Chapter 9.6

“Billy Braithwaite could never look me in the eye again. He went back to school right after that night, and didn’t come into the Tavern again. People of his ‘station’ didn’t drink at the Tortoise, so I think he took to drinking at home by himself. I always thought that was why he never married. Who would want to live with a recluse?

“I saw him once, the day after the one-year anniversary of his incident with me. I was coming out of the pharmacy and he was headed in. I wouldn’t have noticed him except he was wearing a heavy sweatshirt with the hood up on a steamy August day. He looked away fast, but not before I saw two huge black eyes and a white bandage across his nose. I can only imagine what the sweatshirt was hiding.

“At that Sunday’s dinner I made mention of having seen him and the condition he was in. Gram gave her patented ‘oh dear,’ and Pap didn’t say a word; choosing to take a swig from his beer instead. Santiago let the hint of a smile tug at the corner of his mouth before wiping it away with his napkin upon receiving a look from Pap.”

Silence fell between us and we both went off with our own thoughts as the sun dipped down towards the Melanski. The slivers of river I could see through the trees glistened like fire. I thought about the mills, and my life.

I looked back on it in a new light that felt old. My emotions were always fragile. I was delicate. As I’d aged I’d assumed it was because I hadn’t had a father to toughen me up. My mother did her best, and she was as hard and tough as they come, but she wasn’t a father.

I looked up to Pap, but he wasn’t all that interested in me until I came to work for him, and by then it was too late. He’d already decided I was too soft and he only had a couple of years of life left.

Santiago had been the only other male in my life. He did treat me better than most of the other people I saw him interact with in town, but there was always a distance; more like an uncle or a much older brother. He’d sneak me beers and tell me stories of working in the cemetery, but he didn’t do any of the things I thought a father was supposed to; take me to ball games, get me to try out for sports, teach me how to work with my hands, tell me about life.

And still, a piece of me always wondered if he was my father and that’s why Pap let him work at the cemetery, and why he, Santiago, had treated me alright as a kid. Since I’d become an adult, whatever that is, I’d never had the courage to ask Ma. I’d asked all the time as a kid and her stock response was that he’d been an important man in Berwick who’d died in a mill fire years ago. 

That had always been enough, knowing he was important. It wasn’t now, but I still didn’t know how to ask, so I broke the silence, looking for an entry point.

“I guess that explains why Santiago was so angry when we buried Billy Braithwaite,” I said.

“Oh?”

I proceeded to tell my mother the episode of the burial and how it had driven the rift between us. She smiled when I told of Santiago urinating on the vault, shook her head and said, ‘Santiago’ with a false disdain.

“I’m sure he never would have told you this. He didn’t tell me until he had the diagnosis. Once a year after the assault had passed, he called Billy Braithwaite every day. Sometimes, if he’d been out late, he’d call in the middle of the night.

“He’d try to use a different phone each day, but called from the Tortoise most often. He never called from the cemetery, as he felt that would be a dead give away, but he assumed Billy knew anyway.

“He would tell Billy he was watching him and if he so much as looked in my direction or in the direction of another female, there wouldn’t be a person in the state who didn’t know what he had done that night.”

At this Ma turned and looked into my eyes. Her smile was sad, but her eyes were steel.

“I don’t want you to think any less of me, but I suppose I can’t help it if you do. I loved Santiago for making those calls. It’s awful, but the weakness and fear I felt behind the Tavern that night, I felt so helpless, and it was this one stupid man, boy really, who made me feel that way and knowing that Santiago put fear into him, well, it made me feel better.

“And knowing Santiago, when he said he called him every day, he called him every day. I’m sure it drove Billy mad.”

“Do you think that’s why he killed himself?”

“I don’t know why he did what he did, but I guess it wouldn’t surprise me.”

“Why did Santiago call him? Did he say?”

“Not in so many words, but I can guess. I think he did it for Pap. I don’t think Pap ever wanted Billy to have a moment’s peace. Pap would never have said as much, but even at that point in time, he and Santiago had a good read on one another, so I’m sure he said something in passing and Santiago took it and ran.”

“Do you know who beat Billy up?”

“I don’t, but I’m sure you can guess.”

Her statement hung in the air as the darkness fell around us though the sky still held the gentle light of the gloaming. Crickets and other night creatures began their songs. I fought with myself, struggling to find the courage to ask the question I needed the answer to, hoping it was somewhere in the darkness.

“So that’s why you cared for Santiago once he got sick?” my voice sounded thin in the darkness, “because of how he protected you and then tormented Billy the rest of his days?”

“Isn’t it enough?”

“No, no, that’s not what I meant,” my tongue tripped over the thoughts in my head, “of course it’s enough, and I’m not questioning why you did it. It just…”

“Seems strange because you can’t help remembering how miserable and angry he was and that those traits don’t deserve care, or love. And maybe, you’re wondering if I cared so much because you think he was your father.” I could feel her smile as she said this.

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Chapter 9.4

Ma reached out and took my hand. She squeezed it and continued.

“I squirmed under his lips. His stink and the heat from his body were nauseating. I tried hard not to vomit. And then I was released from the wall and on my hands and knees vomiting.

“He’d punched me. His fist was a solid rock slamming into my stomach. He stood over me breathing hard, ‘I like hard to get up to a point, but it is my birthday and I should get what I want.’ His words tumbled over themselves with each breath.

“I would have run then, god knows I wanted to, but I couldn’t get any air into my lungs. Fear had curled me into a ball on the ground and he still stood between me and any type of escape.

“As silent sobs went through me, I kept wary eyes on him. He stood over me, panting and moved his hands to the waist of his jeans. With the sound of the zipper, everything stopped. I was paralyzed against what was to come next. I began to shake and my crying was more audible.

“Looking back, I can’t help but feel self-loathing, this dirty feeling that somehow I deserved what happened, and guilt. I know I shouldn’t. I know it sounds ridiculous; I was the victim, but when I went to work at the Tavern, I’d promised myself to never let something like that happen to me. I am furious with myself for ever being in that situation. I hate how weak and impotent I let him make me feel.”

I squeezed Ma’s hand. I wanted to speak, to tell her it was in no way her fault, to lash out at the memory of Billy Braithwaite and the well-to-do of Berwick, but I’d promised to let her tell the story. 

She squeezed my hand, acknowledging the thoughts that she watched race across my face, then with a sad smile, she continued.

“It didn’t happen. I was curled up on the ground, a sniveling mess of snot and scared tears. Billy stood over me fumbling with himself, trying to get his partner excited about what was to come next. It must have been the alcohol. Or maybe a certain part of him knew what he was planning to do was wrong. I don’t know.

“He started cursing at himself and his partner. Then he started telling me it was my fault for not giving him what he wanted. He alternated between that and blaming me for giving him too many drinks. He said he’d seen the way I was looking at him all night as I brought beers to the table, and the least I could do was give him a kiss now that he’d taken the initiative to come talk to me. Tears formed at the corner of his eyes.

“Then he kicked me in the stomach. I’d just started to get regular breath again when his foot landed. Whatever was left in my stomach ended up on his shoe, enraging him further.

“Through my tears I saw the moonlight cross his face revealing a mixture of humiliation and confused anger. It was almost as though he knew what he was doing and was mad about it, but couldn’t stop himself.

“I tried to beg him to stop, but the words wouldn’t come. ‘This is your fault,’ he repeated over and over as he kicked me again and again. The kicks and curses rained down in a waterfall of pain. At a certain point, I stopped feeling anything and just begged god to make him stop.

“I was curled in on myself, arms and knees tucked so after the first two kicks all the others landed on them or were deflected. Each blow landed hard though the impact lessened with each kick. The pain was still real, throbbing throughout my body. Then all of a sudden they stopped.

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Chapter 9.3

“I couldn’t stand it. The air crackled with the silent electricity of the room’s tension. I knew whatever was going to happen next wasn’t going to be good, so I told Kenny Briggs – who was working the bar with me – I was heading out back to take a break.

“When I left, all eyes were still on Santiago. Everyone was still waiting. I pushed out through the back door and sat on a couple of empty kegs and stared at the moon. It was beautiful, hanging there large as life in the cloudless sky. If it hadn’t been so hot, or there’d been any sort of breeze, it would have been a perfect night.

“I’d just lit a cigarette when I heard the back door creak open. I assumed it was one of the servers coming out to escape the tension inside, so I kept looking at the moon.

“I was surprised when a voice slurred my name from the dark. I looked toward the door and saw an unfamiliar shape backlit in the doorway. It stumbled out towards me and I saw it was Billy Braithwaite.

“’Hey Linda,’ he drooled at me, ‘it’s my birthday.’

“Happy birthday Billy,’ I said. At the time, I wasn’t worried. I’d dealt with plenty of drunks over the years and figured that was all this was, just another drunk. And it was just Billy Braithwaite, a punk, but not a bad kid on the whole. 

“They’d been packing it away at Billy’s table, so I figured he’d missed the men’s room and gone through the backdoor instead. They were right next to each other, so it was a common enough mistake.

“He came a little closer, so that now he stood in front of me and said, ‘did you get me a present?’ I’d turned away when I realized who it was and was looking back at the moon, but there was something in his voice when he asked this question that caused me to look back at him.

“’I’ll buy you a drink,’ I said, hoping to placate him, ‘let’s go back inside and I’ll get you a shot and a Bud.’

“’I’ve already got plenty of those,’ he slurred, ‘I want something else.’

“At this, my heart started pounding in my chest and I couldn’t get air in my lungs. I knew without him saying another word what he wanted, so I began trying to think of a way to distract him so I could get away, or slow down whatever was to come next in hopes someone would come out for a break or make the same mistake with the doors that Billy had, so I asked, ‘what do you want?’

“’A kiss.’

“’I don’t think so Billy.’ I can still hear the quiver in my voice as I replied. God, the fear I felt…

“I had nowhere to go. Nowhere to run. He was standing over me, a massive shadow blocking out the sky. I tried to stand up, but he pushed me back down.

“’Now, give me my present,’ he said as he leaned in toward my face. He stank of onions, beer and sweat. His breath came in heavy gasps. I turned my head away at the last instant and his nose ended up crunching into the side of my head. Not hard enough to do damage, but hard enough to get his attention.

“’Playing hard to get,’ he smiled, a drunken shine in his eye, ‘I like that.’ He moved his hands to my arms, shoving me from where I sat to a position pinned against the wall.

“’Not a sound,’ he breathed at me, ‘not a single word,’ and he moved in to kiss me again. I was so afraid. I didn’t turn my head this time.”

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