I keep stopping. I’ll be fine for a couple of hundred yards, then I’ll start worrying about my bangs being too short and whether or not I brushed my teeth this morning, and I can’t go on.
Abel must think I’m still reeling from the hobo. When I stop, he doesn’t ask why, he uses the opportunity to study tree bark with his magnifying glass or to turn over rocks, and even though his tactfulness is connected to the wrong event, it gets me moving again. This is what I dreamed of and schemed for, this invitation to his house, but I feel lured by invisible forces. I look around for signs of luck, good or bad. He thinks I’m looking for the hobo. “He’s gone,” he says. “He’s miles away by now.”
We leave the cool olive light of the ravine and emerge into the hot white glare of the subdivision. The streets are empty. Still, it’s a risk for him to be seen with a girl. “You go on ahead,” I say. “I’ll meet you at your house.”
He glances around. “Okay.” He knows what I’m talking about.
When he’s about half a block ahead of me, I resume walking. He reaches our street and cuts through the Fosters’ lawn. I stay on the pavement, as I’m sure he means me to. I pass my house. In a kind of trance, nostalgic for a safer time, I give it a long look. By now he’s under his carport and waving at me to make a run for it.
We go along the side of his house. Somebody—her?—is pounding out a military march on the piano as if to usher us onto the property. We enter the back yard. One half, the half where we are, is a vegetable garden. The other is like the moon, all baked mud and craters owing to the dog, who, at the sight of us, bounds to a corner and starts digging another hole. A wall of pink rose bushes separates the two halves. By the cabbages, breathless, I stop.
Abel has opened the screen door. ‘You can come in,” he says.
“Who’s playing the piano?”
“My mother.”
Mother, not mom. It makes her sound so unapproachable. The playing breaks off.
“If you want to,” he says uncertainly. Too late. She has flared up behind him, a pillar of fire in a long burnt-orange skirt and an orange-and-red-striped blouse. Covering her hair is a red kerchief knotted at the front, cleaning-lady style.
“A visitor!” she cries, opening the door wider. “Abel, who is your little friend?”
“Louise,” he murmurs. He slides the straps of the knapsack off his shoulders, and at the verge of my own turmoil I am aware of his. She has embarrassed him by saying “little friend,” or maybe just by her loud voice and clothes and her thick accent, which, with me there, must seem all the louder and thicker (in the same way that my mother’s beauty never really struck me until I noticed somebody else looking at her).
“Louise who?” She is smiling, squinting, betraying no sign of having seen me before.
“Louise Kirk,” Abel says. “From down the street. The house with the blue spruce out front.”
“Oh, yes! Yes! Louise Kirk from the blue-spruce house! But this is wonderful! Well, Louise! Come in, come in! Before all the biting flies do!”
I walk past the tomatoes, the lettuces. I ascend the wooden steps, up the centre where the grey paint has worn off. My arm brushes her skirt. “No!” she screams, and my knees buckle.
And then what happens? I’m not sure. My memory of the next half-hour or so feels unreliable and scrappy, adulterated by later knowledge. I don’t collapse at her feet or otherwise disgrace myself, I know that. (Even as I teeter on the threshold I realize that it’s the dog she’s screaming at.) I can see myself in the house, Abel and me sitting on one side of the kitchen table, her on the other, a small electric fan moving the tendrils of hair that escape her kerchief. There is milk in a cut-crystal pitcher, and something sweet on a china plate, there must be: homemade cherry strudel or her apple tarts; she never worried about us spoiling our supper. I do remember marvelling at the ornate wooden table and chairs, dining-room furniture in anyone else’s house, and at the Oriental carpet underneath, except I wouldn’t have thought “Oriental” but rather “old-fashioned.” That kitchen’s perpetual state of unwashed dishes, baking in progress, mud-caked vegetables tumbling from quart baskets, the wallpaper with its pattern of tiny bluebells, the stacks of yellowed newspapers, the framed needlepoint pictures of farm animals (sheep, cow, horse, goat) hanging one above another in a crooked line between the sideboard and the fridge … all this I’d have taken note of and been pleased by, drawn as I was—and still am in kitchens—to upheaval and congestion.
As for conversation, I remember that it’s entirely between her and Abel at first, and that she touches his hair the whole time, running her fingers through it with an obvious pleasure I can’t blame her for. He doesn’t seem to mind this; he hardly seems aware of it. He’s very interested in what’s she’s telling him, something to do with a piece of piano music she heard on the radio that morning. Watching her play with his hair, I drift away from their voices. It gives me a start when she suddenly sits up straight and declares,“Abel, you know, is a gifted pianist!” He blushes. But she is looking at me now, giving me her full attention.
What does she say? For some reason I’ve blanked it out. I suppose she asks do I like school, what’s my favourite subject (“lesson” she’d have said, as she did in later conversations, and I’d have hesitated, unsure of what was meant until Abel supplied the right word). I remember what we don’t talk about. We don’t talk about the man, as I suspected and hoped would be the case, and we don’t talk about my mother, although my circumstances are known because when I leave it’s with a basket of carrots for my “house lady.” Here I am, in a position to deliver one of my lonely-orphan speeches, but I falter, something I’ve never before considered having struck me, and that is the possibility of other mothers thinking my mother didn’t run off, no mother would do that, she must have been driven off. By me! I can just hear Mrs. Dingwall saying,“Louise always moped around. Louise was an awful disappointment to Grace.”
If only my mother had been bitten by a rabid dog or murdered by fancy Dan. I remember this, all right, this yearning for my mother to be dead, and dead spectacularly.
I leave, as I said, with a basket of carrots. Also with Abel’s instructions to meet him tomorrow morning at nine o’clock in the sumach grove. Nine o’clock, the sumach grove. Every morning for what remains of the summer, that’s the time and place of our rendezvous.
Nothing keeps us away, not thunderstorms, not my migraines, not his mother’s grocery shopping, which, now that I can go into her house, I no longer feel compelled to monitor. We are confederates, Abel and I, secret agents. We take care never to be seen together, developing ploys far more extravagant than the intelligence and antagonism of his enemies call for, but subterfuge is a habit with both of us and, besides, the threat of him getting beaten up is real enough, more so in my mind than in his.
I let him lead the way. I never thought we could be friends, but since we apparently are, I am determined to win him completely. I want him to more than like me, I want him to pine for me, to wish I could be his sister. His mother is already treating me like family, saying “Louise, sit down in your chair” when we go to his house for something to eat before supper. With her, I am still too shy to say much, and yet I love sitting in my chair at that table, it’s my reward for being fearless and nice around Abel all day. She works on a needlepoint picture of a pig and tells us how she has been occupying herself since Abel left the house that morning: she ironed Mr. Richter’s shirts, she tied back the rose bushes, and so on. She can talk for long stretches without demanding a response or even our attention, and since her thick accent causes me to miss some of what she says anyway, and since Abel is usually immersed in a book or a. ‘National Geographic magazine, I feel free to look around—at the pots and pans hanging from hooks above the stove, at the collection of beer steins on the sideboard, at her, her kind eyes and fascinating nose, her wide, naturally red lips and her broad, quick hand working the needle.
Every once in a while she’ll stop, look up, smile with an expression of fresh pleasure and then, because Abel goes on reading, she’ll fix on me and say,“Louise!”
‘Yes,” I say, heart racing.
“What did you have for lunch?” or,“Are the red-winged blackbirds still in the cattails?” Some friendly, easy-to-answer question restricted to the day’s events.
I keep my responses short, out of real timidity but also in order to appear timid. I defer to Abel. Let her see that if she adopted me, I wouldn’t try to hog all her attention.
Regardless of my ulterior motives, my big plans, it makes sense to defer to Abel, especially in the ravine. He knows where everything is down there, how it all works. It’s as if the ravine were an old mansion I’d thought was empty, making do with bare floors and no furniture while he was sliding back panels onto rooms crammed with treasures, onto attics inhabited by ghosts … or bats. I’m thinking of the cave now. He takes me there that first morning. We get to it by climbing up to a ledge covered in stinging nettles except for a narrow path he cleared himself. Inside, there’s a heavy, musty smell, not unpleasant. It’s hard to see anything but I have a sense of walls soaring up.
“It’s huge,” I say.
“It doesn’t go far back,” he says. “It isn’t even really a cave. There aren’t any real caves in southern Ontario. But I call it a cave.”
“I would call it a cave,” I say loyally.
“Listen.”
“What?”
“Hear that? That rustling?”
“What is it?”
“Bats.”
My hands fly to my hair.
“A small colony.” He turns away. “I’ve got a flashlight I keep in here.”
“No!” Some of them are squeaking now. “It’s okay,” I whisper. “I can see.” What I mean is, I don’t want them to see me.
He notices where my hands have gone. “That’s just an old wives’ tale,” he says. “They’re spectacular flyers. They use sonar, which is sending out a pulse of sound and listening for the echo. It’s better than eyes. And they don’t drink your blood like everyone thinks. Only vampire bats do that. These are little brown bats. They eat insects.”
“Do they mind us being here?”
“We probably make them a bit nervous.”
“Maybe we should go, then.” I start backing toward the entrance, something that feels like seed husks crunching under my feet. “If they’re nervous.”
Is he crazy? Did he really think I’d want to turn this place into my new fort? ‘Yeah,” I say. “Is it ever.”
He’s not a crazy, I know that. He’s a boy. He’s a smart boy, smarter than anyone I’ve ever met, including my father, whom my mother used to call an egghead, smarter than Mrs. Richter, who (in occasional unbesotted moments, I must admit) is a bit dense about certain things, such as where Abel sneaks off to in the middle of the night, and how to manoeuvre herself and her bundle buggy through the Dominion store turnstile. Abel has no such gaps in his intelligence, none that I can find, unless his overestimation of my intelligence is a gap, but I don’t think it is, I think it’s just that he doesn’t know much about girls.
He’s very polite with me, very serious. A couple of times a day I get a lecture about something I’ve noticed or, more often, something I’ve passed by without noticing. I don’t mind. For one thing, he hardly talks otherwise. For another, most of what he says is useful and reassuring, such as that the juice from a jewelweed stem, if you rub it on a rash, takes away the itch, or that chicory root can be used to make a type of coffee that his mother prefers to normal coffee (so naturally I plunder the roots of every chicory plant we come across). He promises that there are no rattlesnakes in this part of the province. He says that if we ever ran out of food because of some catastrophe such as World War Three—an event he seems to take far more seriously than he does an attack by the school bullies—we could live on dandelion greens, fiddleheads, raspberries, mushrooms, boiled cattail roots and small game.
And yet the threat of the bullies is nothing he dismisses. Except he won’t call them bullies, he shrinks from applying even mildly offensive names to anyone. He says “five boys approaching at four o’clock,” some sort of neutral, military report. For him, the adversary is not the invading person, it is the invasion, and therefore by modifying my terms (calling a lone hiker “an advance guard” instead of “a crazy-looking guy with a beard”) I can get him to fall in with my fantasy of our being surrounded on all sides by hostile forces.
Even the men who work at the sludge factory we steer clear of. From the way several of them hold their cigarettes between their thumbs and forefingers, and because they all spend a lot of time sitting outside at the picnic table, looking around, looking up at the sky, I’ve pegged them for a spy ring. Abel has his doubts but he goes along. (He also has his doubts about his father being a spy, although he considered the possibility when I came right out and asked if the rumours were true. “I don’t think so,” he said at last. “Nobody ever phones him, and he never has to go out all of a sudden after supper.”)
We study the men through the big old binoculars Abel keeps wrapped in an oilcloth rag and stuffed in a hollow log across the river from the factory. He has about a half-dozen of these cubbyholes around the ravine, in other logs and abandoned fox burrows. They’re where he stores things he doesn’t want to carry around all day: food, water, stones, a trowel, gardening gloves (to wear while cutting back nettles) and a book called The Tracker’s Companion. So now I do likewise, hiding my knapsack, Thermos and lunch box in the other end of his lunch log. At the rear of the bat cave, along with the flashlight, he keeps a collection of maple-sapling spears whittled to perfect points. The second time we visit the cave he brings the longest one out onto the ledge and lets me hold it.
“Wow,” I say. “You could kill somebody with this!” I make a stabbing motion. “Take that!”
“It’s more for hunting game,” he murmurs.
“Hunting enemies,” I say.
Since he’s the leader, however, our strategy is entirely defensive. We constantly reconnoitre, ranging up and down the slopes about thirty feet apart and communicating with each other by means of caws and hoots. To cross the river we avoid the footbridge and swing over on a wild-grape vine. Under the vine, in the muck of the riverbank, we dig booby traps, not very deep ones (we only have the trowel), but a person chasing us might step in them and trip and be held up for a few seconds. Because it rains almost every afternoon, a short violent downpour, we redig and re-roof the traps every morning. We search the bank for footprints. We search everywhere for animal droppings, or scat, as Abel calls it—human, fox, raccoon, squirrel, skunk, rabbit—checking our findings against the turd-pile drawings in The Tracker’s Companion. I find these drawings shocking, though I refrain from saying so. Nor do I act disgusted when he pokes a stick at raccoon turds to see if they contain dung beetles. Many of them do. I say what he wants to hear: that the beetles are beautiful. By August, having been obliged to study enough of them, having seen how some shine blue and others purple, I can almost say this honestly.
Our own tracks we cover. When we need to relieve ourselves (or “go,” as we call it; “I have to go,” one of us will say, and the other will turn and wander off a respectful distance) we use a stick or stone to scrape out a toilet cavity, which we afterwards cover up. Any footprints we make in soft ground we disguise by retracing our steps, or by just walking backwards in the first place. We move like Indians, at least he does. I can’t get the knack of stepping silently over pine needles and twigs.
He says I should pretend that I’m hanging from strings: “Like a puppet. Your feet hardly touch the ground.”
That doesn’t work.
“Okay,” he says then,“pretend there’s a layer of antigravity surrounding the entire planet, and it’s impossible for your feet to touch the ground unless you wear special gravity boots.”
That doesn’t work either.
Late afternoon we go to his house, taking separate routes. At the kitchen table we eat strudel or tarts, drink milk, sometimes iced tea. Abel reads. I spoil my supper and listen to the sound of Mrs. Richter’s voice, although I am now bold enough to offer the occasional response, so it might be said that we have something close to a conversation. I praise her baking and needlepoint. One day I work up the nerve to say I wish somebody would teach me how to bake: “But not Mrs. Carver. Her pastry is chewy. Yours is so light and flaky.”
She fails to take the hint. “Such compliments!” she cries. “I will have a swell head!”
“Swelled,“ Abel says, without looking up from his book.
“I will have a swelled head!” she cries.
I smile. I smile continuously, what I hope is a brave, sweet smile. I hunch to appear frail and motherless. I have begun to talk about my mother. It gets their attention, I’ve noticed that. Abel stops reading, Mrs. Richter sets down her needlepoint. I am anxious to explain why my mother left, to discredit the slander I’m convinced is being spread about me by Mrs. Dingwall. At the same time I am shy of broaching the matter. I need an invitation, a cue.
It comes one afternoon when Mrs. Richter says that the Fuller Brush man showed up on her doorstep and she bought two brushes she didn’t need because he was such a “stealer-dealer.”
“Wheeler-dealer,” I say, sitting straighter.
“He was such a wheeler-dealer!”
“I know all about wheeler-dealers,” I say.
“You do?”
“My mother ran away with one, that’s why.”
Mrs. Richter blinks. “Ah!”
“He lured her away.”
Mrs. Richter clicks her tongue.
“She wrote a goodbye note, and she said she really didn’t want to leave us.”
There’s no proving otherwise. As far as I know, the note is long gone, probably Aunt Verna took it. Anyway, I can’t imagine my father divulging the contents to a neighbour.
I say,“She said she loved me very much.”
“But of course she loved you very much!” Mrs. Richter cries. “What mother does not love her child very much?”
It’s a sultry, stormy August, black clouds heaving up from the southwest almost every day just about the time we finish eating our lunch. At the first rumbles we head for the cave, where a few of the bats will already be flying around. I’ve stopped being frightened after all these weeks of not even getting brushed by a wing tip. They swoop within inches of us, though; you feel the small swipes of air, like somebody blowing out a match. Their squeaks perforate the darkness and give a sense that it’s the cave itself squeaking, shifting under the force of the thunder.
There’s no wind yet. It arrives just ahead of the first slaps of rain on the ledge. The downpour, coming seconds later, sounds like loud radio static and sometimes Abel pretends it is, he says,“Communications tower is down,” or,“Headquarters is still trying to get through.” Sometimes the rain gusts in, which creates a commotion among the bats that still cling to the roof. At especially loud thunderclaps a few fall away and join the flyers. “That was close,” Abel says, fantasizing artillery fire. “Direct hit!” he calls when the lightning and thunder strike simultaneously. We duck down.
He looks dramatic in the lightning flashes, the bats arrested in mid-cyclone above his head, which is just inches from mine. As this happens only in the cave, this proximity, it is only here that I become conscious of him as a boy. What if he kisses me? What if I kiss him? It shocks me that I have such thoughts about somebody who is practically my brother. And yet it doesn’t shock me at all that when I’m at home, by myself, I have thoughts about him getting hit by a car or shot by a burglar, and Mrs. Richter clinging to me for comfort. I am lovelorn when I’m by myself, full of yearning. When I’m with him, I go in and out of elevated states of expectation. Something is going to happen, it has to. The regular commotion of thunderstorms is a clamouring for this thing. Which is? I don’t know, I don’t know what it is, but crouched beside him in the cave I am ready. I wonder if he feels the same. I see, as I never will again, an almost offputting fragility in the curve of his back, or maybe it’s his curly hair or his full lips, I can’t hold the impression of it in one place. Otherwise, I see him as superior to every boy I know. I think, not caring in the least, that most of the girls at school must be secretly in love with him.
These are the days. The nights are warm and windy, thick with the whirring of crickets. When the streetlights come on, and children of less lenient parents get called inside, Abel and I rescue moths. Like ghosts of the bats, the pale moths flutter in a magical zone where a collision between them and us seems inevitable and yet we couldn’t touch one if we tried. Hence the net, which requires skill in order not to cause injury.
I leave that part to Abel, also the transferring of a moth from the net to one of the jars. I stand there looking up, begging: “Don’t! No!” Nothing is so frustrating as watching a moth’s jerky, exhausted climb back up to the light.
“We only want to help you,” I say. “We want to save your life.”