“This is al my fault,” Melanie said. “Oh, Vicki, I am so, so sorry.”
“It’s okay, Mel,” Vicki said.
“No, it’s not okay! I should have been . . .”
But Vicki didn’t have time! She turned and hurried for the dunes.
It was hot in the dunes, and Porter’s head drooped. He made a sucking noise against Vicki’s shoulder.
“Blaine!” Vicki shouted. “Blaine Theodore Stowe!”
It went on like this for fifteen minutes, thirty minutes, an hour. Vicki searched every inch of the dunes; they al looked the same, white bowls of sand crowned with eelgrass. Vicki got lost herself a couple of times; she had to climb into the eelgrass (which was just crawling with ticks, she knew) to get her bearings. She cal ed Blaine’s name until she was hoarse. She wandered back out to the street, al the way down to the market, al the way over to Shel Street. No Blaine. Vicki returned to the beach. She was parched, pain seared her lungs; she col apsed on a beach towel under their umbrel a. Porter had fal en asleep. She laid him down and hunted through the cooler for water. Even if Blaine were alive, he would be thirsty by now, and hungry. Wherever he was he would be afraid, crying, alone.
Caroline Knox was gone—to her tennis lesson, Vicki thought angrily, though she was relieved. Melanie lay facedown on a towel, her face buried.
“I have to cal Ted,” Vicki said. “I don’t know what else to do.”
“This is al my fault,” Melanie said. “I am going to be a terrible mother.”
“No, Melanie,” Vicki said. “Do not say that. Do not think that.”
Vicki dialed home. Ted had promised to clean the attic and get someone to check for powder-post beetles. He would see Brenda’s cel phone number on the cal er ID, but he would have no idea what Vicki was about to tel him.
Four rings, then the answering machine picked up. Vicki’s own voice—happy, unconcerned—a voice from another time, before today, before her diagnosis. “You have reached the Stowe residence . . .” The message played in one ear, and in the other ear, Vicki heard the growl of the ocean, like some kind of animal ready to attack. The growl grew louder—something about the sound made Vicki turn. Just as Ted snapped the receiver up, saying in a breathless voice, “Sorry, I didn’t hear the phone. Hel o?” Vicki saw the ATV, the smug
“Mom!” he cried out. “Look at me!”
When Vicki woke up from her nap, Porter’s hand was on her breast and Blaine was curled under her left arm. They had fal en asleep immediately upon returning home from the beach; Vicki hadn’t even bothered to rinse off their feet, and now the sheets were sandy. The room was dark, though Vicki could see golden sunlight in the living room. She eased out of bed, then stood over her children and watched them sleep. In ninety harrowing minutes, her world had shattered and then, like magic, been made whole again. Blaine was alive and wel ; he’d wandered al the way down the beach throwing rocks into the water. He’d walked wel over a mile, the policeman said, but he didn’t seem upset or worried in the slightest.
“I’ve never seen such a brave kid,” the policeman had said. “And he’s got quite an arm. The Red Sox should sign him now.”
The tops of Blaine’s shoulders were sunburned. When he climbed off the ATV he suffered through Vicki’s whimpers and sobs of relief and the tightest hug of his life; then he showed her a handful of shel s and asked for his milk. Now, even with robust stage-two lung cancer and thirty-six hours until chemotherapy, Vicki felt like the luckiest woman on earth.
She tiptoed out and shut the door so the boys could sleep awhile longer. Melanie’s door was closed. She had slinked off once they reached home, apologizing again and again, until it was like a joke she’d told too many times. Vicki had done the best she could to assuage Melanie’s guilt, but she knew Melanie would flagel ate herself just the same.
A note on the kitchen table said,
The phone rang, loud and grating. Vicki leapt to answer it before it woke the kids or Melanie.
“Hel o?”
A young female voice said, “I’m cal ing about the ad.”
“Ad?” Vicki said. “I’m afraid you’ve got the wrong number.”
“Oh,” the girl said. “Sorry.” She hung up. Vicki hung up.
A few seconds later, the phone rang again.
“Hel o?” Vicki said.
“Hi,” the girl said. “I dialed real y careful y. 257-6101? The help wanted? For the babysitter?”
“Babysitter?” Vicki said.
“For the two boys in ’Sconset?” the girl said. “I live in ’Sconset and my parents want me to get a job this summer.”
“We don’t need a babysitter,” Vicki said. “But thanks for cal ing.”
“Too bad,” the girl said. “It sounded perfect for me. Not too hard or anything.”
“Thanks for cal ing,” Vicki said. She hung up. The house was silent. Vicki’s brain started to fizz and pop. Babysitter, two boys in ’Sconset, this number? Brenda had placed an ad for a babysitter and hadn’t checked with