
Take It to the Grave Part 5 of 6
Author
Zoe Carter
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16.8K
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4
Maisey
I looked up as Bridget walked into the breakfast room. Yes, Sarah and Warwick had a breakfast room. A different room for every meal, pretty much, not counting when we eat outside on the terrace. This one was nice and bright, with the same floor-to-ceiling windows that graced the rest of the house, giving a stunning view down to the beach and to the sea beyond. It was the kind of room youād see in a magazine, potted plants throughout, a couple sitting at the large table, separated by a zip code, the distinguished man reading the paper while the attractive woman read the latest country club newsletter, sipping coffee out of fine-bone china, with a matching coffeepot on the table. Well, Iāll be damned. I watched as Bridget set a tray on the table, and started to lift the stainless coffeemaker and several coffee cups onto the table. Fine porcelain china, of course. This was followed by a white patterned teapot with matching sugar and creamer. Very pretty.
Sarah and Warwick walked in, as if on some sort of subtle cue from the staff that breakfast was ready to be served...or else the staff had an in-built sensor when it came to their employers. I watched as Warwick smiled as he held out a chair for Sarah and helped her subside in her seat, because apparently my sister couldnāt sit without assistance. My lips tightened. I wanted toāno, needed toātalk to my sister. Alone.
Last nightās conversation had raised more questions for me. What the hell was going on? I hadnāt slept a wink. Iād heard some whimpering from Sarah and Warwickās room, but it hadnāt lasted long. At least, I didnāt think so. I must have blacked out, because I remember blinking up at the ceiling as my awareness returned. But it wasnāt sleep. I knew that much.
āSorry to keep you waiting, Maisey. We had to go to the doctor to get something for Sarah.ā Warwick took his seat and moved it even closer to his wife, gazing at her intently as he sat. He wore a collared, short-sleeved cotton shirt. The red-and-blue-checked shirt showed off his tanned arms, and suited his coloring. I couldnāt help remembering the way heād held her arm at the picnic, the way heād spoken to her. He may look as hot and gorgeous as a cologne model, but his shine was definitely beginning to dull for me, especially after seeing his reaction last night to the lullaby. How could he not see how freaked out Sarah had been?
I opened my mouth to ask what theyād needed. The suggestion that my sister needed medical care roused my nurseās curiosity, but Warwick interrupted.
āCan I get you something, sweetheart? What about some tea?ā
Sarah just sat there, in her white lace-and-linen frock that looked just a little too snug to be comfortable, and Warwick poured her some tea, filling the very pretty porcelain cup close to the brim. Then, using the silver tongs on the tray, he picked up a slice of lemon and put it delicately into her tea. I looked at Sarahās face, waiting to see how she responded to Warwickās attentiveness.
She didnāt.
āSarah, are you okay?ā She looked totally zoned out, and I wanted to talk more about what weād discussed last night. I wanted to talk about the emails. I wanted to talk about Frankie. God, I kept replaying that memory over and over in my mind: drinking from the glass, running to the pool and pulling Frankie out. I stared at the food in front of me. I couldnāt really stomach anything at the moment. I justāI needed Sarah to tell me what had really happened, to make sense of the jumble in my head.
She stared at the table blankly, and my brows dipped. I tried to meet her gaze. The emptiness of her eyes worried me like nothing else could. My fingers played with the drop of the crisp white linen tablecloth, twisting the fabric below the level of the table.
āSarah?ā
Warwick gave her a gentle nudge, and Sarah lifted her eyes to meet mine.
Iād seen that kind of blank stare before. My fingers tightened on the fabric. Iād first seen it on my mother as sheād subsided on the chaise longue, her body so bruised and battered. Iād seen it when Sarah had faced up to Peter after Caleb had left. It wasnāt so much what was in the eyes as what wasnāt. The resignation and despair was alarming to see, but it was the absence of hope that most concerned me. Scared me. Was it the emails that had this effect on her, or something else?
āSarah, is everything okay?ā My gaze darted to Warwick. This probably wasnāt something I should start in front of him, especially if my suspicions were correct, but damn it, I couldnāt just sit there and ignore her strange behavior.
āSheāll be fine,ā Warwick said. āSheās exhausted, poor love, what with a baby who doesnāt sleep through the night, and the christening today, and the weather...ā He waved his hand carelessly, then draped his arm along the back of Sarahās chair. āWeāre just making sure she gets all the care and attention she needs, isnāt that right, Sarah?ā
Sarah nodded slowly.
Oh, man, sheās on something good.
I had to agree with Lucy. Whatever the doctor had prescribed for her, it was strong.
A baby. A party. The weather. What other vague excuses could he pack into one sentence?
I smiled. āWell, perhaps I can sit with her out on the terrace for a little while this morning...ā I desperately needed to talk to Sarah alone. I had initially shrugged off the emailsāthey just didnāt make sense, at the time. But when those Frankie flashbacks started, it all began to take on a more sinister meaning. Quite frankly, I was scared shitless. Someone knew. Someone knew, and was toying with me. With Sarah. Which meant that my flashbacks were real.
āOh, I think sheāll be far too busy getting ready for the christening this afternoon,ā Warwick stated, politely vetoing my attempt to talk to my sister alone. His smooth manipulation brought to mind another man who used separation and exclusion like a weapon.
I remembered when weād heard Peter had died. It wasnāt too long after the night Caleb had left. Weād heard Caleb had joined the army, and Peter had gone to visit him at the barracks. Of course, we were not permitted to go. It was as though Peter had this talent for choosing the most painful torment. I couldnāt see my mom, and I couldnāt see Caleb. For Sarah and me, it was us, and Peter, and nobody else. I think that was the way Peter liked it, for some reason.
You need to eat.
I donāt think I can stomach anything at the moment, Lucy.
Eat, Maisey. You need your energy; you need to think clearly.
Lucy had a point. I reached for a bagel and slathered some cream cheese on it, then took a bite, chewing thoughtfully as I gazed at my vacant-eyed sister across the table. My stomach heaved, yet I still kept chewing. Peter had crashed his car on the way back from the barracks, and I still remembered that rainy afternoon when the police had knocked on our door. The two officers had stood there, wearing these dark rain slickers, the water dripping off the brims of their hats, their expressions so stern, so grim, and Iād been scared at first. The last time the police had visited, Frankie was a blanket-covered body in the backyard, and the officers had put my mother in the car and taken her away. But the fear had swiftly changed when they very gently explained why they were there. For the briefest of moments, I felt the sweetest relief. Iād wanted to hug them, the tall, uniformed men standing on our front porch. Peter was gone. No more beatings. No more eating rotten food or cleaning the kitchen floor at midnight until Peter was satisfied that it was spotless enough. For just a series of milliseconds, I thought that weād be fine. I knew Sarah was still devastated over Caleb, but I felt with just the two of us, weād make it through. We could be there for each other in a way that wasnāt possible before.
Just the two of us, making it on our own.
I managed to swallow the piece of bagel, and took another bite. Warwick continued to serve Sarah with attentiveness. I watched as he behaved so solicitously toward my sister. Anyone would think he cared deeply for his wife. From where I sat, it had a tinge of creepy to it.
I almost snorted.
āDo you need help with anything for the party, Sarah?ā Maybe we could talk as weāI donāt know. What does a christening involve? Party favors? Balloons? I suspected that was all a little passĆ© for Eleanor Taylor-Coxās grandson. āI can help with...stuff. It will be fun, you and me.ā
Yeah, you and me. I sighed. At one point, Iād have given anything for that, for it just to be Sarah and me.
And me. Donāt forget me. Remember, I was there when you needed her the most.
Lucy was right. I donāt know how I would have managed after that night, if it werenāt for Lucy.
The officers had asked us each to pack an overnight bag, and we went into emergency foster care. Emergency foster care became a little more permanent. Well, as far as foster care could be permanent. We shifted from home to home. Sometimes we were in a dorm situation with other girls who were seriously fucked up. Sometimes we were in an actual home. The first real āhomeā situation had been a shock to my system. I wasnāt so naive as to think weād be adopted by a millionaire on Park Avenue, but still, the flickering light fittings, the crater in the back of the bedroom door that looked like the perfect size for a fist and the threadbare, scratchy blankets that Iād shivered under for weeks, Sarah doing her little zone-out trick...it was one of the loneliest, scariest times in my life. After that, things got a little patchy. Sarah wasnāt the only one zoning out. Then I found out it could get worse.
When we learned Alice was going to be released from prison early for good behavior, Iād actually felt joy. Things were going to be okay. I somehow convinced myself that it would be like before, as though Peter and Frankie had been a story in some alternate universe, and that we could pick up from that time just after Dad died, and carry on in our own parallel timeline. Iād ignored the fact that Alice had found solace at the bottom of the bottle, that both Sarah and I had largely been abandoned by our mother during that period. No, this time it would be different. This time it would be better.
Alice had come home, and I was devastated. This dry shell of a woman was not my mother. She rarely talked, and when she did, it was barely above a whisper. Her shoulders were hunched, and sheād been so pale, so thin. She couldnāt make eye contact with me or Sarah. Sheād seemed defeated, that day on the chaise longue. Hurt. Miserable. Forlorn. Now, though, it was amplified. Sheād vanished within herself, and the woman walking around our home was a stranger. A sad, quiet little waif whom I did not recognize.
āI think everything is under control. My mother is organizing it. Sheās got a lot of experience in this sort of thing.ā Warwick smiled back at me across the table. I nodded, but couldnāt help staring at my sister.
When Sarah was seventeen and I was fourteen, Sarahād decided sheād had enough. My sister didnāt want to be in the same house as my mother, and I could understand to a certain extentāI mean, letās face it, Mom wasnāt a tea party to be around. I remember her waiting for me to get home from school one day. She was leaning against the railing on the front porch, and sheād hugged me, told me she was moving to New York, and then sheād picked up an old suitcase she must have found at Goodwill, trudged down the steps and walked off into the sunset.
Literally, Lucy said inside my mind. The sun was setting as she strode off down the street. Man, just look at her now.
I lifted the coffee cup to my lips, sipped from it, before placing it ever so gently back on its saucer. It clinked. My hands were shaking. I clenched my fingers for a moment.
Donāt lose it, Maisey. Your sister might be off with the fairies, but youāve got to hold it together. We have to find out the truth.
ButāI need Sarah for that.
Sheās already cracking under the pressure, Maisey.
Sheās cracking under the pressure? What about me? I killed my brother.
I held the napkin to my mouth as my stomach heaved. I canāt do this. I canāt play happy families knowing what I know.
Thatās the problem, though. You donāt know. Frankie wasnāt in the water for very long, remember? What really happened?
I swallowed past the lump in my throat.
After Sarah left, Iād discovered just what the other side of lonely looked like. The darker side, the one colored with desolation and abandonment. Before, Iād always had Sarah. Whatever happened, she was still there. Mom could go off on one of her benders, but Sarah was still there, still connected, still noticing. When we moved into Peterās home, and heād feed us that stinking, rotten refuse from the garbage bin, or lock us in our rooms, I always knew Sarah was there with me. She knew what I was going through, like nobody else on this god-forsaken planet did. When Frankie died, she was there, fixing it for me. Taking care of me. When Sarah was with me, I actually existed.
Warwick lifted a croissant to Sarahās lips, and I watched as my sister bit into it obediently. I frowned. Did she see me? Did she know where she was? Did she know I was here?
When my sister left me, I ceased to exist. Oh, I was there, just not as far as anyone else was concerned.
I turned the cup on the saucer until the handle faced the opposite direction, just to hear the slight grate of the porcelain, to reassure myself I wasnāt fading from existence again.
My fingers trembled, and the cup tinkled on the saucer base. This must be a result of the emails. I was stunned to learn Sarah was receiving them, too.
When Iād read the first one in Thailand, Iād thought it was some goofy chain email, some sort of spam, and had disregarded it. It was the same day Iād received Sarahās email about the christening, so I didnāt spend a lot of time thinking about it at all. Same with the second one. I mean, who is āTruth Seekerā?
That last one, though, had caught my attention, and sent a shock through my system.
No one can run forever.
Who knew? Who else knew? My mind kept skittering over the memory. Alice by the pool. Sarah upstairs in her bedroom. Me in the kitchen. Who else knew Iād killed my brother? My eyes itched, and I blinked back tears. I needed answers. Truth Seeker? Yeah, well, I wanted answers, too. Like how I could do that. What was so wrong with me, so black inside me, that I could do that to a child?
It takes a long time for someone to drown, though, doesnāt it? Lucyās voice inside my head was intrusive, annoying. Come on, Maisey, face it. Itās not adding up.
My eyes flicked back to Sarah. I was desperate for her to meet my gaze, to register that I was there. Instead I got Warwick smiling at me.
I donāt like him. Lucyās words were clipped.
Heās just looking out for her.
Heās like Peter.
I shook my head, and Warwick noticed the movement, raised his eyebrow. I smiled innocently as I reached for more bagel. He didnāt need to know about Lucy.
Nobody needs to know about me. What are we going to do about this guy? Sarah needs to tell us what she knows about Frankie. Itās tearing you apart, not knowing.
I toyed with the bagel. I really didnāt want anything to eat; my gut was having another one of its hoedowns. āSo, Warwick, do you and Sarah have any plans for the rest of the summer, or are you back at work?ā
I needed to feel the uncomfortable silence. Warwick nodded, satisfied I was prepared to leave Sarah alone.
āI can work from anywhere, so I donāt need to go into the office for a while. I could take the whole summer off, if I wanted to.ā
āOh? Would you stay here, or go on a trip?ā I asked politely. āI mean, donāt get me wrong, your home is beautiful, and I can imagine wanting to stay here. I was just wondering if there were any places youād like to travel to...?ā
Warwick sipped from his cup as he thought about my question, then shrugged. āI wouldnāt mind going to London, maybe. Or maybe even Dubai...ā
I couldnāt focus on the conversation. I kept thinking about Sarah. Frankie. Whoever the damn hell Truth Seeker was. Lucy stepped in, keeping the conversation going, and I retreated, letting her have at it.
Iād found the lonely silence at home, as Alice retreated inside her shell, with or without the assistance of booze, as unbearable as Sarah had. Thatās when I really started to get into drama at school. It worked so well in the plays, Iād just mimic the characters everywhere else. Lucy was my favourite, though. She was the kind of girl that could make people laugh, distract them enough so they couldnāt see me. Iād had no idea how to flirt with a guy, but Lucyāshe was great at it. So brave, so cheeky, and sometimes so audacious that folks just had to love her for it. It was Lucy who told the mean girls where to go shove their remarks about Frankie, about Alice. It was Lucy who knew how to command attention and wield it with skill. Lucy was courageous, pluckyāand daring. A little too daring, I found out.
Lucy had a āseize the dayā attitude, which also translated to a āseize that top, handbag, book, necklace, etc.ā action. Iād find all these items at home that I couldnāt remember buying. Couldnāt remember stealing them, either. When Lucy got caught for shoplifting at the local mall, Iād been frightened, but Lucy was just contrite enough, just flirty and innocent enough, that she got us off with only a warning. Iāll never forget that day, though, when Alice had to come pick Lucy up from the police station. The look on my motherās face, the fury, the fear... Weād had a massive argument in the car on the way home.
āHow could you do this to me?ā Alice spat at me.
I huffed as I folded my arms across my chest and glared out of the passengerās side window. I was sick and tired defending myself to Mom. I didnāt do it. Lucy did. Mom now forbade me to mention her name. Lucy got us into this situation, though, so I figured Lucy could damn well deal with it. āI didnāt do it to you,ā Lucy snapped back. āI did it to the store, and like I said, it was a mistake.ā
āYou have no idea what youāve done, you stupid little girl,ā my mother had muttered as sheād turned a corner. Iād blinked at her words, but Lucy wouldnāt let me show the woman how much her words had hurt. āIām on parole, Maisey. Do you know what that means? That means if I get caught associated with any illegal activity, I go back to prison to serve the rest of my time. I never want to have any reason to see the inside of a police station again, but here you are, doing something so reckless, so utterly stupid. Do you know how hard it is for me to get a job? To convince people to look past my record? Do you know how many women stare at me, how many times I hear ābaby killerā whispered behind my back, or spat in my face? I can barely get a job cleaning out toilets, and if I want to get something better, I have to tell prospective clients that Iām an ex-con. An ex-con, Maisey. And here I am, trying to get beyond that, trying to make people forget about what happened to Frankie...ā Alice swallowed at the mention of the son sheād lost, then shook her head. āI am trying everything I know how to make people see me, see us, in a better light. How do you think it will look if my own daughter is arrested for shoplifting?ā Alice pulled into our drive and yanked up the hand brake. āYou have just undermined everything Iāve done, everything Iāve gone through.ā The words were uttered in a low vicious rasp, so full of rage, of disappointment. Of hatred. She put her hands up as though to ward off the discussion, the whole situation, as though she was done with it.
āI canāt deal with this right now. Go to your room. I canāt stand the sight of you.ā
Lucy pushed the car door open with force and stormed into the house, but I tripped on the second top stair inside the house, tears blurring my vision, my heart pounding in my chest, in my ears, sobbing for breath as Lucy slammed my bedroom door shut behind us. But even Lucy couldnāt stand up to the overwhelming guilt that ate at me, swallowing me whole.
Iād woken in the room, watching the shadows lengthen as darkness crept through the window to keep me company. I must have zoned out again. Iād been there for hours. I had never looked at it from Aliceās perspective before. Sheād never talked about it. To learn, though, how my mother was affected by her stint in prison, the trials she faced now that she was out, that it wasnāt a happy release and a brand-new start for her, and that Iād let her down again. It scorched my heart so painfully until only ashes remained. I knew, with a debilitating certainty, that nothing was ever going to be the same again. Caleb was gone. Sarah was gone. I had just done somethingāadmittedly, egged on by Lucyāthat caused Alice shame and humiliation.
I realized now that Iād ruined my motherās life. I closed my eyes. I couldnāt hide from it. Baby killer. I had heard some of the whispers. Hell, Iād faced them at school, but Iād never once really considered how those words would affect my mother. Sheād woken up to learn her son had drowned while she slept within reach. She had accepted the story presented to her, that it was her fault. She had accepted the blame, the responsibility and the punishment. But out of all the horrible, careless things my mother had done in our past, she hadnāt committed the evil that sheād paid the highest price for.
I had.
I rose from the table, and Warwick stopped talking abruptly, looking up at me in surprise.
āI have to go to the bathroom.ā I muttered the lame excuse as I raced out of the breakfast room.
I managed to make it to the bathroom in time to throw up into the toilet.
Baby killer.
Oh, God. What had I done? What had I done?
You need to get a handle on this, Lucy whispered.
MomāI ruined Momās life. I sobbed over the toilet bowl.
You and I both know your Momās life was ruined way before Frankie. You canāt claim that.
Lucy, she went to prison for a crime she didnāt commitāa crime I committed.
And youāve been trying to make up for it ever since, Lucy pointed out. I looked up at the mirror above the sink, and Lucy nodded.
You quit drama so you could study. You didnāt go out with friends, didnāt go to any parties or dates on the weekends. Remember? I wanted to go party, but you never let us.
I nodded. Lucy was right. Iād tried to be a good girl after that.
And youāve been a good girl ever since, Maisey.You became a lifeguard, Maisey. Remember all those kids you pulled out of the community pool? Those lives you saved have to account for something...
I was trying to save Frankie. I know it was twisted, but I kept thinking each time I rescued someone that I was rescuing Frankie, bringing him back. Over and over again.
And then you did nursing...think of all the lives youāve saved with your work.
I turned on the faucet and splashed some water onto my face.
And all that running... Lucy said, although there was a little grumble in her voice. You nearly killed us both with your training.
I needed to run. It was the only way I could get that image of Frankie out of my mind, his little body floating in the pool.
I get it, but seriouslyāthe Marathon des Sables? You donāt think running across the Sahara with a backpack on was a form of penance?
Running was good for both of us, Lucy.
You canāt keep running forever, Maisey.
I lifted my gaze back to the mirror, water dripping off the end of my nose and chin. I know. Tears glimmered in my eyes. I just donāt know if Iām ready.
Youāre ready. You need to know the truth, Lucy said, her voice warm and encouraging. Otherwise, Truth Seeker will keep tormenting you, and we donāt want that.
āBut what if I donāt like the truth?ā I whispered the words to my reflection. Lucy sighed.
I think youāre ready to face it, kiddo.
I shook my head. āNo. Thatās easy for you to say. You make friends so easily. Everyone likes you. But meāIām the baby killer. Can you imagine how Rich would react if he found out? Or Pedro? Mom?ā I shook my head in horror.
Damn it. Lucy slapped the mirror, and I flinched. Iām not going to sit by and watch you torture yourself, Maisey. This has gone on too long. Deal with it.
A discreet knock sounded on the bathroom door. āAre youāare you okay in there, Maisey? Mr. Taylor-Cox mentioned you didnāt look well. Do you need anything?ā
My eyes widened as I stared at Lucy in the mirror. āUh, no, Iām fine,ā Lucy called back, then she put her finger to her lips.
You need to stop talking to yourself, she warned. People will start to think youāre crazy.
I pursed my lips as I glared at her in the mirror. Takes one to know one. I patted my face dry. Come on, letās go check on Sarah.










































