It’s the love, that binds.
I fell in love with Will the moment I saw him in a hospital ward, with tubes taped under his nose to hold them in place, fighting for his life. From that day forward, he was mine.
And though, as his mother, I certainly felt tired at times, I never tired of looking at him. I never tired of watching him eat. I never tired of hearing the sound of his voice or the words he made up, like the name of our cat. I never tired of seeing him play with Legos.
I did tire of stepping on them in bare feet.
It’s hard to compare loves, and it may be silly to try, but I have learned something from my experience in losing Will. Because I have loved before, certainly. I have loved men before, and I might even be falling in love with a man now.
Here is how a mother’s love is different:
You may fall out of love with a man.
But you will never fall out of love with your child.
Even after he is gone.
Ellen sat back and read the last line again, but it began to blur, and she knew why.
“Ellen?” Marcelo asked softly, coming down the stairs.
“I finished my piece.” She wiped her eyes with her hand, but Marcelo crossed to her through the darkness, his mouth a concerned shadow in the glow of the screen. He reached for her hand.
“Let’s go lie down,” he whispered, pulling her gently to her feet.
Chapter Eighty-six
The next morning dawned clear, and Ellen rode in the passenger seat of Marcelo’s car, looking out the window, squinting against the brightness of the sun on the newfallen snow. Its top layer had hardened in the cold, and the crust took on a smooth sheen. The streets on the way to her house had been plowed, leaving waist-high wedges beside the parked cars.
They turned a corner, and a trio of kids in snowsuits and scarves played on the mounds. One child, a girl named Jenny Waters, was from Will’s class, and Ellen looked away, pained. They left Montgomery Avenue, and she noticed how the landscape had changed with the snow. It made unrecognizable blobs of shrubs, lay like a mattress on the roofs of parked cars, and lined the length of barren tree branches, doubling their thickness. Everything familiar had changed, and she tried not to see it as a bad metaphor.
Last night after she’d finished her piece, she’d fallen back to only a restless sleep and felt raw and nervous inside. A morning shower had helped, and she’d changed her top, slipping into an old gray sweater of Marcelo’s. Her hair was still wet, falling loose to her shoulders, and she didn’t bother with any makeup. She took it as a measure of confidence in her new relationship, and she didn’t want to see her own face in the mirror, anyway.
“I should call my father,” Ellen said, mentally switching topics.
“Your phone’s in your purse. I charged it for you.”
“Thanks. I feel bad that I didn’t call Connie, either. She’s probably at a football game today. She loves Penn State.”
“She called you, and I spoke to her. She’s meeting us at your house. I hope that’s okay with you. She thought it would be.”
“It is, sure.” Ellen felt her heart gladden. “How is she? Is she okay?”
“She’s very upset, but I think it will do you good to see her.” Marcelo swung the car onto her street, and Ellen swallowed hard as she looked at her house. Newsvans parked in every available space, with microwave towers that pierced the blue sky. Reporters with videocameras mobbed her sidewalk.
Ellen said, “I hate the press.”
“Me, too.” Marcelo’s gaze shifted to her, worried. “Would you like me to go around the block, one time?”
“No, let’s do it.” Ellen pulled her coat closer around her.
“Looks like national, too, and TV.” Marcelo craned his neck, slowing the car as they neared the house. “I’ll let you read Sal’s piece before we file.”
“You filing this afternoon, by two?”
“It can wait. I’ll email it to you.”
“Thanks.” Ellen knew he was pushing the deadline for her. “Are you coming in?”
“If you would like. I’m happy to meet Connie.”
“Come in and meet her, then I think I’ll be okay.” They approached the house, and to Ellen’s surprise, her neighbor Mrs. Knox was out front, ignoring the reporters and shoveling her walk for her. The sight gave her a sudden pang, of guilt and gratitude. Maybe she wasn’t such a busybody, after all.
“Here we go.” Marcelo pulled up, double-parked, and hit the emergency lights. “We’ll have to do this fast.”
“Okay.” Ellen grabbed her purse, and they both opened the doors and jumped out. She hustled around the front of the car, almost slipping on the snow, and Marcelo took her arm and they hurried together to her front walk. The reporters surged toward them almost as one, brandishing microphones, aiming videocameras, and shouting questions.
“Ellen, when did you know he was Timothy Braverman?” “Ellen, were you gonna give him back?” “Marcelo!” “Hey, El, how did the FBI find out who your son was?” “Ellen, aren’t you gonna make a statement? Marcelo, give us a break! You’re one of us!”
Ellen hurried up her walk with Marcelo right behind her, keeping the press at bay. She hustled to the porch steps, spraying snow, and crossed to the front door, which Connie opened for her.
“Connie!” she cried, more in anguish than in greeting, and the women fell into each other’s arms.
Chapter Eighty-seven
After Marcelo had gone home, Ellen sat with Connie in the living room, telling her everything while they shared a box of tissues, and they cried all over again when they came to the same awful conclusion, that Will was gone from both their lives.
“I can’t believe this happened.” Connie mopped up her eyes with a Kleenex, her voice raspy. “It’s unreal.”
“I know.” Ellen kept stroking Oreo Figaro, who sat in a silky ball on her lap.
“I hope you don’t mind, but I got here early and I went up to his room. I looked around at all the stuff, all his toys, all his books.” Connie sighed, her chest heaving in her sweatshirt. “I put his books away, force of habit, and I closed his door. I didn’t think you’d want to go in. Is that okay?”
“It’s all okay. Anything you do is okay.”
Connie smiled sadly, her ponytail on her shoulder. “I should’ve read to him more. I didn’t read to him enough.”
“You read to him plenty.”
“You thought I should read to him more.” Connie looked at her directly, cocking her head, her eyes glistening. “You used to think that, didn’t you?”
“You were the best babysitter I could have ever asked for.”
“Really?” Connie asked, her voice breaking, and she dabbed at fresh tears.
“Really. You can’t imagine how grateful I am to you. I could never have done my job without you, and I needed to do my job. For Will and for me.”
“Thanks for saying that.”
“I should have said it before, a thousand times. It’s true.” Ellen scratched behind Oreo Figaro’s ear, and he began to purr happily, his chest thrumming against the palm of her hand. “You know, I used to be a little jealous.”
“Of what?”
“Of you, of your time with Will. Of how close you were. I used to not like it that you loved him, and he loved you. It threatened me.”
Connie remained silent, inclining her head, listening. The sun coming through the living room windows was too bright to bear, and Ellen didn’t really understand what was powering her confession. But it didn’t matter why she said it, only that it needed saying, so she continued.
“I’m sorry about that, because now I know better. The more people who loved that boy, the better. We loved him up, really, between the two of us.” Ellen felt her eyes fill again, but blinked them clear. “I used to think that kids were like a glass or something, that they’d break if you poured too much love into them. But they’re like the ocean. You can fill them up with love, and just when you think you’ve reached the brim, you ca
n keep on pouring.”
Connie sniffled. “Agree, but here’s the thing. Will may have loved me, but he always knew who his mother was. He knew the difference between you and me, and he never forgot it.”
“You think?” Ellen asked, though the words only hurt more now that he was gone.
“I know. I’ve sat for kids all my life, and take it from me, the kids always know who Mom is. Always.”
“Thanks.” Ellen set the cat aside on the couch and rose slowly, on joints that seemed suddenly stiff. “Well, I guess I have to go see what the kitchen looks like.”
“No, you don’t.” Connie wiped her eyes with finality. “I went in there. It made me sick to see it, and it’ll make you even sicker.”
“I have to live here. I thought about moving, but no way.” Ellen walked into the dining room, which was still in disarray. She flashed on Carol on the floor next to her, the two of them looking up at Rob Moore, standing behind the muzzle of his gun.
“I know it’s not a crime scene anymore. But I didn’t know whether to put the chairs in order or not.”
“I will.” Ellen picked up a chair from the floor and slid it noisily into place under the table, then did the same to the other, feeling the beginning of an odd sort of satisfaction. Maybe this was what everybody meant by picking up the pieces. She took a deep breath, braced herself, and headed for the kitchen threshold. “Let’s see how bad it is.”
“Right behind you,” Connie said, and they both stood together, eyeing the kitchen.
My God.
Ellen supported herself against the doorjamb, scanning the scene. A large, shiny pool of black-red blood had dried into the floorboards, filling the grain and knots in the hardwood, making a macabre drawing etched in ink. It must have been where Carol had died.
“Disgusting, huh?” Connie asked, and Ellen nodded, her chest tight. She flashed on poor Carol, her arms raised protectively, then chased that thought away.
Across the room, near the back door, lay another island of blood, smaller but just as nauseating, where Moore must have fallen. The stink of gasoline hung in the air, and a dozen yellow spots stained the floor where the solvent had splattered. She squeezed her eyes shut against an instant replay of Will’s mouth taped shut, his snowsuit drenched with gasoline.
“I told you it was bad.”
“It’s worse than bad.” Ellen bit her lip, thinking. “Do you think I can scrub the blood out?”
“No, and I swear I smell it.”
“There’s only one solution.”
“Cover it with a rug?”
“No.” Ellen crossed to the window and opened it, then fumbled around for the metal slides and threw open the storm windows, letting in a blast of fresh, snowy air that somehow felt cleansing. “I’m going to rip up the whole damn floor.”
“You mean do it yourself?” Connie smiled, surprised.
“Sure. How hard can it be? It’s just destruction. Any idiot can destroy something.” Ellen went to the base cabinet, found her orange plastic toolbox, and set it out on top of the stove, trying not to notice that one burner was missing. She opened the toolbox and took out her hammer. “I’m no contractor, but the sharp end looks like it could do the trick. If I start now, I can get it done by tonight.”
“You want to do it now?”
“Why not? One way or the other, this floor is getting thrown away. I don’t want it in my house another minute.” Ellen took a gulp of fresh air, wielded the hammer, and bent down over one of the gasoline stains. She raised the hammer high over her head and brought its sharp end down with all her might.
Crack! The edge of the hammer splintered the wood, but unfortunately embedded itself there.
“Oops.” Ellen yanked on the handle of the hammer, and its head came free, splintering the wood. “Looks like it works, but at this rate, I’ll be finished by next year.”
“I have a better idea.” Connie stepped around her, opened the door to the basement, and went downstairs, and by the time she returned, Ellen had destroyed only part of a single floorboard. She looked up to see Connie hoisting a crowbar like the Statue of Liberty on This Old House.
“Way to go!” Ellen said. “I didn’t even know I had one of those. Thanks.” She rose, delighted, and reached for the crowbar, but Connie held it tight.
“I’ll use this. You use the hammer. We’ll get this done together. It’ll go twice as fast, and besides, I wanna destroy something, too.”
“Isn’t there a football game?” Ellen asked, touched.
“No matter.” Connie got down on her hands and knees, then wedged the end of the crowbar underneath the splintered floor. “Mark will have to win without me this time.”
Tears came to Ellen’s eyes, and she didn’t know what to say. For once, she didn’t say anything. She got back down on her hands and knees, raised her hammer, and the two women worked together for the next several hours, grimly destroying the evidence of a nightmare, with the only tools they had on hand.
A hammer, a crowbar, and the human heart.
Chapter Eighty-eight
After Connie had gone home, Ellen piled the last of the broken floor-boards on her back porch because reporters were still camped out front. She stepped back inside the kitchen, shut the door against the cold, and closed the window, breathing in deeply. The gasoline smell was gone, but the subfloor was a mess. Removing the top boards had only exposed the older floor beneath, and she hadn’t been able to pull out all the nails. They popped up here and there, making an obstacle course for Oreo Figaro, who walked gingerly to his food dish.
Ellen crossed to the refrigerator, careful not to step on a nail or a cat, and opened the door. She was about to reach for a bottle of water when her hand stopped in midair. Staring her in the face was the Pyrex bowl of lime green Jell-O, with a shiny cavern dug in the middle.
It’s good, Mommy!
She grabbed the water bottle and slammed the door closed, determined to get through the rest of the day. The house had fallen quiet, a hollow echo of how she felt. She checked the clock on the wall—2:25. Odd that Marcelo hadn’t called, and she had yet to call her father. She left the room with the water, twisted off the cap, and took a slug, then went into the living room, hearing only the sound of her footsteps on the floor. She found her purse and dug inside for her BlackBerry, but it wasn’t there. She must’ve dropped it in Marcelo’s car.
She looked up, aggravated, and through the windows she could see a commotion on the sidewalk. Reporters and photographers clustered around a taxi pulling up in front of the house, and in the next second, emerging from the crowd was her father.
Dad?
Ellen ran to the door as he waved off the press, taking the arm of an attractive woman in a chic white wool coat, probably his new wife, whose name Ellen had almost forgotten.
“Honey, what the hell?” her father asked, stepping inside, his hazel eyes round with disbelief. He stamped snow from his loafers. “This is crazy!”
“I know, it’s awful.” Ellen introduced herself and extended her hand to his wife. “Barbara, right?”
“Hello, Ellen.” Barbara smiled with genuine warmth, her lipstick fresh and her teeth white and even. She was petite with smallish features, tasteful makeup, and highlighted hair coiffed to her chin. “Sorry we have to meet in these circumstances.”
“Why didn’t you call?” her father interrupted. “Thank God for the Internet, or we wouldn’t have known a damn thing.”
“It just got so crazy, all of it.”
“We’re in the hotel, and I went online to check the scores, and there’s my daughter’s picture and my grandson’s gone! We got on the next plane.”
“Why don’t you go sit down, and I’ll explain everything.” Ellen gestured them toward the couch, but her father waved her off, agitated and acting oddly like a much older man.
“We came straight from the airport. I’ve been calling your cell.”
“Sorry, I left it in a car.” Ellen had to catch them up but she was
n’t going to begin with Marcelo. “It’s been difficult, Dad.”
“I can imagine,” Barbara said with obvious concern, but her father was distracted to the point of disorientation.
“So where’s Will?” He looked around the living room, his head wobbling slightly. “Is he really not here?”
“He’s really not here.” Ellen stayed calm, only because he was so upset. She’d never seen him so shaken, so out of control.
“That can’t be. Do the cops have him or what?”
“He’s with his father, and they’re already talking to shrinks and pediatricians, so I’m praying he’ll be okay.”
“Where is he? Where’d they take him?”
“He’s in a hotel in town.”
“I want to see him.” Her father set his jaw, the soft jowls bracketing his mouth like a bulldog’s.
“We can’t, Dad.”
“What do you mean, we can’t?” Her father’s eyes flared. “He’s my only grandchild. He’s my grandson.”
“If we try to see him, they’ll get a restraining order. I’m hoping that if we work with them, then we can—”
“That can’t be legal! Grandparents have rights!” Her father’s face reddened with emotion. “I’m calling a lawyer. I won’t put up with this. Nobody takes my grandchild away from me!”
“I have a lawyer, Dad. He says what they’re doing is legal.”
“Then you didn’t get yourself a good enough mouthpiece.” Her father jabbed his finger toward her chest, but Barbara put her hand on his jacket sleeve.
“Don, don’t yell at her. We talked about this. You know what she’s been through.”
“But they can’t take him away!” Her father threw up his hands, his expression caught between bewilderment and pain. “I go away for one minute and when I come home, my grandson is gone? How can this be legal?”
“Dad, relax.” Ellen stepped forward. “Sit down, have a cup of coffee, and I’ll tell you the story. You’ll understand the situation better.”
“I understand the situation just fine!” Her father whirled around, his finger pointing again. “I remember when you came to see me, you thought that kid in the picture was Will. So I got it wrong. Ya happy, now?”