bushes near the play area. The sight of him made her brake suddenly and stall
the Honda. He sat with his head down below his knees, as if hiding his face
could hide the rest of him. She restarted the car and pulled back into her spot.
Who the devil was on van duty today? She started parading the Center's personnel
through a mental checklist when she remembered Allison rushing out of her office
after their meeting. She'd been running late. Doesn't matter. This is
inexcusable. You don't leave behind a child. The drivers don't know. Half the
time the district sends over a new one.
Davy didn't look up as she approached, so she called his name softly and shook
the bush lightly, which spooked him enough that he jumped into the open.
"Easy, Davy, it's just me. What are you doing out here? School's over."
He knew that but he didn't want to go home. That's why he snuck away when the
teacher's helper wasn't there. If he went home there'd be nothing but Chet till
Monday, and he wanted to stay here. He could live here and draw all the time.
They had a kitchen and bathroom, it wasn't anything like a regular school, and
he could sleep on the floor. They had a carpet, a nice clean carpet, not like
that linoleum at home with the dark stains. And he didn't need a bed. He didn't
have a real one anyway, just some old cot. He'd be plenty warm on the carpet, or
on the couch in the living room. It looked like a house too. Someone should be
living here. He could take care of it when they left. Keep it clean. He knew
how. Chet made him do it a lot. He'd figured out how to get in too. He'd seen
the window in the basement that was cracked. He'd bust it right open, but he'd
fix it too. He would. Someday.
He could have been there the whole weekend. Chet never would have found him.
Maybe Mrs. Griswold would have stayed with him. Just for an afternoon, the two
of them. They could have watched TV, or she could have read him a book. His
mother used to read books to him. He'd sit right next to her so there was no
space between them at all and he could feel her body and look at the pages with
her, the funny pictures. Dr. Seuss. She'd make her voice change and pull him
closer, and sometimes he sat on her lap. Where'd she go?
Davy concentrated on this so hard he held his breath. If he could just remember
he could find her and they could run away together and he'd never have to be
with Chet again. But he couldn't remember where she was, only that she used to
read to him. But that made him happy. Till today he hadn't remembered that at
all.
Mrs. Griswold opened her car door and asked him to put on his seat belt, but he
had trouble with it. Chet's truck didn't have them. He didn't believe in them.
He said so. He didn't believe in a lot of things. Davy liked the way Mrs.
Griswold leaned over him and snapped the buckle closed. She smelled good. Then
she shut the door and started to come around to her side.
As Celia rounded the front of her car she saw Tony walking down the front steps.
She knew she'd better tell him, so she looked at the boy through the windshield
and held up her finger. "One minute," she mouthed.
She intercepted Tony on the walkway. He was moving at a brisk pace and grimaced
when Celia flagged him down.
"Sorry, but Davy missed the van. I found him hiding in the bushes."
"He missed the what?"
Celia didn't care for his overly dramatic response, and had all she could do to
keep from saying, You heard me.
"It's not that big a deal. I can—"
"Who was on van duty? That's what I want to know."
Why was his first impulse to blame someone? Was it a male thing? Then, wincing
inwardly, she recalled having had a similar response just before coming up with
Allison's name.
"I don't know," she lied, hoping for Allison's sake that by the time Monday
rolled around Tony would have calmed down or forgotten the incident entirely.
"It wasn't you, was it?"
"No," she said curtly.
"Ethan?"
"No, Ethan did it yesterday."
"Ethan," he repeated like a curse, and then said no more.
While he stood there apparently trying to think of someone to blame, Celia said
she'd be glad to give the boy a ride home, an option Tony sharply tried to
dismiss.
"You can't expect me to endorse that suggestion after what I just told you."
"Then I guess you can do it," she snapped. Lowering her voice so Davy wouldn't
hear, she added, "I've got plenty to do around here without running a bus
service."
In truth, she welcomed giving Davy a ride home and was banking on Tony's refusal
to be inconvenienced.
"No." He studied his watch. "I can't." He looked over and saw Davy in her car,
and that appeared to be all the excuse he needed. "He's already with you. Just
take him. But minimize your interaction with him. Take him home and drop him off
and leave."
"Fine," she agreed crisply, though she had no intention of following his
directive.
Tony walked away.
After settling into the car seat, Celia turned to Davy. "You're going to have to
help me find your place, okay? I don't know that area real well."
She actually had a good idea of where he lived. Center rules required everyone
to know how to find the clients' homes. New drivers often needed help with
directions, and in an emergency the staff couldn't afford to waste time trying
to locate an address. Barbara kept a continually updated map in her desk. Celia
had asked for Davy's assistance because she wanted to use every opportunity to
develop communication with him.
He looked at her.
"You can just point, but I really do need your help. I hope you don't mind doing
a little shopping with me. I've got to make a stop on the way home."
After her kissing affair with Ethan, she decided to put together a romantic
dinner for Jack. Catholic guilt. God, would she ever outgrow it? She had her
doubts. So she'd serve up some penance along with a breast of chicken, though
the former was easier to find in Bentman than the latter. Blame it on Andy. He
owned the town's only market, a small, stubbornly ugly food store that squatted
like a dirty old hen by the side of the road, an appalling old box of a building
slapped together out of local timber during Bentman's big boom in the early
fifties.
She herded Davy through the door, plastered with promotional stickers for
cigarettes, chew, and "specials" on twelve-packs of Bud, and immediately noticed
the filth on the floor, the grit ground into the linoleum by decades of boots
and shoes dragging in the dust and mud of the Oregon mountains. Dirt and grime
had settled on the shelves too, and turned into a gooey kind of glop that made
the cans and bottles stick just a little when she picked them up.
She tried to get in and out quickly, as much for Davy's sake as her own, but
this always proved impossible. The aisles were narrow and crowded with rickety
displays, and the shelves rose to within inches of the ceiling. She often had to
ask Andy to reach up and grab an item for her, and then bide her time while the
bald, burly man moved with the speed of a house plant.
If she encountered another customer she'd have to edge along the canyonlike
aisles to squeeze by, but the shelves had all kinds of crap hanging from them:
cheap little plastic toys, flyswatters, mousetraps, special sponges and
doohickies of all types, the kind of junky items that really enjoyed gravity,
that dropped to the floor as soon as she brushed against them, and fell again
when she tried to hang them back up.
She eyed a package of chicken breasts that did not appear too abused by their
internment at Andy's. After sniffing them carefully she decided they would do,
then moved on to the produce counter, where she picked out some healthy-looking
green beans. Andy had just taken delivery on a crate of local mushrooms, so she
bagged a pound of them for a sauce that would go nicely with the beans.
There, she said to herself, with a bottle of wine and the sorbet in the freezer,
we'll be set. A candlelight dinner on the deck.
She found Davy ogling the candy shelves just below the cash register, so she
told him he could help himself to one item. He immediately snatched up a bag of
Gummy Bears, then held them tightly in his fist as if she might change her mind.
He loved Gummy Bears. His mother used to buy them for him all the time. He
especially liked the red ones, but all the colors were good. They didn't
disappear when you put them in your mouth. You could make them last and last if
you wanted to. He could make a bag last all day. She used to joke with him about
that, called him a squirrel 'cause he was always saving them up. But if you were
smart that's what you did. Make them last. After his daddy died he knew for sure
that you had to save up the good times too 'cause otherwise they'd go away
before you knew it. And then his mom left and there was nothing left to save,
nothing he wanted to keep, and just remembering her was so hard to do. Like her
reading to him. He didn't remember that till today. But there had to be more.
Had to be. But maybe no matter how hard he tried he could have her only a little
bit at a time. And then he thought that maybe his mom was like the Gummy Bears,
and he should go real slow. He could think about this one thing, like her
reading to him, until the memory melted away completely, and then he could think
of another. Maybe he could make her last forever this way. And each time would
be sweet as candy. He put the Gummy Bears in his pocket where they'd be safe.
Celia escaped without letting Andy bog her down in one of his interminable
diatribes against environmentalists, whom he blamed for the decline of the local
economy in general and for his own misfortunes in particular. He'd even been
nice enough to give Davy a peppermint, which the boy jammed into the pocket with
the Gummy Bears.
As she turned south on the highway, she asked, "This way?" to see if he'd help
her. When he nodded she offered a cheerful, "Okay, we're on our way."
*
The sun hovered just over the mountains to the west, and she guessed they had
another hour or so of daylight. Tomorrow night she'd have to set back the clocks
an hour, which reminded her to check with Tony to see what Halloween activities
he'd planned for the Center. Most of the children loved to dress up as witches
or goblins or monsters. Lets their darker sides flourish in a socially
acceptable manner, she thought. She glanced at Davy, and it occurred to her that
some adults she'd met recently might benefit from this as well.
"What are you going to be for Halloween?"
Davy looked at her but didn't seem to understand the question.
"Have you thought about it? Do you want to be a ghost or a pumpkin, or a—"
Batman. He didn't hear what else she said because he wanted to be Batman, that's
all. But he knew he'd never get to wear that cool mask. There'd be no
trick-or-treating with Chet. He hadn't said so, but Davy knew. Not like with his
real dad, taking him around from house to house and waiting by the curb and then
asking him what he got.
Last year Davy had run down the steps of a scary old house with a paper skeleton
on the door and showed his father a big Hershey bar. The old man who lived there
had said, "Boo," and tossed it into his bag. His dad had said, "That's a good
one, Davy. We got to remember this place next year."
But there was no next year. There was Chet.
Celia didn't expect Davy to tell her what he wanted to be for Halloween, but she
kept talking to him as she would to any other child. She was genuinely curious,
though, to know what he'd be if he had the chance. And then it hit her. What had
be been drawing?
"I'll bet you'll be ..." She made a long pause to get his attention, and
succeeded; Davy stared at her intently. "...Batman."
When his eyes widened, she knew she'd nailed it.
How'd she know? Davy wondered. It was like she could hear what he was thinking.
Maybe she could hear other things too, just like he was talking, so he pictured
his dad to see if she'd say, "Your dad." But she didn't.
"I'll bet you'll be a great Batman."
Davy knew he would be too. If he had a real costume he could climb walls just
like Batman, and he'd be strong and real fast and Chet would never catch him,
and if he did he'd beat him up so he couldn't move anymore.
Celia passed Broken Creek Road and the way to her house, and had a fleeting
thought about the shepherd, the kind of costume he might wear; then told herself
that next weekend a lot of people would pay good money to try to look as scary
as he did every day. Few, of course, would succeed.
"This way?" she tested Davy as she approached a cross-street. He shook his head.
"But you'll let me know, right?" He nodded.
A couple of minutes later he pointed left, and Celia slowed to study the forest
on the other side of the road. She spotted a two-track that looked like an old
logging road, pretty much what she'd seen on the map at the Center.
"Here?"
Davy nodded again.
She drove down the narrow path bordered on both sides by spindly firs that
blocked much of the dying light. If she hadn't thought she was almost there she
would have switched on her headlights, but she worried that she'd forget to turn
them off— she had a bad habit of doing that— and she sure didn't want to get
stuck out here.
After about a quarter of a mile Davy pointed again, this time to the right, and