Caleb #2
His head came up at that. So I gave him the rest, because he had a right to it.
“A shift broke her. A family came into the bay off a shooting — little kids, one of them with both arms around the others and his face turned away so he wouldn’t have to see it.
It put her straight back in that house in Austin.
She crossed her own yard at first light trying to walk it off, and I was across the road, I got to her before she went down.
She came apart on her kitchen floor and she told me all of it — your folks, the back door, the two shots, the pantry you put her in with your arm clamped across her face so she wouldn’t have to watch.
I had her through every hour of it and into the morning. ”
Something went through him that none of the rest of it had reached.
“Why didn’t she call me.” It barely cleared his teeth as a question.
It was a man finding out that the thing he’d been to his sister for eighteen years had, on the worst night she’d had since the first one, been somebody else. “I’m the one she calls.”
“She didn’t call anybody. She tried to outrun it across a lawn at dawn, on her own, like she does with everything.” I held his eyes. “I took care of her that night. I’ve taken care of her every day since that she’d let me. And I mean to keep on doing it.”
He stared at me a long beat. Whatever it did to him, he did with it on the inside, where I wasn’t allowed to look. Then he set his jaw and went back to the thing he’d driven over to say.
“She doesn’t know where you came from. What your father’s club was — what it armed.
” He held his voice level, and it cost him to keep it there.
“And when she finds out, because a thing like that does not stay in the ground, it’ll take her apart on top of everything she already carries.
So that’s what I came to say. Step back from her.
Now. Before this goes any deeper than it already has. ”
I thought about what stepping back would take — a cold, false week built with my own hands, and then living across a road from the result of it. I couldn’t.
I didn’t take my hands off the bench. “It’s already deep,” I said.
“I’m gone for her. And I’m about as sure as I get of anything that she’s gone for me too.
” I gave him the one sentence about myself that has never once needed checking, plain, no weight added because it didn’t need any.
“I’d sooner take off a limb than hurt her. ”
It was the truest thing I owned, and I was saying it to the one man alive with the most standing to call me a liar about her. I let it sit between us and didn’t add to it.
He didn’t tell me he believed it. He wasn’t going to hand me that, and I didn’t need him to. “Meaning it isn’t going to be enough.”
“I know it isn’t.” I held his eyes. “I’m going to do the work anyway.
And I’m not stepping back from her — I’m going to tell her.
” I gave him the rest of it, because he’d earned the rest of it by driving over here.
“After I’ve sat down with my father. You just stood in my shop and half-confirmed a thing I’ve been carrying on my own since the night she told me how they died.
Before I put it in her hands, I’m going to know exactly what I’m putting there.
The true size of it — not the courtroom version, the real one. ”
“She doesn’t have the facts,” he said. “If she had them she wouldn’t choose you, and you know it. You’re letting her stand in a room and pick you with half the lights off.”
“I think you’re wrong about what she’d choose.
” It came out harder than anything had yet, and I let it come.
“And I think you’ve been deciding what she’s allowed to carry since she was twelve years old — for the best reason a man ever had, and without once having the right to.
But it doesn’t matter what I think, because I’m not asking her to pick me blind.
I’m going to tell her, and then where she stands is hers. ”
“When?”
“When I’ve got the truth out of my father and when she’s not fresh off a night shift. This week. I’m not going to give you a date that’s a lie just to get you off my step. I’m going to do it, and I’m going to do it right.”
He looked at me a long time. Whatever he was weighing, he kept it off his face. “Tell her,” he said. “Or I will.” Not a threat. He said it the way he’d state any other fact in his file.
Neither of us put a name to what we’d just done — two men settling between us when and how a woman got let in on her own life, with her across town and not in the room to be asked.
He thought he’d made me move; I thought I’d refused to be moved.
Each of us certain he was the one looking out for her.
That was the wrong, lying in plain sight on the floor between us, and we both stood there holding it in a fist and calling it winning.
He moved toward the door. Got to it. Stopped with his hand on it and didn’t turn around.
“And, Caleb,” he half-turned, his voice dropping lower than it had gone all night, “she doesn’t need to know I came here.”
It wasn’t for her. I heard that much in it.
He didn’t want tonight kept from her so much as kept from himself — the man who’d driven over to warn her off her own man and been told no in a shop that wasn’t his.
And I’d wanted the shop tonight, instead of my own kitchen, for a reason that rhymed with it: there are things a man can’t keep a clean face through, for the person he’d die for.
So I gave him the second lie of the night with both eyes open, and knew I was doing it this time, which was the worse of the two.
“I won’t tell her you came,” I said. “The rest of it she gets from me, but not tonight.”
He took that, and I thought we were done.
We weren’t. Hand still on the door, he turned his head back to me, and what came was quiet — no heat in it, which was what gave it teeth.
“I’ve read your jacket. I know what you can do, and I don’t doubt you’d put yourself between her and damn near anything that came at her.
But understand me. Anything touches her — your watch or not — there’s no team on this earth that finds what’s left of you. I’ll see to it myself, and I’ll sleep.”
It was the one thing all night that got under the lid. “I spent thirteen years in the teams,” I said, and left the edge on it. “I know how to keep a person alive. I’d do it for her with my own life and not think twice.”
“I believe you. That’s the problem.” Flat, level — the real thing, down at last. “It was never whether you’d take the bullet.
It’s that her standing close enough to be loved by you is what calls the bullet down.
You’re not the danger, Maddox. You’re the door it comes through.
And there’s no training on this earth that fixes that. ”
I knew he was right — because I’d watched a man do his arithmetic on her across the dark of my father’s yard the night before, and the only reason he’d been doing it was me. Loving her was the thing that aimed it at her.
“I’d kill for her too,” he said, quiet, laying his card down face-up beside mine so we both saw the hand was the same one.
“Same as you’d die. So don’t take me for a man who doesn’t know what’s in you right now.
I know it to the letter. That’s the whole trouble — you won’t step back, I can’t make you, and the thing I’m afraid of doesn’t care which of us is right. ”
He didn’t wait on me for an answer. He went down the steps; I heard the truck door, the engine catching. The headlights swung off the high windows and were gone, and the quiet came back into the shop.
I stood at the bench a while. The frame glowed under the lamp.
My father has the math, I thought. And I’ve run out of room to keep not asking him for it.
I’d been carrying the question since the hog roast like a round I hadn’t decided where to put, and somewhere in the last hour — between the star on his hip and the thing I’d just promised her brother I’d do — I’d set it down where it went.
I shut off the bench lamp and found my keys by feel.
I pulled the door behind me and stood a second in the lot with the cool coming up off the asphalt and the smell of cut grass from somewhere down the row.
The town was quiet — a weeknight, nobody in trouble yet.
Back across it she’d be asleep by now, behind the white fence she’d painted herself one summer, having spent her last clear thought of the day on a heart she sent a man who was lying to her for her own good.
I got in the truck and turned it toward the county road, toward the porch light I’d been driving out to since I was a boy.
I couldn’t do one more day on the wrong side of this.
I pulled out of the lot and the town fell away behind me, and the road ran out dark and straight ahead, a road I’d driven a thousand times, out to my father and the only honest answer either of us had left to give.