeremy. They're near the security entrance again sharing something from a greasy paper bag. Onion rings, Emily thinks.
After a while, she says, “She had fries not ten minutes ago.”
“What?”
“Lynette, I bought her french fries not long before you got here.”