Page 22 of The Drowning Kind


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I thought of Declan’s drawing again, his nightmare fish.They weren’t who they said they were. “He’s really into animals and nature; that’s always been a door in. I’ve got a bunch of field guides and nature books in my office. But, Karen, helovedthose fish. I saw him on Friday, and he told me he’d had a nightmare about them—but we talked through it and he seemed okay.” Had I missed something? Had I been too cranky and headachy to deal with the situation as I should have? “Damn it,” I said. “I should have called him back when I got his message yesterday.”

I looked at the raft on the water and noticed a piece of paper next to it, drifting. It was a folded paper boat, like something a child would make.

The things in dreams, they can follow you into real life.

I walked toward the far end of the pool, where the little boat was floating.

“You’ve got enough to deal with there,” she said. “Leave Declan to me.”

“Call me after you see you him, okay?”

“I don’t want to keep bothering you, Jackie,” she said. “How are you holding up?”

Lexie and I made little paper boats like that and sent them down the canal that flowed to the stream. She’d write messages inside them, hoping they would get carried far away, be picked up by a stranger who would read:I’m being held prisoner, send help, please! This is a note from the other side of the world. Everything is upside down here.

“I’m doing okay, all things considered. And it’s fine. I’d really appreciate an update tomorrow.”

I ended the call as I crept up to the edge of the pool, got down on my knees on the damp stone, and reached to grab the paper boat. It was made from lined notebook paper with three holes along the edge—there were words visible through the damp page. I carefully unfolded it and saw the message scribbled in green crayon in what appeared to be my sister’s handwriting:Why didn’t you pick up the phone?

I dropped the paper, watched it flutter back down into the pool. And just at that moment, I was dead sure I caught a glimpse of something in the water—a shifting shadow, a trick of light—and for a half a second, I expected Lexie to come bursting out of the water, gasping for breath, saying she still hadn’t touched bottom.

chaptereight

June 19, 1929

Lanesborough, New Hampshire

It doesn’t seem real,” I admitted, picking at my cuticle until it bled.

Myrtle had gotten very quiet as I spoke and was now poking at the strawberry tart on her plate, spreading the jam around with her fork.

Will and I had been back at home since Sunday evening, and I was having a difficult time getting back into the rhythm of real life. Our trip felt like something I’d imagined or dreamed. Since our return, I’d done my best to get back into my usual routines, but nothing feels quite right. I’ve cleaned the windows until I can see my own reflection as well as in a mirror. I sewed a new button on Will’s good shirt. I helped him go over the books for his practice. I attended a luncheon with ladies from the Auxiliary to plan our fall foliage festival—I was appointed chairwoman! Yet still, I feel like a sleepwalker. As if I’m under a spell. The world seems off. Colors are dim and pale. The grass and trees don’t seem as green, the sky isn’t as blue. The beautiful silver dress I wore to dinner at the hotel that seemed to sparkle now looks faded and sad on its hanger. Tucked away in the back corner of our closet, in an old hat box, are the two jars of spring water Eliza sent me home with. Will does not know I snuck them into our suitcase.

“You know,” Myrtle said at last, “I’ve been there.”

This caught me by surprise. “What? To the hotel?”

“No, no. This was years ago, long before they built the hotel. Whenit was just the springs.” She abandoned her half-eaten tart, the smeared jam looking like coagulated blood.

“My Felix, he returned from the war in a wheelchair. Did you know that?”

I thought of her husband, who ran the feed and tack shop in town. I’d seen him lifting great bales of hay, sacks of grain. He’d once been in a wheelchair?

“He was shot on the battlefield in France. Took two bullets in his hip, one right in his spine that the doctors weren’t able to remove. They said he’d never walk again. We were resigned to it. And then, one of Felix’s friends told him about the springs. Encouraged us to go.”

Myrtle is one of the most matter-of-fact people I know. She doesn’t seem the sort to believe in water with healing powers.

“We thought it was silly, of course.” She chuffed out a meek laugh. “My husband had a bullet lodged in his spine. How was sitting in spring water going to help him? But… after bathing in the waters, Felix was able to feel his legs again.” She shuffled her feet against the painted floorboards. Sunlight filtered in through the kitchen window, lit up the dust in the air around us, making it sparkle.

“So it worked!” I said. Her face was full of awe, but underneath, I detected a hint of fear.

“Yes, he walked out of that water on his own.” She paused, rubbed her face. “And now, he dances with me on Saturday nights.” She smiled, then the smile faded, her lips pursing together tightly. “I had no idea they’d built a hotel there,” she said. She looked out the window, then back at me. “Did you drink the water? Bathe in the springs?” She sounded worried.

“Of course. Why wouldn’t we? Your Felix was able to walk again—”

“The water gives miracles, yes, but I think it takes, too.” Myrtle looked pale. “Whatever’s in that water, maybe it should be left alone.”

“Did something happen to you after you went? Something bad?” I have been sipping at the water Eliza gave me, a little each day, tasting the rusted metal and blood, and focusing all of my energy on the wish I made down at the pool.