Three goldfish--Snap, Crackle, and Pop--that functioned as appetizer, main course, and dessert on the new piranha's first day.
A toad kept in a grass-filled jar that I thought was singing to me with his mouth wide open until my mother told me I'd forgotten to put air holes in the lid.
My legs take me to a park bench next to the creek that runs below the prison. The sky a glaze of gasoline on the slow water. Slides over the rocks and passes on out of town through the system of connected rivers and lakes to Georgian Bay. I listen for voices in it but there's only my own, picked up and carried on the water in its constant motion to join itself.
It was early that October when the Murdoch detachment of the OPP called and said they wanted to ask me some questions. Nothing too serious, no lawyer necessary, no, no, but could I come up sometime soon and have a word? Dad canceled his lecture, I was pulled out of class, and both my parents drove me up early the next morning, so that by noon I was sitting in front of a desk with a cop behind it, his face so empty of color that his head appeared as a cheesecloth sack packed tight with rice. Behind him, half sitting on the two-drawer filing cabinet against the wall, a younger cop with a mustache who said less than the older one but whenever he did speak asked the tougher questions. Any problems with handling feelings of aggression? sexual appetites? you're a good swimmer, right? His crossed arms and the noise he made through his nose after I gave him an answer suggested he believed in a foul-play theory. Believed I was a murderer.
The interview seemed to go on well into the night, but by the time they let me go it wasn't yet five o'clock and the sun still blanched houses and trees from its position behind low, seamless clouds. My parents were silent as they led me out to the parking lot, my mother offering an uncertain smile but my father too embarrassed for any show of emotion right there on the tidy grounds of the police station. They remained silent for the first part of the trip home, talking only after night had fallen over everything and the green dashboard light turned them into phantoms in the front seat.
''So, what did they have to say?'' my father begins, as though the question had only just occurred to him.
''Nothing. They just wanted to know about Caroline. How it happened.''
''And you told them?''
''The canoe tipped. I tried to save her. She drowned. I told them.''
''And what now?'' my mother asks, turning around to face me. ''Is it over now?''
''Yeah, I think so. They don't have anything.''
''Any
''Evidence,'' I say.
A brief look passes between them and with this the conversation ends. The car rushes south to join the highways that increase in breadth as the city gets closer, two lanes to four lanes to six to eight, my mother and father dim silhouettes in the oncoming headlights. Somewhere in there I fall asleep.
Were there dreams? Did I hear them cry out, or was it the shriek of metal torn by metal? Was I awake or did I only later imagine the suspended moment of impact, of flight and spiraling darkness?
I'm being lifted up. Careful, orchestrated hands levitating me onto a varnished wood stretcher and strapping my head still to protect me from any further spinal injury. Being asked what my name is and if I could count the number of fingers the paramedic waved before my eyes (four) as they settled me into the back of an ambulance with buffed stainless steel all around. The line of cars stopped in both directions for what seemed several hundred miles. White lights and red lights, not going anywhere.
A tractor trailer carrying electric blankets to the downtown department stores for the Christmas rush, four cars in front of us when it lost one of its eighteen wheels. Just shredded right off its rim, bounced over the cars ahead to finally bring its two hundred pounds down against the front windshield. Our car spun out of control, was struck from behind, rolled end over end into the grassy median. The chain reaction caused by our flipping across three lanes resulted in a smoking pileup that was pictured in the Toronto papers the next morning but, ''miraculously,'' only my mother and father ended up as fatalities. Their son, outside of a few nasty cuts, was fine, partially because his parents' bodies in the front seat absorbed the better part of the impact. Everyone agreed that it was a tragedy, shook their heads, and said no more.
Then the years of boarding school and holidays with legally obligated aunts and uncles (with the exception of Caroline's parents, who I was told ''thought it best'' if I stayed away). All of them doing what they could at first before finally surrendering, feeling that I could have made their jobs a little easier if I'd only made a bit more of an effort, tried to be somewhat more responsive, instead of the unreadable kid who was a cause of great concern to the headmaster, who suspected me of ripping the last pages out of novels in the library. But in the end nobody could say much about it, given the nature of the tragedy the boy had endured. So the aunts and uncles addressed their checks to Upper Canada College at the beginning of each term, looked forward to the day the kid headed off to university (thank God his marks were good), and, aside from the annual charade of good-natured congeniality at Christmas, could be left completely to his own devices once and for all. And the whole time the kid looked forward to the very same thing himself, feeling that once he'd gained his own space he could refine all the mechanisms that would allow him to wipe his hands of himself forever.
On this point it turned out that hate alone wasn't enough, although it certainly helped in dealing with the world, the right poses to strike. But hate wasn't so good with managing the past. What I had yet to discover was the simple fact that the best way to get around memory is to forget. That forgetting is not the absence of memory but a thing in itself, with its own mass, shape, and texture. The process calls for initial encouragement but then a standing back to allow it to run its own course. A weed gone wild in the garden that will bring about the death of all other things around it if left alone long enough.
The more difficult part was to rid the body of memory. The trick is to convince it that it's not really there. Treat it like a stupid machine and let it rust. Dull it with drink and opiates. Never step on a scale. Avoid mirrors.
It worked.
Hadn't thought of it, any of it, for a long time. Almost two decades of nothing. And now it's come back out of nowhere. Phoning up in the middle of the night, rising from the water, asking to be held.
Evidence,'' I say.
A look that passes between them in the front seat, quick and ashamed.
Neither of them ever told me they believed me. I never told them she was pulled.
Sitting next to my father on the arm of his chair and pretending to read the same page he was reading, each word a soldier, each paragraph a battalion following the one ahead of it into war.
Proposing marriage to Caroline under her father's billiards table, the twist-tie from a loaf of bread for an engagement ring.
Carried, asleep, at my mother's neck.
I smell the morning before I see it: bagged leaves, pine sap, and coffee. Then the gray light you don't believe at first, pushing color into the shadows. From the block behind me a car refuses to turn over, a screen door whinges open, a child is told to
chapter 45
After court the next evening I drive out to the lake once more. Haven't slept in over twenty-four hours and the full extent of the day's menu has consisted of something the plastic label called a burrito thrown into a convenience-store microwave, but I'm neither tired nor hungry. And it's not just another cocaine distraction either. It's those last vapors of burning consciousness, the heightened senses that come just prior to final collapse. I'm aware of this as much as I'm aware of the briars reaching and tugging at me across the path, geese honking south overhead, the smoke from Mrs. Arthurs's fire.
I sidestep down the slope past her woodpile, around to the front, and raise my hand to knock but there's no need, the old woman already swinging the door open with a nearly toothless show of tonsil and gum.