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Authors: Lisa Lutz

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How to Start a Fire (28 page)

BOOK: How to Start a Fire
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And then Daddy came home.

On the surface, Kyle had been an appropriate choice. George had met him in Boise, Idaho, on vacation with her boys. He was the guide on a river-rafting trip. A man who liked nature as much as she did. A man who scooped up spiders in the shower and released them to play their role in the universal food chain. He could stare at the stars all night, sleep on the ground, and go for days bathing only in a swimming hole. He had the kind of tan that would never fade, skin that felt like rawhide—handsome now, but one day it would kill him, as Anna remarked when she first saw a photo. That was one thing that George and Kyle did well together: they would take the boys on weeklong camping trips, bathe in icy ponds and creeks, and hike for hours at a time. It was when they returned home, when Kyle faced the realities of domestic life—laundry, shopping, cleaning, chauffeuring children to and fro—that their relationship lost its luster.

“What’s going on here?” Kyle asked as he gaped at Carter blowing on his purple nail polish, and Miller putting on a tutu. George had adorned herself with a simple pink feather boa.

“We’re getting in touch with our feminine side,” George said.

Kyle grunted disapprovingly.

“I need a shower,” he said, which George always took to mean that he had just been with another woman. At some point she began to wonder what was wrong with the shower at his girlfriend’s place.

George followed Kyle into their bedroom.

“Where have you been?” she asked. George had come to loathe that question, having asked it so many times.

“What difference does it make,” said Kyle, who also had a low opinion of that particular interrogative. This was his first marriage and he hadn’t quite grasped the idea that it involved a tether of some kind.

George wasn’t going to engage in one more battle. The war was over and no one had won.

“You should move out,” she said. “Oh, and I’m pregnant.”

She swiftly departed; the pink boa danced in her wake. Kyle didn’t pursue her. He took his shower, and the next day he was gone.

 

Two boys and the exhaustion of pregnancy quickly turned George’s nerves into sandpaper. She had managed to make only a few friendly acquaintances in Boise, mothers of her boys’ schoolmates, friends by convenience, occasional babysitters. Children as a common interest was something, but it couldn’t compensate for history, for remembering that time you dove naked into the water just as Russian tourists traversed what you’d thought was a secret trail.

If Bruno were still alive, he would have been on a plane while Kyle was still packing his bags. George wanted to call Anna, but she was still punishing her for her most recent betrayal. She considered asking Kate to visit, but sympathy wasn’t something that Kate did very well. So George dialed her mother. She spoke in teary hiccups, told her mother that a divorce was inevitable, asked for help with the boys. Vivien responded in soothing tones and promised to book the next flight.

When she arrived, the nurturing mother became the relentless commentator, like the kind you find on cable news. No thought in Vivien’s head went unspoken.

Have you seen the dirt under Carter’s nails?

They’re having cereal for dinner?

Why is Miller wearing that ridiculous scarf?

When was the last time you cleaned the trash bin?

Don’t you have eye cream?

Boys shouldn’t wear nail polish, I don’t think.

Have you gained weight?

You might consider choosing less attractive men. Studies have proven that relationships do better when the woman is considered more attractive.

What happened to the ceramic vase I sent you last Christmas?

Miller, blow your nose.

Carter, do you have any long pants?

When’s the last time you ran a comb through your hair?

George had to think about that last one, and while it might have been a reasonable question, George decided she couldn’t stand to hear one more word from her mother. She went online, booked Vivien’s plane ticket, packed her suitcase, and told her mother it was time to go home.

“I’m here for you, darling. I’ll stay as long as you want.”

“I think I should be on my own. If this is how it’s going to be, I better get used to it.”

With her mother gone, George was lonely again, although she didn’t miss the soundtrack. George phoned Kate, who on occasion could provide a helpful perspective.

“I have two kids, another on the way, and I’m about to be divorced for the third time. Can it get any worse?” George asked.

“It can always get worse,” Kate said.

 

It did. Mitch, out of the blue, decided to fly to Boise to visit Carter. He had a new girlfriend who’d expressed interest in meeting his son. As George said when she phoned Kate, he was trying to impress her with a show of his humanity.

George hadn’t seen Mitch in two years. The idea of coming face to face with her flawless-looking ex-husband in her current state was mortifying. Bloated from pregnancy, her skin blotchy from hormones, she looked worse than she had in years. She was still attractive to people who passed her in the grocery store, but Mitch would note every single flaw.

She took two hours to get ready on the day he arrived, so preoccupied by her own appearance that she almost forgot to dress Carter. With ten minutes to spare, she put her son in a pair of size 6 corduroy pants and a rugby shirt, an outfit Mitch had sent for Carter’s birthday two years ago, when his son was four. It finally fit.

George peered out the window when she heard a quiet engine idling in front of her house. Mitch got out of the rental car and strolled up the walkway. He had the decency to make his girlfriend wait in the car.

When Carter put on his jacket, George said, “Do you have your gifts for Daddy?”

Carter gently patted his pocket.

“Good,” said George. “I think he’ll really like them.”

The doorbell rang. George’s heart raced like a caged jackrabbit.

“Mitch,” she said, as she saw Mitch in the foyer. He had a few more gray hairs, but nothing else about him had changed. George was ashamed to admit that the sight of him made her flush. Hate was the first emotion to surface, but a suffocating attraction came next.

“George,” he said. “You look . . . well.”

He sized her up, like he always did. She could sense that her attempts at camouflage had failed.

“Carter, say hello to your father.”

“Hi . . . Dad.”

Mitch mussed up Carter’s hair. The gesture appeared laughably unnatural.

“Ready to go?” said Mitch.

“He’s ready,” George said, a slight grin edging onto her face.

Mitch turned back to Carter.

“Carter, empty your pockets,” he said.

Carter turned to his mother for instruction.

Mitch repeated his directive. “Carter, please empty your pockets.”

“It’s okay,” said George. “You can give Daddy his gifts now.”

Carter reached into his jacket pockets and withdrew four snails, two in each hand.

Mitch grunted, closed his eyes, and stepped outside. He took a deep breath, and she saw him try to choke back the nausea bubbling in his esophagus. His sick expression made him decidedly less attractive, which pleased George.

“Carter, give the snails to your mother,” Mitch said from outside.

Carter dropped the snails into George’s open palms.

Mitch stepped back into the foyer and said to Carter, “Wash your hands and then we’ll go.”

When Carter was out of earshot, Mitch glared at George and said, “That was really mature. What, no grasshoppers available this time of year?”

“I can always find a grasshopper,” George said. “But their legs would break in his pockets. Doesn’t seem right. Snails are sturdier. They could even survive a plane flight if Carter was careful.”

“Don’t threaten me,” said Mitch.

“Your son wants to share his interests with you, that’s all.”

“No, you just want to torture me.”

“If I wanted to torture you, there would have been snakes in his pockets.”

2012

San Francisco, California

 

“That wasn’t so bad, was it?” Anna asked as Matthew cradled his recently beaten wrist in his uninjured hand.

There was a glow about Anna that Matthew found startling. She felt a rush of excitement so heady it made her feel almost sick, a reminder of the past, her need to push the limits. There was that monster she’d banished again and again, returning.

“Are you a sadist?” Matthew asked.

“Not in the traditional sense. But I like all forms of experimentation, which sometimes requires that you be ruthless with your subjects.”

Matthew held up his wrist and studied the location where the tumescent form had been. It looked like a molehill had been tamped down with a shovel. Anna noted his look of surprise and approached, taking hold of his arm.

“It worked,” she said, trying to stem the enthusiasm in her voice. “I’d love to see this written up in a medical journal. Can you imagine soliciting subjects for the study?”

“No,” Matthew said, pulling his arm away. His wrist still ached from the impact.

“You all right?” Anna asked.

Matthew picked up a gift bottle of bourbon wrapped in a bow and uncorked it. He poured himself a drink.

“Do you want one?”

“No, thank you.”

“I’ve never seen you drink.”

“That’s an accurate statement.”

“Do you drink?”

“Is that your first question?”

“No,” Matthew flatly said. He took the bottle and his cordial glass over to the leather sofa and sat down.

“Three questions only,” Anna reminded him.

Kate had always believed that secrets would one day become an endangered species. Loyalty and silence were the two things Kate and Anna had most in common. Matthew was outmatched in this game, and yet he proceeded.

 

Q. Why aren’t you a doctor anymore?

A. I lost my medical license.

Q. Why did you lose your medical license?

A. I was a substance abuser and I got caught doing things that doctors aren’t supposed to do.

Q. How long have you been clean?

A. Three years, four months, two days.

 

“Do you miss it?”

“You already asked your third question.”

“I let you smash a book on my wrist,” Matthew said. He felt like he knew less about her now than he had when the questioning began.

If this were discovery, Matthew would have had thirty-five questions to get to the bottom of Anna. And the answers would have had to be the truth because the testifier would be under oath. It would have gone something like this:

  1. Q. What is your legal name?
    A. Anna Lee Fury.

  2. Q. Do you have any siblings?
    A. I have a brother. Colin Fury.

  3. Q. Are your parents still alive?
    A. Barely.

  4. Q. Did you have a happy childhood?
    A. I found ways to be happy.

  5. Q. Have you ever had a romantic relationship with Mr. Blackman?
    A. Of course not.

  6. Q. How do you know him?
    A. He’s a family friend.

  7. Q. Have you ever been married?
    A. No.

  8. Q. Engaged?
    A. No.

  9. Q. What do you do when you’re not here?
    A. I read a lot.

  10. Q. What kind of books do you read?
    A. Crime.

  11. Q. Why?
    A. Because in the books, people do things far worse than I have ever done.

  12. Q. What is your favorite book?
    A. Whatever is currently distracting me.

  13. Q. Do you mind working for someone seven years younger than you?
    A. Sometimes.

  14. Q. What do you think of me?
    A. I think you ask too many questions.

  15. Q. What have you got against questions?
    A. Sometimes answers don’t help us.

  16. Q. Why don’t you drink?
    A. Because I’m a drunk.

  17. Q. Is that why you lost your medical license?
    A. No.

  18. Q. Why did you lose your medical license?
    A. It happened in parts.

  19. Q. What was the first part?
    A. I prescribed drugs for patients and took them for my own use. I was caught. Sent to rehab and put on probation.

  20. Q. What was the next part?
    A. I prescribed drugs for patients I didn’t know, who were most likely addicts, and gave the scripts to a local drug dealer in exchange for other drugs. I was caught again; I begged for mercy, was sent to rehab, and put on probation one last time.

  21. Q. What happened next?
    A. Six months later, I bought heroin from an undercover cop.

  22. Q. What were you thinking?
    A. I was thinking how smart I was buying street drugs under the radar.

  23. Q. Did you go to prison?
    A. I went to rehab and was sentenced to thirty days in the county jail. Served two weeks. One year community service. Medical license permanently revoked.

  24. Q. When did that happen?
    A. Six years ago.

  25. Q. What did you do for those five years before you came to work here?
    A. I repented.

  26. Q. What is your biggest regret?
    A. I have many.

  27. Q. Pick one.
    A. Leaving a door open.

  28. Q. What was your most cowardly act?
    A. Lying.

  29. Q. What did you lie about?
    A. That maybe I did more than leave a door open.

  30. Q. What’s the worst thing you’ve ever done?
    A. I killed a man.

  31. Q. Was it in self-defense?
    A. No.

  32. Q. How did you kill him?
    A. I made him be at the wrong place at the wrong time.

  33. Q. Do you believe in God?
    A. No. But I talk about Him a lot.

  34. Q. Have you ever been in love?
    A. I have.

  35. Q. Who were you in love with?
    A. A ghost.

But Matthew had just three questions, and he’d gotten three tightfisted answers. Over the next few weeks, he pressed for more, only to have Anna tighten the screws on her box of secrets. If she had been smart, she would have parceled out bits of information, feeding Matthew’s starving-dog curiosity. Since she didn’t, he scavenged on his own.

BOOK: How to Start a Fire
9.64Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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