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    The Other Mrs (ARC)

    Page 22
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      tune to The Addams Family theme song, clapping twice between each line. Though I hear him, I don’t reply. “Do you like it?”

      he asks, louder this time, nearly screaming.

      I nod my head, but I’m just barely listening. I hear his song,

      but my mind can’t process it because all I’m thinking about is

      the missing knife.

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      Tate doesn’t like the brush-off. His posture shifts; he throws

      his arms across himself and begins to pout.

      Will turns to me, wrapping his arms around me. It feels good,

      being held.

      “I’ve looked into home security systems,” he tells me, return-

      ing to the conversation we started on the phone earlier today,

      about whether or not we’re safe here. “I set up an appointment

      to have one installed. And let’s give Officer Berg a chance to get

      to the bottom of this, before we cut and run. This is our home,

      Sadie. Whether we like it or not, for now this is our home. We

      have to make do.”

      I pull back from his embrace. He’s trying to be reassuring.

      But I don’t feel reassured. I meet his eye, and ask, “But what if

      a security system can’t protect us?”

      His look is quizzical. “What do you mean?” he asks.

      “What if there’s a threat inside our home?”

      “You mean as if someone got past the security system?” he

      asks, assuring me that we could keep the house armed at all

      times, that these things are monitored twenty-four hours a day.

      If the alarm was triggered, help would be on its way almost in-

      stantly.

      “It’s not an intruder I’m thinking about,” I say. “It’s Imogen.”

      Will shakes his head, disbelieving. “Imogen?” he asks, and

      I say yes. “You can’t possibly think—” he begins, but I inter-

      rupt him.

      “Our k-n-i-f-e,” I tell him, spelling the word out for Tate’s benefit. Tate can spell, but not well enough. “Our boning k-n-i-f-e isn’t here. I can’t find it,” I say, admitting in a forced whisper, “She scares me, Will.”

      I think about her in our bedroom the other night, watch-

      ing us sleep. The strange exchange we had in the hallway. The

      photograph of her dead mother that she carries around on her

      phone. These are abnormal behaviors.

      And then there’s the padlock on her bedroom door. “There’s

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      MARY KUBICA

      something in there she doesn’t want us to find,” I say, finally ad-

      mitting to him that I was in there the other day, before the lock

      was installed. I tell him about the picture I found with the man’s

      face scratched off, the Dear John note, the condoms. “She’s been

      sleeping with someone,” I tell him. “A married man, I think,”

      based on the content of the note.

      Will doesn’t say much to this. He’s more disappointed that I

      would violate her privacy by snooping through her room. What

      he does say, however, is that there’s nothing criminal about sleep-

      ing with a married man. “She’s sixteen,” Will reminds me. “Six-

      teen-year-olds do stupid things all the time. You know why she

      put that lock on the door?” Will asks, saying before I can reply,

      “She’s a teenager, Sadie. That’s why. She doesn’t want people

      coming into her room. How would you feel if she went snoop-

      ing through your stuff?” he asks.

      “It wouldn’t matter,” I tell him. “I have nothing to hide. But

      Imogen is an angry girl with a short fuse, Will,” I argue. “She

      worries me.”

      “Try putting yourself in her shoes, Sadie. You don’t think

      you’d be angry?” he asks, and of course I’d be grieving and un-

      comfortable—my mother dead by her own hand, me forced

      to live with people I don’t know—but would I be angry? “We

      have no idea what Imogen saw that day,” he asserts. “If we’d

      seen what she must have seen, we’d be on a short fuse too. You

      can’t unsee that.

      “Besides,” Will tells me, coming back to the knife, “I used

      the boning knife just the other day to skin chicken for a casse-

      role. You’re all worked up for nothing, Sadie,” he says, asking

      if I checked the dishwasher for the knife. I didn’t. I didn’t even

      think to look in the dishwasher.

      But it doesn’t matter right now, because my mind has moved

      on from the knife and to the picture on Imogen’s cell phone.

      The one of Alice dead. I know exactly what Imogen saw the

      day her mother died, though I’m reluctant to tell Will because

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      the last thing he needs to see is what Alice went through. And

      yet I tell him anyway because it isn’t right, it isn’t normal, for Imogen to have taken a picture of Alice postmortem and for

      her to be carrying it around. What is she doing with it anyway?

      Showing her friends?

      I look away from Will. I confess to him that I do know what

      Imogen saw. “Imogen took a picture that day before the coro-

      ner took Alice away. She showed it to me,” I say.

      Will grows suddenly silent for a moment. He swallows hard.

      “She took a picture?” he asks after some time. I nod. “What

      did she look like?” he asks, meaning Alice.

      I’m generally nondescript. “Well, she was d-e-a-d,” I tell him, treading lightly. “But she looked peaceful,” I lie. I don’t tell him about claw marks, the severed tongue. I don’t tell him about the

      state of the attic, the toppled storage boxes, the broken lamp, the pitchpoled telescope. But I recreate them in my mind, imagining Alice’s thrashing body knocking into these things, toppling

      them, as her oxygen supply was siphoned off.

      As I dredge up the images of them, something gets under

      my skin. Because I picture the boxes and the lamp overturned,

      and yet the stepstool—the one Alice used to raise herself up to

      the height of the noose—stood upright. I remember that now.

      How could the very thing that Alice would have needed to

      kick away to go through with the suicide not be overturned?

      Even more, the stool was out of reach of Alice’s body. Which

      makes me think someone else yanked it from beneath her feet.

      In which case, was it even a suicide? Or was it murder?

      I turn white. A hand goes to my mouth. “What’s wrong?”

      Will asks. “Everything alright?” he asks. I shake my head, tell

      him no, I don’t think so.

      “I just realized something,” I say, and he asks with urgency,

      “What?”

      “The picture of Alice. On Imogen’s phone,” I say.

      “What about it?” he asks.

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      MARY KUBICA

      “The police hadn’t come yet when Imogen took the picture.

      It was only Imogen,” I say, wondering how much time lapsed

      in between her arriving home and calling the police. Was it

      enough time for Imogen to stage a suici
    de? Imogen is tall, but

      she’s not heavily built. I can’t imagine she’d have had the strength to haul Alice to the third floor—even if Alice was drugged and

      unconscious, unable to fight back—to hoist her up and into the

      noose. Not alone. Someone would have had to help her. I con-

      sider the friends she smokes with while waiting for the ferry to

      arrive. Clad in all black, rebellious and oppositional, full of self-loathing. Would they have helped?

      “In the picture, Will, the stepstool we found in the attic. The

      one Alice would have had to use to do what she did. Everything

      else was knocked over. But the stool remained upright. And it

      was too far away for Alice to reach. If she’d been alone, the stool would have been knocked over, and it would have been much

      closer to her feet.”

      He shakes his head. “What are you getting at?” he asks, and I

      see a change come over him. His posture shifts. Ruts form be-

      tween his eyes. He frowns at me. He knows what I’m suggesting.

      “How can we know for certain,” I ask, “that it was a s-u-i-c-

      i-d-e? There was no investigation. But there was also no note.

      Don’t people who k-i-l-l themselves usually leave a note? Officer Berg said it himself, remember? He told us he never pegged

      Alice for the type.”

      “How would Berg know,” Will asks angrily, “if Alice was the

      suicide type?” It isn’t like Will to get angry. But this is his sister we’re talking about. His niece. His flesh and blood.

      “I don’t trust Imogen,” I admit. “She scares me,” I say again.

      “Listen to yourself, Sadie,” Will says. “First you accuse Imo-

      gen of taking our knife. Now you’re saying she killed Alice.”

      Will is too worked up to spell the words out, though he mouths

      them for Tate’s benefit. “You’re all over the place. I know she

      hasn’t exactly been welcoming, but she’s done nothing to lead

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      me to believe she’s capable of murder,” he says, seemingly hav-

      ing already forgotten about the writing on my car window just

      the other day. Die.

      “Are you really suggesting that this was a murder made to

      look like a suicide?” he asks, disbelieving.

      Before I can reply, Tate again begs, “Please Mommy, play with

      me.” My eyes drop to his, and they look so sad, my heart aches.

      “Alright, Tate,” I tell him, feeling guilty that Will and I are

      going on like this, ignoring him. “What do you want to play?”

      I ask him, voice softening though my insides are still in a tizzy.

      “Do you want to play charades, or a board game?”

      He tugs hard on my hand and is chanting, “Statue game,

      statue game!”

      The wrenching on my hand has begun to hurt. It’s wearing

      on my nerves, because not only is he pulling on my hand, hurt-

      ing me, but he’s trying to turn my body, to make it go ways

      it doesn’t want to go. It’s subliminal, the way I yank my hand

      suddenly away, holding it above my head, out of reach of his. I

      don’t mean to do it. But there’s an immediacy to it. So much so

      that Tate flinches like he’s been slapped.

      “Please Mommy,” Tate begs, eyes suddenly sad as he stands

      before me and leaps for my hand. I try to be patient, I really do,

      but my mind is whirling in a dozen different directions and I

      don’t know what Tate means by this statue game. He’s begun

      to cry. Not a real cry but crocodile tears, which wear on me

      even more.

      That’s when I catch sight of the doll I kicked aside over an

      hour ago. Her limp body is pressed against the wall. “Put your

      toys away and then we’ll play,” I tell him, and he asks, “What

      toys?”

      “Your doll, Tate,” I say, losing patience. “Right there,” I

      tell him, motioning to the floppy doll with her frizzy hair and

      marble-like eyes. She lies on her side, dress torn along a seam,

      one shoe missing.

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      MARY KUBICA

      Tate’s look is leery. “It’s not mine,” he says, as if this is something I should know. But of course it’s his—it’s not like any of

      the rest of us still play with toys—and my first thought is that

      Tate is embarrassed for having been caught playing with a doll.

      “Put it away,” I say, and Tate comes back with a quintessen-

      tial childish reply.

      “You put your doll away,” he says, hands on hips, tongue thrust out at me. It startles me. It’s not like Tate to act this way. Tate is my good boy, the kind and obedient one. I wonder what’s

      gotten into him.

      But before I can answer, Will does so for me. “Tate,” he says,

      voice stern. “Do as your mother says and put your toy away.

      Right now,” he says, “or your mother won’t play with you.”

      Having no choice, Tate picks the doll up by a single leg and

      carries her upside down to his bedroom. Through the floors, I

      hear the thump of her plastic head hitting the hardwood.

      When he returns, Tate chants, “Statue game, statue game,”

      over and over again until I’m forced to admit that I don’t know

      what this statue game is. That I’ve never played it before, that

      I’ve never heard of it.

      It’s then that he snaps and calls me a liar. “Mommy is a liar!”

      is what he screams, taking my breath away. He says, “Yes you

      do!” as his crocodile tears turn to real tears. “You do know

      what it is, you liar.”

      I should reprimand him, I know. But I’m speechless and

      stunned. For the next few seconds, I can’t find the words to

      speak as Tate scampers from the room, bare feet sliding on the

      wooden floors. Before I can catch my breath, he’s gone. In the

      next room, I hear his body drop to the ground. He’s thrown

      himself down somewhere, as limp as the doll. I do nothing.

      Will steps closer, his hand brushing the hair from my eyes.

      I close my eyes and lean into his touch. “Maybe a warm bath

      would help you relax?” he suggests, and it’s only then that I re-

      member I haven’t showered today. That instead I’m wet through

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      from the run in the rain. My clothes, my hair have yet to com-

      pletely dry. There’s a smell to me. It’s not a good one.

      “Take your time,” Will tells me. “Tate and I will be fine. I’ll

      take care of this,” he says, and I feel grateful for that. That Will will clean up this mess I’ve made with Tate. By the time I return from my bath, everything will be as good as new.

      On the way upstairs I call back to Tate that we’ll play some-

      thing just as soon as I’m through. “Okay, buddy?” I ask, lean-

      ing over the banister where I see him, body thrown across the

      arm of the sofa, tears seeping in the marigold fabric. If he hears

      me, he makes no reply.

      Beneath my feet, the steps creak. Upstairs in the hall, I find

      the sheets stripped from the beds, just where I left them. I’ll re-

     
    place them later, put them back on the beds just as dirty as they

      were then I took them off.

      The darkness of the outside world seeps into the home, mak-

      ing it hard to believe it’s not the middle of the night. I flip a light in the hallway on, but then just as quickly turn it off, on the off chance that someone is standing in the street, staring through

      the windows at Will, Tate and me.

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      Mouse

      Not long after they brought Bert the guinea pig home, he started

      getting fat. So fat that he could barely move. He spent his days

      laid out, flat on his big belly like a parachute. Her father and

      Fake Mom told Mouse she was feeding him too many carrots.

      That was why he was getting fat. But Mouse couldn’t help her-

      self. Bert loved those carrots. He made a squealing sound every

      time Mouse brought him some. Even though she knew she

      shouldn’t, she kept on feeding him the carrots.

      But then one day, Bert gave birth to babies. That was how

      Mouse knew that Bert wasn’t a boy after all, but that he was a

      girl, because she knew enough to know that boys don’t have

      babies. Those babies must have already been inside Bert when

      they got her from the pet store. Mouse wasn’t sure how to take

      care of guinea pig babies but it didn’t matter because none of

      those babies survived. Not a single one.

      Mouse cried. She didn’t like to see anything get hurt. She

      didn’t like to see anything die.

      Mouse told her real mom what happened to Bert’s babies. She

      told her what those babies looked like when they were born and

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      THE OTHER MRS.

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      how hard it was for Bert to get those babies out of her insides.

      She asked her mother how those babies got inside of Bert, but

      Mouse’s real mom didn’t say. She asked her father too. He told

      her he’d tell her another day, when she was older. But Mouse

      didn’t want to know another day. She wanted to know that day.

      Fake Mom told her that it was probably Bert’s fault those ba-

      bies died, because Bert didn’t take care of them like a good mom

      should. But Mouse’s father said to her in private that it wasn’t

      really Bert’s fault, because Bert probably just didn’t know any

      better because she had never been a mom before. And some-

     


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