My larger fixation with death is more complicated. The therapist in my head says it is because I was left alone with Tuck’s closed casket when I was six and looked inside.
I don’t know why I am thinking about this now, in the middle of Texas nowhere, whizzing by fields fried gold by the heat, as Hudson gives me the silent treatment.
Granny would call it a premonition.
I had my finger poised to power off my phone when it began to vibrate.
Private caller. Please, not Charla.
One press of a button, and my world hurtled out of control again.
Sadie’s voice. Two words, the last ones I expected.
“Mama’s dead.”
The next twenty-four hours were a blur of tears, anger, denial, and the tedious business of death.
I learned that Hudson was, in fact, extremely good at speeding. It turns out that his team in Afghanistan drove a “controlled” hundred miles an hour everywhere they went to avoid getting ambushed. With warning lights flashing and the speedometer pushing ninety, he scooted every vehicle to the side of the road like an obedient row of ants. He stopped only when we reached the hospital, where Sadie and I sat numbly in the office of a suited nerd who’d been through this routine way too many times to still successfully fake sympathy. I almost appreciated that.
Would we like Mama to stay in a comfort room in the hospital morgue for the night (translation, on a steel table covered with a sheet) or had we already picked a funeral home?
He shoved a permission form across the desk. The hospital sometimes conducted autopsies in cases like this when the cause of death was uncertain. Would we please sign off? The hospital would pay, of course, although it could take up to a month for the results from UT Southwestern. I tried to turn off the mental picture of medical students cutting away on our mother, trading sick jokes to make it seem like a less awful way to learn.
“It’s not CSI, where cases are solved in forty-five minutes,” the administrator said, a line he probably used five times a week.
My head throbbed under the fluorescent lights. I let my attention wander to his name tag. “Martin Van Buren, senior afterlife counselor,” a title surely tried out first on some stupid focus group.
I’d bet Mr. Van Buren was one of the last kids picked for games in elementary school and things hadn’t improved much for him since. His dark suit hung on a thin frame that held no hint of muscle. Fuzzy red hair sprouted out of his balding head. He wore smudged wire-frame glasses. No wedding ring. A brutal analysis, but I needed a target for my anger.
“How did this happen?” I demanded, making him jump. “Who had access to her room? To her IV?”
My fury bounced off. I would have to do better than that to ruffle Mr. Van Buren, whose plaque on the wall boasted fifteen years of counseling to unreasonable, grief-stricken customers like me.
In a practiced gesture, he took one hand and flipped out his polyester tie, a colorful bouquet of hot air balloons.
“Ma’am, you will need to speak to the authorities about that. The hospital is not admitting to any fault or culpability. Her doctor believes she suffered a stroke, a risk of one of her medications. The autopsy is just a matter of routine.”
A visibly upset Sadie put her hand on my knee. “Tommie-let’s talk in the hall for a second.
“Don’t do this, please,” she pleaded, outside the door. Thirty feet away, Hudson and two of his bodyguard friends stood like gladiators in a protective semicircle around a teary Maddie. Our cousin Nanette had brought her back from Marfa an hour ago.
“Mama’s dead, Tommie. Let’s bury her peacefully. Send her off with good karma.”
“Good karma?” I looked at her in disbelief. “This isn’t about karma. This is about what’s real. About whether our mother was murdered.” I spit out this last part as quietly as I could, but Maddie captured the tone and planted her face in her protector’s chest, a man with the ridiculous name of Bat whom we hadn’t even known yesterday.
I couldn’t stop myself, hurtful words rolling out of my mouth way too easily. “Why do you just accept things as fate?” And then, with a disgust that surprised me: “Grow up, Sadie.”
From the corner of my eye, I watched Hudson urge Maddie and the rest of the group down the hall, away from my explosion, a good decision because Sadie immediately fired back with dead-on arrows. She’d always been a good shot.
“You’re kidding, right? Look at yourself, Tommie. You rescue those kids. But you won’t lift a finger to rescue yourself. Your personal life is a sea of denial. Maybe you’re not dependent on alcohol now, but if you keep going this way, in ten years you will be. And where’s a lasting relationship? For that matter, where’s mine?”
I started to interject, but Sadie was just warming up.
“Did you really just figure out now that our childhood was a little odd? That Mama was depressed? That Daddy wanted a better marriage than he got? That we lived in a state of paranoia? How many grandfathers do you know who place their elementary school granddaughters in the trunks of their cars, close the lids, and tell them to kick out the taillights while lying there in the dark, then wave their hands out of the holes like a white flag? Remember how Daddy used to make us get in on the passenger side of our car in a parking lot if a van had parked next to the driver’s side? You know, a safety precaution so the bad guys couldn’t toss us in.”
Her voice had begun to shake. “I still do that with Maddie today even though he always said it was a game. A game!”
The tiny white cross on her forehead, usually invisible, flared red, a warning sign to anyone who knew my sister well. The scar resulted from Sadie refusing to wear a seatbelt on the way home from a dance lesson. Almost as soon as Mama hit the gas, a car pulled out in front of us and Sadie hit the dashboard.
When Sadie arrived home with a pink balloon and a neat cross of black stitches on her forehead, Granny said that it was a sign that God had personally stamped Sadie with the Gift. Mama had disappeared for the rest of the night.
Mr. Van Buren poked his head out the door. “Ladies? It’s closing in on five p.m. Decisions should be made.”
I swallowed hard. My anger was about something else entirely. The person I wanted to talk to most in the world, who could shed light into all the dark places, was gone, forever. No more living with the hope of a new drug or the fantasy that Mama would just snap out of it.
No more music.
“We’re ready,” I told Van Buren.
Sadie, surprised, raised her eyes. Her face was splotchy and pale.
“You’re right,” I said quietly, squeezing her hand. “You’re right about everything. We need to say goodbye to Mama. I’ll leave it alone. Turn it over to the police.” I didn’t know yet if this was a lie.
Sadie and I had survived bitter fights like this as teenagers because every hormonal word we spoke melted away by morning. But I couldn’t count on that now. I couldn’t be sure of anything, except that I couldn’t lose Sadie, too.
CHAPTER 28
I sat alone on the front porch swing at the ranch, lulled by the gentle clanking sounds of dishes being washed by hand. Three former high school basketball teammates I’d barely seen in the last ten years carried on an easy conversation about their kids that floated out the cranked-out kitchen window, over the stretch of burned-out lawn and into a fiery summer sunset.
They’d shown up every morning for the last three days with something in their hands. One of them had even paid the gravedigger, driving the money I gave her to the old frame house over the tracks where Ronald “Gippy” Gillespie had lived with his mother since dropping out of Ponder High School’s special ed classes. Gippy’s mother, a horse-faced woman who preferred flowered sundresses, took care of the financial end. She stopped playing online poker only long enough to collect it, and you usually had to knock five minutes before she’d open the door. A crude system, but in Ponder it worked.