Read Dogwood Online

Authors: Chris Fabry

Tags: #FICTION / Christian / General, #FICTION / General

Dogwood (16 page)

I received the burn permit, promising not to use any accelerant, and went home to prepare the pile. I called Carson and Jenna, inviting them to the festivities, and in the cool of one evening, having dug a trench around the remnants of all my father held dear, we set the memories ablaze and watched the smoke and ash rise and float above the trees.

“It’s almost pretty,” Jenna said, taking my arm and drawing me close. Too close.

“A lot of history in that pile of junk,” Carson said.

“A lot of your history you probably don’t want to talk about,” I said.

“You boys hush,” my mother said.

“What history?” Jenna said.

“Just about every eligible girl in the county knew about this barn.” I snickered.

Jenna loosened her grip long enough for me to get away. “What’s he talking about, Carson?”

“Watch out now. I see a big copperhead coming out of there.” Carson said it so convincingly and with such visible angst that my mother and Jenna jumped back and for a moment forgot about history.

I knew it was a ploy but a good one. Copperheads were the most feared snakes of our region, and a bite from one caused visions of horror and stories of relatives who had died or experienced unprecedented agony. Swelled and gangrenous limbs. Our father had protected a nest of blacksnakes around the barn to ward off the copperheads, which they were known to do, and now that nest was gone.

“Let’s go inside,” Jenna said, walking through a spent strawberry patch.

“Don’t those copperheads like to eat strawberries?” I said.

Jenna hopped out of the patch, grabbing the hem of her dress and lifting it high. She looked at me and inched it farther. “Are you teasing me?”

I ignored her and turned back to the fire, the flames now reaching the tops of trees. They melted leaves and made them wither as the smoke and ash rose like prayers.

Carson called when he returned home and told me he could see the blaze from Route 60 and that people were pulling off and getting out to look. “I heard one old boy say you were back in town
and burning the family home. They thought you’d gone crazy up in that prison. Thought you wanted to kill the rest of us.”

“What did you say?”

“What was I supposed to say, that you’re just fine? I wish I could, but I don’t know what happened to the old you. If he’s still out there, I wish you’d find him and tell him to come home.”

I wanted to tell my brother that I was more myself than I had ever been, that I was finally understanding my place. I also knew no matter how loud I spoke, those without ears to hear can’t.

He wasn’t finished. “And this thing with Karin . . . you should give it up. It can go nowhere but bad. It’s only going to lead to trouble.”

“I’ve never counseled you in matters of love, and I’m not going to start now. Can you pay me the same courtesy?”

“Are you saying something against Jenna? You don’t think I made a good choice?”

“I didn’t say that. I just need you to give me some space.”

“Space and time are all you have.” Carson sighed as if he’d thought of something else that would put my life in perspective, that would solve all the mysteries and I’d snap my fingers and say,
Thanks. That solves everything. I’ll be down to the hairdresser’s shop at eight tomorrow to start so that tart of a wife of yours can seduce me.

But I didn’t say it. I didn’t say anything. I just hung up.

Later that night, when I was sure the fire was under control and my mother was in her room, the strains of Christian music playing on her stereo, I eased outside and found solace in the darkness, the pitch-black anonymity of the country. Inside Clarkston, there was always a glow from something, even deep into the night, and voices of guards and inmates. Here there was silence, only the continual songs of crickets and frogs.

I slipped into the old Chevy Impala parked by the garage and drove the familiar route to Karin’s house—the one I remembered
so well. I passed the street three times before I got up the courage to drive down the cul-de-sac. Several students from our high school had lived here. Maybe they still did. The sidewalks were pristine, and the grass was finely manicured. Here and there my headlights illumined a Big Wheel or some other toy, but most of the yards were empty, cars inside garages. Upscale. Every bit of it said,
Don’t live here unless you can afford it.

Karin’s parents had lived at the end of Summerdale Lane, and I turned off my lights and stopped at the first curb, parking between two mailboxes. When I’d arrive early in the morning, the outside light would be on, but it was dark now. No children to wait up for.

I don’t know what I was looking for or hoping for—maybe a connection with the past that didn’t hurt as much—but I got out of the car and walked the sidewalk under a new moon. The smells of lilacs and peonies and freshly mowed grass. An oily spot on the driveway. The stone bench where Karin used to wait for me on those late Tuesday and Thursday mornings. We took long walks on the campus together and sat on a bench and ate lunch outside Old Main or near the fountain dedicated to the plane crash victims of 1970.

Then I thought of the concert. The night that changed both our lives forever.

W
ill

July 1, 1980

Cincinnati, Ohio

We stayed until the last encore. Karin was like a vision beside me, standing and clapping, raising a cigarette lighter. It was a dream, even better than anything my subconscious could dredge up.

The crowd, frenzied during “Running on Empty,” had relaxed into that long-tunneled view of life “The Pretender” offered and rounded out with “For Everyman.” It struck me that though Browne’s music had become popular, it was not the same as the Top 40, bubblegum, sticky sweet songs that pummeled the airwaves. It was thoughtful and transparent and revealing. His lyrics had depth, a self-confessional spirit that let you in just enough to identify but still kept a measured distance.

We walked backstage, showing our passes, and were ushered into a large room with Coke machines and tables where the band had eaten earlier. Jackson stood and spoke about the growing danger of a nuclear holocaust and what Ronald Reagan would do if we didn’t stay the course with the current president.

When the line formed for a picture and a personal word, I told Karin I wanted to leave. She wouldn’t and pushed her way closer until she stood next to the singer, winking at me. “He’s so short,” she mouthed.

We walked through the empty auditorium. The only people
left were roadies in their white T-shirts with the names of every stop printed on the back.

“Wouldn’t you just die to have that job?” Karin said, looking over her shoulder. “Getting to go to all those places, see all those people. And listen to great music every night.”

“It’s probably kind of boring,” I said. “Plus, the pay isn’t good. Probably minimum—”

“Who cares about how much they pay?” she interrupted. “You’d be rubbing shoulders with musicians. Poets. It would be such an experience. Haven’t you ever wanted to do something just for the experience?”

“I’m here tonight,” I said, smiling.

Karin turned and walked ahead toward the car. She huddled close to me as we passed a homeless man begging. If I’d been alone, I probably would have walked right past him, but I handed him the rest of the change in my pocket.

“That’s nice of you, sir,” he said. “You have a real pretty date with you. You deserve something pretty like that.”

I gave him a look, as if I were going to take my seventy-eight cents back.

He held up a hand and moved back.

Karin huddled even closer to me. “He gives me the creeps. He smells terrible and looks worse.”

I opened the door, and she slid in and glanced at her watch. “It’ll be the witching hour soon.”

“What do you mean?”

“Your birthday. You said you were born early in the morning, right?”

“Yeah, somewhere between four and five o’clock.”

Karin reached under the seat and pulled out a paper bag. “I figured we could celebrate.”

It was a bottle of wine, and she hadn’t thought to bring a
corkscrew. I had one on my knife, but I was leery about using it. “That’s all I need is to come home drunk with you.”

“My parents think I’m staying at Vicki’s house. Come on.” She hounded me for the first few miles, then began to pout. “I thought you’d appreciate it. I even brought two glasses. It doesn’t taste good unless you use real glass.”

I shook my head. “If the police pull us over with that open, you know what they’ll do?”

“You worry too much. You never do anything without thinking about the worst thing that can happen.” She looked out the window as I found a station tracking Jackson’s
Hold Out
album.

When they reached “That Girl Could Sing,” Karin looked at me. “How about something . . . for your birthday?” The way she said it was breathy and out of character.

I felt my face flush.

“You agree to open this and share a glass with me, and I’ll give you a little present. Our first kiss.” She raised an eyebrow and pursed her lips. “Ready to pucker up, farm boy?”

Blood raced through my body, and I felt a sense of urgency.
Just breathe,
I thought. The car was suddenly hot, and I rolled down my window. I had no idea where we were going, but I knew I had to keep driving. “All right, we’ll have one glass each, but that’s it. And not while we’re on the road.”

“Fine,” Karin said. “Pull off at the next exit.”

A few miles later we snaked up a winding off-ramp. Mosquitoes and other bugs splattered the windshield. I hit the windshield washer fluid to erase the stains, but it just smeared. We reached a light at the top of the hill, and the county road was deserted. I didn’t know if we were in Kentucky or Ohio. “Right or left?”

“Surprise me,” she said.

I turned left and we quickly escaped the harsh lights of the interstate. The road rose above the homes that lay below us on the ridge. It reminded me of our own area—newer homes with long
driveways and ivy-covered brick walls mixed in with trailers and run-down homes. Cars propped on cinder blocks. We passed a Kroger and a gas station, and I started to turn into a wide spot in the road sporting a picnic table.

Karin touched my arm, pointing at a blue sign that said Swimming Pool. “Keep going.”

We drove another mile and the hills dropped on one side, revealing a flat plain bathed in moonlight.

“Turn here,” she said.

It was the entrance to a high school. The brick building was older, and the grass needed mowing. Four dilapidated tennis courts, laid out east to west, stood at the end of a long parking lot, a high chain-link fence around it. A baseball field and a cinder track in the distance. I didn’t see a football field, but I knew there had to be one.

“Go over there,” Karin said, motioning to a small building with another fence connected to it.

I drove slowly, as if someone from the school might jump out, but the place was deserted. The trash can near the building was full of soda cans and paper plates. The familiar smell of chlorine wafted through the area, but the temperature remained hot and muggy.

“I’ve got an idea.” Karin grabbed the bottle and the glasses and opened the door. “Park at the tennis courts and meet me back here.”

I tried to stop her, but she had made up her mind. I left the windows rolled down and parked, then followed her to the small building. The front had turnstiles and a large window covered with plywood. Above it was a sign listing the prices of hot dogs, sodas, and candy.

“Hey, where are you?” I said.

Karin was on the other side of the building, trying to scale the fence.

“There’s barbed wire at the top,” I said. “You’ll cut yourself.”

She stepped down, and I saw she had pushed the bottle and glasses through the bottom of the fence. There was no way we were getting in that way.

“You have an old blanket in the backseat, don’t you?”

“It’s full of dust,” I said.

“Get it.”

Her eyes twinkled a fluorescent reflection of the security light above us, and her hair glistened. I thought myself the luckiest person on earth to be alone with her. And then she smiled and I thought of the Eagles song “Witchy Woman.”

“Look, the cops probably patrol this place,” I said. “You try to get over that and the people in those houses up there will call.”

Karin cocked an eyebrow and put a hand on her hip. She was about to speak when she spotted something on the ground and picked it up. A good-size rock. Looked like it could do some damage.

She hurled it with a speed and accuracy that surprised me, and the flickering light smashed and sparked. A shower of glass fell onto the roof. Instead of snapping us into darkness, the light faded, the filament going from white to orange to nothing.

“Won’t be able to see us now.” She grinned.

“If they catch us out here . . .”

Karin ran toward the car in the moonlight, darting like a cat through the parking lot. She returned a few moments later with the old quilt I kept in case I had a flat tire. It was several inches thick, and I imagined it laden with European diseases and used to wipe out tribes of Native Americans. I’d found it in my grandfather’s trunk along with several 78 rpm records of some singer named Caruso. I had thrown the albums into the woods just to see how far they would fly.

She folded the quilt lengthwise and almost threw it over the fence, but it stuck on the barbed wire perfectly. “Don’t want you catching anything on those barbs up there.” She laughed. She
pulled herself up on the eight-foot fence and got her foot stuck between the post and the building. “Little help.”

“I’m not coming in there,” I said, reaching up and pushing her higher.

She turned and grinned at me like we had just shared something forbidden. Her foot came out easily. “Yes you are.”

“You can try to charm the cops if you want to, but they’ll throw my butt in jail.”

Karin leaned again and tipped forward, taking my breath away. It looked like a cheerleader move and she dropped to the ground, landing squarely, but she let out a squeal as she touched down and melted to the ground. “My ankle,” she said, her back to me, bent forward at an awkward angle.

“Stay right there.” I scaled the fence and used the quilt to help. I wasn’t as graceful, but I hit the ground beside her and knelt as she slipped off her sandals.

“Told you I’d get you over here,” she said, laughing and pushing me over.

I fell back, and when I regained my balance, I watched her trot across the edge of the freshly mowed grass. Tiny pieces stuck to the bottom of her feet as she dipped a toe into the edge of the pool.

“It’s warm,” Karin said.

“You can’t be serious. Let’s get out of here before . . .”

She put the bottle on the concrete and both glasses beside it. If her forward flip on the fence had taken my breath away, what she did next stopped my heart. Turned away from me, she pulled her shirt over her head in one motion and unclasped her jeans and stepped out of them. Her dive into the water was perfect. She swam to the other end of the pool before I realized I hadn’t moved.

“Come on!” she said, waving. “It feels great.”

The moon rippled in the disturbed water, and she went under. The lights at the side of the pool were off, and soon the pool calmed. I edged forward in the grass, remembering the songs
I had heard tonight. “That Girl Could Sing” became “That Girl Could Drown.”

Karin was waiting at the edge, and she burst from the water and grabbed my leg like in some horror movie.

I fell back, catching myself with my hands.

“Come in!” she said. “Right now or I’ll scream. I’ll say that you got me drunk and attacked me. How would that look?” She floated into a backstroke and turned into Scarlett O’Hara. “A big old country boy taking advantage of a poor little girl like me.”

I stared, thinking that she wasn’t little or poor or in the least bit unhealthy, and why wasn’t I in the pool?

“I mean it, Will. If you don’t come in here, you won’t like what happens.”

I gathered her clothes, snagged the quilt from the top of the fence, and stashed them in the darkened exit from the showers. I kicked off my shoes, then peeled off my shirt and socks and added them to the pile.

“Whatcha doin’ in the dark over there?”

“Keep your voice down,” I whispered.

When I emerged from the shadows, she protested. “Uh-uh, no way are you swimming in your jeans.”

“I never agreed—”

“Plus, it’ll be a wet ride home. Take them off. I promise I won’t look.”

I hesitated, then returned to the dark, throwing my jeans into the corner and running back in my briefs. She giggled and shook her head as I dived in, the warm water welcoming me like some maternal spring, pulling me down and surrounding me. I burst through the surface and shook the water from my hair and found her at the far corner.

“You’re a chicken—you know that?”

“I don’t like swimming with strange women,” I said, my voice carrying across the water and slapping the brick building.

“Is that what I am? A strange woman?”

“You’re strange and you’re beautiful.”

“Is that a come-on?”

“Nope. Just the truth.”

Karin leaned back in the water, wetting her hair and pushing it from her face like an Olympic diver emerging from the pool. “Any other guy would be all over me right now. And he wouldn’t have jumped in with his briefs.”

“Guess I’m not any other guy.”

“Ask yourself what Jackson Browne would do.”

“He’s shorter than me. I could beat him up.”

She laughed.


You
could probably beat him up. He’d have to reach up to hit you.”

“Are you scared, Will Hatfield?”

“I don’t know if you could characterize what I feel as fear,” I heard myself say. “It’s kind of like jumping into a pool of cold water. You like to get used to the idea before you do it.”

Karin swam with her head slightly above the surface, like some elegant animal paddling for the shallow end. The clouds were gone and the moon shone on us. She looked up. “Pretty, isn’t it?”

“Like the star over Bethlehem.”

She kept swimming away from me. “That’s pretty close to blasphemy—don’t you think?” She made it to the pool stairs, next to the silver railing the little kids play on, splashing and jumping with their inflatable rings. “Why don’t you open the bottle and bring me a glass?”

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