“So I knew I’d killed my mom, my dad, Lena -knew it but I never felt it. Do you know what I mean? I never felt like a killer, like some psycho. I still felt kind of like the kid who played ice hockey, the boy with the fishing pole. God, it was strange. I didn’t know it was strange then. It was like air and stone walls, just there. Most of my life I’ve walked around thinking I was a time bomb that was going to explode and kill everyone around me.
“Tippity-the dog I told you about-she didn’t jump in the freezer. She was taped up and thrown in. I figured I’d done it. The night was a blank, just like when I was a kid. I figured getting close to Elaine triggered it somehow.” Saying the words aloud, Marshall realized he’d not “figured” that. Danny had told him that, and Danny had brought them a bottle of champagne that had knocked two adults out. It was drugged. Danny. The drug dealer of Le Cure.
“He was doing it,” he rasped, his throat dry. “Danny was doing it. Danny was giving me drugs and moving things. My brother. My brother.” Marshall felt his face turning inside out.
Polly’s cool fingers and murmured endearments brought him back to himself.
“Just like he did it before?”
“Yes.” Marshall stared at the shadows he and Polly cast on the white wall of the hospital room. He was seeing two boys, Dylan and Richard. “He must have been born with something broken inside of him. It’s no easier for me to see him doing it than it was to see myself doing it.
“He was going to do it again. To you and the girls.” The cold in his soul was deep. “I don’t want to hate him,” he said quietly.
For a while, they sat without speaking. Marshall ’s breathing evened out. His thoughts slid from frantic to torpid. Polly held his hand.
“You asked if I believed you,” Polly said.
Marshall grew very still. He wanted, needed her to believe in him-to believe in him when he was unbelievable.
“It was not merely the lipstick on your brother’s shirt-though that had a comforting concreteness about it. It was partly that I did not believe Danny. I wish I could say I believed you, but, except to the writers of sonnets, love does not show one the way. When one has children, one cannot have faith where they are endangered. There are some mistakes a mother could not live with. Had I been twenty or even thirty, I might have been able to love blindly, unconditionally. No more. There are two conditions: Emma and Gracie.
“A part of me believed that I was not fooled in you. Part of me knows anyone can be fooled.” She ran her fingertips down his cheek. His sadness trailed after her touch. “I am sorry, my darling. I cannot even apologize for not believing in you utterly and without question; that kind of love-faith-must be learned young. My early childhood instruction was centered around how to keep little girls alive.”
Marshall let that soak in. The knowledge that she had entertained the thought he was a beast and a killer did not hurt him as much as he’d thought it would. He had not believed in himself. He’d believed in Danny.
“That’s best,” he said finally. “Civilized behavior is built on conditions. I love both your conditions.”
“They don’t seem to be too traumatized,” Polly said. “I hope to keep it that way.”
“There will be newspaper articles about this, about the old murders, about who I am, and what Richard did, and what Danny did,” Marshall warned. “The case was national news at the time. It might be hard to shield them through that.”
“Surely the rebuilding of New Orleans is sufficiently ubiquitous in the press that they will not have space for an old story,” Polly said with a smile. “We can hope most of our neighbors will be too occupied with their own dramas to read them.”
“I’ll read them,” Marshall said. “I’ll read them and try to figure out why, what makes a killer desire the kill, what made my brother take my family’s lives and, then, in every way he could, take mine. Homework. I’ve done it for so long, trying to find myself.”
“Well, my darling, you can quit looking. Gracie and Emma and I have found you.”
41
Richard Raines was sentenced to life without parole. Because his injury had left him unable to use the lower half of his body until the swelling around his spinal cord went down-if it went down-he was put in the maximum-security hospital ward of the U.S. penitentiary in Pollock, Louisiana.
Twice a month, Marshall made the drive to Pollock to visit his brother.
Danny showed every indication that he enjoyed these exchanges. The allotted hour was spent telling Marshall what had been done to his life. Danny used the time to talk about how he had used and used up Vondra, set her as a watchdog on Marshall’s office, related Polly’s secrets to her, and set her up as Polly’s tarot reader; he described in detail how he’d told the warden Phil Maris was a pedophile and had raped Dylan, how he’d killed Phil, Sara, and several others. Some murders he made up just for the pleasure he felt in hurting the brother to whom he had given everything and who had abandoned him.
Marshall listened but, except for learning Phil had been killed, he was unaffected. At the telling-and retelling-of each horrific incident, he was reassured of his own innocence, his own sanity. And that of his wife. The tarot reader had been primed by Danny to wait for Polly, so the dissolution of Marshall ’s marriage could be set in motion.
Even after he no longer needed this assurance, he still made the drive. He did it because Rich had done it for Dylan, because Dylan loved his brother. And he did it because Danny was confined to a wheelchair, and Danny’s lack of control-of himself and, most sharply felt, of others-was torture for him. Marshall drove out to see Danny this way because Marshall hated Danny.
Dylan Raines’s name was cleared, but Marshall chose to keep Marchand.
It sounded better with the name Pollyanna.
Richard Raines. Killed mother, father, sister, and the family cat.
“We get to the upstairs hall, and Pat finds a light switch. You’re not going to want to print this next part, but by God this is how it was. In the middle of the rug-one of those long narrow hall rugs-was a baby, a little girl no more than two, and she had been cut in half. I about puked, and Pat looked like he was going to.
“We hear movement downstairs and think maybe it’s the killer.
Or somebody hurt. Pat goes first.
“In the back bedroom, there’s two boys. At first, we thought both of them had been murdered. The older boy nearly had his leg cut off and had bled so much he was the color of a sheet of paper. The other boy was still in his bed, but at first we didn’t even know it was a kid, you know? It just looked like a bucket of red paint poured over some blankets.