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Authors: Peter Abrahams

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“You couldn't be more wrong. She wanted me to hand the money over, on the assumption it was going to Nat.” Mr. Zorn turned to him. “She liked you. But it doesn't work that way, Nat—might as well learn now.” He paused, looked Nat in the eye. Nat met his gaze; it took just about all the willpower he had. “I can relieve your mind on two things,” Mr. Zorn said. “First, we didn't tell your mother what was happening, and have no intention of doing so. Second, there will be no legal consequences—as long as you do what I'm sure you knew was the right thing from the beginning.”

“Which is to go on home,” said Andy. “Plus no hard feelings, right, Mr. Zorn? You said to remind you.”

“Of course not,” said Mr. Zorn. “No hard feelings, no recriminations, no threats. I never threaten people.”

The nature of the threat—his mother and the law—was clear.

“They're at the age for adolescent pranks,” Andy said.

“Good point,” said Mr. Zorn. “Imagine if they'd been funneling-is that what they call it, Andy?”

“ 'Fraid so.”

“Funneling quarts of vodka or something.” Mr. Zorn shivered.

“Every parent's nightmare,” said Andy.

“So we dodged one this time. Let's think of it that way. Have Grace get in touch when she cools down.”

 

N
at and Izzie stood by the window, watching Mr. Zorn and Andy Ling walk across the quad. Andy said something that made Mr. Zorn laugh; a big breath cloud rose above him.

“We ended up looking like idiots anyway,” Nat said. He felt worse than an idiot, embarrassed and ashamed; but deep inside he agreed:
We dodged one this time.

“Speak for yourself,” said Izzie.

He looked at her in surprise.

“Sorry,” she said; came to him, wrapped her arms around him, shivered, just as her father had done. Mr. Zorn and Andy disappeared from view. “There is a positive side,” Izzie said after a moment or two. Was she, too, aware that they had dodged one this time? Izzie surprised him again. “It's not often,” she said, “you get the chance to find out what someone really thinks about you.”

“He likes you,” Nat said. “He loves you.”

“You don't understand.”

“It couldn't have been clearer,” Nat said. “If he's got problems, they're with Grace.”

Izzie's grip on him tightened. Outside snow was falling harder.

“We'd better go tell her,” Nat said.

“What's the rush?” Izzie said, her mouth close to his ear; the sound sent one of those odd nerve reactions down his neck and spine. He knew what Izzie was thinking: Grace would say they'd blown it.

But they had to tell her, tell her about the failure of their little scheme; and while they were at it, there was more: “We should tell her about you and me.”

“Both at the same time?” Izzie said. “How much can the poor girl take?”

Nat turned her sideways a little so he could see her face. “You're acting funny,” he said.

“Am I?”

He looked into her eyes, saw the gold flecks, took in Izzie's whole golden effect. “Maybe there's no point telling her about us,” he said, “now that I'm going home.”

Did the idea upset Izzie? Nat couldn't tell. Before, she'd said,
You can't just go.
Now she said, “Let's worry about that later.” She kissed him; then kissed him deeper. At first, he felt nothing. Then he realized this might be the last time—Albany-Chicago-Denver, there was a flight that very afternoon at three—and felt a great deal, much more than he was prepared for.

“Now?” he said.

“Why not?”

Izzie drew him toward the bed; the closest bed, which happened to be Grace's. He steered her the other way, toward her own bed.

“What's the difference?” she said.

They lay on Izzie's bed. The last time, he thought: and maybe because of that knowledge, nothing went quite right. It was clumsy, awkward, quick—clumsier, more awkward, quicker, than any of the other times, even the first, on Aubrey's Cay. He was surprised once more, then, when Izzie cried out at the end, loudly, passionately, instead of making the low moan she sometimes made, or no sound at all.

 

I
zzie came out of the bathroom. “I've been thinking—it might be better if I tell her myself,” she said. “Why don't you wait here?”

“No,” Nat said. Grace almost certainly would blame them—Izzie especially—and he wanted to shield her. “I'm coming.”

“I'd rather do it myself.”

That was Izzie. He smiled at her. “I'm coming.”

She opened her mouth as though to argue, closed it, came over. “Why not? It can't get any crazier.” She kissed him, running her tongue over his chipped tooth. “What's that?”

“My chipped tooth.”

“You can always get it fixed.”

 

T
aking a flashlight, they crossed the quad, went down to the Plessey basement, shifted the panel at the back of the janitor's closet, entered the tunnel. They walked, deep under the campus, Nat leading, their feet silent on the hard-packed dirt floor. All familiar now: the downward slope, the dampening air, the dripping sound from somewhere nearby. At the junction, they turned into the right-hand passage, no longer hung with spiderwebs because of their coming and going. The dripping sound grew louder. Suddenly Izzie screamed and dug her fingers into his shoulder, hard enough to hurt.

“What's that?” she said.

In the flashlight's beam, a bat hung from the valve on the steam pipe. “Just the bat,” Nat said.

“Kill it.”

“Don't be silly. What's wrong with you, Izzie?” But he knew: she was afraid of her sister. It made her jumpy. “Why don't you go back? I'll tell her myself.”

“Piss on that,” said Izzie.

They walked on, past the bat, hanging motionless. Izzie released her grip on his shoulder.

Nat raised the trapdoor, saw it was dark down in the cave, at least in the bedroom part. Grace was probably asleep. He climbed down the rope ladder, Izzie following, shone the light on the bed. Grace wasn't in it, but something lay on the pillow. Nat went closer. Because of its color—that of putty—Nat didn't recognize it until he was within touching distance. He didn't touch. Lorenzo: Lorenzo lying on the pillow, dead in the open air, all his gaudy beauty faded away.

“Grace?” he called. “Grace?” And hurried, running at the end, into the big room. No candles burning in the big room either. Nat stabbed his light here and there. “Grace? Grace?” The room was a shambles—furniture overturned and broken, paintings knocked off the walls, cabinets smashed, shattered glass everywhere—and Grace was gone.

27

According to Nietzsche, “Man and woman never cease to misunderstand each other” because (a) women have less need to vent their strength, (b) the religious nature is less developed in men, (c) their emotions run at different tempos and thus are never in sync.

—Multiple-choice question one, final exam, Philosophy 322

I
zzie lit a candle. Huge shadows appeared on the walls. “Where is she?”

She picked up a chair, one of those dainty gilt chairs, a leg now broken off, tossed it aside. Then something else, bang, and something else, crash, as she moved through the two rooms, faster and faster, the huge shadows in wild motion on the walls. “Where is she?” Then, much louder: “Where are you? Where are you?” No response; Nat thought he heard a distant dripping sound. She turned to him. “What's going on?”

He didn't know. Where was Grace? His first thought was the studded door in the big room, bricked-in on the other side. He opened it, shone his light around, then up at the grate that led to Goodrich Hall. She wasn't there. She wasn't under the bed, under the couches, behind what was left of the old wind-up record player. He knelt over fragments of a record: “Caro Nome,” the label still intact.

Izzie cried out. He hurried to her. “What is it?”

“Nothing.” She pulled a shard of glass from her finger. A fat drop of blood rose to the surface, quivered.

Nat shone his light on the smashed aquarium at her feet, on the chunk of coral Lorenzo had liked to hide behind, on the seaweed almost invisible on the pattern of the rug. He raised the beam up to Izzie's face. She was sucking on her finger.

Izzie shielded her eyes; he aimed the light away. “Where are you?” she called, so loud and sudden it startled him. “Where are you?”

A painting fell from the wall, startling them both. Nat went to it: the nude bathers with the centaur spying from the bushes. He passed his light over the wall, saw a small hole where the hook must have been.

“Something bad is happening,” Izzie said.

Nat wasn't so sure. “Suppose she was out in the hall.”

“What hall?”

“Your hall, in Lanark. When your father was in the room. What if she came up to tell us something and heard what he was saying about her?”

“What are you getting at?”

“Wouldn't it make her angry?” Nat said. “It made you angry.”

Izzie watched him, saying nothing.

“Maybe she was angry enough to come back here and . . . do this.” Do this, down at the subterranean level, in the time he and Izzie had spent in bed, above.

“You don't know her,” Izzie said. The candle she held lit her face from below, casting cheekbone shadows over her eyes, at the same time lightening her hair. “You talk about her like she's some kind of monster.”

“Not a monster. But she can be funny. You're the one who told me that.”

“Did I?”

“On the beach.”

“How loyal of me,” Izzie said.

He overcame the urge to shine the light on her face again, to get a better look at her. “What's wrong with you, Izzie?”

“How can you ask a question like that? Something bad is happening. And you don't care. You think she's off by herself, in a sulk.”

“What other explanation is there?”

She gazed at him. “You're starting to remind me of my father.”

An uncommon feeling stirred inside him, that same anger he'd felt when the campus security officer had implied he knew something about the theft of the HDTV from the student union.

“But here's an explanation if you need one,” Izzie said. “Wags.”

“Wags? Wags doesn't even know about this place.”

“Maybe he found out.”

“How?”

“Maybe she did come up, as you said, but went to your room. What if he was there?”

“Why would he be?”

“Why not? Where else can he go? What if he was there, popping those green pills, kidnapping plots buzzing in his brain?”

“So?”

“So he made her bring him here.”

“Wags couldn't make Grace do anything.”

“Or tricked her, then.”

“He couldn't trick her either.”

Izzie's face softened. “You think pretty highly of her.”

“It's not so much that,” Nat said. The soft look faded. “More that Wags is—” He started to say
harmless
, stopped himself. Wags wasn't harmless. Plus: leaving Lorenzo on the pillow. That was Wags; he'd probably seen something like it in a movie. “We'd better check my room,” Nat said. He shone his light around the wreckage one more time. There were movies like that, too.

They started up the rope ladder, Izzie first. As he reached for the ladder, Nat stepped on something slippery. He shone his light on it, picked it up: a black satin jacket.

“Wags's?” said Izzie, coming back down.

Nat had never seen it before.

“The kind of thing that would amuse him,” Izzie said. A black satin jacket, two snaps ripped from the material, with
Saul's Collision
in gold and crossed bowling pins on the front, and a gold crest,
Runners-Up '99.
“Especially that runners-up part,” Izzie said.

“Sure it's not Grace's?” Nat said.

“You think she'd wear something like this?”

“It's not impossible.”

“Trust me,” Izzie said.

 

N
at's room. And there was Wags, sitting at Nat's computer, fingers on the keyboard, face almost touching the screen.

“With you in a sec,” he said, not turning toward the door. “Just checking out the Fatty Arbuckle Web site.”

Nat glanced in the bedrooms. No sign of Grace.

Izzie jabbed off the monitor.

“Hey,” said Wags as the screen went dark. “I was downloading.” His eyes went to Nat; actually to a spot in midair a few inches off target. “Hope you're not pissed about our little . . . debate last night, or the night before, Nattie, my friend. No harm done. And I brought you some chocolates, as a bribe.”

A box of chocolates lay on Wags's old desk. They'd been gift-wrapped, but now the wrapping was ripped off, the box open, and three or four of the chocolates gone.

“Fact is, roomie, I'm moving back in. I can't afford to neglect my education for another second. So if you'll excuse me . . .” He reached for the monitor button.

Izzie grabbed his wrist. “Where is she?”

“That hurts a bit,” Wags said. “Ouch. I mean it.”

“Where is she?”

“Where's who?”

With her free hand, the back of her free hand, Izzie smacked Wags across the face; harder than a smack, from the way his head jerked to the side, stunning him. Nat was stunned too.

“Where is Grace?” she said.

Wags gazed up at her, wide-eyed. “Is that like metaphysical or something?”

She raised her hand again; he winced in anticipation, like a dog Nat remembered in his neighborhood.

“Izzie,” he said. She froze, slowly lowered her hand. Her other hand still gripped Wags's wrist.

Nat went to them, put his hand on Izzie's. Her hand, so cold, relaxed. He uncoiled it from Wags's wrist, looked down at Wags. “Do you know where she is?” he said.

“I don't understand the question,” Wags said, his eyes still locked on Izzie. They filled with tears, like the eyes of a child badgered by the teacher.

“Did you take her down in the tunnels?” Nat said.

“The tunnels?”

“The tunnels under the campus.”

“There are tunnels under the campus?”

“You didn't know?”

“Real, physical tunnels?”

“Yes.”

“You've been in them?”

“Yes.”

“And you never told me?” Wags smiled, a smile Nat didn't like at all, with only one side of his mouth turning up and the eyes not participating. “Why am I surprised?”

“No time for therapy,” Izzie said. Wags's smile, what there was of it, vanished. “Does this belong to you?” She held up the black satin bowling jacket.

“No.”

She shoved the jacket at him. “Put it on.”

Wags rose, unsteady, as though his legs were weak, put on the jacket. “Is this like Cinderella?” he said. It was much too big.

Izzie reached behind the collar, turned it out. “XXXL,” she said.

“He's got nothing to do with it,” Nat said.

“With what?” said Wags.

They didn't answer.

“These tunnels—are they scary?” Wags said. “I'd like to see them, at your earliest convenience. Also, I'm growing partial to the jacket.”

“You can't have it,” Nat said.

“Can I borrow it?”

“No.”

Wags took off the jacket, handed it to him obediently.

“What do you want to do?” Nat said.

“Resume my education, I already told you. Beginning with Fatty Arbuckle.”

“I meant do you want me to call your parents or do you want to go back to the hospital?”

“Give me a hard one,” Wags said.

They sent him to the hospital in a taxi.

 

“N
ow what?” said Izzie; back in Nat's room.

“I don't know,” Nat said. But what could it be? Either Grace had heard her father's analysis and had some sort of violent psychological reaction or . . . what? He couldn't think of anything else. “She must have overheard.”

“What makes you so sure?”

“It's part of a pattern.”

“Pattern?”

“Grand Central Station,” Nat said, “all over again.”

“Grand Central Station?”

“When your family was splitting up and Grace stood on the railing.”

A look he hadn't seen before, at least on her, appeared on Izzie's face. He wouldn't have thought her capable of a look like that if he hadn't seen what she'd done to Wags.

“You know everything about us, don't you?” she said.

“You didn't have to tell me.”

“I shouldn't have.”

They sat in silence. The wind was blowing harder now, driving snowflakes against the glass; they made a soft drumming sound.

“We just sit here, then,” Izzie said, “waiting for her to reappear. Is that the plan?”

Nat had no other; but this one had a flaw. First he just sensed it, an uneasy feeling, then he identified it, then it grew bigger in his mind: the bowling jacket, size XXXL. He picked it up and did what he probably should have done in the first place. He searched the pockets. There were two. Nothing in the left-hand one. Something in the right; something his fingers identified before he even pulled it out: a switchblade knife. There were always a few kids at Clear Creek High who carried them. He pressed the button. The blade, longer than the ones he'd seen, snapped out. Nat knew then that she was right and he was wrong. Something bad was happening.

Izzie held out her hand.

He gave it to her.

“Like this?” she said.

Like that.

She folded the knife, stuck it in her pocket.

“Let's go,” he said. She was already moving.

 

T
hey went down to the cave. Everything, the whole mess, was exactly the way they'd left it, except for the painting of the nude bathers and the centaur, the painting that had fallen. Now it was propped against the wall, facing the wrong way. On the back, in big black letters:
A milion sounds nice. Right here soon say by dark. Call the cops and she die$.

BOOK: Crying Wolf
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