Part 15 (1/2)

Pearce was heavy, and Clary was tired. She sat down on a slight hummock above the lake. She should have brought him a bottle. She could hear motion, nighttime animals moving through the gra.s.ses. Fish in the lake coming up for sleeping bugs, an occasional tiny plop. A sound like something wading: a deer, or a fawn. Pearce pointed his finger up to the moon. He always pointed at the moon; he laughed when he saw it through the window at home. This time he was silent with attention. Wrapped in the soft darkness, Clary lay down on the gra.s.s and curled herself around Pearce. He was wide awake and not in pain any more. He stood against her hip and leaned forward over her body to get closer to the black sky over there, and the black fronds of gra.s.s.

Trevor had a bad moment, in water over his knees, not knowing which way to go back to the sh.o.r.e. The lake was not very deep in the daytime, not until you were way out there, he told himself. He was fine. He took a step one way, and thought maybe the bottom sloped down. He took a step back, and that was definitely sloping down. Any way he stepped, it got deeper.

He was frightened, but on the other hand, there he was in the middle of the lake, in the middle of the night, alone. No waves, no wind. He was in the world, himself completely, no part left out. The moon was in the sky. He stood still.

His flashlight carving a small oval of real world out of the darkness, Moreland walked down to the cabin from behind the store, where he'd parked the truck so as not to wake anyone up along the cabins. He was stiff from that marathon of work. Beautiful night, a far cry from the last few days of dust and paint. Grace didn't know he was coming out, wouldn't be waiting on him. There was time for the luxury of a walk around the lake.

His wobbling flashlight picked and p.r.i.c.ked out to the lake, dancing on the mud as he walked-and what was that in the distance? It was a head s.h.i.+ning over the water.

Hair flying upwards: Trevor. Fifty yards out, the nut. Moreland took his shoes off, since he hated cleaning shoes, and after thinking a minute, took off his pants too. His boxers were shorts, after all.

Trevor had crouched down to feel with his fingers which way the bottom sloped, and at first he didn't see the flashlight moving on the surface. Then he thought it was the moon. But it was a light coming bobbing from the land. So that was the direction! He would have walked the other way, he thought.

”Stay still, Trev,” Moreland called gently over the water, not to alarm him. ”I'll come out to you, and we'll have a wade together.”

Clary felt a clutch on her waist, and heard Pearce answering Moreland, before she realized that she had heard Moreland. She had fallen asleep! Would she have woken if Pearce had crawled away down into the water? Her slow brain finally re-heard Moreland, saying Trevor, saying something-she sat up, grabbing Pearce, and stood to scan the darkness.

There on the lake, a moving light caught something- ”Trevor?” she cried, too afraid to keep her voice steady. The water's dimpling surface broke up the light-she had made Trevor fall backwards into the water.

”Oh!” she cried again, stumbling along the path with Pearce hanging awkwardly from her arm, the sweater swinging around her neck, no use now.

Then she saw Moreland, and heard him calling back to her to calm down, calm down, he had him. Moreland had him.

Grace made cocoa and found Trevor a soft old pair of Fern's shorts to wear to bed. He lay on the couch and listened to Grace scolding Moreland for coming out in the middle of the night and scaring them all, although if he had not, who knew what might have happened, and for letting Trevor have a midnight swim once he'd found him, which was just childish, and so on.

Clary was silent, sitting at the other end of the couch holding Trevor's feet in her hands, which were not warm themselves but seemed to make him warmer.

In the wicker rocking chair Moreland held Pearce, watching his drowsing baby face. ”Good boy,” he said. ”I missed you, Grace, that's all. I'm allowed to miss you.”

19. Tumbling blocks.

The house was still standing. No lumber or workmen around, no debris on the gra.s.s. It looked to Clary as if Moreland might have done some yardwork. The children were hungry, so she let Mrs. Pell stump off around the side of the house-mad again-and went straight to the kitchen, stepping lightly to let Darwin stay asleep in the bas.e.m.e.nt. But Trevor and Dolly ran down the stairs before she thought to stop them: clatter, clatter, and then wild shouts.

Trevor galloped back up the stairs to grab her arm and pull her. She checked that she had fastened Pearce properly into the high chair, because everything was dangerous, and then let Trevor have her hand.

The stairwell seemed lighter. Fresh paint, she realized, as she was rushed down. At the bottom of the stairs, an empty field of bright green carpet was splotched with squares of light. A big window-Moreland must have helped with that, he was a great one for windows. They had scooped out a well to put it in, and lined it with ridged aluminum and pea gravel in the bottom, like one of Moreland's new buildings. The window was beautiful. The carpet was lurid, green as Astroturf.

”Look! See?” Trevor said, as the boy had in Clary's earliest school reader, showing Mother the new puppy. He flung open a pair of over-ornate louvred doors, and there were the washer and dryer.

Dolly found a separate room with the old bas.e.m.e.nt window, looking small now, behind a gathered green panel. A single bed against the wall. She wanted it to be her room, she wanted it so bad-but that would mean that Darwin was gone, that the wind had changed. It would mean that her mom was dead and so Darwin was finished helping her. That thought caught Dolly up short. She'd been doing so well not thinking. She almost had to throw up, but she ran out into the big room and rolled around on the floor. She would go to the canning cupboard and break the jars into a million pieces. Trevor jumped on her and hurt her stomach but she didn't even mind. She grabbed him and hugged him as hard as iron, like a clamp.

Mrs. Zenko called down the stairs from the back door.

Clary said, ”Come and see!” like the children. She wondered how much money she owed Moreland for all this, and if she could ever get used to this carpet. The furnace room was lined with boxes, more orderly and well-labelled than before; and the ancient rolled-up Persian carpet of her mother's. But she couldn't put that over the violent green, which would after all be a good playground for the children.

”My, my, my,” Mrs. Zenko kept exclaiming, even as she was coming down, even before she saw the hidden laundry, and the secret door to the cold-room.

”They worked like bees down here the last few days. Your dad would have been so pleased,” Mrs. Zenko said as they trooped back upstairs. That was true-although Clary's mother had resisted the tiniest change in the house after his death, in life her father had been a relentless fiddler and improver.

Clary felt strange, standing in the kitchen over top of that clear empty s.p.a.ce down there. She felt like the graves of her parents had been hollowed out and aired, like their clinging spirits were lifting and drifting out of the house and up, beyond the garden into the tops of the trees. Not desecration, but opening. Out the kitchen window the tall birch tree was shaking its leaves in a light wind. Her mother would tangle in the gold lace leaves and her father would wind himself calmly around the trunk. Older in death, and more stable.

Darwin said he had a box of doughnuts.

”What kind?” Mrs. Pell asked him through the workshop door, not wasting breath on chat. Fine with her if he wanted to suck up.

”Maple glaze,” he said.

She undid the lock, hooked the box out of his hand and shut the door again. She checked. He knew what she liked. She went back to the recliner, draped with an old quilt from the pile left out here for covering tomato plants. He was free with his money, give him his due. A dozen, and no save some for the kids. Trying to make up for manhandling her, the b.u.g.g.e.r. She crammed her mouth full of doughnut. The door scratched open, light streaming too bright for her eyes. He couldn't bully her. That Rose was a bootlegger or some such thing. She ran a still for a years, that's what Clayton had heard. Darwin upturned a garbage can and sat, making himself right at home.

”You don't want to live with Clary,” he said. Like he was hypnotizing her.

”Maybe I do!” she said, quickly. Where else was she going to go, now that Millie Lyne had thrown her out for good? She was out here to make a point.

”You need a little privacy, a little independence,” he said. ”At your age.”

Mrs. Pell agreed, it was not what she had coming. ”I'll have the old age pension by the end of August. $450 a month. And she's looking into retroactive. I'll get what I'm owed.”

”But you don't want to be at somebody else's beck and call. You need a place of your own, that's what I'm saying.”

”You're the one with the fancy bas.e.m.e.nt,” she said, doughnut making her voice thick.

”You don't want to be climbing stairs all day long. Besides, you're not private in a bas.e.m.e.nt. Them all walking around on top of you.”

That was true. But she wasn't going to be parked in some seniors' poorhouse. Clayton had a duty, and if he wasn't here, then Lorraine had it-and she was getting everything done by Clary. Mrs. Pell's reasoning trailed along like a dog looking for the source of a meaty smell. They owed her. She bit another doughnut.

”I'm thinking this is a pretty good place, this shop out here,” Darwin said.

She followed his eyes as he looked the place over: long room with windows along one wall. Blinds, so snoopers wouldn't see your every move. Sun coming in. Alley door down there. The long shape of it was like the cabin in Nanton where her sister Janet had lived when she first got married. The rag-pieced quilt was like what Janet used to make.

”You know this was here?” Darwin opened a door she hadn't bothered with. Washroom, with a sink and toilet. ”Her dad was a plumber, first. Good carpenter, too. Built this place sound.”

She'd peed in a cup the other night, thrown it on the gravel out the back alley. He had a grin on his face. Up to something. He wasn't pulling the wool over her eyes. They were trying to get rid of her. No way she was getting kicked out of Clary's.

”You set yourself up in here, n.o.body can tell you what to do. Your cheque comes to Clary's mailbox. Same address. I could find you a bed, some furniture. Give it a lick of paint.”

Mrs. Pell got up and walked slowly, favouring her cramped hip, to check the little washroom. She flushed the toilet. That worked. She went back to the lounger. The quilt had been pieced properly, using up old clothes, not one of these fake quilts you got now. It was that one, Tumbling Blocks. Tiny st.i.tches: the dotted line on a highway. Sweet itch under the fingers.

”I don't want to be stuck paying for power,” she said. ”And there's no TV!”

Darwin went out the open door. A minute later he came back, staggering a little, with the white TV in his arms. He waggled the TV side-to-side onto the counter, and pulled the remote out of his pocket.

”No cable,” Mrs. Pell said.

He burst out laughing. ”Hook into Clary's,” he said. ”I'll get my buddy at the cable company to run it out for you. All legal.” Pleased with himself, big banana smile.

When the children were asleep, Clary knocked on Mrs. Zenko's door. Mrs. Zenko was quite likely to be choosing her numbers for the lottery at 10 p.m., or was.h.i.+ng the kitchen floor. She was a nighthawk and a morning glory, she liked to say.