After opening the car door, Nora plops into the seat sideways. Turning, she slowly lifts each leg in, then finally closes the door and tells me which way to go. The cemetery is less than a mile away. The funeral home, a sprawling white building, sits on top of a small rise.
The parking lot is full. I hadn’t expected more than a handful of people. I follow the drive around to a back lot and finally find a space. Someone has left a shopping cart full of junk at the end, but my car is small enough that I can tuck it in.
I should have let Nora out at the door. “Want me to go back and drop you off up front?”
She doesn’t answer, just opens her door.
I hurry around to help. Nora’s swung her legs out, but she’s still sitting. I lean down, grab her forearms, and haul her upright. She grabs the crook of my arm, and we start to walk.
“Are you okay?” I ask. Nora’s using me for more than just balance.
“I need to do this,” she says, which isn’t really an answer.
Despite her long legs, Nora’s steps are short and slow. I match her pace. Around us, rows of flat metal grave markers are occasionally broken up by benches, marble statues, or little ponds. It’s pretty here. Peaceful.
Maybe the woods where my dad has been all these years are peaceful, too. For a minute, I picture white snow lying like a fluffy blanket under evergreens so tall they crowd the sky.
I stop short.
Where did that come from? Was it even real?
Nora tugs my arm. “I’m not dead yet, honey.” Catching sight of someone, she waves her arm. “Frank, you old geezer!”
An old man walks back to meet us. He’s about my height, five foot seven, but as solid as a fire hydrant.
“Good to see you, Nora,” he says, and then looks at me expectantly. I don’t know what to say, but she does.
“This is Olivia. She’s my guardian angel. This morning, I told God I didn’t feel strong enough to come, and then Olivia turned up.”
Outside the wooden doors, about a dozen people are chatting. Everyone’s wearing dark colors, but no one looks like a movie mourner. My black T-shirt and pants aren’t too out of place.
Frank is holding the door for us when a wiry old man with a cigarette calls his name. “Ladies,” Frank says, before turning back.
The lobby is full of people milling around. Who are they? A lot of them look like they’re about the ages my parents would be if they had lived.
The doors to the chapel stand open. In front are upholstered chairs, and behind them two men in suits are hurriedly setting up dozens of metal folding chairs.
In the center of the entryway stands an easel with a big photo of my dad wearing a cap and gown. His Adam’s apple sticks out above the knot of a tie. Scattered around the room are more easels covered with snapshots. Some people are adding their own photos.
I walk straight to the nearest easel, my eyes darting from photo to photo. The only pictures I’ve seen of my dad are the ones on America’s Most Wanted. I’ve never even thought about him as a kid. But here’s my dad on a tricycle, a skateboard, a motocross bike. Holding a plastic bat. Always grinning, sometimes with missing baby teeth.
The pictures aren’t in any order, so there’s also one of my parents at the prom, standing stiffly next to a white pillar. And a photo of me holding my dad’s hand at the beach. I wonder if it was taken the same day as the photo on America’s Most Wanted. I have the blond springy curls I’ve only seen in photos. I’m fingering my dark waves when Nora’s voice interrupts my thoughts. “Honey, would you mind terribly if I asked you to stay and give me a ride home?”
I turn back. “No problem at all.”
She hesitates. “Only if you’re sure. I could probably get Frank to take me.”
“After hearing what happened, I’m curious.” It’s not really a lie, but still, I don’t meet her eyes.
Nora takes my arm. “Do me a favor and help me get a seat before the mob rushes in.”
In the chapel, the folding chairs are now all set up, and some people are already taking seats. Nora sits in the last row of upholstered chairs, then plops her purse onto the chair next to her. “I’ll save this for you. Go look at the pictures. I saw some of my friend Sharon.”
Back in the lobby, I bite on the insides of my cheeks to keep my face neutral, a trick I learned a long time ago.
My father at birthday parties, at restaurants, holding a blue can of Pabst.
Holding a silver fish, grinning.
Holding a limp deer by the antlers, grinning.
Maybe he liked to kill things. Maybe it hadn’t been such a stretch to think he’d killed my mom. Or maybe this is just the kind of small town where people hunt and fish. I feel like I swallowed a stone. Who was my father, really?
A man’s loud voice interrupts my thoughts. “Remember that time we were all in Terry’s old car? Going a hundred and five miles an hour?” I turn. Even though most people are dressed casually, this guy has taken things one step further. Skinny, but with a barrel chest, he’s dressed in flip-flops, shorts, and a multicolored Hawaiian shirt.
“It was a Trans Am, right?” The other man looks Asian, or maybe only half, with dark, straight hair and eyes that turn up at the corners. His charcoal suit, cut close to his slender body, boasts a gray silk pocket square. He doesn’t look like he belongs in Medford, or even in Portland, but instead in Los Angeles—or maybe Tokyo.
“Don’t you remember the Wasp, Rich?” Hawaiian Shirt Guy says. “Bright yellow with that black interior?”
Rich doesn’t answer. His attention has shifted, as has everyone else’s in the room. A girl wearing a black dress and sandals has just walked in, but it’s not her clothes making people stare. It’s her purple hair. That and the silver chain running from a ring in her right earlobe to a second ring in her nose.
“It’s a funeral, for gosh sakes,” an older woman behind me whispers. “She comes dressed like that to a funeral!”
I decide she looks perfectly fine if you take away the purple hair and the piercings. Even just the piercings. Maybe she doesn’t want anyone to see past them.
I look back at the easel, then suck in my breath. In what must be a Thanksgiving photo, my dad sits at the head of a long table, with a turkey on a platter in front of him. He’s joking around, looking maniacal, teeth gritted and shoulders hunched as he lifts his hand overhead, pretending to stab the turkey like a crazed slasher. Everyone else is laughing. Grandma and my mom and me on one side, Grandpa Jack and a young woman on the other. I’m sitting on my mom’s lap. My mom is a little blurred because she was just starting to turn her head away.
The guy standing next to me looks at me curiously. He’s about my age, with curly black hair and those thick eyelashes only guys seem to come by naturally.
“My parents had that exact same chair.” I point at a green recliner at the edge of the photo. It’s a lame excuse, but it’s the best I can think of.
He follows my finger, looking a bit puzzled, and then we both go back to looking.
“I didn’t think Sam would be here,” a woman next to me whispers to another. I look where they are. They’re not talking about a man, but a slender woman with shoulder-length blond hair and wide cheekbones. “Wasn’t she dating Terry before he started seeing Naomi?”
“I heard it wasn’t just before,” the other woman says, her voice only slightly hushed. “She tried to get him to break up with Naomi.”
She’s scrawny, I decide. Scrawny, and her nose is too long. Realizing I’m staring, I turn back to look at more photos.
Me and my parents. I’m dressed for Halloween in a ballerina outfit defeated by cold weather. My pink net skirt comes down to my ankles. Under the narrow straps of my dress I’m wearing a hand-knit sweater that makes me look like a cross between a ballerina and a lumberjack. My mom is dressed in your standard cheap sexy nurse outfit. My dad’s wearing red rubber hair and is made up like a clown. But I look happy. Happier than I ever remember being.
Six weeks later, two of the people in this photo were dead.
A man standing by the chapel doors clears his throat. “Okay, folks, if you could take your seats, the service will begin.”
I’m at the easel farthest from the doors. As everyone shuffles inside, I unpin the photo and slip it into my back pocket.