We Disappear
A Novel
Scott Heim
This book is for my mother.
Go, Youth
I was in a dreamstate and this was causing a problem with the traffic. I felt lonely, like I’d missed the boat, or I’d found the boat and it was deserted. In the middle of the road a child’s shoe glistened. I walked around it. It woke me up a little. The child had disappeared. Some mysteries are better left alone. Others are dreary, distasteful, and can disarrange a shadow into a thing of unspeakable beauty. Whose child is that?
—James Tate
Contents
Epigraph
One
THE LITTLE GIRLS who found the body of the missing…
Two
I SLEPT THROUGHOUT the trip, avoiding the hoard of Gavin’s…
Three
HAD I BEEN alone, I could have walked to the…
Four
AFTER MR. WYLER and the stranger on our porch, I…
Five
I LED HER to the couch, gave her a glass…
Six
ACROSS TOWN, FRIDAY nights, the local high school hosted its…
Seven
SOMETIMES IT SEEMED that everything she’d recently done—all her fraudulence,…
Eight
ALICE DROVE HOME on the morning of the winter’s first…
Nine
OUTSIDE THE HOSPITAL windows, the storm became a sermon. Slow…
Ten
KAUFMAN WAS BUSY all day, and assigned two interns the…
Eleven
AS IT HAPPENED, Pamela Sporn was expecting our call: Cindy,…
Twelve
AND THEN THE snow turned to ice, sealing the phone…
(FADE)
FOR A WHILE, after everything was over and I’d returned…
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Other by Scott Heim
Credits
Copyright
About the Publisher
ONE
THE LITTLE GIRLS who found the body of the missing boy were not angels, although that is how the newspaper described them, the following morning, beneath the headline. I saw the photo, after all, and the seven girls were only girls. They had no haloes or transparent wings. They had no heavenly warmth or sweet, scarless faces kissed individually by God. What the girls did have were muddy pant-legs and boots; bright jackets buttoned against the wind of a Sunday hiking trip; name tags in crooked calligraphy made just that morning by their Lutheran youth-group sponsor. Teresa and Joy, Maura Kay, Mary Anne. Two Jennifers and a Missy. When I close my eyes, I picture the girls stepping back, a warped semicircle, as the body of the murdered boy, his bones and tattered flannels, alters their lives forever. Their hands folded clumsily for prayer. Their seven mouths a silent chorus of ohs.
My mother woke to her room, her hushed house at the end of the street. It was newly morning; she sensed the threat of rain in the bleary sky. She made the walk to the kitchen to pour weak iced tea into a smudged glass. Through the sounds of wind and the sparrows in the trees, she listened for the paper-boy, his determined grinding rhythm, until finally, through the swelling silence, came the circular clack of gears, the spit of gravel, the paper’s thud against the screen.
She carried the Hutchinson News to her morning bath. The clawfoot tub…the Victorian washerwoman prints she’d found at the junkyard…the pink towels bordered with roses. She twisted the faucet as hot as she could stand and, lowering herself through the layer of water, unrolled the front page.
My mother saw the headline and photograph. At last: the missing boy.
Henry Barradale, the words said. For the past three days, since reading about the body, she’d been tracking the progress. She had called the police offices; searched for articles on her slow-speed, secondhand computer; stayed up late within the tolerant television light. And now she knew. She raised the paper above the bathwater and ran her fingers along the words. FAMILY IDENTIFIES PARTRIDGE BOY: a father, mother, and two younger sisters still lived, left behind, in tiny Partridge, Kansas. My mother noted the funeral date. Henry Barradale would be laid to rest at Rayl’s Hill cemetery: the same that held her parents, her older brothers and sisters, and even her first husband, the father who’d died only weeks before I was born. Rayl’s Hill was the same where, only fourteen months earlier, my stepfather, John, had been buried beside her own empty plot. Yes, my mother knew the cemetery well.
She took her pills with the tea, sitting at the table to sketch her plan. At two o’clock she dialed my number in New York. “Finally he has a name,” she said into my machine. She pronounced each word as though he were royalty. From bed I heard her breathless voice, but was too tired to answer. “Hope you’re thinking seriously about coming home. I’ll call again when I know more.”
She found the road atlas, torn-cornered and coverless, among a stack of hospital bills in the hall closet. Partridge, faint point on the map, was only twenty miles away. My mother ripped the atlas pages, figuring she’d never visit those other states again. She tucked Kansas into her purse and began to dress. I imagine she wore her tortoiseshell glasses. I imagine she dabbed some red on her lips, pausing to decide between the wig and half-folded scarf. The straggle toward the antique mirror. The uncertain smile, lights off, the same I’d caught on the day of John’s funeral, before Friday-morning treatments, times she thought no one could see.
The rain was soft; she could walk to the pickup without getting too wet. Henry’s picture stayed sheltered in her purse, alongside the pictures of John, of my sister Alice and me, the atlas pages, the orange prescription bottles. My mother spread the map on the seat, turned the key, and silenced the pedal-steel ballad on the radio. She fixed her eyes on the rainy road, steering John’s pea-green Ford along the highway toward Partridge.
All week, she’d called as often as four times a night. In a hesitant, almost childlike voice, she’d urged me to leave New York, to return home. We could play detectives, she’d said. You and me, just the two of us, like we used to do. Come home and we’ll learn everything about the missing boy.
The two of us, she’d said. In truth, it was my mother, not me, who’d willingly traveled this world before. Her obsession began the autumn I turned ten. During those chilly, copper months, a boy named Evan Carnaby had vanished from our hometown. He was a boy of fifteen, just like the later Henry; he had identical boredoms and daydreams and after-school slammed doors. MISSING, said the flyers Evan’s family posted along our streets. MISSING, warned the newsmen on our radio and TV.
At first, Alice and I were stunned. We felt we’d known Evan personally: we’d seen him hurling backyard baseballs with his dad; we’d watched from our window seats as he’d boarded our bus. But our strange thrill was no match for our mother’s. She’d recently accepted a job at the Kansas State Industrial Reformatory, the maximum-security prison in nearby Hutchinson, and was now our authority on any trickles of knowledge about Evan. She became an insider, a specialist. Evenings, I’d watch proudly as she unbuttoned her walnut-brown uniform and took her hair from its bun. I’d stare at her gold badges and KSIR patches, the belt on which hung a gold-knobbed nightstick, and, most astonishingly, a gun. Perhaps I believed our mother could save Evan Carnaby. Perhaps she believed it, too.
The boy had disappeared during the time our mother was drinking, those weeks and months so long before her real disease, and soon she began staying up, quiet leaden midnights and beyond, to search for information on Evan and more missing souls. I remember hunkering downstairs to find her in the darkened kitchen, absorbed in her new undertaking. The staggered breathing, the rustle of newspapers, the sudden glint of scissors. And the slow, narcotic linger as I watched her slump across the table, hair fanning across the bour
bon bottle, ice melting in her favorite green glass with the palm trees on the side. In the mornings, Alice and I would wake to find all the faces watching us, Evan and his vanished companions, their photographs taped and pasted and pinned to our kitchen walls.
Pictures from the sides of buses, from highway posters, grainy gray from cartons of milk. To me, their names seemed like song lyrics or lines from poems. George Jordan, Penny Paulette Myers, Clyde Heiding Jr. I remember the weary-eyed, nightly-on-the-news Cantrells, residents of nearby Abilene, whose daughter Gina had disappeared one Christmas Eve. Or Inez Eberhardt, a Coffeyville librarian, whose coworkers reported her missing. Or the runaway Douglas Francis Minahan. The decade-without-a-trace Christopher Kemp.
Alice and I watched and worried. Sometimes our mother would stand in the center of a room, staring blankly, staring at nothing. We watched her pin photos to the wall, inspecting her like we’d inspected our substitute teachers at school. We remembered stories we’d heard about our mother’s teenage years: wild tantrums and blackouts and attempted overdoses of pills, magnificent bouts of depression. At seventeen, she’d spent two weeks in what she called a “sanitarium,” although she never clarified the details. Was she somehow shrinking into that former afflicted self?
For a while, those new nights of her woozy kitchen-table enterprise, we tried to assist or federate. But neither my sister nor I could match her compulsions. October droned by, November and December, and Alice eventually withdrew. Since I was younger, I didn’t mind laboring onward, even as Evan’s mystery remained unsolved; I sat with my mother late into the night, organizing pictures in her scrapbooks. I remember her explaining, in her Jim Beam voice, how badly she wanted to meet the deserted ones, the innocents left behind by those who had vanished. The wives and husbands; the distraught, insomniac parents. She wanted to ache with them. To get as close as she could, to understand the victims “gone without a trace,” those saints for whom the earth seemed to yawn its bleak and blackened throat and swallow whole.
Then things got better. During the spring and the summer that followed, my mother’s nights of drinking gradually ceased. She removed the pictures from the walls; like so many other fancies, her interests began to wane. It wasn’t that she stopped caring. It wasn’t that her sources, those tragic children and women and men, had stopped disappearing. She simply slipped into other unwelcoming worries. In a few more years, Alice would leave home for college; a few after that, I would follow. For my mother, another marriage, a move to a new town. Eventually I left for New York. Eventually she became sick.
Sometimes, all these years since, I’ll read a missing-persons report or catch some late-night crime show on TV, and my mother’s words will flood forth. I’ll imagine her sitting at the table, her officer’s uniform, her twinkling green glass, and I remember her utter devotion. Back then, each detail of each disappearance was her essential clue, tucked away with the promising hope to develop, someday, into meaning. The snagged and bloodied sleeve of the blouse. The cellophane sweet-candy wrapper. The chain with its lockless key.
It didn’t take long to find his house. She felt an almost criminal thrill, and then, a numbing sorrow. She eased to the ditch and parked. Rain rolled across the windshield and smeared her view, but she could see the silver mailbox with the final ALE broken from the family name, the black angled roof, the blue shutters and hail-battered siding, the fence that ringed the flower beds. She could see the empty tire swing, lazily swinging from the branch of a mulberry tree. She imagined a younger Henry playing there, his lanky denimed legs kicking from the rubber, the rope rasping and branch bending on his upward soar.
Nothing about the Barradale house seemed to invite what had happened. She watched the front door with its surprising cobalt paint; the scarred screen door before it. The doorknob seemed the same type as hers, back in her own small town of Haven. She thought of its familiar sound, the echoing buckle as the latch uncaught. Entering could be so simple. If only she possessed enough energy—but how would she escape if they arrived home? She thought about the mom and dad and two sisters. “Whatever happened to our little Henry,” she said, as though they all could hear.
She kept her sentry in the Ford, warmed by the heater’s silky huff, the nubbled seatback marking her skin. Finally she drove the length of Partridge’s central street until she found a pay phone. When I answered, she blurted, “Nobody’s at his house.” Thunder shuddered through the breaths between her sentences. “I got a little lost but then I figured it out. I’m sopping wet!”
“What? Where are you?”
“Right down the street from Henry’s house. Been waiting and waiting in this storm. But it’s like everybody’s vanished. Have you made your decision about coming home?”
“I don’t know. Haven’t said anything to my landlord. You drove all the way to his house?”
“It was a nice drive. I wanted to see where the dead boy lived.”
“I’ve got stacks and stacks of work at the freelance job,” I said. “I’m still not sure I should come.”
“Please. I really need you here.”
What she forgot to describe, I composed on my own. I know she drove back to the Barradale address and lingered, caught in the storm, until twilight. By now she must have been so tired. Surely she forgot to eat dinner or take her meds. Her scarf leaking rain; her clothes a mess. My mother might have cried a little, a dislocated suffering for Henry and those he left behind. She stayed to watch the house, the tree with its tire like a blinded eye. I believe she pictured him again and again, leaving for school, slamming the bright blue door, running toward whatever waited for him. Against the sodden skyline drifted a thin collar of geese, and my mother followed them so far she had to squint, and then her gaze returned to the empty house, which she watched until her hand dropped from the steering wheel into her lap, and she closed her eyes.
How many times, in that stretch of days, would she stare at Henry’s photograph? His uncertain smile, the ridge of his clavicle, the modestly mussed hair? The newspaper article filled four columns, with six more on page three, its focus so careful and deep that my mother wondered if a relative had written it. I remember her reading it, more than once, over the phone.
Henry Harris Barradale was only fifteen, born December 23, an A and B student, so kind to his sisters, his German shepherd Shasta. He’d been missing nearly a month. He left his summer-session football practice that Wednesday night, all shower-damp hair and soap-scrubbed skin, rushing to meet a cluster of friends at a diner. But Henry never showed.
When we reviewed the article, my mother and I found every detail so perfectly pat and American, so generically teenage and clean. I helped her embellish the scene: the unfilled space at the café booth, the plate without the usual Henry hamburger, Henry fries; his friends’ letter jackets, the maroon P pinned with each football and basketball, each winged shoe; the boys’ red-white-red straws in their root-beer foams as they waited and waited.
The medical examiner speculated that Henry had been murdered nearly three weeks after he’d disappeared. He’d been lying in the field five days. Pressure to his throat had snuffed his air and crushed his hyoid bone. Henry had been stabbed, although the paper did not specify where. Both his wallet and letter jacket were missing. There had not been, as the author of “Family Identifies Partridge Boy” noted, any “sexual foul play.” Mr. and Mrs. Barradale had identified their son through dental records. They recognized the size and brand of his T-shirt, his red high-top sneakers. And the friendship bracelet circling Henry’s wrist, a gift from a girl, violet and forest-green threads with delicate egg-shaped beads.
For days afterward, my mother would marvel at this final, focused image, the beaded bracelet connecting her irreversibly to his murder. At her prodding request, I helped her elaborate on the reporter’s story. We decided that for Henry, the eggs on the bracelet meant something special. According to the article, his grandparents kept a farm just east of Partridge, and we guessed Henry often worked in the
hatchery, the chicken coop with its aisles of white warmth, of red-beaded eyes. Each autumn, he helped his grandfather incubate eggs—his cautious, touchdown-tightened hand beside the old man’s speckled knuckles—twisting the heat-lamp bulbs in their sockets, preparing the beds of hay and cedar chips, bunching gunnysacks against the feverish chicken-wire corners. Yes, Henry had joined this ritual every year his grandparents could remember. But this fall, this terrible fall, Henry would not help.
Together we focused on the flickerings, the accidentals most others would miss. I remembered this practice from before, all those years ago, whenever she’d come to me with the details of some new disappearance. Because I couldn’t mirror her fascinations, I’d keep her satisfied by embellishing. Now, with Henry, we fabricated a boy who must have smoothed each eggshell against his cheek; a boy who stuck dandelions in the gaps between the eggs. A boy who, left alone, sang hymns to the pullets and hens. In our visions he stood in the blood-scented shadows, no relation to us, yet somehow ours, Henry without a thought of the future or the field with its waiting demon. Henry, poised beside his grandfather’s incubator, letting lamplight warm the eggs, shudder them, until, at last, some miracle evening, when a single shell cracked and the firstborn head emerged, damply dazzled thing, breathtakingly alive.
On the phone, my mother’s enthusiasm began to worry me—it was excitement, after all, over a murdered boy. Then again, after so many stories of her doctors and therapies and pills, I found it refreshing to hear some zest return to her voice. So in these new conversations, I let her speak solely of Henry. I avoided talking about myself, trying to conceal what she doubtlessly knew: that my depression hadn’t improved since I’d last come home; that I still hated Pen & Ink, where I sometimes freelanced, writing copy for school textbooks. Worst of all, that I hadn’t stopped abusing the drugs she’d often begged me to quit.