Chapter 9 #3
You would expect a sensational local crime to headline the front page of a local newspaper, but in Derry—the Peculiar Little City—they kept as quiet as possible about their atrocities.
The big story that day had to do with Russia, Great Britain, and the United States meeting in Geneva to discuss a possible nuclear test-ban treaty.
Below this was a story about a fourteen-year-old chess prodigy named Bobby Fischer.
At the very bottom of the front page, on the lefthand side (where, media experts tell us, people are apt to look last, if at all), was a story headlined MURDEROUS RAMPAGE ENDS IN 2 DEATHS.
According to the story, Frank Dunning, “a prominent member of the business community and active in many charity drives,” had arrived at the home of his estranged wife “in a state of inebriation” shortly after 8:00 P.M. on Friday night.
After an argument with his wife (which I certainly did not hear…
and I was there), Dunning struck her with a hammer, breaking her arm, and then killed his twelve-year-old son, Arthur Dunning, when Arthur tried to defend his mother.
The story was continued on page 12. When I turned there, I was greeted by a snapshot of my old frenemy Bill Turcotte.
According to the story, “Mr. Turcotte was passing by when he heard shouts and screams from the Dunning residence.” He rushed up the walk, saw what was going on through the open door, and told Mr. Frank Dunning “to stop laying about with that hammer.” Dunning refused; Mr. Turcotte spotted a sheathed hunting knife on Dunning’s belt and pulled it free; Dunning rounded on Mr. Turcotte, who grappled with him; during the ensuing struggle, Dunning was stabbed to death.
Only moments later, the heroic Mr. Turcotte suffered a heart attack.
I sat looking at the old snapshot—Turcotte standing with one foot placed proudly on the bumper of a late forties sedan, cigarette in the corner of his mouth—and drumming my fingers on my thighs.
Dunning had been stabbed from the back, not from the front, and with a bayonet, not a hunting knife.
Dunning hadn’t even had a hunting knife.
The sledgehammer—which was not identified as such—had been his only weapon.
Could the police have missed such glaring details?
I didn’t see how, unless they were as blind as Ray Charles.
Yet for Derry as I had come to know it, all this made perfect sense.
I think I was smiling. The story was so crazy it was admirable.
All the loose ends were tied up. You had your crazy drunk husband, your cowering, terrified family, and your heroic passerby (no indication what he’d been passing by on his way to).
What else did you need? And there was no mention of a certain Mysterious Stranger at the scene. It was all so Derry.
I rummaged in the fridge, found some leftover chocolate pudding, and hoovered it up while standing at the counter and looking out into my backyard.
I picked up Elmore and petted him until he wriggled to be put down.
I returned to my computer, tapped a key to magic away the screensaver, and looked at the picture of Bill Turcotte some more.
The heroic intervener who had saved the family and suffered a heart attack for his pains.
At last I went to the telephone and dialed directory assistance.
8
There was no listing for Doris, Troy, or Harold Dunning in Derry.
As a last resort I tried Ellen, not expecting anything; even if she were still in town, she’d probably taken the name of her husband.
But sometimes longshots are lucky shots (Lee Harvey Oswald being a particularly malignant case in point).
I was so surprised when the phone-robot coughed up a number that I wasn’t even holding my pencil.
Rather than redial directory assistance, I pushed 1 to call the number I’d requested.
Given time to think about it, I’m not sure I would have done that.
Sometimes we don’t want to know, do we? Sometimes we’re afraid to know.
We go just so far, then turn back. But I held bravely onto the receiver and listened as a phone in Derry rang once, twice, three times.
The answering machine would probably kick on after the next one, and I decided I didn’t want to leave a message. I had no idea what to say.
But halfway through the fourth ring, a woman said: “Hello?”
“Is this Ellen Dunning?”
“Well, I guess that depends on who’s calling.
” She sounded cautiously amused. The voice was smoky and a little insinuating.
If I didn’t know better, I would have imagined a woman in her thirties rather than one who was now either sixty or pushing it hard.
It was the voice, I thought, of someone who used it professionally.
A singer? An actress? Maybe a comedian (or comedienne) after all? None of them seemed likely in Derry.
“My name is George Amberson. I knew your brother Harry a long time ago. I was back in Maine, and I thought maybe I’d try to get in touch.”
“Harry?” She sounded startled. “Oh my God! Was it in the Army?”
Had it been? I thought fast and decided that couldn’t be my story. Too many potential pitfalls.
“No, no, back in Derry. When we were kids.” Inspiration struck. “We used to play at the Rec. Same teams. Palled around a lot.”
“Well, I’m sorry to tell you this, Mr. Amberson, but Harry’s dead.”
For a moment I was dumbstruck. Only that doesn’t work on the phone, does it? I managed to say, “Oh God, I’m so sorry.”
“It was a long time ago. In Vietnam. During the Tet Offensive.”
I sat down, feeling sick to my stomach. I’d saved him from a limp and some mental fogginess only to cut his lifespan by forty years or so? Terrific. The surgery was a success, but the patient died.
Meanwhile, the show had to go on.
“What about Troy? And you, how are you? You were just a little kid back then, riding a bike with training wheels. And singing. You were always singing.” I essayed a feeble laugh. “Gosh, you used to drive us crazy.”
“The only singing I do these days is on Karaoke Night at Bennigan’s Pub, but I never did get tired of running my mouth. I’m a jock on WKIT up in Bangor. You know, a disc jockey?”
“Uh-huh. And Troy?”
“Living la vida loca in Palm Springs. He’s the rich fella in the family.
Made a bundle in the computer biz. Got in on the ground floor back in the seventies.
Goes to lunch with Steve Jobs and stuff.
” She laughed. It was a terrific laugh. I bet people all over eastern Maine tuned in just to hear it.
But when she spoke again, her tone was lower and all the humor had gone out of it.
Sun to shade, just like that. “Who are you really, Mr. Amberson?”
“What do you mean?”
“I do call-in shows on the weekends. A yard-sale show on Saturdays—‘I’ve got a rototiller, Ellen, almost brand-new, but I can’t make the payments and I’ll take the best offer over fifty bucks.
’ Like that. On Sundays, it’s politics. Folks call in to flay Rush Limbaugh or talk about how Glenn Beck should run for president.
I know voices. If you’d been friends with Harry back in the Rec days, you’d be in your sixties, but you’re not.
You sound like you’re no more than thirty-five. ”
Jesus, right on the money. “People tell me I sound a lot younger than my age. I bet they tell you the same.”
“Nice try,” she said flatly, and all at once she did sound older. “I’ve had years of training to put that sunshine in my voice. Have you?”
I couldn’t think of a response, so I kept silent.
“Also, no one calls to check up on someone they chummed around with when they were in grammar school. Not fifty years later, they don’t.”
Might as well hang up, I thought. I got what I called for, and more than I bargained for. I’ll just hang up. But the phone felt glued to my ear. I’m not sure I could have dropped it if I’d seen fire racing up my living room curtains.
When she spoke again, there was a catch in her voice. “Are you him?”
“I don’t know what you—”
“There was somebody else there that night. Harry saw him and so did I. Are you him?”
“What night?” Only it came out whu-nigh, because my lips had gone numb. It felt as if someone had put a mask over my face. One lined with snow.
“Harry said it was his good angel. I think you’re him. So where were you?”
Now she was the one who sounded unclear, because she’d begun crying.
“Ma’am… Ellen… you’re not making any sen—”
“I took him to the airport after he got his orders and his leave was over. He was going to Nam, and I told him to watch his ass. He said, ‘Don’t worry, Sis, I’ve got a guardian angel to watch out for me, remember?
’ So where were you on the sixth of February in 1968, Mr. Angel?
Where were you when my brother died at Khe Sanh?
Where were you then, you son of a bitch? ”
She said something else, but I don’t know what it was.
By then she was crying too hard. I hung up the phone.
I went into the bathroom. I got into the bathtub, pulled the curtain, and put my head between my knees so I was looking at the rubber mat with the yellow daisies on it.
Then I screamed. Once. Twice. Three times.
And here is the worst: I didn’t just wish Al had never spoken to me about his goddamned rabbit-hole.
It went farther than that. I wished him dead.
9
I got a bad feeling when I pulled into his driveway and saw the house was entirely dark. It got worse when I tried the door and found it unlocked.
“Al?”
Nothing.