It's long, it could use some revision and addition, but I'm pretty proud of this story.
Eli Albert
The Mighty Finn
0.
My name is Samuel K. Justice, and I have a sad story to
tell.
I grew up in a small house in New Jersey. I could see the highway from my
window, and though you might not think it, the highway was immensely entertaining.
For instance: Every morning as the sun started to rise, it would glance off the
windshield of every car that zipped by. This lit up my room like a lantern
every three or less seconds, every morning, so I set up a mirror by the window.
I would zap people near the window with the angry morning sunshine, pretending
to be an invading space alien and seeing if I could get them in the eyes. My
mother explained the whole O-zone environmental crisis, but it didn't bother me
- my attack-rays would be all the stronger.
When I wasn't in school I used to play with the kids next
door. These two brothers are actually the focus of my story. They lived in a
house just like mine, except they owned the whole thing - my family rented the second
floor. They also had a nice big TV from Sony, so I spent most of my free time
over there. They were the Finns, and the brothers were Silver and John. Now, I
don't know what possessed the parents to name their child Silver. He was the
older brother, and everybody used to say that "Silver Finn" had a
ring to it and fit him rather nicely. Both brothers were on the short side,
with thin lips and green eyes. Amazingly, though both Finns had
characteristically blond hair, Silver's was much lighter than John's to the
extent that it could indeed be called Silver. Now that I think back, I find it
very unlikely that a boy named Silver just happened to have silver hair, so I
suppose that name could have come second. Well - might have to look that one up
later.
Silver was two years older than John and I. As you might
imagine, he was used to giving orders. He was always in charge when we played,
for better or worse. Our favorite game - now, I know this is going to surprise
and possibly scare you - but our favorite game was called "the highway
game." We had some small inkling of how stupid it was, so that when a
parent was nearby we craftily called it "cowboys and Indians." My
parents thought we loved those cowboys and Indians, and for one of my early
birthdays they got me a toy gun and cowboy hat. Honestly, did anybody really
think that kids growing up in the eighties played "cowboys and
Indians?" We were busy pushing boundaries, risking our necks, and going to
the video arcade. The highway, however, was the best and cheapest entertainment
around.
It had three lanes on each side with a concrete divider in
the middle. On one side was our housing development, separated from the highway
by a wall with these strange sperm-shaped squiggly designs running along it. On
the other side was a plain green hill that sloped up for fifty feet or so. The
Wall, as we called it, was hardly childproof. It had breaks every few blocks to
get through to a bus stop, but it also had a small hole, hidden by a bush,
directly in front of our houses. In general the wall was pretty useless - it
obviously didn't stop the sight and noise of the highway from reaching my
second floor bedroom.
The highway game started on the other side of the Wall, on
our side of the highway. We would line up and, one by one, cross the highway. I
suppose that was pretty obvious, but the first time we did it we were
terrified. Our parents had always told us to stay away from the highway, so we
were crossing the ultimate taboo each time we crossed that road. That first
time was a rush, sure, but you can imagine that the game got pretty tired after
a while. It just became too easy - once you cross a six-lane highway a certain
number of times, you become something of an expert. We used to have "style
points," determined by the grown-up expertise of Silver - hopping,
walking, skipping - we overcame every challenge as a team. We started to
include the hill on the other side in our obstacle course - cross to the hill,
run all the way up, and then time your crossing back so that you ran all the way
down the hill and across the highway without stopping. That was the hardest
one, but I think everybody does stupid stuff in their childhood. It's part of
growing up. Some kids have playgrounds for playgrounds while others have
highways, but everybody risks their neck every once in a while. You can't stop
that any more than you can stop kids from getting older.
So I grew up like most other kids at that time, I guess. I
was never the fastest, strongest, or best-looking - they always told me I had
an Irish nose with Asian eyes - but I had friends; I enjoyed myself. Now that I
think about it, my life isn't all that different from anyone else's - I suppose that's why this is a story about the
Finns. Although I won't be able to resist talking about myself and Caroline
once in a while, you're probably reading this story because of poor John - you
probably read about it in the paper or something - so I'll tell you what you
came for. It all started when John got bored of the highway game.
John Finn was a thinker. Anybody who knew him could see
that. You could be talking with him, having a good conversation, and then you'd
realize that his eyes were focused on nothing at all, and he hadn't heard a
word about your wife's annoying friends. He was smart, and always a little
removed from Silver and I. Somehow, you always got the feeling that he was
standing back just a little bit, that he was observing first and participating
second. Then, when he did decide to do something, he was completely sure of
himself. He might not act and succeed in the way he'd planned, but you could
tell that each movement was calculated and premeditated. As you might guess, he
didn't open up easily to others. Growing up with the Finns, I think John was my
closer friend, but Silver was more of an older brother to me than he was to
John. They soon drew apart as you’ll see, but I remained close with both.
1.
I'll always remember that hot September day that I mentioned
- the day we realized that we had conquered the highway. We were standing on
the top of the hill on the other side, hesitant to drop back down. John said it
first - "the highway is boring!" Silver, always boss of the highway
game, was none too happy at this remark, and immediately took charge of the
situation.
"Hey," he said, "let's play a new game."
"What game?"
Silver thought fast. "Explorers!" he said,
"we've never played in the forest before."
I'm sure this remark worried me significantly. The forest
was over the top of the hill on which we stood, a scant thirty yards farther
back. We'd always joked about it. The forest was hot, and wet, and dark even in
direct sunlight. We didn't know how big it was or where it finished. I would've
been quick to back away from Silver's idea, but John was even quicker to accept
the challenge. With that piercing, thoughtful look that sometimes came into his
eyes, he stood up - we'd been squatting at the crest of the hill, squinting
down at the sunny highway - and began walking towards the trees behind us.
"Let's go, then," he said. Silver jumped up
quickly, not to be second, and I followed behind. The forest grew as we got
closer. I don't know why we'd never considered exploring it before, but I
suppose we were more used to the urban jungle than the natural one. Speeding cars
seemed so easy and predictable compared to raw nature. And that explains why,
at the ages of 13, 13, and 15, the three of us began a trek through the forest.
As we got closer we could see that the forest was decadent,
rotting. It was a mix of green and brown, with the occasional yellow or white
flower. The sun shone through where the trees let it, which was to say that we
could see, but only enough to be scared by the noises and shadows around us. We
walked in a straight line for a good ten minutes, which, for a young boy in a
forest, can be a very long way. The forest was obviously quite large, because
we saw no sign of civilized life around us. Of course both brothers walked side
by side, fast so that neither would take the lead, climbing and jumping over
bushes and fallen trees. At first I worried about dangers in the forest, and
even more about getting lost and not making it home before dark. Soon, however,
the serenity of my surroundings overcame me. I couldn't hear the whoosh of the
highway. I couldn't hear the hums and whirs of electronics and mechanical
devices. All I could hear and see was nature and my two best friends, walking
steadily onward in front of me. Even better, pretty soon the monotony of plants
and trees was broken up now and again by huge boulders half buried in the dirt.
John and Silver made a point of racing to the top of each one. I joined them
when I could, and we had a grand time. This was definitely more fun than the
highway.
I'll always remember this, our first excursion into the
forest, for what happened next. I still don't understand it completely, as
you'll soon see, but I know that it changed everything. We had come to a
particularly pretty area in the forest. There was a kind of clearing caused by
a stream running between two big boulders. Large trees on the sides of the
boulders and the stream hung over the clearing, keeping it shaded. The stream,
along with the elevation of the ground, took a sharp turn to the right, around
the bigger of the two boulders. We had been following the stream for some ways,
climbing and leaping from rock to rock while keeping it in view. We reached the
top of the smaller boulder in this clearing and all paused briefly, without
deciding to. It was just too exciting, beautiful; we had to take in the sights.
I sat down where I was. After about ten seconds Silver slapped his knee and
jumped up, ready to forge onward. John was close behind him. They jumped
lightly down the boulder, across the stream, and around the corner of the other
boulder. I got up slowly, intent on following them but fully aware of my aching
muscles. As I carefully made my way down the boulder, I heard Silver (or was it
John?) exclaim loudly.
"Whoa - what's that?" In my haste to follow them
around the big rock ahead of me, I slipped in the stream and fell - I never
have been very graceful. I remember hitting the side of my waist on a rock in
the stream, and I remember being soaked. I got that feeling of nausea that
sometimes comes from an unexpected and quick injury, and I felt dizzy. I soon
regained my senses, though, enough to hear what sounded like some sort of
scuffle from around the corner. I got up, bruised and wet, and finally rejoined
the Finns, only to find John in the dirt and Silver with his hands in his pockets,
standing over him. John's eyes were red, and he looked like he'd been punched.
Silver was breathing hard.
"What happened?" I asked, while at the same time
Silver said, "It's mine," and walked back in the direction we'd come.
John watched him go with a strange look on his face, at which point he finally
seemed to notice me.
"I hate him," he said. "I hate him. He always
rules everything, and thinks everything he wants is his for the taking. I hate
him." John stood up slowly, and brushed the dirt off his clothes. He
noticed I was soaking wet, and realized what had happened.
"I guess you missed the whole thing," he said with
a sad smile.
"Do you want to explain?"
"No." He left it at that, and so did I. Of course
I was burning with curiosity over what John and Silver had found there in the
forest, and I wanted to ask, but I figured I would find out soon enough. I
didn't feel very suave standing there soaking wet and clueless, and that,
coupled with the dangerous look in John's eyes, kept my mouth shut.
"I guess we should get back," he said. We slowly
retraced our steps, and do you know, the magic of the forest had completely
disappeared. It was humid, dirty, and uncomfortable. It wasn't even scary and
mysterious - what had taken us more than an hour to walk on the way in only
took us twenty minutes on the way out, even at what seemed like a slower pace.
I can only assume that the forest wasn't as big as we thought; that we'd
explored every nook and cranny on the way in. When we crossed the highway and
got back to the houses, Silver was standing in the front yard waiting for us,
his pockets conspicuously empty. John was so angry that he looked like he was
on the verge of tears, and I cautiously retreated to my own house when my
mother conveniently called me in for lunch. I didn't learn what the object was
that day, or the next. I didn't learn about it until much, much later. But life
went on.
"Have it your way," said Lilly, standing over the
prostrate bully. "You want to push people around? Come get me!"
The year was 1986, and we were all in high school. Lilly had
her mind made up. She didn't let anyone push her around, and when she felt like
it, she didn't let anyone push anyone else around either. She was standing over
another student from our school, who happened to be holding his groin in agony.
She wore dark green tights and a colorful skirt with a dark knit sweater on
top, and about a hundred bracelets. Lilly looked great - she always did - but
there was something more to the tomboyish attitude and cute attire. She exuded
what some hesitate to define, but which I now know for a fact to be panache,
pure and simple, and it isn't hard to imagine that she attracted every man in
any room she walked into.
High school had treated the Finns and I well, or as well as
a poor town's public high school might. We were on top of the bunch, at least,
in terms of popularity. Well, they were, and I was still their best friend.
John and Finn, in their separate grades, were both friendly and well-liked by
everyone of their age. However, though you might find it hard to believe, they
had hardly talked to each other since that fateful day in the forest. At the
time I had figured it to be a small insult that would blow over and be forgotten.
I'd assumed we would all examine "the object" and have a fun time at
it, and that would be that. However, to the best of my knowledge Silver never
showed anyone that thing that he found, and John, in his pride, never once
asked. As a result, the gap between them grew and grew, until it wasn't easy to
believe that they were brothers, let alone that they'd been best friends. This
whole situation was made much worse by Lilly, of course. What better way to
dominate and attack the other than by the objectification of a woman - and not
just any woman - the woman.
The poor girl never saw it coming. One minute she was
tempting hapless boys with a twitch of her lips, and the next she was assaulted
by the pure energy of the Finn brothers. Their competition, rather than working
against them, only served to lend strength to their individual efforts. What's
more, without having to say anything, it was soon widely known that Lilly was reserved
for one of them; that she was completely off limits to anyone else. Now obviously
this was terrible for the girl herself, at first. She despised being
objectified - rightly so - and as such despised both Finns. But they bore on
with the patience of their hatred for each other, and she soon grew accustomed
to the situation. The students in the school were afraid of this love triangle,
actually, and Lilly eventually realized that much of her pain and loneliness
would cease if she'd just choose one of them.
That is why, after gyrating between the brothers for a year,
and after countless heart-to-hearts with me, her window into the
brother's hearts, she went to the Senior Prom with John. That's right - me. I
did play a small part here, one that the brothers didn't know about. While they
were busy being alpha wolf, I used my neutrality as each one's
best friend to approach and talk with Lilly like I've never talked with anyone
before. That's because Lilly, besides being stunning and strong and cute, was
quite intelligent and sometimes emotional in times of trouble. We both
recognized that she needed someone to talk to, and though I knew I could never
have any sort of sexual relationship with Lilly (which, face it, is the only
thing on a teenager's mind in this kind of situation), I was happy to be closer
to her, to communicate and help her. She was Silver's age, which put her two
years older than John and I, so you can imagine how great I felt talking to the
coolest, prettiest girl in school, who also happened to be a senior.
By the way, my friendship with Lilly was also how I met the
lovely Caroline, who is now my wife. Between Lilly's friendship and Caroline's
love, as well as the Finns' charisma and energetic fun, I had a really
excellent time. I was never bored, I was popular, and everything was easy. I
still don't know how I pulled that off exactly, and I know I always felt a bit
like I was trespassing - not that I ever complained. Caroline and I had some
trouble through the years, it's true, but I'm sure you're anxious to hear about
the Senior Prom. As I said, Lilly finally realized that she had to choose
someone. The Finns' style and determination finally got through to her, and she
came to understand that she might be honored by the complete attention of the
two most popular boys in school, instead of insulted. After discussing the
matter with me, at which time I gave her a very conservative, "I don't
know what to tell you," Lilly made up her mind. As I've mentioned, Lilly
was unstoppable, once she decided something. In her senior year she started
dating John exclusively, and they did go to her Prom together. This was a huge
blow to Silver, as you might imagine, though some students at the time said
that it was less a matter of Lilly picking John than it was of Lilly not
picking Silver. The rumor was that the older Finn made some sort of aggressive
play for her on the hunch that he could catch her off guard and force a
surrender, as it were. Neither one of them ever mentioned this to me though, so
I can't really say.
The senior prom (which John and I went to as Sophomores to
accompany our girlfriends) was a strange night. We were John and Lilly,
Caroline and I, and Silver and his backup date. John positively shown that
night; he was triumphant and handsome. Everybody had tuxedos and flowers. The
theme was so stupid that it hasn't stuck in my mind after all these years. I do
remember Silver leaving pretty early, and his date leaving with him. Lilly
seemed happy with John, too. The whole thing would have been normal were it not
for Caroline, who was acting strange. I've mentioned that Caroline and I have
had some problems throughout the years, and as far as I can tell, this night
was the first time that they manifested.
We were enjoying ourselves with our classmates, and though
we both agreed on the inherent stupidity of "the prom," we could
appreciate the opportunity to dance and socialize with classmates before they
went off to college. Soon, though, I realized that Caroline was acting slightly
strange. She had a distant look to her, as if she didn't want to be near anybody,
and was at the prom against her will. At first I thought I might be imagining
it, but throughout the night she got worse. At one point a song that we both
loved came on, and I stood up with a grin and asked her to dance. She refused,
though, and inexplicably recommended that I dance with a friend. Now I don't
know how you might feel if that happened to you, but it was the prom, a song we
both loved, we'd been sitting and not talking for a while, and now this.
Obviously I was surprised. I recommended then that we get some fresh air, and
we walked outside the school's gym and sat on a nearby bench. The conversation
we had then has remained in my memory.
"Is there something wrong?" I asked, in a friendly
tone of voice. "You seem upset at something."
"No," she said. "No, I'm fine."
"I don't know. This whole night you've seemed pretty
different: withdrawn, even." She didn't answer.
"Please, Carol." I said. "I want to know
what's on your mind." After a while I noticed a single tear roll down her
cheek, and then another. Something was happening, at least. The awkward silence
had troubled me. Through her tears, she started to talk softly.
"It doesn't have to do with you," she said.
"I swear. I'm so happy with you, but sometimes I feel like I don't deserve
you. Sometimes I get so sad. You should be with someone who isn't like
this."
Poor Caroline, with her short black hair and tiny nose,
those sparkling eyes and tiny, fun and tiny body. I held her to me, on the
bench.
"I'm just a stupid boy. I really don't understand, but
you know you mean everything to me Carol, you know that I'm happy..." I
trailed off. The tears were flowing now, and I hadn't helped at all.
"It's not that. It's just that sometimes, sometimes I
don't want to be, you know? I don't want to live." For that I had nothing
to say, so I held her there. Eventually I realized that I now knew her a bit
better than I had before, and told her as much.
"It's like a secret," she said. "You know
something that no one else knows." We rejoined the party then, but I was
deep in thought.
2.
John had been slowly losing ground to the ball of energy
that was his older brother during high school, and Lilly's choice gave him a
much-needed boost. Previously, Silver had bested him academically - 3.7 to
John's 3.5 - and athletically, becoming captain of the school's hockey team.
When John and I became juniors and Silver, Lilly, and Caroline graduated,
things began to look up for John. Lilly stayed in town working as a waitress
while studying at the local community college and Silver took on a job with a
moving crew, which had him frequently out of town. The next two years passed
quickly, and though I was still close friends with John, I didn't see Silver
very often. John and I became closer, if possible, sharing our experiences in
the same class in school and our experiences with the loves of our lives.
Caroline attended a local city college, one slightly more prestigious than
Lilly's, and I was able to see her often as well.
I remember realizing at one point that John and Caroline
both had this same quirk in common - that which I described earlier. Of course
John never told me as much, male friendships being as they are, but I could see
many similarities. Every so often, they would fall into a spell of loneliness
and despair. It was sad, disturbing, and for me, inexplicable: there seemed to
be no obvious cause, and the best course of action was to be consoling, to a
point. I let them know that I cared, but that I knew that I couldn't really
help. However, I do think that John's spells of sadness came from a source more
distant than Caroline's, and I hope you could figure out by now that I refer to
his brother. One day during our senior year I caught him at such a moment and,
seeing that he seemed to need a sympathetic ear, I sat with him and resolved to
talk things through. If it seems to you like I do a lot of counseling, a lot of
therapy, you're right. I've always been this way, and I won't say I enjoy it,
but between Lill, Carol, and John, I had my hands full.
I'd found John that day on the dirt around a corner of
school. He had skipped gym class to sit and think there, alone. I sprawled out
with him in the dirt.
"Do you remember that day," he said without
preamble, after two or three minutes, "that day we explored the forest on
the other side of the highway?"
How could I tell him that that day had been in my thoughts
on and off for years? That they'd never explained to me what happened? I was
sure he had no idea, and my suspicions were confirmed.
"You probably don't," he said. "That day that
I fought with my brother. The last day I talked, really talked and enjoyed
myself with him. How could I have held a grudge for so many years?" He
trailed off.
"It was that thing," I prompted, hinted. I
couldn't ask what it was. To this day I'm not sure why I didn't ask. I had been
waiting for such an opportunity all this time, to be able to ask naturally. I
had waited for John or Silver to bring up the forest, and now my chance had come,
but my mouth would not respond. Maybe I would have managed to, but John began
again.
"Yeah. That. There's something about it, I'm telling
you. I'm sure you noticed too." Here I realized that it wasn't deliberate
- he thought I'd seen it too, that day. He didn't remember my clumsiness, that
I hadn't been there. "When I saw it, I knew I needed it. I grabbed it but
Silver took it from me. We fought over it, and he won, of course, but why
wouldn't he let me see it after that? Why wouldn't he share? I wish I could
hold it again. I hate him for that!"
At this I didn't know what to say. I couldn't out and admit
to my cluelessness now, after such an
emotional outburst. I don't remember what I said after that. Probably nothing,
or nothing important. The gym teacher found us when he heard John's raised
voice, and we were both marked down. John didn't mention that day again, which
should make sense, and our conversations usually stayed away from Silver. And
life went on. We both graduated high school in due form. We'd been popular,
we'd had a good run, and it was time to continue. Time to do something real.
Well, real enough, anyway, for middle-class suburban teens. The way it worked
out, John ended up going to a nicer university about an hour away, and I attended
the nearby city college with Carol. Lill continued
her job and studies, and I'm sure she understood John's decision. They could
still see each other often, assuredly, and he could live his ambitions. John
wouldn't settle for good when he could have better, and since his family had
some money put away, it was no problem.
So you have a clear picture of where we all were. It was a
time for learning, a time for charging, a time to become acquainted with life
away from the housing development and the highway. Carol and I were at your
standard cheap/city-run school, Lilly was working and studying nights, and John
was away at a big university. Silver was the outlier in the group. No girl, as
far as we knew. No plans for the future, as far as we knew. Just trucking back
and forth across the country, moving people's possessions and making good
money, or so we heard. Our time passed, in that way time has of passing before
you know it. Clichéd as that may sound, as I look back I realize that it's
true. College finished so soon that it was over before it started.
Here is where everything could have gone well for everyone.
We were all split into our little units. No one was in a position to cause
friction with anyone else. We were educated, contributing members of society.
Pretty soon, the time came to decide our futures.
At a dinner party at the Finn's house, the five of us were
reunited once more. This didn't happen often, what with Silver's job. There we
learned that we weren't the only ones with big plans in the future.
"It's fantastic," Silver was saying as Caroline
and I joined everyone in the house's living room. "I think this project is
going to be huge."
"What is it?" Carol asked, "I missed what you
were saying."
"Don't worry," Silver said, "I'm just getting
to the good part. It's a small business that I'm starting with two friends from
my moving company. We're going to use this new thing, it's called the World
Wide Web, and some people call it the Internet..."
Of course much of what he said went right over my head then,
but I'm sure you and I can both admit now that he was something of a visionary.
His company's capacity for success would be unlimited. At that point early on,
he seemed to know what he had, and he was flush with excitement. The future was
beckoning, and nothing could stop him. John was there, of course. It was one of
those rare times that the brothers communicated.
"Sounds good," John said, looking Silver straight
in the eye. "I'm eager to see how it turns out. I have no doubt that
you'll succeed." There seemed to be some secret communication beneath
those words, something dark. It was enough to be obvious to Lilly and Silver
and I, and measures were taken to steer the conversation in another direction.
Soon we were eating our hamburgers and enjoying ourselves, and the tension
between the Finns was forgotten. After dinner, though, it came up again.
"And what are your plans, John?" Silver said it in
a slightly nasty tone of voice, as if questioning any answer his brother might
have. "You're educated now. Are you going to make good on that
education?"
"I have plans," said John, caught off guard.
"Lilly and I are going to get married. I've been interviewed for a job at
a national publishing company, and it looks like my prospects are good. I'll be
helping to decide which books to publish, which authors to sign. I also plan on
spending some time with my own writing. I have a lot of ideas."
"Good, good." There was a smirk at the corner of
Silver's mouth as he took a huge bite of cake and said with his mouth full,
"good luck with that."
"Sam!" said Caroline, eager to divert the
impending conflict, "Why don't you tell them our plans." I was more
than happy to comply.
"Well, we haven't told anyone yet, but we're getting
married too! The date is all but set, and we're starting to plan for a life
together." Nobody was surprised, but everyone was happy and excited. A
toast was made, jokes and congratulations were said, and the brothers' problems
were once again forgotten. I went on.
"Yeah, Caroline and I don't have anything so grand
lined up, but I have a job offer from a local bank. They needed a man with an
economics degree, and I came in at just the right time. If it goes well I could
be doing investment banking in a few years. They say there's money in
that."
"And I," Carol cut in, "am working on a
newscasting spot. I had an interview at the local news channel the other
day." We didn't have anything huge, as I'd said, Carol and I, but we were
supremely satisfied with each other, with our life to come, with our future.
Our friends could see that, and overall it was a pretty happy dinner, as far as
the Finn brothers were concerned. In the next few weeks, in fact, our plans
unfolded in exactly the way we had all discussed. I started work at the bank,
Carol at the television station, John at the publishing company, and Silver
with his new company and partners. Carol and I rented a small apartment near
the center of town, and John, with his parents' help, purchased something
similar for Lill and himself. Silver was staying with his partners somewhere
north. I hope you can get the idea, now, that his whereabouts were largely a
mystery to the rest of us. I was surprised for that reason when he called me a
week later. He asked if I'd like to come up to his new company's offices, which
were rented in a suburban office building, and chat. I assured him I would, and
the next day found me kissing Carol goodbye and getting on a bus for the three
hour trip.
I arrived a bit before lunch and was met at the bus station
by Silver. He greeted me warmly, which, while not exactly strange, was slightly
out of the ordinary, and we drove in "the company car," as he
explained, to a nearby diner. There we chatted amiably and without focus until
the food came. It was only after he'd done quick and efficient work to his beef
steak that he came to the point.
"Sam," he said. "Sam, Sam - I guess it's a
bit strange, but you're probably used to it. Everybody always comes to you for
advice. You're like the official therapist." He looked troubled, I
suppose, to the extent that Silver could ever look troubled, and I was caught
off guard.
"Is there something you want to talk about?"
"Well, yes and no," he said, "I'm having trouble
deciding if I should. More than that, though, I really just wanted to talk to a
friend. My business partners are good guys, really intelligent, but they don't
really fill that need that people have."
"The need for friendship?"
"Yeah, that. Ever since me and John..." He trailed
off for a second. "Well I just don't feel as close to all you guys as I
once did. I guess I was always more of a big brother than a best buddy, but I
get lonely too. I don't suppose you know that Lilly and I have become friends
again?"
I was mildly surprised. Although Lilly didn't hate Silver, I
hadn't thought of anything between the two of them.
"Yeah, I didn't think you'd heard." Silver read my
surprise. "She's come down to see me a few times now. We agreed that it
might be better if John didn't find out. Not that there's anything
improper," here he paused, and looked at me strangely, "but we all
know how John is. Fierce, that one. I guess I don't like secrets, and I wanted
to tell someone."
"Well, that's fine," I started.
"Yeah, he cut in. It's really great to be able to talk
to you again. Let's get out of here. You want to see the office?"
That night I was a little perturbed, I suppose, when I
returned home, but Carol didn't seem to notice. Actually, she was acting much
stranger than I was, so I decided not to mention what Silver had told me. I
carefully kept my distance, at first, seeing as I didn't want to upset her if
she was in a bad mood. I soon realized that she wasn't in a bad mood, just quiet,
really, but it wasn't very comfortable. In fact I realized that she hadn't so
much as kissed me on the cheek in greeting on my return from the meeting with
Silver, and I told her as much. She looked at me sadly, and said nothing. I
figured out then that she was feeling depressed again, possibly. I held her
close to me, but she didn't respond. She felt limp in my hands. I let her go
and looked at her closely. Before I could say anything, she said, "I'm
going to bed." It was about nine at night.
I followed her into the bedroom and sat next to her on the
bed. "What are you doing?" I asked. She looked at me quickly. Had I
said the wrong thing?
"What would you do if I got pregnant?" she asked.
Out of nowhere!
"Huh?" A good answer. I followed it up quickly
with, "Are you?"
"No," she said, "I don't think so."
"What's wrong, baby?" I didn't know what to do or
say.
"Oh, Sam. You're always so perfect." Her eyes were
brimmed with tears. "Sometimes I don't know what to do. I feel so lost,
and I get mad at you, and I do stupid things, but then I realize how bad it
was, and I hate myself even more." Alarm bells were going off in my head.
What did she do? I decided it was best to keep quiet and let her tell me.
She was quiet for a moment too, and then looked back up into
my face. "I killed the dog," she said. That one came out of nowhere,
I thought.
"I killed it and I hate myself but I was so mad and I
was mad at you and your stupid dog and..." she stopped, slowed down, took
a deep breath.
"I came home from work early today, because I was in a
really bad mood. It's just not fair! Sometimes I feel so alone, and you weren't
there... So your dog came over to greet me, and he seemed happy, and I was
annoyed that he was so carefree, and then he peed on my shoes. It was
disgusting. I started crying, and I couldn't see so well, so I picked up your
dog and I..." she broke down. I patted her knee. What more could I do,
exactly, at this point?
"I threw him out the window. I felt a lot better after
that. I went down and swept him up, which was also gross, and threw him
out." There was a pregnant pause between the two of us, and her tears
stopped falling, and we both started to laugh.
"You mean," I said with relief, "you didn't
cheat on me?"
"What? No, honey, never!"
"You didn't quit your job?"
"No..."
"You didn't stop taking birth control pills?"
"No."
"Huh," I said, and, "Poor Charles."
"I'm sorry."
"Well, I'll be alright. We don't have to get another
dog, if you don't want to."
"Actually," she said, "I was thinking about a
different sort of addition to the family." I kissed her quickly, and then
again.
"Huh." It had been a surprising day and night, but
I think everybody came through unscathed. Oh, well not Charles. Truth is, I
never really liked him that much either, so I wasn't mad. Maybe that strange
day was a warning of things to come, though, because the very next week, a
bombshell dropped.
3.
It was 6:30 on a Monday evening when John
called. I was sitting in the main room of the apartment with Carol, and we were
playing chess. One of the great things that Carol and I have in common is our
enjoyment of the game. We play at roughly the same level, which keeps our games
interesting. John called, and Carol answered, and I heard a "no, I don't
think so..." and a "do you think something is wrong?" I won't
say I was worried, but when Carol came back to the table, I could tell she was.
The chess game was momentarily forgotten.
"It was John," she said. "He told me that he
hasn't seen Lilly in two days. She went out Saturday night, said she needed
some time alone, and hasn't come back since."
"Oh. That's bad... did you ask him what we can
do?"
"He's at his wits end. I almost get the feeling that
there was more to the story than he was telling me, but I didn't push. Felt
that would be a bad idea. He had no idea what to do, so I told him I'd talk
with you and take care of him." She sighed. "Poor guy. And I hope
Lilly is OK, but knowing her, I'm somehow not so worried."
We sat for a couple minutes, thinking, and we called some of
Lill's acquaintances, in the most discrete way possible, of course, but they
had no leads. Eventually I called John back. I could tell he'd been crying, and
between choked sobs he told me that he didn't know what to do, that everything
was going wrong, and that he wanted to see me. I told him we could meet
anywhere, anytime, so he suggested immediately, at his house. He told me Carol
could come, but she told me that it would probably be better if she didn't, and
I agreed, so ten minutes later I was walking the six blocks between us at a
brisk pace.
When I arrived, I realized that John was in bad shape. The
place was a mess - furniture overturned, broken glass on the floor, empty
bottles of alcohol in abundance, pizza boxes (with and without pizza) lining
the table. John himself was sitting in a darkened living room, on the couch,
staring at nothing. I had let myself in (I had a spare key) and he hardly
acknowledged my presence. This was going to be bad, I thought.
"John." I walked towards the couch and sat down.
"Tell me what happened." There was a pause in which neither of us spoke.
The TV in the bedroom was on, but all I could hear was white noise. The
apartment smelled.
"John-" I started, but was interrupted when he
started to talk.
"It's worse than you think," he said. "Lilly
and I fought. That night I actually told her to get out, which was a terrible
idea. I was so stupid!" his fist pounded against the arm of the couch.
"How could I let her go? I thought maybe she would come back, maybe she
wasn't sure, but then I found this note. Someone had stuck it under the door
some time yesterday."
He was holding a crumpled piece of paper in his hand, which
was shaking. I wasn't sure if he was telling me to read it, but he pushed it
towards me, so I took it. Before I could look, John went on.
"Everything is falling apart!" The words poured
out of his mouth. "Last week I lost my job." Whew. I hadn't had any idea.
This was a lot worse than I could have imagined. He continued: "I didn't
know what to do. I didn't tell Lill at first, and spent a few days alternately
searching for a new job and getting drunk during the day. Eventually Lilly
found out of course, oh, Lill-" here he broke down. I waited for him to
continue. "Lilly wanted to bring back my fighting spirit. I didn't deserve
any help from her. I was drunk, I was stupid. We fought about the future, about
what I would do. Soon it just turned nasty." He stopped again and looked
at me. "Read the letter."
I looked down at the paper with dread, because at this point
I had a feeling that I knew what I would find. The letter was written in black
pen on standard white printer paper. At the bottom Lilly had signed her name.
Dear John,
I'm sorry to have to say this to you by way of letter, but I don't want to see
you right now. I left, Saturday night, and I went to a friend of mine who you
know quite well - your brother. Actually we've been meeting on and off for the
last few months. I hadn't told you because I knew you'd be mad, but we really
enjoy each other's company. I was so mad at you
that night! Now I'm not. Now I'm just disappointed. I did back-breaking work
for years and years just to support myself through community college, and after
your fancy education, you lose one job and completely give up! What's wrong
with you? How could you say the things that you said when I was just trying to
help?
Whatever. I'm staying with Silver right now. I don't know
what I plan on doing with Silver here - I suppose that will depend mostly on
him. He drove me here the other night so I could drop off this note. He has a
car. He's successful. I know his business is going to take off, and I know
he'll be rich. I also know that if it fails, he'll keep right on going. So
don't expect to see me for a while. Silver says you don't know where he lives,
which is all the better in my opinion. I hope you don't drink yourself to death
when you read this.
4.
What would you do if such a thing happened to your best
friend? I was at a complete loss. Poor John was getting worse - now that I
understood the cause of his current state, I could understand everything.
Something had to be done to bump him out of his tailspin, so I did the only
think I could think of. I stuck the letter in my pocket, stood up, stuck my
right arm under his legs and my left arm behind his back and lifted him bodily
off the couch. All I could think about was that I had to remove him from the
apartment and take him back home with me. He couldn't be left alone like this.
John hardly moved as I was doing it, which made my job slightly easier, and
when I got him out the door and put him down, he stood himself up. I locked the
door and walked slowly with him to the car; the man was in a daze. I know what
you're thinking, that this was just another example of his inability to cope
with failure, and I suppose it's true. However, he was still my friend, and I
was still going to support him, so that meant that Sam the Therapist was back
in session. We got into my car and headed back home.
Carol was hardly surprised to see John with me. In fact,
she'd had the wisdom to prepare the couch for a guest, and to cook dinner for
three. It was impressive. We sat at the table, John still silent, and ate
salad, chicken, and rice. She'd prepared a bottle of wine which I noticed
sitting on the sideboard, but I motioned her not to open it. John, poor John...
The best we could do was to make him feel at home and comfortable. We told him
that he could stay as long as he liked, that we'd take care of him, that we
could help him look for a job. I think he was looking a little less depressed
when I led him to the couch and he passed out. I hoped that in the morning a
more sober, rested John could properly assess the situation. And you know what?
He did. Or at least he seemed to. The next morning his eyes had light in them
once again, we talked, and he seemed almost up-beat. Well, not really, and he
still lapsed into silence now and then, but it wasn't so bad. He was away from
booze, on his feet, and communicating. A few days and nights passed like this,
and we had a couple leads for a new job.
A week later (during which time, I must admit, the apartment
was starting to feel a bit crowded) I woke up to some noise, and got out of bed
to use the bathroom. I heard a sound from the living room on my way back to the
bed, so I took a look. John was sitting by the window, staring out at nothing.
He was crying, and shivering, and I wasn't sure what to do. I stood there for a
minute, and then he must have noticed my presence.
"He still has it, you know," were the first words
out of his mouth. At first I hadn't a clue what he was talking about. I was
still drowsy and very confused, but John spoke again. "It's gotten him
everything. He took it from me, and he can do whatever he wants. It lets him
achieve whatever he wants."
I realized that John was talking about the thing, the
object, that they'd found that day in the forest. I could hardly believe that
he was still thinking about that. We hadn't discussed it in years. Looking
back, I can only assume that he thought about it quite often.
"Um..." I said. The therapist wasn't yet running
at full steam.
"You don't understand," said John almost calmly,
preempting my attempt to steer the conversation away from the object.
"It's everything. I need it! I can't stop thinking about it, about that
day. Don't you know why Lilly went to him? Didn't you read what she wrote?
He'll always succeed. Anyone can see it - and I bet he carries it with him all
the time."
Here, here is where I finally lost it. I just could not
stand the curiosity any longer. Maybe it was tactless, but I had to ask, I just
had to ask John what that thing was.
"I don't remember," I said meekly, "what was
that thing you found in the forest?"
John turned slowly and looked at me. He looked at me as if
he hadn't seen me for a long time. It was a long, strange, disquieting look,
and I didn't like it. I can only guess now that he'd assumed I understood and
shared his opinions on the object, on Silver's theft, on its almost magical
properties.
"You don't know?"
"I never actually saw it."
"You weren't there?"
"Well, actually, I fell in some mud." I was happy
that John was distracted, at the very least.
"You know, all this time I haven't really been sure
what it is." I was stunned. "I saw it briefly, it's true, but that
was only briefly, and more than a decade ago." He stopped, and chuckled a
little. "Funny, actually. I have this image, this image of it in my mind,
this image I've been following forever, but it's more of a feeling than an
image. It's a feeling of success and confidence. That's what I need, Sam -
confidence."
I could tell I wasn't going to get a straight answer, and
frankly, I was tired of the whole stupid ordeal. I was likely also just plain
tired, seeing as it was probably three or four in the morning.
"I don't know, John, you've always seemed pretty
confident to me. Can we talk about it in the morning?"
"Yeah," he said, with a strange look. "We'll
figure it out."
So I went back to sleep, and I assume John did too. In the
morning things were clearer, and neither of us brought up the night before.
John went out to look for a job, Carol and I went to work, and the day passed.
It's amazing how quickly a given day can pass, whether you want it to or not.
That evening we were all together again and John informed us that he had to
make a phone call. It had been a week and half since he had talked to Lilly,
and I guessed correctly that he had abandoned his pride, and was going to call
his brother. He took the phone into the other room for some privacy, which
Carol and I would have gladly granted him, except that our apartment was small,
with very thin walls. We heard every word of his side of the conversation.
"Hi..." John's voice sounded pensive from the
beginning. "It's John... your brother... I know... no, she doesn't have to
talk to me... no, it's something else... I'm not mad... no, it's something else
I have to ask you." There was short pause. "Can I see it?" A
longer pause. I can only imagine that neither brother talked for a while. Then,
"You know exactly what I mean... Can I meet you somewhere? I just want to
see it... I need this, Silver, please... Um, your house? Near your house...
right... got it. Can we meet tonight? Tomorrow night. Fine... At 10:30? Right. I'll see you there."
The conversation was over.
Carol and I quickly became occupied so that John wouldn't know
that we had heard. He came back, giving no indication that anything strange had
just happened. He sat for a bit, staring at nothing, and then announced that
he'd like to sleep. Carol and I moved into the other room, and John turned off
his light. Knowing him, I'm fairly sure that he laid on the couch, awake and
thinking, into the early hours of the morning. Carol and I talked about it
briefly, but she obviously didn't know what was going on, and I felt that it
wasn't right to tell her everything. It isn't that I didn't trust her, of
course, just that I felt a wariness on her part. I don't think she wanted to be
drawn in to the whole thing; she could tell that there was a sadness to the
whole situation and decided to stay away, which was certainly a wise decision.
Caroline has always been very good about things like that. Intuitively
understanding and never jealous or curious. It's a rare and wonderful trait.
Next morning we could tell instantly that John was agitated.
He hardly spoke a word; he was lost in his own thoughts. I knew, of course. I
knew he was constructing the events of the coming night in his head. After
breakfast he told us that he wouldn't be home that night, that he had to meet
someone, that we shouldn't worry, and that he would spend the night in a hotel.
He went out for the day on his standard job search (I think he also had an
interview, which he probably either skipped or bombed), and Carol and I went to
work. There I received an unexpected phone call.
"Hello?" It was Lilly.
"Hi Sam," she said, "how're
you?"
"Fine, yourself?"
"Well, yeah, the last few weeks have been strange, I
must admit."
"Yeah, for me too. I bet you want to know how John
is."
"You got me, I admit it."
"Not so good." I wanted her to know the effects of
her actions. She was my friend too, of course, and I didn't want to make her
unhappy, but I had slipped comfortably into my therapist role.
"How not?"
"Well, he's looking for a job at least, and he's not
drinking as far as I can tell, but I don't think he's trying very hard. He's
obsessed with Silver, and Silver's success. He is, frankly, a bit lost."
"I know," said Lilly, in a soft voice. "I
know exactly how he is. I know him so well. The truth is, though, that I'm just
not sure if I ever want to go back."
I was pretty shocked. I had honestly assumed that she would
decide to see him again, at least. I was silent for a second, and she went on.
"I want to talk to you in person. Silver does too, and
he asked me to invite you over here for a night. You can come and have dinner,
oh and bring Carol, of course."
I wasn't sure, though it did sound fun. I was worried about
John, but conveniently he would be staying out that night, so I decided to
accept.
"Sounds good. I'll have to ask Carol, of course, but
she'll probably be delighted. I think she's been a bit worried about you, and
we've never seen Silver's place."
"Oh, it's wonderful," said Lilly. "The first
round of investing on his company has already made him a pretty wealthy man,
and he had enough money to start payments on something of a mansion. Oh, which
reminds me, he asked me to tell you that he'd schedule a limousine to pick you
up and everything, so you don't have to worry about the bus."
"Wow, I... I don't know about that." Silver's
generosity should not have surprised me.
"Don't say no. Just call me later after you talk to
Carol and we'll arrange everything. See you soon!"
"Bye," I said, because I couldn't think of
anything else to say. I decided it would be a fun night, though possibly a
little strange. I wondered about Lilly's current relationship with Silver, and
then called Carol. She thought it would be a great idea, so I let Lilly know,
and everything was set. After work I met Carol at home, we packed a small bag,
and before we knew it the car had arrived to take us north.
5.
Lilly and Silver were happy to see us. They greeted us
warmly at the door. John's name was not mentioned that night, and I suppose we
all tried not to think about him. We ate a nice lamb dinner together, which
Lilly and Silver cooked, and we played a board game and chatted late into the
night. If I had known how important that night was to be, I probably wouldn't
have spent it chatting, laughing, and drinking. As it was, everybody was very
loose and happy. Carol and I were both wondering about Silver and Lilly's
relationship, which was obviously very close. I don't really want to speculate
here.
Little did I know that around midnight, a bit before we all
went off to bed, John was leaving a strange and scary message on my answering
machine. In a choked voice that alternated between hysterical and strangely
calm he left a long message that I'll include here now, although I didn't hear
it until later. If only I had known beforehand! The message said:
Uh, hi, Sam. It's John. I just had a weird experience, and I, uh, decided
something. See, what happened was that Silver never showed up. (a pause) Yeah,
we were supposed to meet at this park by his house at 10:30, so that's when I
was there, and I looked everywhere. Sam, he stood me up! It was terrible. It
was dark, and I was alone, and then it started to rain. I got soaking wet and
didn't know where to go. I walked back to the bus stop, but there was no bus
coming for hours. Then I... Then I just started walking. Pretty soon I came to
this big bridge. I stood in the middle of the bridge and looked at the water...
(A pause, and a choked sob) I hit bottom, Sam. I thought I had already
hit bottom but this was worse. I looked at the water, and shivered, and looked
some more, and then I stood up on the guard-rail, and it all seemed so clear. I
could just jump. So I did it! Or I thought I did, but then I realized that I
was still standing there, standing swaying on the rail, looking at the water. I
didn't jump, and I knew I wasn't going to, so I climbed down again. Then a
thought hit me. (A third pause, and then continuing in a louder, faster
voice): I knew what to do! It's around midnight now, Sam, and I'm on a
payphone at a nearby gas station. I know where Silver lives, and if he didn't
want to meet with me, I'm going to meet with him. I'll let you know how it all
turns out tomorrow, Sam. (A long pause. I thought the message was over, but
then, in a near whisper): It's my turn, Sam. I'll let you know (A click).
And there we were, enjoying ourselves, not even thinking about John, or at
least I wasn't. Then we started yawning, and drifted contentedly off to bed.
Carol and I occupied the guest room next to the study on the second floor, and
Silver (and Lilly, I suppose, although we went to bed first) was in the main
bedroom across the hall. It was an enjoyable and romantic night.
I'm not sure how long we had been sleeping when I was
awakened by the noise of broken glass. I turned over slowly, and then came to
my senses. Broken glass! I think at this point I had some clue as to what it
might be. I got groggily out of bed and padded into the hall. There were more
sounds coming from the room next to ours. At this point Silver appeared on the
other side of the hall as well. I think he knew, or suspected, who was making
the noises as well. He took a quick look at me, and then strode toward the
study without saying a word. He entered, and I entered behind him. As I had
imagined, there was John, slightly bloody, standing next to a broken window,
caught in the act of searching through the room. He looked up as we entered.
"Where is it," he hissed. "Where is it!"
"Stay out of this," said Silver pointedly to me,
and strode forward. The room was dark, but I could see Silver reaching for
something around his neck, beneath his shirt. I didn't know what to do.
Interfere? Let the brothers meet? I didn't know what would happen one way or
the other. Silver pulled something free of his neck and held it in front of
him, and I heard John gasp. I inferred that this was the object, that thing
from the forest, the subject of John's obsession. Silver's body and the dark
were blocking my view, but I had to know what it was. I circled around the room
to the left, which put me behind a large couch and recliner setup. At that
moment the moon broke free of the rain clouds and shone in through the broken
window. A knife! Silver was holding a small, ornately jewelled dagger in his
hands. The blade was about four inches long and looked wickedly sharp. It
glittered and shone in the moonlight, and seemed to have a life of its own. I
could almost understand John's obsession.
Silver held the dagger out, and John fairly jumped over the
desk. He had been holding a crowbar behind his back, and before anyone could
act he struck Silver's forearm. The dagger fell to the floor, and Silver
stepped back, clutching his arm in pain. At this point I tried to get to the
brothers, of course, but I had forgotten about the numerous pieces of furniture
in front of me. I stepped forward and hit my foot, and then looked frantically
for a way around. During this time John snatched up the weapon from the floor
and held it carefully.
"Finally..."
"Give it back!" said Silver.
"Never." They approached each other, and John
raised the knife as if to strike. I finally managed to circle the couch, but I
tripped over a chair and landed hard on the floor. I looked up to see Silver
cowering, with John standing above him with the knife. John's eyes flashed
madly, and I knew that he would do it. Suddenly I heard a shout.
"No!" It was Lilly, who had just burst through the
door. She pushed Silver aside and faced John, who had already begun his
downward swing. I watched with horror as that split second timing substituted
Lilly's neck for Silver's face. She fell to the floor.
There was a shocked pause. The world, for a second, was
completely silent and still. Then Lilly moaned and time started anew.
"Wait," said John in a small voice, "I didn't
mean to..."
"Lilly!" Silver was crouched over the figure on
the floor. I could make out a pool of blood that was increasing at a terrifying
rate. I managed to stand up and crouch next to her too.
"Lilly," whispered Silver. At this point I noticed
Carol, who had recently arrived at the door. "I'll call an
ambulance," she said, and left. Silver and I were huddled around Lilly,
but we were helpless. She had lost what seemed like an inhuman amount of blood
and was now hardly moving. Suddenly her eyes focused past us, towards the
window. John had been standing a few steps away, staring helplessly at the
scene, mortified. He had been looking at Lilly, at the knife in his hands, and
back at us. As Lilly, with her last bit of strength, looked up at John, he took
the knife and plunged it under his ribs. With a grunt he fell forward, on the
dagger, on the floor. The room was again silent, with that terrible silence of
death.
I won't dwell on the aftermath of that night. Of course you
know that by the time the ambulance arrived, it was too late. How had it all
happened so quickly? Could I have done something? These questions will haunt me
forever, I fear. The police did not press charges against any of us, though
they offered us all grief counselling. Carol and I went home the next day:
Silver had withdrawn into a shell from which he would not emerge, while on the
outside he became blank and methodical. We didn't know how to talk with him,
what to do, so we took the bus home. I have heard that his business continues
to thrive, but we've visited him many times since, and he hasn't changed. He's
become empty, a mere shadow of the man he used to be. The deaths of Lilly and
John have affected us all terribly.
As far as this history is concerned, there are only a few
things left to tell. Nine months after that terrible night, Jonathan Justice
was born, our first child. The decision to name him after poor John Finn was
not a difficult one, but it certainly won't make that night any easier to
forget. Not that I can ever forget. Someday, when my son is much older, I'll
sit him down and tell him about the story of Lilly and John Finn. There is one
thing I won't be able to explain, though. When the police finally arrived
behind the ambulance, they asked about the murder weapon, as a matter of
course. They never did find it. Either Silver managed to grab it in the
confusion, or it went to the grave with John. At this point, though, I don't
think it really matters.