ACCLAIM FOR “THE DEER EFFECT” BY SUSAN WINGATE
Transcription
ACCLAIM FOR “THE DEER EFFECT” BY SUSAN WINGATE
The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE ACCLAIM FOR “THE DEER EFFECT” BY SUSAN WINGATE “Beautiful and incredible and heartbreaking.” ~Author Denise Murdoch “Reminiscent of Mitch Albom’s ‘Five People You Meet in Heaven.’” ~Author Juliet Lyons “Forboding. Zooming into conflict. ~Author Joshua Graham Lovely!” “Excellent work, likely up there with my all-time Susan Wingate favorites.” ~Author Michael Angel “Wonderful in every way.” ~The Happy Looker “A master storyteller who draws you in from the very first page.” ~Filmmaker, Suzanne Kelman “Well, to be honest, I bawled my way through it - for Hannah, for the deer, for her husband and of course, for her dog. Well written and emotionally draining, this book had me riveted from the beginning. Excellent writing, excellent characterisation - all in all, well done!!!” ~Diana Hockley 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE OTHER BOOKS BY SUSAN WINGATE NOVELS Troubled in Paradise: A Love Story (Young adult romantic fantasy) The Wild Wood Trilogy Way of the Wild Wood (Young adult fantasy) Detective Ink (Mystery/thriller box set) Drowning The Bobby’s Diner Series Bobby’s Diner (Book one) Hotter than Helen (Book two) Sacrifice at Sea (Book three) Of the Law (Mystery/noir) NONFICTION Tell Don’t Show: How to Successfully Break the Rules of Fiction 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Copyright © 2014, 2015 by Susan Wingate All rights reserved as permitted under the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior permission of the publisher. Eye of the Needle Press 2014 Eye of the Needle Press Seattle, WA 98126 http://www.wordpress.eyeoftheneedlepress.com Second Edition: Mass paperback version, 2015 ISBN: 978-0-9898078-2-1 The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to a real person, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author. The Deer Effect: a novel/by Susan Wingate Cover design by © Eye of the Needle Press/DeranedDoctorDesigns.com Published in the United States of America Eye of the Needle Press 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE You are just about to read THE DEER EFFECT by Susan Wingate. All of Susan Wingate books can be found at: www.susanwingate.com. You can also find Susan on the following social sites: Facebook: www.facebook.com/authorsusanwingate Twitter: www.twitter.com/susanwingate Pinterest: www.pinterest.com/susanwingate Google+: https://plus.google.com/u/0/107176228678049355232 And you can read Susan’s blog Writing from the Couch at: http://bit.ly/PS56HD 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE For Robert For that which befalleth the sons of men befalleth beasts, even one thing befalleth them: as the one dieth, so dieth the other; yea, they have all one breath; so that a man hath no preeminence above a beast: for all is vanity. All go unto one place; all are of the dust and all turn to dust again. Who knoweth the spirit of man that goeth upward, and the spirit of the beast that goeth downward to the earth? 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Foreword “When you reach Heaven, you're given three memories. Just three. One for the past, one for the present and one for the future. My memories? Of my mother, my husband and my dog.” 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Part I ONE ONE BRITTLE LEAF FOUND ALONG our usual path proved the days had gone wintry. Papery thin as onion skin—blanched from frosty temperatures and yellowing like the pages of an old Bible, the leaf’s long slender shafts, crooked and dry, painted my world. The blue sky dragged me out that Sunday in December—December 5, 2010, if you must know—when the temperature rose to only forty-two Fahrenheit. What was I thinking? Hold on. Wait a second. Let me back up just a tad. For your information, I'm dead. Although I speak of myself, make no mistakes. I died this day. This story will tell you a tale about my dog and my husband and the two going on a journey in order to come to terms with my death. It's their story. Through my eyes, 001 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE ears, nose, fingers, tongue and mind you'll get a sense of me, of course—an infusion of me, but I'm just the storyteller here. Make no mistakes. It looked like a good day to take the dog for a walk. A good day to walk, to let off steam from a nonstop fight about money between me and my husband. Bobby, to anyone who knew us, was my dog. He slept with me on my side of the bed at Rod’s request. Although Rod liked animals, at least the concept of them, he’s not exactly what I would call an animal person. I held that distinction in our small family pack. The photo of Bobby and his litter mates showed each of them, cream-filled bellies, shocking white with pigletpink skin peeking through their fur, up on the bed on a blue thermal blanket trimmed in satin. There were five in all—females and males—some playing with each other, others looking askance, but not Bobby. His button eyes and black nose peered into the camera lens. And, when all the other ears spiked up at attention, Bobby's flapped over as if someone had missed him in the proper ear assembly line. Perhaps the dog-ear quality controller had taken the day off when he rolled through. “That one.” I pointed. “I want him.” It was instant, the falling in love. In eight years, he never got much bigger than when he was a pup. In those same eight years, things had started to shrink between me and Rod. I'd gotten a term life insurance policy and used it against him, as a joke, to threaten him. 002 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “If anything should happen to me, the police will automatically suspect you. They always suspect the husband first. Especially when this kind of money is involved.” Or, when I was feeling particularly morose, I'd say, “You'll just love cuddling up with half a mil when I'm gone.” You know. The typical guilt trips we play on people who we just wish would stop yelling and see our worth. I'd heard self-worth rated a close second in importance to the average person's survival instincts. I suppose it did with me, for sure. Lately, a waning income brought on by a flagging economy had handed us an extra wallop. We had a big house built on a large parcel of land, on an expensive island off the coast, close to British Columbia. The Santa Maria Islands were known as the Martha's Vineyards of the west. We had moved here to retire, but after paying triple for everything, our retirement plan seemed weak at best. Our lifestyle hadn't changed, just the means to support it. The fights had grown in intensity too—raging, blaming, threats of divorce. I needed to get away. If only for a little while. “I'm taking Bobby for a walk.” The words somehow soothed me as if pulling on a cashmere sweater, protecting me, as I walked Bobby toward the street and didn’t look back. The fog my words created looked like a dying cloud of cigarette smoke as it fell to the ground. 003 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Rod didn't even grunt. He had decided, for his break in our constant battle, to rake out the mucky fallen leaves in the circular driveway. “Come on, Bobby.” I said, as we turned, right, down the road, the way that took us toward the water. “Hannah!” Rod yelled. “What?” “I'm moving out.” I looked away from him. We were miles apart standing there, out in the front yard, only a hundred feet from one another. His exact, sure words weren't what I'd expected. I had expected an apology. My legs felt numb, like they'd lost all their blood. I couldn't move. It felt as though my feet had become cemented to the ground. A rush of heat rose quickly up my back, covering my chest and face, as if someone had thrown hot alcohol over me. Bobby yanked forward on his leash. Yanked me out of my trance. I didn't answer Rod. What would it change? I couldn't let him see how hurt I was. I didn't want him to see my face crumple. I didn't want him to know I was crying. I just walked away. 004 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE TWO WHAT SOUNDED LIKE A BUZZ saw turned out to be two gunning engines roaring in the distance, around the corner just over the hill, out of sight. I wiped at my face. Whoever was coming, I didn't want them to see my tear-streaked skin. Motorcyclists use our tiny island, where the law is lax and the people scattered, as a racetrack. They use the island like it’s theirs to rape. I felt blind, only hearing them, and stepped back off onto a ragged trim of damp decaying road. Slick black rocks fell off where the frayed edge of the tar road disappeared into matted clumps of melting dandelions under brown wet leaves, fallen from a recent wind storm. A misty breeze, full of wood smoke, caressed my face. It made me think of childhood campfires and spooky tales. The sound of one motorcycle engine cut out, fast, with a set of short bursts and screeching brakes. The noise lasted only for the briefest of seconds with both motorcyclists slowing, then roaring their engines again as if to make up for lost time. I pulled Bobby's leash in close, wrapping the black twist of braid around my red chafed knuckles. I noticed how old they looked. Not like when I was twenty, or even thirty. It was, as if, my hands had turned old overnight. I swore to myself right then and there to take better care of these old-woman hands. The buzzing grew louder as the cyclists neared the corner, from where I stood, just below the top of the hill. It irked me like crazy. This was a 25-mile-per-hour zone, 005 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE and they scoffed at the speed signs, speeding by each one at no less than 50 mph. By the sound of it, they were speeding up like they were racing each other. Again, I pulled Bobby closer into the gully. It was at that moment they appeared. One in black, the other in chartreuse. Both in helmets, both wearing heavy boots and gloves, completely cloaked, looking like creatures from outer space. Their bikes weren't wimpy thin racing bikes, no, these were fatboys—wide-girthed, wide-tired, meant to stay up against anything thrown in their way. I stepped out, one foot into the road. “Slow down!” I pumped a red fist at them. One flipped me off as he whizzed by. “Screw you too!” I gave them the finger as well, arm high, pressing it for added effect. They both leaned forward, almost laying their stomachs onto the cradle of their bikes and sped out of sight racing even faster than before. 006 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE THREE WE DIDN'T SEE IT RIGHT away. I mean, it was like we saw but couldn't make out the form until we were closer. Bobby spotted it first. Even as we cornered the bend, the same bend the bikers had appeared from just minutes before, we still heard them. It was like bees swarming a hive. But then I shook my head, trying to ignore everything that seemed to be bombarding my brain—the run-in with the bikers and the looming separation from Rod. It didn’t work. A tree alongside the road looked like a woman's torso, with appendages sawed off at the thighs and just above her breasts. For whatever reason, the log captivated me, with its bark making it appear like a woman's charred body. I shuddered at the thought. Tears burned hot out of my eyes. I smeared a wet hand across my face and my snotty nose. I got angrier and cried more. We quickened our pace, Bobby and I, coming off the slight hill from the turn. Small puffs of steam blurred my vision as each breath escaped my mouth, my nose. I looked down at Bobby. He too had vapor escaping from his glistening, hot snout. It was as though we were in some macabre stage show with the clicking of his nails catching on the tar pavement, making him sound like a tap dancer. Our breathing caught every eighth-count in unison, Bobby syncopating his beat with mine. “Bobby. I love you. Thanks for always being there, for always walking with me.” I’d said the same words to him countless times. It was a mantra. 007 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Though blue skies played peek-a-boo behind a bank of scudding billowy clouds, the air felt moist. Bobby stopped and shook his coat out hard. A halo of silvery mist jettisoned off him in all directions. And when he stopped, he didn't continue forward but, instead, he dug in his feet, anchoring himself to the ground. I walked past, assuming he'd catch up. When he didn't, I had to stop. “Come on.” I pumped my arm at the words. But he wouldn't move. His snout remained forward, popping up, sniffing the air. The hum of the motorcycle engines seemed to be growing louder but I figured it was my mind still playing tricks on me. But, Bobby remained frozen. Locked his legs and wouldn't budge. “Come on.” Still he refused. I pulled harder at his leash. “Come on, Bobby. Now.” Then he bolted, jarring my arm forward with him. “Bobby. Good Lord. Stop!” I finally got close enough to make him stop and see what he had seen, to smell what he had smelled. Bobby continued to pull hard. My focus locked onto the object. It was still breathing. Mist around its nose formed delicate clouds of rapid fire vapor. I didn't feel my legs jump into a lope but there I was, there we were, running toward a deer that had been hit. Nearing it, I saw it was no more than six months old, with fading spots in a series of lines on its side. Someone had hit a fawn. 008 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Someone... Those bastards. The motorcyclists, when the engines cut. As I got closer, it struggled to get up. As if it had fallen on ice it flailed. The jagged formation of its hip told me they'd busted its spine. The energy the fawn expended dealt its final blow. The animal fell back, resting its head, straining to breathe. Seeming to understand its fate. Blood pooled out from under the fawn, forming a widening circle. I put my hands onto the ground, then my elbows, trying to form a boom around it, as though surrounding the blood, capturing its outflow would help. “Oh. God. Please. No.” Garnet continued to flow from somewhere near its head. The fawn tried to scramble up one last time. It bayed like a calf, making a sound like “maa,” and settled its head onto the ground. Her breathing sounded raspy. The distinct smell of fired iron filled the air as blood continued to leach out of her body. The baby deer was going to die. There was no turning this around. My heart cramped at the knowledge. I believe it was then I should have heard the engines gunning too close but nothing else mattered except for this dying fawn. My eyes, my heart, my soul, my total energy was riveted by this animal. Half on, half off the road, head slumped into the ditch, her eyes began glazing over, fast. 009 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Bobby ran into the street next to the fawn. I pointed and yelled to him to move off the road and to go down into the ditch where he stood with his face toward hers. He whiffled his snout around hers and then, once, licked her. Gently. She continued to pant but more quietly now. I laid my hand on her. “Oh baby,” I said. That’s when it happened. A flash, blazing around the corner. The same two bikers. Startling me once again back to the world around me, the world outside this small dying deer, to the living world. But I didn't react fast enough. My hands flew off the fawn as if surrendering. The pain came next. My head flipped back as a handlebar cracked me square in the forehead. Behind it, the second motorcycle appeared, landing a death blow to the fawn. The bike bumped up onto my pelvis and over my chest, crushing my ribcage and snapping my neck as it rolled on and off and over my head. When my neck broke, it spun my head to the right, toward the deer. My hand fell limp landing over the fawn's spots, across its rib cage. Our eyes locked. bobby go home. It was no more than a thought, but perhaps I spoke the words to him. I couldn't tell from the noise of the fleeing motorcycles. 010 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE After that, all my energy seemed connected to the deer lying next to me. And, as our stayed eyes connected, its breathing slowed with mine. Hazy clouds of fog ghosting from our mouths slackened, then dissipated, and, finally came to a stop. 011 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE FOUR THE DEER AND I ROSE TOGETHER slowly and stood by our bodies as we watched Bobby bark. go home, bobby. I said to him. My voice sounded younger, reminding me of my days in the school playground, in sandboxes, on monkey bars. Bobby burst into an onslaught of yapping. Then he began to whimper. His mind was not capable of understanding my death, nor was it capable of understanding the sound of my new voice. I bent to console him, to pet him like I'd always done. don't cry bobby. I said, stroking his head. But my hand wasn’t touching him. It seemed inches above his fur. He sat but continued his nervous panting. Bobby wasn’t accepting my affections with joy. He shuddered and whimpered again, like when he was a puppy. don't cry. you need to go home. you need to go see Rod. He panted harder and pulled away, made his way to the fawn, sniffed her body once more, and returned to my body. He licked my face, the way he used to when he sat above my shoulder on the back of the couch as I worked on my laptop. It felt good somehow. Like my body was still translating his touch to my soul. I felt the warmth of his tongue shroud me in his sadness. go home. go to Rod. I repeated. 012 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Then, he stood. He looked at our bodies again, then looked directly at my spirit and the fawn's and yipped, only once. go home. And he turned and walked off but so slowly, his head down, the leash dragging alongside him, his tail nearly touching the pavement. I sensed he would stop again. When he looked back at me and then toward the direction of home, then once more at our bodies, I urged him on stronger. go. now. go to Rod. When I placed my hand onto the back of the fawn spirit, he understood. I wasn't going with him. I wasn’t with him any longer. I was with the fawn now. I was gone. And, in a bolt, Bobby took off, his leash whipping at the air, waving behind him. 013 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE FIVE AN OVERALL SENSATION OF PEACE, as if lying on a bed of feathers or eating warm caramel, caused me to glow. The air smelled of pear blossoms but it was still late fall on the earth. In this new place, where I seemed to awaken, springtime (or maybe it was summer) showed itself in blistering lime-colored mosses and fragile pink cherry blossoms, in brilliant sunflower yellows, in the bluest sky I'd ever seen. It was like indigo but with bright whorls, an abalone shell horizon. The plane I stood on, if plane was the right word, drifted in undulating rhythm above the ground. Not that the ground couldn't be stood upon, but what was the point? I didn't need the earth. I was no longer anchored to it. I could just as easily flow through the earth's crust and come out the other side, or hang around within it, as I could fly in the sky! And, from where robins soared, the world looked heavenly over our island. A soft braying made me look over. The little fawn was still next to me. Her body wasn't bent or broken anymore. She'd become whole again like me. Now I understood—when you die on earth with someone, you awaken with them in your renewed blissful state. Death didn’t mean the same thing on this side. I felt no sadness, regrets, no pain. I smiled at the fawn, and she winked at me. Her lips split and she made the goofiest smile I'd ever seen on a 014 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE deer before. Okay. It was the only smile I'd ever seen on a deer, but I'm telling you, it was goofy-looking. I giggled at her and she smiled again which made me giggle more and made her smile more. I think it might've gone on for a long time but then she stopped the whole thing by bumping my hand and sliding her head under it. She nuzzled my palm, wanting me to pet her. “You're my new friend.” She burrowed her head harder into my hand. “I'll call you Fawn and you can call me ... Hannah.’Cause that's my name. Okay? Fawn?” She nodded by lowering her muzzle onto her leg and then she looked up to see if I understood. Which I did, of course. Angels understand everything, good and bad alike. I began to note the changes in me. They felt good, the changes, natural, like something God intended. I was only inches taller than Fawn. Through my transfiguration from death, I reverted back to the body I had when I was a child of about ten years old. My hands looked small and pudgy, pink and soft. They hadn't looked like that in years. My adult hands appeared long, thin and bony. A pianist’s hands. I was innocent again, but I retained an inkling of the knowledge of someone much older and wiser. Fawn nudged my side, nearly tipping me off my feet but I caught myself. In fact, when I did, I floated aimlessly. I guess it was the closest thing to a fall an angel can have. “Hey!” I giggled. It made me remember the last time I sounded that way, at the school yard, in the playground, on a rubber-seated swing, tipping back as I swung 015 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE forward, tipping forward as I swung back, and screaming with delight in a tone that couldn’t be replicated by any adult vocal chords. Fawn nudged again as she floated next to me. She wanted to play. I floated up and over her and got behind her. That's when I tugged on her tail! She leapt and hopped away and kicked her heels, giving chase. I zoomed, like Superman, to try and catch her. We hovered above the ground, about twenty feet. She came to a skidding stop and, when she did, she looked behind, waiting for me to catch up. She pointed down at the ground with her nose. It was Bobby. He had just turned the corner and was running down the last stretch to our home. A blazing shot of light burst behind my eyes. It spun around my brain, like a tornado inside my head, and began to fill the rest of my spirit body, crossing over my shoulders, my chest, my belly and down each leg, like a lightning flash, as it spiraled toward my feet and shot out my toes. Crying as an angel is different than crying as a human. As humans, we express our sorrow through tears and physical anguish. But as an angel, a complete sense of contentment normally fills your heart and, so, when sadness grips us, it's with an utter feeling of shrouding darkness. Like falling into a bottomless pit. A helpless feeling soaked in memories and the love we left behind. Then it struck me. The sensation was caused by who I left behind. 016 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “Bobby!” I screamed and almost whirled down straight to my little dog, but something tugged against the pocket of my red denim overalls and brought me out of the horrid trance. It was Fawn. She held the pocket in between her teeth. Her eyes bore the pain of my sorrow. “That's my little dog, Fawn!” She nodded at me then tipped her head toward Bobby and trotted off in his direction, her teeth continuing to hold me back. We were only supposed to follow him. 017 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE SIX WE SOARED ABOVE BOBBY AS he ran. The scent of his breath swung up to me, mixed with the thick perfume of woodland undergrowth. Fawn swayed back and forth in a gallop as if she had ground under her hooves. She appeared cartoonish, like a rocking horse. Bobby's small white body hurdled hard and fast, on his stubby legs, forward as he ran to find Rod. Just like I'd ordered him. He had another solid block to go before reaching the house. He was a good boy, minding like that. I dropped down closer as he ran only about ten feet above him now. Then I dipped a little lower and smiled, but my glee lasted only a short while. Once again, I felt the crushing sensation of grief grip me. The flash of light returned and swirled around me. And I felt something reeling me back, like a hooked fish jerked out of water. Understanding swept over me: I had to stay within a few feet of Fawn or get lost forever. I pointed my hands together, making me fly back up to her. That’s when we spotted them. Our murderers. Fawn stopped suddenly, slewing into a halt. I toppled over her in a somersault and landed on my rear but never took my eyes off my target. The motorcyclists had stopped directly in front of our home. 018 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE SEVEN NEAR THE BLACKTOP driveway that curved like a snake into a property, the motorcyclists dismounted their bikes. From their position, the house was camouflaged by a hedgerow of alders, spruce, salal and ocean spray. A bead of sweat dripped slowly along the gentle slope of the biker’s nose and onto his upper lip. A dull scraping came from someone working around the property—a landscaper most likely, raking perhaps. The man in black flipped his tinted visor over his helmet. “Oh man! You killed her, man. She's dead!” His eyes plated open. Fear poured from his mouth. His breath, dank from syrupy rum, blew back in his face. “Nah. She'll be fine.” But the green-clad motorcyclist looked back, his visor down concealing his true thoughts, over his shoulder. He revved his bike's engine. “She'll be fine.” He turned back to his friend, this time raising his voice. “Oh man!” His head recoiled when he slammed his hands onto the handlebars. He tipped his visor up. Their faces mirrored the horror each other felt. “We should go back, man.” The one in black said. “Nah.” He paused again. “Ya think?” “We should go back.” The words sounded forced, as if he would break down any minute. They peered into each other's faces. “You hit her first.” 019 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “Did not.” “Yeah.” He nodded his head violently. “She was falling before...” He tipped his head, a guilty grimace smearing his mouth “…you know.” He shook his head. “Crap!” The man in black yelled again. But when the scraping sound stopped, it drew their attention to a man's voice in the distance, behind the house they'd stopped in front of. Someone was walking toward them. A yipping sound broke their concentration and they looked behind. A small white dog charged at them. The man, now in the driveway, yelled again. “Let’s go!” The green man revved his engine and squirreling his back tires as he tried to regain control of the bike. The black cyclist heard the man yelling now, over the drum of his friend's engine as the other man sped away. He flipped down his visor when the man, wiping ashy bangs out of his face, came running into view. He frowned when he saw the motorcyclist flip down his visor. The dark rider then turned and zipped off down the road toward a main arterial. “Hey!” The man broke into a run, but stopped at the edge of his property. His arms hung loosely as if exhausted from the exertion of raking leaves. 020 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE EIGHT THE DAY WAS A BLEND of warm and chill. The cool air hit his watery eyes and through them the sky looked misty. Sunshine poured through the bank of trees that blocked their house. The sun cast prisms off the grass, off amber rotting leaves mounded in the middle of their circular drive in one enormous pile. Rod wiped a bead of sweat from his lip. He didn't know why he couldn’t allow hired help handle the raking. It was just something he'd always done since he was a young boy. And truthfully, he enjoyed it. The raking anchored him somehow—to the past, to the present and to the future. He and Hannah decided to leave the leaves on the ground until fall was done blowing through. They always did. He figured she didn't care. What was the point in raking and raking for the entire length of the season when one good pass could be accomplished in a few short hours? He leaned on his rake, resting. The rake's green paint looked chipped and worn from years of use. He stared at it. Thinking about Hannah, he thought about how they'd worn through their relationship. He felt a crush of pain grab his stomach. He loved her. More than anything, even now, even after their impending financial doom. But he wanted out for some reason. She'd changed. She'd become tunnel-visioned. Nothing mattered to her except the freaking wildlife, the deer especially. He'd watched her obsess about them. 021 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE He’d even encouraged it. But he had his limits. The feedings tapped their waning resources more than any other expense, save for the monthly mortgage. It was sheer craziness. She'd fully stepped into a realm where he knew he couldn't reel her back but he still loved her. And that was the thing that hurt him the most. He knew he had to leave. He took in a deep breath. The raking felt cathartic. The smell, like nothing you could bottle. Simply the pure perfect beauty of nature giving back. He breathed out, enjoying his break. He licked his cracked lips. They tasted bloody and felt raw. Winter was definitely coming. But, the moment broke like a mirror falling onto concrete. Engines roared up and stopped in front of his home. Two bikers. They were arguing, it sounded like. He couldn't make out their words. He dropped his rake onto the heap of leaves and walked toward the street, wondering if there was some kind of trouble. Through the leafless limbs of winterberry, Rod saw a man in black, head to toe, on a motorcycle. The man lowered his visor, and he looked to Rod like some kind of Ninja ant warrior. Rod almost laughed. Instead, he brushed a swag of sweaty hair from his brow. And, when the man reacted, as if scared, Rod chased after him. 022 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE For what? He didn't know but something felt off, as if he knew and hated these men. Fury grew in him for no reason. He ran to find out why. He stopped, finally, and watched them speed away turning toward town. Rod shook his head and turned back to the house but another sound, barking and then panting, made him spin around. “Bobby?” he whispered in disbelief and then louder when he realized the dog was alone, “Bobby!” The little white dog—no bigger than a bread box, Hannah always said—was running toward Rod in a full gallop, pink tongue flagging at the corner of his mouth. His leash waggled off the back of his halter, still attached, without Hannah. “Bobby!” Rod bolted off toward the dog. 023 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE NINE THE GREEN AND BLACK BIKERS peeled off their jumpsuits, revealing sweat-stained clothing beneath—thick long-sleeve jersey shirts and droopy jeans. One wore a red bandana with a swirling black motif. They looked around as if stealing money from a cash register but it wasn't money they had stolen. Their eyes patrolled for witnesses but they couldn't see me. Only Fawn could see me. I crouched next to her. She licked her knee, then scratched her floppy ear with her back hoof so delicately you'd have thought she had fingertips on the end of it. When she finished she sniffed the end of it, licked it gently and then set her hoof down again. The men stuffed their uniforms and then their helmets into the storage compartments behind each seat. “I'm hungry.” “How can you be hungry after that? Freak.” “It's the grease from that restaurant.” He tipped his head to the building where they hid. They were in an alley behind a bank of stores—a grocer, a jeweler and a pizza joint. The man in black let out air from between his lips in a disgusted hiss. “We need to get off this stupid island, not eat, you idiot.” He snapped closed the lid to his seat compartment as if adding an exclamation point. “Come on. Hurry. We need to get in line for the ferry. Hopefully, there'll be other bikers too. We'll blend.” 024 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “What if there's not?” “Then we're screwed.” He threw his leg over the seat, stood tall on the kickstarter and pumped the engine into action, making it roar before letting it settle into a low rumble. The man in green rushed to do the same. His friend backed up his bike, then angled it taking a few glances around for anyone who might've spotted them. Satisfied, he drove out of the alley and back onto a main road. His friend followed but stopped, pulled his red bandana up and over his head, adjusting it low onto his forehead. Even over the grumbling engine, he heard the creak of a spring door open. Some young bald guy with a fat belly wearing a dingy tomato-stained chef's apron was throwing out garbage, outside a door marked VEGOS ITALIAN PIZZA. The remaining biker looked at him and their eyes joined in a question. The bald guy nodded a hello but the biker just turned and squirreled off and out of the alley, kicking up gravel toward the pizza man. 025 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE TEN IT WAS LIKE TWO PEOPLE telling you the same thing at the same time. That’s how Rod felt, anyway. At the moment Bobby and Rod met up with each other, the distant echo of a siren swung from high to low and back again. Like someone whistling down the road. “Come on, boy. How did you get away from Mommy?” He ruffled the dog's white fur as Bobby licked him over and over. Rod turned his face away, and as he did, he peered down the road, half expecting to see me walking toward them. “Yes. Boy. Yes.” After a second, Rod turned and led Bobby back toward the house. “Let's get you some water.” But Bobby, panting hard, refused to move. “Come on, boy. You need some water.” Bobby mewled and limped. “Are you hurt?” Rod bent down and examined each of Bobby's legs and paws, rubbing them, checking for injuries. “I don't see anything, guy.” The sound of sirens grew closer. He looked to the end of the road, where the cyclists had turned and disappeared. Then he saw the flashing lights. “Come on.” Rod pulled Bobby off the road. A wave of cold sweat swept over him. The ambulance passed in the direction from which Bobby had come. The dog began yelping, howling and barking, knocking Rod out of his thoughts. “Stop it! Stop it! Bobby!” 026 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE But Bobby refused. Rod crumpled to his knees on the mucky ground next to Bobby, now trying to quiet the knowledge in his heart that something was dreadfully wrong. 027 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE ELEVEN MY VOICE JERKED ROD UP and off the ground. He looked behind him and then down the street but couldn’t see me. I didn’t mean to make contact with him. I didn’t think he would hear. But his grief pierced my heart. Fawn was pulling at me, urging me away. Fear filled her big soulful eyes. She bobbed her head fiercely and whinnied like a stallion. But, it was too late. The pain that traversed through me before, filled me again. We tumbled as I chanted Rod’s name. We swirled over and under a wave of… …nothing. But it was too late. I had split the distance, ripped open the curtain between our planes. Like gutting a fish. Rod wiped his nose, streaking a thin line of shiny slime across his sleeve. His face, streaked with dirt where his tears had run. Then, with Bobby on his heels, he ran back inside the house perhaps thinking I had made my way back home without him noticing. The house smelled like me, my skin scent, everywhere, imbedded into the paint, the stain of the wooden floor, the fabric on the couch, everywhere. As if I'd hid a lavender sachet inside a drawer. “Hannah?” Bobby yipped and wagged his tail. “Bobby? Did your mother come home?” Bobby wagged his tail in short swipes. It created a faint dust angel on the floor. 028 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE TWELVE “HANNAH!” ROD SCREAMED, “YOU HOME?” He lifted his eyes up the stairs but hearing nothing continued his search in the den. Bobby lapped up water as Rod peered out the back, then headed to the garage. “Hannah!” Then Bobby looked up at the ceiling, at me. Straight at me! He wagged his tail like crazy, making me and Fawn giggle uncontrollably. Bobby had a way of making my pain disappear. It seemed he had the same effect on Fawn, too, because she rolled over with all fours in the air, twisting as if she were scratching her back on the ground, snorting and giggling like Bobby was the funniest thing she'd ever seen in her life. The way Fawn was acting made me laugh even harder and made Bobby's tail wag with more fever. He began to yip and jump and spin in circles. Bobby, too, was laughing with us. The noise brought Rod back into the room. “Bobby, cut it out.” Rod looked dazed, but not frantic. Bobby dropped down to his stomach and laid his head on his front paws with his tail continuing to wag. “Hi, sweetie!” “What was that? Hannah?” “Oops.” I whispered. Fawn's eyes grew wide and I placed my finger up to my mouth and shushed them both. Although I was new to this world, old wisdom boiled in me. Wisdom from ancient times that told me we were not 029 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE supposed to communicate with anyone in the live world. I’d broken that wisdom with Bobby. No telling the repercussion for that. “Hannah! Dammit. This isn't funny. Come out here! Now!” Bobby lay down again with his head down but this time his tail slumped. I could tell that he could see and hear and understand things from both sides—him on earth and we up in the cosmos. The phone rang, jarring everyone in the room. Rod ran over and nearly tackling the phone. “Yes.” He barked out the word. But the next one came out slower. “Yes.” As if he were a tire going flat. His face went sallow. Then he fell back against the counter, landing the middle of his back on the corner of the sink. His body crumpled to the floor. “Yes.” The word ground out of him, and he dropped the phone. 030 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE THIRTEEN ROD SAT, HALF IN AND half out of the car. His hands held up his head but also helped keep his tear-streaked face covered from the police officer who stood outside next to Rod. They were a ways back from where our bodies lay on the road, among a trapezoidal square of yellow crime scene tape the police had strung up creating a barrier for traffic. The tape fluttered in the wind and made a soft clapping sound when it did. The day was still morning on earth and besides the soft clap of plastic tape whipping in the breeze, a more somber sound of Rod weeping hung in the air, making people around him wipe their faces, their noses, and talk in stifled phrases. How awful, what happened here, there for the grace of God. The things people say when someone dies and they don't want the loved ones to hear. A light scent of ocean-salt mixed with rotting kelp, whiffed up in small tornadoes from outdoors. Rod's lamentations echoed up to Fawn and me, pounding like a bass drum against our hearts. We wailed and moaned, spinning upward, both of us, away from the plummeting pain in which we had become engulfed. The breeze picked up and howled, making those on the ground grab the hoods of their jackets and curse at the sudden change in weather. Officer Scott Johnson was a friend of theirs and didn't budge. He remained at Rod's side, wiping his own tears. Then, as if he got it, as if some cosmic sense flooded over him, he knelt to Rod. 031 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “That wind? Was her.” He paused then said, “This is a raw deal.” He lifted his sunglasses, showing Rod his wet red eyes. He nodded slowly and broke down again. “It was my fault.” Rod said. The wind blasted through again. Pieces of dried grass kicked through the air. Johnson protected his face. “Sorry?” “It's my fault.” “Rod. You don't know what you're saying.” “It is, Scott.” He looked at the officer. A thin film of moisture covered his eyes, nose and mouth. “If I'd been kinder...” His words trailed off. “Look. Don't do this to yourself.” “It's true. If I hadn't said what I said. If I'd just asked her to stay or went with her...” “Rod.” “None of this would've happened!” The others at the scene looked at the two men. “You can do this to yourself for the rest of your life,” Johnson said. “Or...” “Or, what?” “Or, you can understand that this was going to happen no matter what you did.” “No. You're wrong.” “Rod.” “No! Scott. You're wrong. If I had just gone with her this wouldn't have happened!” Johnson looked away at the others and scowled, making them turn away, and Rod continued. “I told her I was leaving.” 032 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE He looked at Scott, trying to gauge the other man’s reaction. But there was nothing. Nothing. Scott’s face was unreadable. “If I'd been kinder.” He repeated it, more quietly this time, like a mantra. “If I'd just gone with her.” 033 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE FOURTEEN “LIFT HER CAREFULLY,” SCOTT ORDERED the EMTs. “It's her arm.” The male EMT said. “It's, well, it's like it's locked onto the deer.” “Good Lord.” Scott growled. He pulled out a sterile glove from his pocket and slipped it on. Then, Scott moved around one EMT, the one at my head and into the two-foot-deep ditch, and stepped between the deer's broken body and mine. He grabbed hold of my wrist, and released it almost immediately. “God.” Tears welled into his eyes, and he fell back on his rump. “God. God. God.” He wiped at his face and took three deep breaths in. Then he sat forward and stood up. “The cold. I'll never get used to how cold bodies get.” He wiped his face again and coughed into his hand, the same hand with which he tried to move me. After coughing, he opened his palm and looked at it. As if looking for some unwritten answer. “We gonna do this?” The EMT shook Scott out of his trance. Scott rubbed his palms together. He didn't answer the EMT. He said nothing. He simply placed his hand firmly around my wrist again, shutting his eyes and then tugging my arm, wrenching it down and off the deer's body. He placed it under the white sheet that covered most of me. He held it there for a few seconds and I sensed that he wasn't only adjusting my body, he was trying to feel for any last surges of life in it. But there were none. 034 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE I lowered myself beside him and gave him a peck on his cheek and he let go of my arm. “Okay,” he said, as if only to himself. Then, he repeated it a little louder. “Okay. You can take her now.” The EMTs lifted the gurney. Scott grabbed the rim of it though, preventing them from moving my body. Before letting them move me up and into the ambulance he said, “Be careful with her. She was my friend.” Scott climbed out of the ditch and looked down at the small deer. “Poor little thing.” He stepped back into the gully, pulled its body off the road and laid it gently in the ditch. 035 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE FIFTEEN PASTOR JOHN SET THE PHONE down, on the cluttered credenza behind his desk, and stared at the wall. He wiped his eyes but kept his focus away from anyone who might enter without warning. Island Light, the bulletin of Santa Maria Presbyterian Church, hung open a bit tilted on his wall. How to Flourish Together in Christ was the title of this week's flyer. The scripture of I Corinthians 16: 13-14 stated in italics: Be alert; stand firm in the faith; have courage; be strong. Do everything in love. John would need to gather all of his strength today. Hannah had been a parishioner of his church for many years, but more important than that, she had been a friend to him and Corrine. They'd tried to get Rod to join but he had told them point blank once, it's just not my thing. And then grabbed John's hand, shook it and apologized. John looked at his watch. The regular Sunday service was scheduled to start in fifteen minutes. His arm looked weak under his royal purple robe, under the weight of what Rod had told him. He wiped his eyes again. Rod had sounded vacant to John but had held it together. John knew that Rod would have to pull together all the courage and strength he could in order to make it without Hannah, now that she'd been killed. Rod hadn't gone into much detail, just that she'd been hit while walking the dog. 036 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Pastor John bowed his head and leaned on the credenza behind his desk as if holding himself up by the elbows. Corrine walked in. As she always did before every service, to walk with her husband to the altar. John would need her support today. She would need his. When he turned around and looked at his wife's pretty face, spotting a few lines creasing her eyes and mouth with well-worn age, he still thought she was the prettiest girl he'd ever seen before or since. He wiped his arm across his eyes again. Corrine took in a quick quiet breath and held it. 037 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE SIXTEEN PASTOR JOHN FELT HIS THROAT catch, and glanced over at Corrine, who was wiping tears from under her eyes with a napkin from one of the snack tables. She'd picked it up, wisely before leading her husband into the hall, past the pews of happy unknowing faces, up two steps onto the carpeted altar and over to the row of chairs he usually sat while waiting for the elders to begin service. Hannah had been Catholic but had long since left that church, reading only from the Bible from time to time and then finally settling with John's church six years ago. She had come in with Rod for the funeral of a friend and never left. Before John, people stared blankly. He swallowed. He coughed into a fist. He shuffled his notes in front of him, tapping them into a neat square. He looked up. Congregants waited for him to begin but he could only stare back. John was used to losing church members. He was not jaded, but loss came with the territory. Loss and grieving was a large part of why people went to church. Or returned to church. John looked over at Corinne again, and when he did, the crowd became uneasy. People shuffled in the pews and caused a quiet shushing. Someone cleared her throat. John looked up to her and wondered why the Lord chose the people He did to return to Him. It didn't figure 038 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE to him that some were still alive and others were dead. John knew it wasn't his place to understand but he still had questions. Lots of them. Then it was John who cleared his throat. “I'm sorry. I just got some, um, terrible news.” People took in breaths and looked at each other. People grabbed hands. “Oh, no,” someone said. “Yes. I'm sorry but she was my—” He turned to Corinne and held out his hand to her. “Our friend.” He bent his head and silently wept. He felt his wife's hand over his back. They embraced each other. They now stood before everyone, clutching each other and crying quietly into each other's necks. A few women in the congregation began to cry, causing some of the children to burst into tears. The Sunday School teacher, Miss Jill, gathered them together quickly and led them out. “We're sorry.” Corinne took over as John stepped back and tried to regain his composure. “We don't mean to alarm you, it's just that”—her voice warbled through the tears that streaked her face—”the news has come as quite a shock to us. We just learned about it, not fifteen minutes before the service started.” She looked back at John, who nodded; he was okay now. Corinne kissed him lightly on the cheek then walked back to the row of chairs. He stood correcting his posture and taking a deep breath in. “One of our dear members has passed.” He waited for the news and the muttering subside. “Yes. Hannah Demsey.” “Oh, dear God. No,” said Pamela Stark. 039 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE John's face crumbled and he shook his head violently. “Yes.” He backed away from the podium again. Corinne ran up to him and helped him to the chairs. One of the elders, jumped up. “We'll be offering communion today, but please let us open our Bibles to Psalm 23 and say it together.” 040 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE SEVENTEEN THE WEATHER HAD TURNED FAST from sunny and cold to sloppy and wet. Most everyone there huddled under any umbrella available. One kind soul held a wide black umbrella over my mom, Belle. Her eyes wore the look of age, sullen and dark and swollen from crying. She just stared through the entire process of saying goodbye, to me, her only daughter. From the limo, Bobby yipped without letup. His head lifted each time he barked. Rod turned from him toward the casket, which was slung above the hole in the ground that was to be my grave. It was weird knowing I was in there. The wind picked up. Poplars bent at their waists. Firs paddled, as if waving me off. It was a snotty day for a funeral, but I smiled to see how many people turned out. Even in this weather. “Fawn. I was popular.” Fawn licked my face. She had decided to pull up next to me and sit on her haunches. I'd crossed my legs like a girl pretzel and leaned over onto my elbows, propping my head up on the palms of my hands. It was like being at an outdoor amphitheater. I wished for something happier and popcorn popped into my mind. When it did Voila! A big buttery cardboard bucket of it, the kind you get at the movies, plopped down right in front of us. Fawn dove her face right in and made a few kernels sprinkle out around the bucket. I picked those up and shoved them into my mouth. Blissful oily oozing butter coated my lips and tongue and it was like the best popcorn I'd ever tasted in the 041 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE whole entire world, ever. Fawn's eyes got so big after eating some that I thought they might explode right there and then, out of her head. She looked over to me slowly and mewled this little sputtering sound. It made me think of outward purr. I giggled so hard. She dove her face in again. “Hey. Piggy. Leave some for me too. It's called sharing.” Fawn definitely needed some training. But then Pastor John stood. He spoke solemnly. I looked over at Fawn and popcorn was tumbling out of her mouth. “Hannah Demsey was my friend.” His voice resonated and he tipped his head to the clouds. With his arms held wide and his wife, Corinne, holding the umbrella higher than the other umbrellas to allow for his uplifted hands. “We are gathered for Hannah today. To offer our last respects.” Bobby stopped yipping. Gliddy Canden wept openly for me, which actually added a little humor to the whole scene, seeing as how, Gliddy and I had could barely stand each other and had once nearly come to fisticuffs over whose fudge was better. It was the stupidest fight I'd ever been involved in but then Pastor John called a tie on the fudge and, we were ordered to hug and forget our differences. Talk about nauseating. 042 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Gliddy could be such a pill and, honestly, I really never thought of her as much as a friend as she apparently did me, now, now that I was dead. Corinne cried and tilted the umbrella when she went to wipe her nose, causing the rain to drench Pastor John. Pastor John stopped speaking and went over to Rod, who got up. “Thank you all for coming out today.” Rod smiled but only with his lips. His eyes bore a pain that I hadn't seen on him until the day I died. When he said he was leaving me. “It's a stinker of a day so, thank you, for all coming out for ... Hannah.” Bobby started barking again. Some of the folks turned toward him. Gliddy cried loudly again, I saw Rod shoot her a bullet of an ugly look. “Did you see that Fawn?” I jumped up. I laughed and danced, pleased that Rod would commit such a bold act. And! In public! “Woo hoo!” I bellowed. Rod looked right at me, then, and spoke. “Hannah. Wherever you are…” “I'm here, Rod! Right here!” “Wherever you are, Hannah Demsey, I'll miss you forever.” The rain splashed into his eyes but it couldn't hide his tears. His tears shone as if aquamarine blue droplets. “Rod! Rod! I'm here!” I jumped up and down as if smashing an anthill. Rod looked up, as if confused, into a sudden blast of rain. He wiped his eyes as he looked in our direction. Pastor John came up and patted him on the back. He 043 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE handed him a sachet of dirt, taking Rod's attention away from us, but, Rod refused the sachet and bent to the ground. He picked up a clump of mud and soppy grass and threw it onto my casket. After throwing it, he just seemed to lose his strength. He dropped onto his knees and covered his face in his hands and wept. It broke my heart. To anchor myself to the spot, I placed my hand on Fawn’s neck and, without taking my eyes off Rod, I said, “Did you see that, Fawn? He loved me.” 044 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE EIGHTEEN MOM LIFTED HERSELF LIKE SHE needed a walker and moved over to Rod. She placed both whitegloved hands on his shoulders. “Come on, honey.” Her body looked like a question mark as her old bones bent her shoulders. Her hair shone gray and in curls under the black veiled cap she wore. Rod crossed one arm in front of him and placed it on Mom’s hand, patting it as if to tell her he was going to be all right. She grabbed his hand in both of hers and helped him stand. They embraced and stood quietly with everyone watching them. “Come on.” Mom whispered. Rod nodded and they turned to leave, but Pastor John stopped them both. “I'm so sorry, Rod, Belle, for your loss.” He grabbed Rod's hands in his. “She was our dear friend and a faithful woman to God.” Belle nodded but Rod pulled his hand out of Pastor's. “Yes. Well. Thank you, John.” Rod placed his hand on the small of Mom’s back and pressed her forward but Pastor John stopped them both. “Look. Rod, I know I've asked before. It sure would be great if you joined us sometime. I mean if you ever...” Rod jumped in. “John. I know Hannah believed in all of your, your, words and all. However, she and I did not agree on this subject. So, please, drop me from your radar.” He placed a hand on Mom’s back and moved her past him and toward the limo. 045 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE NINETEEN ROD LOOKED HOLLOW, SCRAWNY. HE looked as if he wanted everyone to just leave so he could escape back to the house, back to bed. To hold Bobby against his stomach and just sleep. Belle's house had filled up with nearly everyone at the cemetery. Gliddy rushed up to Rod, catching him in a death grip and whispering how “dreadfully sorry” she was. I nearly puked. Rod peeled her off him and rushed to Belle, who ran interference. “Look, Gliddy. He's a bit unraveled, as you might suspect. Let's give him some breathing distance, okay?” “It's just I feel terrible, Belle.” Gliddy swiped a wadded tissue under her nose. “You know, with that fudge fiasco and all.” Her face pinched in what looked like another onslaught of tears but Belle grabbed her solidly by the arms and gave her one stiff shake. “Look, Gliddy. That's old news. Get over it. No one cares about that anymore.” “HELLO-OOO! Mother! I do!” I floated over Gliddy's shoulders, making faces at her, pulling at her hair and blowing raspberries at her face. Gliddy swiped at the air, as if she were trying to get a gnat out from in front of someone’s eyes. Fawn poked my shoulder blade to stop me. “Isn't she just the biggest pill you ever laid eyes on, Fawn.” Fawn rolled her eyes, like, Whatever, YOU need to get over it! But I really didn't want to. Until, that is, a flood of light washed over her, spilling above her head and 046 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE spreading around her to the floor, shielding her from my terrible attack. an angel's behavior, young lady, an angel's behavior Lord? I felt a wave of embarrassment blanket me. There was so much to learn. And, as the notion filled me, Pastor John entered the room. Gliddy turned to him. They nodded at one another and she left, looking morose. Pastor John paused before approaching Rod, who had turned his body away from people and was leaning against the kitchen's sink. He let his head hang with his chin almost touching his chest. His eyes were closed and I could see a thin line of moisture collecting in his lashes. “John.” Mom grabbed both his hands in hers. “Belle.” He tipped his head to Rod. Mom shook her head as if to say, He’s had better days. Then Pastor released his hands and pointed them to his chest as if to say, May I try? Mom rubbed one of his upper arms, as an okay, and joined the others in the living room. Pastor John's stance was apprehensive, guarded at first, then he looked up to the ceiling. Fawn and I swished into his view, but he closed his eyes and said a quiet prayer one that only Fawn and I could hear. And, well, God, of course. He asked God to give him strength for Rod. John walked up behind him, gently patting him on the back. “Rod.” Rod glanced sideways but after seeing him, looked back down into the sink. “John.” He took a deep breath. 047 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “How ya doing?” Rod chuckled, a chuckle intended to chide, but followed it up graciously. “I've been better.” “I bet you have.” “Look. John. I know you mean well. I really do.” Rod faced him. “It's just, well, I've never been a, believer. That's all.” “Hannah handled that part of your relationship, huh?” Rod chuckled again. “Yeah.” He took a full breath in. “Yep. I guess so.” He turned away again. “Rod...” “John. Please. Some other time.” Pastor John stopped the inevitable sales pitch but the uncomfortable moment ended when Bobby wiggled into the kitchen to find Rod. Belle walked in behind him, smiling. “He missed you,” my mother explained. “Bobby!” Rod bent and lifted the dog into his arms. Bobby slathered a ton of wet kisses against his face, making Rod smile for the first time all day. “He didn't want to stay in that stupid old limousine anymore.” “Bobby!” I screamed and rolled in the air in a somersault and then a cartwheel and screamed in laughter, “Bobby! Bobby! Bobby!” Fawn romped and kicked her heels. Bobby began a litany of angry-sounding barks. It looked as if they were directed at John. Fawn and I stopped. I covered my mouth knowing it was our fault that Bobby had gone off. 048 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “Look,” John said loudly over the barking, “I'll leave.” He shoved both palms out as if pushing off from a wall then nearly ran out of the kitchen. “Let's talk soon!” Which seemed to make Bobby go nuts again. “Bobby. You saved Daddy.” Rod whispered to him. “Oh, he's only doing his job, Rod.” Mom moved next to him and began running water to wash the few dishes she'd allowed to accumulate in her sink. “You should give him the benefit of the doubt.” “Bobby!” I yelled, making him squirm and whimper. “What's wrong, little guy?” Rod frowned, knowing he couldn't console the dog. He set Bobby down but the dog continued to bark up at me and Fawn. “You see me, don't you?” He went absolutely nuts when I asked. I giggled and his tail took a couple long lazy swags across the floor. “He's been acting this way, since... you know,” Rod said. “He just misses her. They know too, ya know. They feel loss too, ya know.” My mother stopped rinsing a plate and seemed to dissolve in the reality of what she'd just said. “Can you see Fawn too, Bobby?” I asked. He took another long swag with his tail and yipped once. “Okay. Fawn, this is Bobby. Bobby, this is Fawn.” Fawn laid on her stomach and set her head down as a gesture, I guess, in acknowledgement of the dog. And, Bobby did the same. He laid on his stomach and set his head in between his paws. “He says, 'Nice to know ya, Fawn!'“ 049 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Bobby popped up and sat on his haunches. Now, mind you, Mom and Rod weren't exactly tuned into what was going on. Mom was crying and Rod was trying to console her. That is until Rod glanced down and saw the dog looking at—well, I supposed it looked like nothing to Rod, but Bobby and my eyes were connected and when he met Fawn, they connected too. “What's he doing?” “Huh.” Mom turned to see what Rod meant. “He's acting weird.” “He's just sad too.” She turned back to her dishes. Bobby barked and sat back down. “Bobby!” I taunted him. He wiggled his entire body but this time with his head down and his tail tucked. “Don't be scared, sweetie-pie! It's your mommy and the little deer on the roadside.” He barked like he understood me, and it was then that I realized he did. “Fawn. He sees us!” Bobby began wagging with crazy speed. Fawn loped and kicked her heels and I did a cartwheel. Each time we moved Bobby followed our action. You two will remain connected, forever The voice echoed into me and Fawn, and Bobby dropped to the ground putting his head down between paws again. “It's okay, Bobby. You get used to it.” Bobby sat up again and opened his mouth in a dog smile. 050 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “I've never seen him behave like this,” Rod said, but mom ignored him. We stopped acting out to get Bobby's attention and he finally settled down. Then Mom spoke. “Well, remember, Hannah took care of him. I'm sure you'll be seeing all the things she used to from now on.” 051 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE 052 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE 053 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE And every creature which is in heaven, and on the earth, and under the earth, and such as are in the sea, and all that are in them, heard I saying, Blessing, and honor, and glory, and power, be unto him that sitteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb for ever and ever. Part II TWENTY RO-OD! RO-OD! I WAS HANGING from the widest Monkey Tree I'd ever seen in my life. It had been rooted above our house since time immemorial. Who knew? Not I! Ro-od, Rod! It's me, Hannah. I sang out the words like a plunky tune from one of those old-fashioned ice cream trucks. Bobby's tail had already begun wagging when Rod sprung up in bed. A light glow of sweat coated his face, neck, shoulders, arms and chest. 054 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE He gasped for air when he awoke, and Fawn and I jumped back. Bobby lifted his head off my pillow, his new spot on the bed, and watched us watching Rod, who swallowed hard. The distinct smell of Rod's morning breath wafted up under my nose. It smelled sour and musty. He looked around the darkness of the bedroom as though he'd woken up in a strange place. The fractured variant shades of black made everything look the same-some things appeared murkier, some more vivid but everything, at that time of the night, looked obscured. The silvery sheets bundled around one of his legs, revealing the other one, slipped up and over his hip. And, although I saw his complete nakedness, nothing but fondness stirred inside me. Like walking past a burning woodstove, a sense of comfort blanketed me. “Hannah?” He sounded confused, scared, and he pulled the blanket up and over himself, tucking it around him tight. “Rod.” To him, the word sounded like the wall heater kicking on. He breathed in fast. But, just as I compared my voice to the heater, it did kick on. “Holy crap!” He flung his body backward, lying down again, like he'd lost a fight. “I'm going mad.” Bobby sidled up to him cautiously and curled in between his chest and his right arm. He laid his head on Rod's shoulder and breathed hot air into his face. “Bobby…” I missed him so much. He popped up into a sitting position and growled. This form of communication needed a bit of smoothing 055 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE over. “Over here, pup!” Fawn came up next to me. We both hung above the foot of the bed, in sitting positions— Fawn like a large dog and me like a soft salted pretzel! Bobby turned to my voice. This time he yipped, which made Rod sit up again. He watched as the little dog stared up to us. “You see me now, right, pooch?” Yip. His tail batted against Rod's hip. “I miss you.” Yip. Yip. He crouched down with his head on his feet and whimpered. “What is it, Bobby?” Rod said. “Answer your father, Bobby.” When I said it, the little dog turned to Rod but then quickly turned back to me again for more prodding. “Go ahead. Answer him.” Bobby grumbled and then sat face forward to Rod and barked once. He turned back to me and Fawn again and yipped, explaining to us that he'd answered Rod. “Yes. I know. Good boy.” I floated down in my pretzel position onto the bed next to my little dog and Rod, sitting there at the end of the bed. Bobby snuggled against me and rolled onto his back for me to rub his belly and scratch his legs. Of course, I did and when I did, he stretched both legs out, pointing them like a ballerina. “Feels good, huh, punkin'.” Bobby grumbled. Rod looked at Bobby as if he'd lost his mind, but he began to laugh anyway. “We're losing it, aren't we, son?” Then, Rod reached for him to pet his stomach and, when he did, his hand 056 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE brushed through mine. Rod pulled back, reacting as if he'd been zapped by an electrical current. “Oh my God!” He gasped, making Bobby roll onto his tummy. “Sorry ’bout that, Rod.” I giggled, figuring he'd get over it. But then he stopped, as if he'd heard me this time for real. “Hannah?” He said my name as though he were hiding from someone. Then, he got bolder. “Hannah. Is that you?” I flipped backwards and spun up to where I'd left Fawn. She was scratching her ear. “Yes.” I said in my angel voice, something that sounds to humans like walking too close to a beehive. His eyes widened. “Oh my God!” He dragged the covers up to his eyes. “Oh my God!” “Oh my God.” I corrected him. “Jesus! What's happening to me?” I realized that he wasn't exactly ready for communication with me, not just yet. Not the way I sounded to him. So I spun my attention to Fawn. “Whoops.” She flipped her head back and forth and her ears fluttered, then she scratched at them once again. She brayed at me and batted a hoof in my direction, then shook her head as if to get fleas out of her ears. “Itchy ears?” I whispered. Fawn stopped and tipped her head. Wisdom told us that we weren't to get involved with anyone belonging to the earth. 057 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “I'll get it for you.” I stuck a finger into each ear and wiggled them around. Her eyes scrunched in pleasure. “Get it?” I said when I was done, but with my fingers in her ears she couldn't hear me and cocked one eyebrow up as if asking, What? I pulled my fingers out. “Get it?” I repeated. She nodded and licked my hand. “You're welcome.” I knew I wasn't supposed to interact. I knew Fawn was only trying to distract me from interacting but I also knew that I wasn't to be fully trusted in this new, improved state of consciousness. Then, I turned back to Rod who looked as if he'd seen a... a... a… Well, you know. Which he had. And so I said, “Get over it, Rod. What did you expect?” But what I'd completely forgotten was that I'd reverted back to my child-self. I guess that would sort of freak me out too if the whole scenario were reversed. Bobby yipped and I floated back down and petted him again. Rod watched. He probably thought he was going insane and for the briefest of moments, I felt a brush of enjoyment flood over me. Now, Hannah, set aside pride and hold on to forgiveness, daughter “I'm sorry,” I said, looking, well, all over the place. Then, turning back to Rod, I said, “Rod, just forget about it. Get some sleep. Rest.” I looked around again, then added, “You too, Bobby.” 058 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE And, they both drifted back into unconsciousness. Rod first, then Bobby. I floated over him and patted his head. 059 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE TWENTY-ONE “THIS IS GOING TO SOUND crazy. I mean, it is crazy.” “Yes, honey. What is it? You sound distraught.” Mom's voice owned the rasp of age and cigarettes, like it always had even when I was a kid growing up. She cleared her throat, then coughed. Rod grimaced on his side of the phone. “Sorry. Go on, honey.” “It's probably nothing but, God, Belle. I hear her.” “Who, honey?” Now, it was Rod's turn to clear his voice. “Jesus.” He rolled his eyes, knowing how insane it was going to sound. “You hear Hannah?” Her voice broke. Then she openly wept. “Belle. I'm sorry. I shouldn't have called you.” Belle's moaning ended and she sniffled, causing phlegm to build up again in her throat. My mother hacked again, finally clearing the gunk from her lungs. “No. No. It's okay.” “It's crazy.” “It's not crazy, honey. It's normal.” “Have you seen her, heard her?” His voice sounded pathetic, needy. “No.” “It's not normal, then.” “I've heard many people say similar things after a loss.” “You have?” “Yes. I have.” 060 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE There was a pause. “In fact, after Jay died, I thought I heard him all the time. I dreamed about him all the time.” “You did?” “Yes. It comforted me so much. I sure miss those dreams.” “You don't have them anymore?” “Not like before. Not right after ... you know.” “Yeah.” Rod's face crunched. His shoulders jerked as he fought back tears. “Honey.” “Hmm?” He couldn't speak. If he spoke right now his voice would crack and Belle would know he was crying. “What happened?” “Um.” He coughed, to regain a calmer sound. “Um. Well, it was last night. I awoke. Suddenly. I thought I heard her.” “Upon waking?” “Yeah.” “Yes. That's when it used to happen with me.” She chuckled quietly. “Upon waking.” “It felt so real but then I would get so tired and, well, I guess I fell back to sleep.” “I'm sorry, honey.” “She touched me.” “What?” “It's nuts, huh?” “What do you mean, she touched you?” “Well, it didn't feel like if I touched your hand but it felt like something. Like a shock, like static electricity.” “I've never heard that before.” “Do you have photos of her when she was a kid?” 061 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “Well, honey, you know I do. Do you want them?” “Maybe. I don't know. Yes. Maybe a couple.” “Of course, honey.” “I can copy them so that you can have the originals.” “That's fine.” “How are you, Belle? How you holding up?” Silence felt like an ocean had flowed between them. Mom sniffled and then, mumbled something inaudible to Rod. He was in the middle of asking her to repeat herself when he realized her side of the phone went dead. 062 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE TWENTY-TWO WHEN ROD OPENED HIS DOOR, a mix of hairspray, an extinguished cigarette and perfume rushed to the entrance. He also smelled a nutty scent of toasted mocha from the coffee she had just purchased. The sky had turned into a painting of puffy clouds with winks of blue behind them—eyes peeking through a keyhole at the earth. Mom held in one of her hands a brown bag and in the other a photo album, which she pressed against her chest. “I wasn't expecting you. Sorry.” Rod looked down at his worn sweats. One side tipped off his hip where the hem of his wrinkled white T-shirt hung out. His mouth still tasted of sleep. “I would've put on something more, well. I would've put something else on.” “You look fine. I'm not here to judge your wardrobe, Rod.” She pushed the photo album at him. “Brought some cookies too.” He gestured for her to come in. The brass knob under his palm had gone from chilled to warm in just those few seconds. “Thanks, Mom.” He couldn't remember the last time he called Belle that. “Sure, sugar.” She walked into the kitchen and Rod followed. “Got coffee?” “Sure do. Cream?” “Just some sugar if you've got it. This thing’s empty.” Belle shook the paper cup and then tossed it into the garbage under the sink. 063 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Mom set the bag of cookies down onto the table and unwrapped her raincoat as Rod prepared her coffee. “Don't think I'll need this much sugar, honey.” Mom teased. I snickered out loud at her comment, which made Rod swat at his ear and Bobby run into the kitchen and bark. “Sorry, Mom. Hush, Bobby. It's Belle. You know Belle.” But Bobby wouldn't stop barking. Instead, he spun a little in a circle, once, and then stood looking straight at me. Again! He yipped like he was watching animals on the TV, crazy barking. “Bobby. Hush! Now!” I put my finger to my lips and he stopped. “Shh. Sweet pea. Daddy's mad. Look at his growly face.” Bobby turned to Rod and jumped up on his legs and Rod bent over and petted him. “It's okay, son. It's okay.” “He's so cute.” “Yes. He is. But he's been acting... out. “ “That's so sad, Rod.” “Well. I get it. They were always together. He took rides with her in the car. They went on their daily walks, no matter what.” He sat across from her. “She bathed him. She talked to him endlessly. I can only imagine what he thinks.” I giggled and Bobby turned to me and sat on his haunches, watching me. “He thinks he sees his mommy! Don't you, Bobby!” I flipped backwards and then swung on nothing down to Bobby, like I was holding onto a monkey bar. “See?” Rod continued. 064 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Mom looked up looking at whatever Bobby was looking at, which was me. “Hi, mom!” She tipped her head and stuck a finger into her ear, shook it a little, took it out and looked at her fingernail. She flicked whatever she'd gotten out onto the floor. But Bobby was still engrossed in me. We were connected. “Well. He'll get used to her being gone.” I sat next to Bobby. He lay on the floor and I stroked his back. Rod opened up the photo album and sipped his coffee. “Thanks for bringing this.” “Sure, honey.” He flipped a page and looked at each of the blackand-whites that had been taped to the black felt paper. The ripple-y edges looked like someone had cut them with pinking shears. “That's when we went to Disneyland.” “That's Jay?” “Yes. That's Jay. And me. Hannah was eight then.” “That's her.” Rod's eyes widened. “Yes. Can't you tell?” “No. I mean. That's her. I saw this little girl last night.” “What are you talking about?” Mom frowned. “I saw her last night.” Rod looked at Mom. “I did. Belle. This is the girl.” Mom looked at the photo. She shook her head, not believing but then caught his eyes. He wasn't kidding. He was serious. “That's ridiculous.” 065 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “I'm telling you. I saw her. Last night. I told you. On the phone?” “I know what you're talking about. You don't have to condescend.” Rod swiped a hand over his head. “I didn't mean it like that.” He looked back down at the photo. “I'm serious.” Mom stood. “I can't do this.” She began to cry. “You cannot tell me this!” She grabbed her jacket. “It's mean, Rod. Just mean.” She walked out of the room. Rod jumped up and trotted after her. “Belle. I'm sorry.” Mom approached the door and turned. She'd gone from upset and crying to angry in seconds. “You need to see someone. A professional. You need a psychiatrist!” She flung open the door and left. 066 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE TWENTY-THREE “THERE.” THE TALLER ONE YELLED over the Harleys’ clattering engines, pointing with his right arm as they passed it. He indicated a narrow dirt road off the main artery they drove as they ran north, out of town, into a glitzy area at the tip of the island where yachters spent summers and celebrities occasioned. The road looked more like a path not intended for motor vehicles, more like for walking. They came to a slow stop on the side and circled back. “Let's see what this leads to.” Both men looked young. Too young for such an attempt to cover the truth, to cover their guilt. But, there they were, pulling off the main thoroughfare and down a gravelly, loamy, narrow wooded road full of twists that bent south then north and once more to the south. They were hoping to find a proper burial ground. The bikers moved with caution as they bumped over jagged rotting branches and stones. Crushing ochre pinecones and lichen of the palest green along the way causing the woodsy perfume to burst in a spicy balm that filled the air leaving a trail for anyone who might be pursuing them. The biker in front lifted off his seat, standing fully on his pedals, and the man behind him copied. They rode slowly, for fear of losing traction and being knocked down onto the rough terrain. After nearly a mile, they spotted an old rusted-out car. The rust looked as though someone had dusted it with 067 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE dry, crushed ginger. In the body style appeared to be made in the 1950s. What seemed odd to the boys was its cover, an old mottled Army-grade canvas whose original green was now bruised with black mold and warted with mushrooms and an odd array of fungi. Rough weather had yanked the neglected canvas off in such a manner that it hung off the car’s shoulders like a harlot's blouse. A mullion splitting the glass made the window appear like two dark eyes, the hood ornament a nose, and the grill a stupid smile. As they approached the broken down heap, they slowed then finally stopped next to the car. The silence roared in their ears. They hadn't spoken. They hadn't needed to. Their breathing said everything. A fine mist ghosted in front of their faces waited like bubbles that would soon contain words. “Like minds.” The taller man spoke in a whisper. “What're we doin'?” “Same thing whoever left that old hunk of garbage was doing.” “What's that?” “We're dumping your bike.” “The hell we are!” The shorter man unsnapped his chin strap and twisted his helmet off his head. His hair was coiled upward and stuck there. “Yours hit her,” the taller man reasoned. “She's dead. You do the math, ace.” “This is just wrong.” The redhead replaced his helmet, leaving the chin straps detached. 068 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “We'll double up.” “I don't want to leave my bike here.” He scratched at his bister locks. “Hell! I don't want to leave my bike, period!” His chin trembled. “Look. Shut your face. Yours has evidence all over it. Probably skin and blood.” The thought of it made the taller man sick. “Definitely tracks. We're leaving your bike or I'll go straight to the cops and turn your butt in!” “Oh man. This is just flippin’ lousy.” “Yeah. Tell it to her. Hell, tell it to the judge.” The shorter guy got off his bike and rolled it deeper into the bedding of rubble—stones, twigs, mud and a scrap of oxidized chicken wire laced with barbed wire. The taller guy walked alongside him. “Put it over here.” He pointed toward the back end of the abandoned car. “Under the tarp.” “Great.” The other guy shook his head in disgust. His straggled hair that appeared crimson in the dark forest. “Just great.” His friend lifted the car's cover by pinching it between his first finger and thumb. “Let me, priss.” The redhead slid his bike up next to the car and then angrily pulled the tarp out of the other guy's hand, up and over his bike, causing a spray of moisture to kick back into their faces. “Good God, you idiot!” “Whatever. Look. You'd be sore too if it was your bike we were leaving under there.” They glared at each other before turning back to the remaining bike. The redhead followed. The taller man mounted the saddle and ordered, “Get on.” 069 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE TWENTY-FOUR “IT WILL BE A FEW minutes still.” “Okay.” Rod looked at the receptionist. The woman in a pink smock, CHRISTINE, her nametag bragged—smiled at Rod and pushed a clipboard through the slot in the glass window. On it was a medical form for him to fill in and a pen wedged underneath the metal clip. Rod turned back to a row of chairs next to an end table. The table had a stack of magazines on it, self-help magazines, like Health and Yoga and Prevention. Not one People magazine adorned the stack. He sat down with a sigh. The office had filled in his name, address and phone number already. As he picked away at each of the questions, he noticed his heart beginning to pound erratically and he began to feel queasy. He felt as though he'd just run a block. His breathing was short and choppy but he'd only just sat down. His eyes blurred. And, for a moment, he couldn't swallow. His tie felt too tight. Then he remembered that he hadn't worn a tie today. He grabbed at his throat and pulled at the collar of his knobby sweater. He fanned himself with the clipboard. He noticed Christine look up. She mouthed something to him but he couldn't hear her. She stood and picked up the phone behind the counter. 070 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “Dr. Strick. You need to come quick.” Rod's head spun. Then his vision dimmed. 071 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE TWENTY-FIVE THREE PEOPLE STOOD ABOVE HIM. One was Christine, next to his right arm. The others—a man directly above him and a simple-looking young woman in a nurse's uniform—both wore nametags but because he couldn’t focus he couldn't read their names. The man wore a doctor's smock. He had a large nose and from Rod's vantage point, he could see every single nose hair inside the man's large protuberance. “You blacked out.” The man spoke in a deep nasal tone. Rod wanted up and tried to get to his elbows but the man pushed him on his shoulder, back down. “You need to stay down for a minute.” Rod noticed a stethoscope hanging from his neck by the earpieces. The man, Rod figured to be a doctor by now, pulled out a small flashlight and shined it in his eyes. Rod turned his head away from the glare. “Sorry, Rod. But, look at me again. I need to check your pupils.” Rod turned back to the doctor who shined the light once again into Rod's eyes, flicking it away from each, to gauge his reaction to the sudden light, then sudden dark. “You fell out of your chair. I can safely say you didn't have a stroke. You can try to sit up. Slowly.” He drew out the word. “Lean back against the chair here.” As Rod sat up, the doctor seemed to spin right-side up now. His nametag read DR. STRICK. The nurse's read BETH, RN. “Sorry for the excitement.” 072 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Just like Rod to set people at ease, even upon his fainting. I was having quite the effect on my husband. “Do you think you can stand?” Dr. Strick placed a hand under Rod's elbow. “I think so.” But, as he soon as he tried, Rod felt woozy again. “Whoa.” He slipped back into his chair. “We have some smelling salts, Beth. Go get some. Stat.” Rod smiled when the doctor said 'stat' because, way back when, when our relationship was still rich, he'd say, in this ever-manly voice, “To the bedroom with you, lass! Stat!” I giggled and Rod swatted at his ear. “I think I'm going insane.” “Well, I'll be the judge of that.” Strick squatted in front of Rod, smiling. “Yes. I suppose you will.” Beth rushed in with a small white cardboard tube of smelling salts, cracked it, and pushed it in front of Rod's nose. Rod's head bolted back at the pungent sickening smell. Strick blocked her arm, tweezing the tube out of her pinched fingers. “Beth. He's alert. If he faints we'll use it. Only if he faints.” Strick looked at Rod and rolled his eyes. The other women didn't see but Rod chuckled. “It's fine. No harm. No foul.” “Can you get up?” “Yes. I mean. I'll do it slowly. Very slowly.” 073 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE TWENTY-SIX “YOU SAID YOU'VE SEEN HER since she died.” Dr. Strick repeated, not as a question, but as a statement of clarification. “Yes.” Strick scribbled something down into his notes. “I hate that.” Rod lifted his nose and looked at the notepad Strick was scribbling onto. “Yes. I know. Everyone feels the same way.” He smiled at Rod. “Has to be done. Would you rather I tape the sessions?” “Lord. No.” “Not many people do.” He put down the notes and folded his hands onto his desk, a plain-looking maple laminate. Nothing fancy. Nothing overdone in this office. “Now. Let me explain. I must take notes so that I can review them and make some determinations about you. Some of the questions I will ask are the standards: What was your mother like? Your father? Who do you most identify with? What about siblings? These sorts of questions are so that I can get a handle on who you are, how you were raised and in what type of social environment it was.” He leaned back in his chair and placed his hands behind his head. “Some of the questions will feel more organic, like we're talking, but believe me, they're all used to determine any issues you might have, that need to be resolved.” His arms came back down and settled into his lap. “Like, you seeing”— he extended the word—”your late wife.” 074 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE He smiled at Rod, who simply nodded. “Great.” He rolled his chair under the desk and placed his hands back onto the clipboard but before picking it up again, he asked Rod, “. So, do you understand why I need to take notes?” “Of course. I'm sorry. I'm fine. I'll be fine. With. The notes.” He offered his hand as if asking someone to sit down in front of him. “Great.” The doctor chimed again. “We have fortyfive more minutes. What say we dig in?” “Sure. Let's do this.” “Well. First. Let's talk about your problem at hand.” “Yes. That would be nice.” “You say you saw your wife?” “Yes.” “When.” “Um. Two nights—wait, three nights ago.” “Where?” “I was in bed.” “Were you sleeping or had you been awake for a while?” “I was sleeping.” “I see.” Dr. Strick jotted some notes. Rod rubbed a hand across his hair. When he finished writing, he looked up at Rod and smiled. “You okay?” Rod nodded. “Need some water?” “Sure. That would be wonderful.” 075 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Strick dragged open a heavy drawer in his desk. “Here ya go.” He tossed the bottle, making Rod reach forward and catch it in both hands. “Thanks, doctor.” “You can call me Tom.” “Tom.” Rod unscrewed the plastic cap and slugged back five long gulps. He breathed out audibly. “Better?” “Yeah.” His voice sounded breathy. “Okay. So, you saw her three nights ago.” He looked down at the notes. “And, tell me. Were you asleep?” Rod frowned at the question he'd already thought he'd answered. “I had just woken up.” “Do you think you might've been dreaming?” The question bit hard. He wasn't sure. He didn't want to be crazy. Rod looked down to his hands and wiped them on his pant legs, then folded them on his lap. He couldn't have prevented what happened next. It seemed like someone opening up the gates to a horse race. His hands lifted, almost in slow motion, and covered his face but he couldn't stop crying. 076 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE TWENTY-SEVEN DR. STRICK SLID A BOX of Kleenex across the desk to Rod. “It's completely normal to cry.” Rod took four tissues. “Especially, after this sort of loss.” “It's my fault she's dead.” His voice jumped sporadically around the words. “It's not your fault.” Rod nodded insistently. “Did you run her down?” Rod looked stunned by his question. “God. No!” “Then, it wasn't your fault. It's perfectly normal to feel as if you could've prevented her death. That's something everyone believes. The thing is, when the time comes. It just comes.” “But, I'd”—Rod paused—”I had told her I was leaving her.” “When?” Rod looked down at his hands again. “Right before.” “Ahh,” Dr. Strick said. Rod explained and broke down crying again. “So because you were leaving her she died?” “Of course not.” He glowered at Dr. Strick. “But, if things had been different? If I had gone with her?” “Yes. If, if, if. If the sun exploded tomorrow, I suppose you could've prevented that too. Right?” “Look. I'm not here to be belittled by you.” “And, I am not belittling you. You're saying if things were different. Right?” Rod nodded. 077 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “But things weren't different. They aren't different.” He patted Rod's arm. “And another thing.” He stood and walked back to his desk. “We cannot, no matter how much we want to, turn back the hands of time.” Dr. Strick sat again. “We have a few minutes left. Have any questions for me?” “Can you move into my house?” Rod looked hopeless. Dr. Strick chuckled. “Boy, I never get asked that one!” He rolled his eyes. “I have invitations to live with a vast number of my patients.” He sat forward in his chair. “Look, Rod. These instances of seeing things, hearing things. Normal. So normal I can't even tell you. People's minds play tricks on them. The mind is an amazing piece of equipment. It can crumble into a billion pieces and then mend itself in seconds. The thing is, you're dealing with loss and grief right now. It will be quite some time before you feel like your old self again. Okay?” “Okay.” Rod sniffled and coughed. “You continue to come here and we'll see you get through it together. All right?” “Yep. Doctor.” “Tom.” He looked at his watch. “Tom. Thanks.” Rod looked at the clock on the wall. His hour was up. 078 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE TWENTY-EIGHT BOBBY BARKED THROUGH THE CLOSED window of the car. Rod handed the photo album back to Belle. “I copied a few of them.” She turned into her house and was about to shut the door, but he stopped her. “Belle.” She stopped but held her eyes down. “Belle.” His voice softened. “I'm so sorry about the other day.” She nodded and tried to close the door again but he stopped her again. “Belle. Please forgive my insensitivity. I went to see someone. Like you suggested.” His hand braced the door against her. She spoke to him as if she were hiding on the other side of the door. “Rod. Hannah was my only child. She was all I had left. She's the only thing that's ever mattered to me. So, when you go on about her, well, it tears my heart out.” She wiped her nose with a single finger. “I'm trying to just get up in the mornings. So, I can't be your strength. I'm sorry. This is killing me too. Now. Please. Go.” She pushed all of her weight against the door, against Rod's hand, which he let drop to his side. The door shut and then he heard the lock twist to a click. Rod turned around. I was floating right in front of his face. “You really did it now, mister.” He fell back against Mom’s door with a thud. Bobby went ballistic. “You're in big trouble!” 079 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE He jerked like he'd been stung by a bee and pivoted, trying to locate the noise that buzzed around his ear. “Big trouble now!” Fawn hopped around in a circle spinning nearer the car. We floated over to see Bobby. “Hey, sweetheart.” We slipped inside with Bobby and he stopped barking when I began to pet him. “You'll always be my darling, won't you, Bobby.” Rod had made his way to the window and watched as Bobby lifted himself into a sitting-up position. His front paws leaned against my chest and he gazed into my eyes. “Bobby?” Rod said through the glass. But Bobby didn't look away from me. I giggled at the smell of his breath. It smelled like he'd just eaten a dog biscuit. “Did you get a cookie?” His tail beat hard against the seat of Rod's chair. “Bobby!” Rod screamed. Taking Bobby's attention away from me, as if pulling him by the ear. “Bobby!” Rod repeated gaining his attention fully. Bobby continued to pant and wag his tail. He was so happy to see me again. I knew the feeling. “Good God. What's up with you these days?” He pressed the remote and unlocked the door but I pressed the button from the inside just before he lifted the latch. “What the...” He tried the remote again. When it popped the lock open, I pressed it down. I was being such a bad angel. “Oh my goodness! What's going on?” He was screaming and Bobby was starting to get upset so I decided to stop my antics but apparently a little 080 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE too late because Rod's yelling made Mom notice and she opened the door. Her eyes were watery and swollen. “What's going on, Rod? Why are you yelling at the dog?” “I'm not yelling at the dog. My remote doesn't seem to be working.” By that time, Mom had come outside. She was wearing a housedress that hung off of her like a blue bed sheet. “Here. Let me try.” She took the remote out of Rod's hands and pressed the unlock mechanism. The locks unlatched like before but this time, I didn't press the lock from the inside. Mom lifted the latch and the door swung open freely. “Seems to be working just fine.” She kissed Rod on the cheek. He looked flummoxed. “Sorry about what I said before, honey.” She patted him on the back. “Go get some rest.” “Right.” Rod still looked stunned. “Right.” He sunk into the driver's seat and Bobby just barely got out from under him. “Drive carefully, honey.” Mom was being sweet now. Just like always. “Yeah. Right.” Rod appeared frazzled. But, he shut his door, started the engine, and backed up with Bobby in the passenger seat. And with me and Fawn in the back seat. We were all going for a ride. 081 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE TWENTY-NINE “WHAT A SURPRISE!” HE SPOKE in a big booming voice, the same voice that had always filled me with such hope. And, even if he'd seen you a thousand times, the way he smiled at you always looked as if it might be the last time. “For both of us.” Rod said in a glib tone. “Corinne and I have been praying for you, constantly.” Pastor John examined Rod's expression as he spoke. “Thank you ... John. Pastor.” He shuffled in his seat as he looked around the office. “John's fine! So, what can I do for ya, Rod?” “I, I really don't know.” He stood as though he was going to leave. “Now, wait a second.” Pastor John held out his hand. Rod stopped, before turning the knob to the door, and waited for John to speak. His hand rested there, just in case he needed to bolt. “You came here, Rod. You obviously wanted to talk about something. What do you need?” “What do I need? What do I need?” He turned to look at Pastor John. “I wish I knew.” John got up, walked over to Rod and led him back to the chair. “Sit. I'll get Corinne to bring us a couple cups of coffee. Okay?” “Sure.” “Yeah?” “Yeah. Sure.” 082 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “Great. Great.” He opened the door and yelled to his wife, who was somewhere in guts of the church. “Corinne. Would you be a doll and get me and Rod here a couple o' cups of coffee, honey?” Her voice echoed from somewhere in the building. “Well. That's done.” He shot a broad smile at Rod and sat again. Rod never liked Pastor John's hair. He said it looked greasy, too slick to be a man of the cloth, he'd say. But I never minded. Not everyone was born with a perfect set of locks like Rod. All that natural waviness would make any woman envious. I sat in the chair next to his left arm and Fawn was sitting at my feet. “That's done.” I mimicked the Pastor and giggled. I loved the Pastor and Corinne. Rod fluttered his hand next to his ear. “That!” Rod yelled. John jumped. “What!” He looked puzzled. “Did you hear that, that ... buzzing?” “Buzzing?” “Like bees talking with, words, like human words.” John's eyes widened. “Bees talking?” I have to admit it did sound crazy and I giggled again. Rod jumped up from his seat and looked at the chair next to him. “That! That!” He waved wildly around his left ear. Fawn began to leap and play, which made me laugh again. But harder, much harder. “Don't you hear it?” His face contorted. Pastor John got up and grabbed Rod by the shoulders. “Rod. Sit.” “No. Not there.” 083 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “Where then?” “I don't know.” Poor Rod. I felt a wave of pain sweep across my body and spin me around. Fawn followed me, nudging me around in circles. She felt my pain too. Rod's pain. Corinne walked in and saw the two men standing there, with John gripping him, almost holding him up by the shoulders. John looked at his wife and shook his head. He mouthed Not now! “Here, Rod. Sit. Over here.” John backed Rod up to another chair that had a few books and some papers on it. He swept them off onto the floor and gently set Rod down. Then Pastor John knelt before him. “Look. Tell me what's going on.” Rod looked crazed for a second and then their eyes connected. But instead of answering John, he covered his face with his hands and leaned forward with his elbows on his knees. “Oh God. Oh God,” he whispered between his fingers. “It's going to be okay.” “No.” He uncovered his face abruptly. “No. It's not.” “Yes. It is.” Rod moved, trying to get up, but the Pastor blocked him. “No. Rod. No. You came to me for a reason. Now, spill it. What's been happening? Why are you so unglued?” Dragging both hands over his face, Rod sighed. “Oh lord.” Then he shook his head. “It's crazy.” “What's crazy?” 084 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE He dropped his arms into his lap. Pastor John remained, kneeling in front of him. Then, Rod spoke, like he was telling a secret. “I hear her. Bobby hears her!” “You hear who?” Pastor John whispered back. Rod cocked his head. “Hannah!” “Hannah.” Pastor John sat back on the floor. “I see.” “I told you. It's crazy.” Rod watched John as he knocked the idea around in his head. “No.” John shook his head but leaned back against his desk like he'd lost all of his energy. “No. It's not crazy.” Then a broad grin broke out around his mouth. “It's a miracle.” Rod laughed. I almost laughed too but slammed my hand over my mouth before anything came out. “Now, I think you're crazy.” Rod chuckled again. John pushed up and ran behind his desk to get his Bible. “You'll see.” He flipped the book open and let the pages flap under his thumb until he found something. “Aha! Here it is.” 085 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE THIRTY “RIGHT HERE.” PASTOR JOHN SWIVELED the Bible in front of Rod. “Numbers, chapter 22, right there.” He pointed to the correct verse. “Read it.” Rod fished into his pocket for his readers and slipped them on. He looked rapt with the prospect that something might be able to prove him sane. As he read, his face slackened. His eyes went sallow and when he looked up from the book at John, he slammed it shut. “Is that supposed to make me feel better? A parable? A donkey speaking? Really?” Rod rolled his eyes and slumped back down into the chair. “You think this is just a, a story?” John appeared insulted and hurt. “Come on, John. Don't you?” “Absolutely not. Not at all.” “You're telling me that a donkey spoke to its master.” Rod leaned forward with his attack. “I'm not telling you anything. It's right here. In this Bible.” Rod rolled his eyes at John and let out a puff of air through his lips. He cracked them in a cynical smile and leaned back against the chair, folding his arms across his chest. “The Bible, Rod,” John explained, “is a historical document. Not fiction. This tells how our Christian faith came to pass. From Genesis to Revelation, this is written by men who saw these things happen and more than not, when miracles occurred, like with this here donkey? Well, there was more than just one person who saw it happen.” 086 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE John leaned against the back of his chair and it rocked back way too far, making Rod feel uneasy. “Careful. You'll fall.” “If I do, it will be in the Lord's hands.” He smiled a big knowing smile at Rod, who blew out another disbelieving puff of air. “See, Rod. Faith is tricky. You can't explain it because sometimes there's no way to. People believe in one thing or another because they just do.” The pastor went to the door and called for Corinne again. “Honey, we'll take that coffee now.” He pulled the door open wide and Corinne walked in holding a tray set up with a thermos pot, two cups, a beaker of cream and a bowl of sugar cubes, and set it on John's desk. “Thanks, doll.” He kissed her cheek. “I love you.” “I love you too, Pastor.” She winked at him, smiled and moved through the door. “When you boys are done, just call me. I'll come get that tray out of the way.” “Will do, honey.” Corinne pulled the door closed behind her and John looked at Rod again. “Sugar? Cream?” “Black's fine.” He poured the steaming, toffee-colored liquid into cups that looked like something you'd find at a hotel restaurant. “Here ya go, Rod.” John stood, handing the cup and saucer to him over the desk. “Thanks.” “I love that woman.” “She's a good gal, John.” “That she is. And, you know what?” “What's that?” 087 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “She loves me too.” “She does.” Rod nodded. “Know how I know?” Rod shook his head. “No. How?” “I have faith.” Rod tipped his head. “It's not the same.” “It's not? Why’s that?” “Well, love is different.” “Explain it to me, Rod.” “Well, you can tell when someone loves you.” “You can? How?” “They do things to prove their love.” “I believe that.” John smiled. “Like what, for instance?” “Lord, John. Okay. I'll play your game.” Rod grinned. “They think about and hope for your best and they stay with you even when you're not the best person in the world.” At that, Rod looked down and shook his head ever so slightly, fumbled with his hands, and looked up. John held his cup in both hands and took a tentative sip from the hot drink. “All good points. I agree one hundred percent!” He sipped the drink again, this time deeper and with more commitment. “Now, tell me this, John. How is that different than God's love?” “Well, heck, John. You can see it with people.” “You can?” “Yes.” “What does it look like?” “Okay. Okay. I know where you're going.” “No. Please. Tell me. What does it look like?” 088 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “It's in the eyes. I suppose. You can feel it when you're with someone you love.” “So, what if you're not with the someone you’re in love with? What if she’s at work and you’re at work?” “What do you mean?” “Well, if you’re not there to see their love, how do you know that the person really loves you?” “You just do.” “How!” “You trust that they do!” “You trust it?” “John. Of course. You just know.” “Just like I know God loves me and God loves you. I just know.” John set down his mug and leaned forward into his desk. “It's called faith, Rod. Love is faith and faith is love. ‘God is love. He who lives in love, lives in God and God in he.’ That’s from the Bible.” Rod looked down into his cup of steaming brew. The reflection in the cup rippled the surface of the hot liquid but he could see his eyes. For the first time in over a week, even through the wavy effect of the coffee, Rod could see they looked alive again. But, John wasn't finished. “You can't prove someone loves you, like the way I love Corinne or the way Hannah loved you. You just know it. And, conversely, Rod, you can't prove that God loves you. You just know it.” 089 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE THIRTY-ONE “DON'T YOU WISH YOU HAD listened to me when I was alive?” My words hummed in Rod's ear. He pulled away but didn't freak out this time. “Did she say something?” Pastor John noticed Rod jerk. Rod nodded. “What?” “I can't really decipher it but I have a feeling she's telling me, 'I told you so!'“ Rod looked down into the coffee again. He'd hardly drunk a drop. “This is good coffee.” He looked back up at John. “Will you tell Corinne, thank you for me?” “Well, you certainly don't have to leave.” “I need to get back to Bobby. I left him in the car. He's probably barking his lungs out by now.” He took two big slugs of coffee and then stood, setting the mug and saucer back onto the tray. “She talks to Bobby too, you know.” “So you said.” “You sure I'm not nuts?” “Well, no. But I don't think you're crazy.” John stood and grabbed Rod's hand in his and pulled him into a light embrace. “Look. Trust me. Okay? If you begin to have doubts, just call. I'm always here. The office phone rings to our home when we leave. For emergencies and, well, anything else people need.” He smiled big. “We're open twenty-four-seven!” And, then he let out a big round laugh. Rod couldn't help but laugh too. 090 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Fawn loped in a tiny circle and kicked up her heels and when I giggled at her, Rod pulled on his earlobe. 091 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE THIRTY-TWO I SKIPPED BACKWARDS AND FAWN continued to prance around Rod in circles as he walked to his car. “Nanner nanner nanner! Told ya! Told ya!” I giggled, bending over as I grabbed my stomach from my constant laughing. Fawn saw me stop and bumped me with her snout and then went to club me with one hoof but I sidestepped her. “Stinker! Don't!” I screamed. Rod paused, stuck a finger in his ear and jiggled it around. “Don't you dare go to the doctor for that!” I knew that every little sniffle worried Rod and drove him to the medical center. Then he said it out loud. “Maybe I have an ear infection. Maybe it's just an ear infection.” He said quietly to himself but it didn’t feel like an infection. He jiggled his finger again but this time tipping his head hoping to dislodge the niggling buzz that my voice created in his ears. I nearly choked to death laughing in my hands. Then Fawn nudged Rod. OMGee. It was the funniest thing because, when she did Rod nearly tripped over his own feet. Well, that's what it looked like anyway. “Lord. Now, I'm tripping over nothing!” Sounding exasperated, he righted himself heading for the car's door. His hand reached the latch just as Bobby's face peered up and through the window. My sweet little pup panted, making steam doilies appear on the glass inside the car. I stuck my face directly 092 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE in front of his and he licked the glass, creating a tonguesized swatch of wet spittle through the steam. “Help me, God. I need your help.” Rod's plea broke my concentration on Bobby. I fell through the top of the car into its interior and Fawn slipping in behind me. The smell made me breathe in deep. It felt so familiar, like a saddle just wiped clean with saddle soap and Bobby, the smell of his mouth, his hair and his, well, all of him. I breathed in again. Then he jumped into the backseat with me. He sat as if he was looking at the back window and barked, wagging his tail madly. We were face-to-face. “Bobby.” Rod's voice sounded stern but there was something else behind it, something that sounded like fear. “Come on, Bobby. Up here. In the front.” He patted his hand hard twice but Bobby's attention was fixed on me. “Rod. He wants to stay back here with me.” Rod tipped his head and rubbed both hands this time with the butts of each palm, into both ears. “Sheesh...” Then, he turned back and stared at the dog, then looked around as if trying to locate a thin transparent silk thread. Something so minute that he had to squint for it. His eyes tightened then opened wide, then tightened again. “Okay. Okay. Hannah! You win!” He shook his head in defeat. “You win.” He started to laugh but as he did, a thin film of wet edged his lower lids. “You win.” His face twisted. He began to cry openly, his head leaning against the steering wheel, as we all sat in the church's parking lot. Rod looked completely spent. “You win.” 093 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE THIRTY-THREE I FELT SO GUILTY FOR making Rod cry. “Bobby?” The dog whipped his head toward me and away from worrying over Rod. “Bobby. Will you do something for me and Fawn? Bark once for 'yes' and twice for 'no.'“ Rod rammed his finger into an ear again. My little pup barked once. “Great! Thanks!” Bobby's tail wagged, distracting Rod from his anguish. “What is it, Bobby?” he said into the rearview mirror. “Will you help us, Bobby?” He barked once as he stared right into my face and wagged his tail. “Good boy!” I reached over and petted his hair. “Good God!” Rod gasped when he noticed Bobby's hair smoothing down and then lifting with my hand as it moved back and forward against his coat. “That's right, Rod. God is good!” I giggled and Bobby let out a series of quick, happy yips. Then, once again, I rustled his coat with both of my hands this time, all the way down to his tail and back up to his head with a scratch under the chin. “Oh my goodness!” Rod pushed his back against the driver's side door. He sucked in a huff of air. “Rod. Get over it.” I said. Bobby yipped once and looked over at Rod, then he jumped over, across the car's console and into his lap, making Rod grab him and loosen up a little. Bobby stood up placing his forepaws onto Rod's chest and began 094 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE licking his face, a thing he never let Bobby do when I was alive. “Is she petting you?” he mumbled through a series of wet licks. Bobby pulled back sat onto his lap stared up at Rod and barked once. “Does that mean 'yes?'“ Bobby barked once, staring at Rod deeply. “I'm talking to a dog.” He swiped both hands through his hair, ending at the nape of his neck. Bobby barked again. I giggled like a crazy person and Fawn jumped up and down like a little spring lamb. Then, Bobby went into a series of crazy happy yipping again, as if explaining to Rod the most astounding story, in dog-speak, of course. “Okay. Okay.” Rod broke in. “Get over in your spot.” He pointed to the passenger chair. Bobby jumped over into the seat and wagged his tail. “We're going to try something.” Bobby wagged his tail again. “Okay. Sit.” Bobby sat. “Good boy.” I thought it was funny that Rod actually seemed surprised that Bobby obeyed him. “Okay. Look.” He went on. “We're going to try something.” He paused and said, “It’s insane, but, we're going to try something.” Rod shifted to face the dog, front on, bringing up one bent leg onto the seat. “Bobby. Answer me, bark, okay?” Bobby barked. “No. Not now. When I say. Okay?” Bobby wagged his tail. “Once for 'yes' and twice for 'no,' okay?” He yipped once, bobbing his head to the side, lips parted answering him. “Right.” Rod seemed oblivious. “Will you do that for me, Bobby?” Bobby barked once again. “Not yet. We 095 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE haven't even started.” Bobby's head dipped down and he laid his jaw onto his front paws. “No, that's okay. You didn't know.” Bobby sat up and wagged his tail. I giggled and Bobby turned to me, yipping three times in my direction. “That's three times.” Rod sounded annoyed. “This is ridiculous.” Bobby looked back at Rod and barked once. “Right. Good grief. Okay. Bobby. Okay.” He pumped out his chest, taking air in. “Now. I'll ask you a series of questions, yes and no questions and the response will be bark once for 'yes' and bark twice for 'no.' Here we go.” Rod paused. “Am I your dad?” Bobby barked once. “Okay. Here's the next one. Am I your mom?” Bobby barked once, paused, then barked again. Rod pulled back his chin and leaned against the driver's side door. “Okay. That was weird.” He petted Bobby's head, making the little dog pant and fling his tail slowly, sideto-side. “Okay. Next question.” He leaned forward. “Is Hannah your Mom?” Bobby barked once. Rod waited, held his breath but kept a steady eye on Bobby. Finally, he spoke. “Whoa.” Rod's back landed against the car door. “Okay. This next one is a very important question, Bobby. Think about it long and hard before saying anything. Is Hannah, your Mom in the car with us right now?” Bobby wagged his tail, parted his lips in a dog smile and barked, wiggling a full-body wag. Then, he turned his 096 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE muzzle to the backseat. I waved at him with one finger, bending it and opening it again, as if scratching a single small itch. “Holy Cr—” He cut the word off. “Oh my….” Bobby barked. “Okay. Okay. Bobby.” His royal sweetness turned to Rod when he said his name. “Okay. Another question, Bobby.” Bobby sat still, staring at Rod intently. “Is Hannah alone?” Bobby barked once, paused one half of a second and then he barked yet again. Rod looked as if he'd seen a ... well, he looked like he'd gone into shock. Rod’s eyes opened wider and he frowned. “Okay. Here's another question.” Bobby wagged his tail preparing for his next answer. “Did you enjoy your walks with Hannah?” Bobby barked once, tipping his head up, wiggling his body, and patting his forepaws as if dancing. “Did you hate your walks with Hannah?” I giggled, understanding Rod's need for proof. Rod scratched his ear. Bobby cocked his head and then he looked at me, straight in the eyes and wagged his tail. He barked hard and fast two strong yips. “Do you love Hannah?” Bobby barked. Once. Then mewled and laid down on his paws. “I'm sorry. That wasn't a good question. Was it?” Rod petted his head, making my little dog whimper even more. “I'm sorry, boy.” Rod stroked his back and then slid his hand under his chin, lifting Bobby's face up, making him sit up again for the final question. 097 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “Now, Bobby. This is going to be a hard question. But…” Rod's face contorted, his chin quivered, his voice cracked and he began to cry. Bobby laid down again, waiting. Rod lifted his right hip and reached into his pocket pulling out a handkerchief. He wiped at his nose and at his eyes. “Okay,” he said breathlessly. “Okay.” He wiped his nose again then shoved the kerchief back into his pant pocket. “Okay. Bobby? Did you see the person…” His voice arced up, his face cringed, but he braved through his words. “The person who, who killed, your Mom?” Bobby paused. He mewled again and whimpered then looked back to me. “Go ahead, sweetie. Answer Rod.” But, his face stayed glued on me so I floated up above Rod, behind his shoulder and whispered, “Answer Rod, Bobby.” Just beside Rod's ear, who flipped his hand into my face. I pulled back so I wouldn't get smacked again and laughed making Bobby's tail wag. Fawn loped over next to me. We were all crammed in against Rod. “Answer Rod. Now.” I ordered him. “Bobby?” Rod interjected. “That's a tough one, huh, bud?” He petted Bobby's head again. “Okay. We'll wait on that.” Rod turned in his seat and grabbed hold of the keys in the ignition. I flitted back with Fawn into the backseat. The engine started. He dragged out the safety belt to secure himself and then, looked over his shoulder to see if any cars were around. When there were none, he grabbed the automatic gear shift and pulled it to drive. “You did good, son.” I encouraged him. “He'll ask again. I'm sure he will.” I fluffed Bobby's shaggy beard 098 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE and leaned over to kiss him on the head. When he whimpered again, it got Rod's attention. He placed his right foot onto the brake. “What's wrong, boy?” And, then, Bobby barked… ...just once. 099 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE THIRTY-FOUR THE PASTOR POURED OUT A shot of the tawny liquid from an ornately etched crystal decanter, one for him and one for Rod. He set the crystal container back onto his desk, handed Rod his liquor and sat on the chair next to him, facing him straight on, while Rod leaned his spine weakly into his chair. “Pastor John. I know it sounds wacko but I think my dog saw the killer.” “Doesn't sound inane at all. He probably did.” “I know he did.” “How's that?” Pastor John sipped at the short stubby cobalt souvenir glass. Gold lettering boasted Santa Maria Island and on it was a sketching of the sea fading out in a small circle that wrapped the glass. “He told me, that's how.” John had barely pulled the glass from his lips when he decided to return it to his mouth and slug back the entire shot of whiskey. When he spoke, he nearly choked. “He, what?” “I'm telling you, John. She's in my car right now.” “The dog?” “No! Hannah.” “How do you figure, Rod?” “The dog told me.” “The dog told you...” Pastor John looked back at the desk where he'd placed the decanter and stood. He refilled his shot glass, not bothering to re-cork the bottle. “Want more?” He held the decanter to Rod, who threw back his drink in dramatic fashion then held out his arm, full 100 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE length, for a refill. The alcohol glugged twice and rippled up to the rim, daring to spill over. Rod pulled the drink toward his head and his head toward the drink in one equal motion, somewhere in the middle, and he sipped at the dome the liquor made to keep it from dribbling. John decided on a different approach. “This dog of yours. She's a smart dog, I gather.” Rod rolled his eyes. “First off, John. She's a he. His name is Bobby and, yes, he's a very smart dog. However, I'm not one to go around listening to dogs talk.” He took another sip at his drink. “Anyway, as everyone knows, dogs don't talk. See, they don't have the same capacity. It's a throat-structure-issue or something. Hannah told me once.” Now he was rambling. “But, no. They don't talk, or speak.” “It's more of communication rather than speaking.” Rod rambled. “Although there is sound and one could suppose if another dog were in the room that sound might be construed as speaking to the other dog. But, not humans. No. Not speaking with humans. That's just ridiculous. Don't you think?” John sat numbly in front of Rod, saying nothing for a few extremely uncomfortable moments. Finally, Rod shuffled in his seat, knocking John's stare off him and making him drink the full extent of the new whiskey he'd poured himself. He sucked in a pocket of air after the liquor had burned a trail down his throat and into his stomach. “I'm officially”—Pastor John swallowed hard— ”worried now, son.” 101 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Son. Rod considered the word. His father called him son when he had to reprimand him. Son. Pastor John had taken a parental tone with him. He immediately felt insult at John's reference. “Look. It was you who told me about the speaking ass. Please do not take that tone with me.” He pounded his drink back and stood to leave. Embarrassed. Hell no! Humiliated, was a better word for it. To have believed this, this ... man about animals speaking. He felt duped. 102 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE THIRTY-FIVE BACK IN THE CONFINES OF his car, Rod fumbled anxiously with his keys, his seatbelt, and his rearview mirror. Bobby nearly bounded into his lap, which irritated him instantly. “Sit!” The little dog recoiled and slunk into a curl over on the passenger's side. “Daddy's mad, Bobby.” I whispered as I knelt before him on the floorboard. “Daddy's in a bad, bad mood.” Bobby smacked his lips and crimped his black eyes tight, making them nearly disappear, trying to forget his punishment. “Dammit.” Rod scolded himself understanding as he watched Bobby's reaction and ensuing despondency. “I'm sorry, little man.” He touched his back, not caressing, not patting, just laying his hand onto his back for comfort. “I'm sorry.” But Bobby felt the slur deeply and he didn't stir, even when Rod turned the ignition key. He stayed put in his tight curl even when the car inched forward, crawling toward the road in front of the church's parking lot. As he pulled forward into the right lane, I saw them coming from the opposite direction. The motorcyclists, two younger men in their late twenties, one with sandy blond choppy hair, the other's red and curly—riding on just one of the bikes now, both wearing regular clothing, jeans and white T-shirts—but it was them. There was no doubt. “Bobby,” I whispered to him, “there they are!” 103 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE The dog leapt up, jumping up onto the car's dashboard. He barked loud at the window, toward the bikers. “Bobby!” Rod shouted. “Down!” He slowed as the motorcyclists approached in the other lane. But Rod’s attention was on the dog, not the traffic. He looked into the rearview mirror briefly to see if he was slowing anyone down behind him, then he pulled off the road. Bobby leapt into the backseat as the motorcyclists shot past them. He jumped off his seat into Rod's lap, jamming his black nose into the window, smearing it with spit and yipping, yipping, growling, baring his teeth and yipping the entire time. He was inconsolable. Then, he raced off Rod's lap, as the motorcyclists passed the car, falling between the console and the backseat, adjusting himself, then jumping up into the curve of the back window, smashing his body into the angle where the glass met with felt. He refused to cease his wild, relentless barking. Rod pulled onto a road next to the church's property. He jammed the automatic gearshift into the park position and turned behind him. “Bobby! Bobby!” But he couldn't stop him from barking. So, I stepped in. “Bobby.” I touched his forehead and caressed his neck. “Don't worry, sweetie. It will be what it will be.” Bobby jumped down onto the backseat and sat on his haunches. He panted hard, still staring behind, toward the road, toward the cyclists. “There.” Rod said anxiously. “There you go.” He hoped his words helped soothe the dog even more. Rod's 104 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE attention was on Bobby and the motorcyclists slid away without Rod noticing. 105 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE THIRTY-SIX “NOT ANYTHING NEW. NO WORD of whoever they were.” Officer Scott Johnson reported when Rod called him and asked the status of the police investigation. Fawn and I paced, crossing one another in front of Rod, me chewing on a thumbnail and Fawn, head down, eyes big and full of worry. “Could they still be here?” Rod asked. “Doubt it.” “What about the cameras at the ferry? No one saw them leaving, right?” “The ferry cam isn't always reliable. Even though it snaps shots of the dock once every minute, its visibility is limited. It isn't a security camera. Plus, the position of the camera allows for a few blind spots. One major blind spot is where motorcycles line up, right in front of the semis. They could've been sitting there for an hour before leaving but the big rigs would've blocked any sighting of them. Even boarding, the delayed snapshots cause huge gaps. They could've boarded and gone upstairs, peed, gotten food and come back down, and we never would've seen 'em with ferry cams. “Chances are they slipped onto a boat unnoticed and have long since been gone.” Scott paused as if realizing the loss of hope that Rod was feeling as he spoke. “But, hey. Rod. We'll find these sons of mother's carcasses. We will.” Rod thanked his friend. But he didn't feel confident that the authorities would track these guys down at all. 106 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE After hanging up the phone, Rod looked over at Bobby. He slept on the couch, on a pillow where I used to read. Fawn and I flitted up and over to him, onto the back of the couch, and alighted on the pillow next to him. He lifted his head to look into my face and then rested his head on my thigh. I stroked the bridge of his snout and pinched the black wet texture of his nose the way I used to. But, now, the sensation felt different, as if I could feel every microscopic molecule. It felt sticky and nubby but comforting, like warm water on cold hands. Bobby breathed out, licked his chops and settled even deeper into my thigh. When Rod slammed down his fist on the hard wood, we all jumped, all lifted our heads in his direction. “I can not believe this!” His voice was a blending of anger interspersed with the tears. “Anger. Fawn. Anger is bad.” Fawn turned to me and blew out a soft bray, like a tiny foghorn. Bobby crouched down deeper into my leg and against the pile of the sofa's material. He was scared. “How could they get away with this?” His anger poured out of him. “How?” He slammed down both hands onto the arms of the chair. And continued to pound the arms, making Bobby turn his head to the wall, away from Rod. He continued to pound until his wrists looked reddened and sore. He continued to pound, saying all the while, “How!” 107 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE THIRTY-SEVEN FAWN AND I WATCHED ROD'S eyes roll toward his ear. It was the same ear into which the young sienna-skinned ear, nose and throat doctor—Dr. Jha, ENT—had inserted the otoscope. Rod squinted his eyes, feeling its strange eerie depth, but too afraid to move The doctor withdrew his gadget and moved to Rod’s left ear. “Don't worry. Everyone worries. I think it's my age.” He looked squarely into Rod's eyes bending toward him as he sat on the examination table. “I won't touch your eardrum. I can see how deep I have the scope.” When he finished, the doctor scrawled something onto a chart. Rod rubbed the small fold of skin at the entrance of both ear canals. They felt sore from over-attention. “How old are you?” “Thirty-one.” Dr. Jha turned back to Rod and smiled when he saw Rod lift his eyebrows. “I know. I know. I look 'much younger'.” He said in a voice that mimicked someone older with a deeper voice. “You do look younger than thirty-one.” “Well, I'm not. Was way ahead in my class at Stanford, graduated early from high school and got my undergrad a year earlier than the rest of my class. Guess I was in a hurry.” He gave Rod a friendly smile and flipped off the plastic cap covering the end of the otoscope, pressed with his foot on the stainless steel lever of the waste can and dropped the used ear protector into the trash. “Okay. Everything looks fine. In both ears.” “Of course.” “You seem disappointed with my diagnosis.” 108 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “Well, I just can't help but hear that constant buzzing sound.” “Describe it for me.” “It's a buzzing sound.” Rod frowned. “Yes. I understand. I guess I should've ask how it sounds. Like a bee?” Jha bared his teeth. Or like this?” He made a long, loud distinct noise similar to a buzz saw. Rod shook his head. “No. That would be awful, wouldn't it?” He made a sound similar to the buzz of a hummingbird's wings cutting out, or the sputtering engine of a small plane. “Hmm.” Dr. Jha's face searched Rod's. “We could do a hearing test? You know, to eliminate any worries you might have about hearing loss, assuming that's your concern.” Rod's concern wasn't the loss of his hearing but the ultra-sensitivity of his hearing. But he said, “I suppose.” “We can do it right here, today. Right now if you like.” “Sure. Why not.” “Great. I'll be just a minute. I have to make sure the testing room is available. I'm sure it is but I should check first. It only takes a few minutes so if someone else is using it, then your turn wouldn't be longer than fifteen minutes, I would guestimate.” “That's fine.” Dr. Jha left the examination room leaving the door ajar just enough for staff to see someone was still inside and just enough to provide Rod some privacy. He appeared sooner than Rod expected making him jump a bit. 109 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “Sorry. Didn't mean to startle you.” Rod slid off the side of the table. “I didn't expect you back so soon.” “It's free so I wanted to get you right away. Before someone else got it.” He held the door open wide and let Rod pass through. We followed, of course. 110 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE THIRTY-EIGHT INSIDE THE DARK SOUNDPROOF ROOM, Rod sat with a set of earphones on his head. He looked through a thick glass panel at Dr. Jha and at a short-haired woman around Rod's age, a Certified Audiometric Technician. They sat at a large slanted control board that looked like the cabin of a jet fighter. Rod was positioned high enough above the panel to look down into the control room. A voice came through the earphones. “If you hear a sound in your left ear, raise your left hand. If you hear a sound in your right ear, raise your right hand.” The woman's voice sounded raspy, as if she was just getting over a cold. “Understand?” “Yes. Oh. And, I hope you get over your cold soon.” Rod said. The woman visibly laughed, turned to the doctor covered the microphone, said something that made Dr. Jha laugh, lifted her hand off the microphone and said, “It's not a cold. It's my normal voice.” She laughed aloud. “But, thank you. I get that sometimes. Always makes me laugh. I forget what I sound like. An audio tech, no less.” Dr. Jha walked out of view. Rod's embarrassment could be seen through his physical reaction. He turned his head then looked back at her and mouthed, “I'm sorry.” Shaking his head and making the audio tech giggle again. She shook her head, smiling. “Really. It's okay. It happens. You're just today's first. For some reason I always think it might stop.” 111 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE She waved the subject off. “Okay. Right ear, right hand. Left ear, left hand. Got it?” Rod nodded. “We're gonna start now.” The first bong was loud enough. Rod lifted his right hand. “Good. That was a test,” she said. “The sounds may be nearly so low that you won't be able to hear anything and even if you think you hear something, please respond. Okay?” Rod lifted his right and gave her a thumbs-up. She did likewise. The next few sounds, Rod acted accordingly, raising his left hand, then his right, his right, his right again, then his left, a right, a left, two more lefts, three rights, one left, one right. That’s when I began to giggle. He looked so serious and goofy lifting his hands and straining to hear some sound through his headset in this or that ear that my giggling quickly grew to all-out laughter. Of course, Rod could hear that buzzing sound again as he had described it to the doc, a hummingbird crashing. Good grief. What a visual. Anyway, by then I was rolling on the ground in the sound room, which made Rod begin to lift his hands, sometimes one at a time and sometimes together, but the audio tech noticed and covered the microphone. She called to someone out in the depths of the office. Dr. Jha came in fast, as if responding to an emergency. Her voice mumbled through the fingers she'd clamped over the end of the mike. 112 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Rod was still flailing, his arms lifting randomly because I was still laughing. 113 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE THIRTY-NINE DR. JHA KNELT BESIDE ROD'S chair, trying to console him. The tech held his right hand in one hand and patted his arm with her other one. “Rod. Like I said. We didn't hear anything. We track the decibels of the sounds we're transmitting only. And watching your response.” He looked at the tech now with worry smeared all over his face. “How could you not hear it? I had my headset on, for crying out loud!” “Look Rod. If you heard the noise, you're hearing it with or without the headsets. Right?” Rod nodded but his face looked broken. He looked like a man giving up. “Therese?” The doctor looked at the technician. “Give us a minute, will you?” “Of course, Dr. Jha.” She released Rod's hand and patted his arm once more. “This worries me.” Dr. Jha said. “But before I go making rash and possibly expensive decisions here, like ordering an MRI, I have to ask you some questions. Okay?” Rod nodded and lowered his head toward his chest. “Okay. Tell me when these noises, this buzzing as you say, began.” “Three months ago.” “You're certain. Three months. Because earlier you mentioned it had been a few, or several weeks.” “Three months. Exactly.” “Exactly?” 114 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “Yes.” “Okay.” Dr. Jha elongated the word while he thought about his next question. “Three months. So, did anything happen three months ago”—Rod raised his head as the doctor continued—”that might have caused you any undue stress?” Rod appeared immobilized by the question, so Dr. Jha added, “Anything major in your life—job-related, money issues—anything?” Rod sunk into his chair. He covered his face with his hands. “What, Rod?” “Oh my God. I didn't put it together.” His hands dragged down over his face. “My wife.” “Yes?” “She was killed.” “Dear God.” Dr. Jha stood and pulled an empty stool that had been sitting in the corner over next to Rod. “I'm so sorry.” “Thank you.” Rod breathed out a long sigh. “You think you're getting used to it, you know.” He looked into the doctor's eyes. “But then it just flips you inside out. All this pain. All this emotion. It's unbearable. Then, this noise in my head. I feel like I'm losing my mind.” Dr. Jha lowered his eyes to his lap. “Look. I'm a man first, a doctor second. I'm a spiritual man first.” The doctor looked up at Rod. “I don't know how to say this.” “Just say it, doc.” Rod urged. “Please. I'm about to go insane.” 115 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE The doctor looked down again. “Good grief. I can't believe I'm going to say this to a patient.” He seemed to be speaking more to himself than to Rod. “Please, Dr. Jha. Please.” When the doctor looked up into Rod's eyes he put out his left palm. Rod seemed to understand that he was supposed to put his hand in it. After doing so, the doctor covered Rod's hand with his right. “I might get my licensed revoked for this but I just have to ask.” And his words tumbled forth: “Have you ever thought that your wife might be trying to communicate with you?” 116 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE FORTY “YOU TALKED TO JOHN?” BELLE sounded surprised that Rod had gone to the pastor. Or any pastor. He leaned forward, head slunk. “I know. Crazy, huh? Me?” His shoulders bounced once with a sardonic chuckle. “Actually. No. It's great, honey.” She patted his hand as they sat, coffee mugs in front of them, steaming, smelling up the room. “I told you to see the psychiatrist only because I didn't think you would listen to me if I told you to go talk to a man of the cloth.” “I've been blind, Belle.” He pulled his hand back and leaned against the back of the chair. “It's like, I want to believe. You know? I really do but it seems so ridiculous. Like, I see all of these people I recognize as believers and they all wear light blue suits, have greasy hair and say things like’ Praise God’ and ‘Hallelujah.’ It's just not how I can ever see myself.” “I didn't realize you were so critical.” “Neither did I.” “Why should people in blue suits with greasy hair dictate how you think and act?” “I understand that it's silly to think the way I'm thinking but some things have been hard-pressed into my psyche.” “So, therefore, you can't change.” Rod started to speak but Belle brought up her hand to quiet him. “You can't get an image out of your head in order to allow yourself to believe in God?” She put up her hand again. “That's just an excuse.” 117 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “An excuse.” “Yes. An excuse.” She sipped tentatively. “You watch too many movies.” Mom giggled but then her face turned serious, like when I was a kid and acted out. That stern motherly look I remembered. Something big was in the making for Rod. “You're worried about appearances. That's shallow water you're standing in, Rod.” Her eyes squinted. “Take the dive. You might want to visit your Church some Sunday. Take a look around at the people. They look exactly like you, exactly like me.” Then she paused for the kicker. “They look like Hannah.” She set down her mug, not diverting her eyes from Rod's for a second. He seemed embarrassed. “I wish I had gone with her.” His face buckled, making Belle's eyes fill with heavy sad tears, but she didn't make a sound. She sat up straighter. She wasn't finished with him. She wasn't going to let him off the hook. “Well, that’s just a pity.” He looked up amazed at her strength and the fight in her. The spite in her words. “I’m sure Hannah wished the same.” The last words struck like a slap across the face. The shock stopped his weeping. He wiped his nose with the butt of his hand. “Yes. Well. Now, I have to live with that fact, don't I?” He rose, walked to the door, opened it, and said, “Sorry to upset you, Belle. It wasn't my intention.” Then, he walked out closing the door behind him. 118 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Belle blew out air between her lips. She got up slowly and, hearing Bobby bark outside from Rod's car, she quickened her pace. She heard the door slam and the engine turn over. “Rod!” She called to him from the door, making him step on the brakes. He depressed the window's button and it rolled down enough that he could bend his head out and respond with, “What?” “I'll go.” But Rod didn't make the connection and rolled the window down farther, pressed the shift into park, flipped the ignition switch to off and opened the door but he didn't get out, he simply yelled from where he sat. “What?” He said again. “I said, I'll go.” Rod shook his head, not understanding. “Together.” Rod's head tilted again. “To church.” He blinked seeming to understand what she meant. “I'll go.” His face brightened. “With. You. If you'll let me, that is.” Rod buried his face in his hands. The sudden flow of emotion was becoming routine by now for him. The sound from him made Belle think of an animal mourning the loss of its mate. She moved fast to Rod. Then she bent before him and collected him into her arms. 119 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE FORTY-ONE “OKAY. REMEMBER NOW. ONCE FOR 'yes,' twice for 'no.' Got it?” Bobby barked once. “Great.” Rod shook his head that he was once again conducting such an experiment. It sounded quite insane. He looked through a window to see if anyone could see him. Rod sat, with his legs crossed into a pretzel, in the middle of the living room, next to the wooden dining table that I had made the year before. The raw pine smell flooded his senses. The table still had not been sanded or stained, halfway between fresh clean wood and distressed beaten wood, as we'd decided to finish it. The idea for the table was to bring as many friends and family members over to dinner in order for them to scrawl their names, a picture or some way of identifying them later in life, years after I'd stained and lacquered the table. We had vowed to give ourselves a two-year window of hands-on sketching and dremeling so that we could fill the table with memories of people we loved. Rod called it our “history' table.” I'd carved with a screwdriver at the place I normally sat the words, Hannah Sits Here. And, then decided to do another etching, Hannah Loves Rod 10/25/2010. I'd encased this one in a huge heart with a stick arrow piercing its center, one that had stick feathers at the end of the arrow. As he sat next to the monstrous wooden slab, he rested his hand on it, as if touching one of the last things 120 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE I had touched. His eyes filled up fast and he swiped at his nose. “Dammit.” Bobby laid his head down on his legs. Fawn and I drifted down, me to the left of Bobby and Fawn to the right. “You, can do this Bobby,” I whispered. Rod poked at his ear canal. I giggled. Fawn patted a hoof at me, trying to get me to stop. Bobby perked up again and sat, panting small breaths at me, looking at me. Waiting for my command. But Bobby remained obedient. His angel wing ears perked up in attention, his mouth slightly open, happily awaiting someone's command. “Is your name Bobby?” Rod asked. “Say 'yes,' Bobby.” Fawn leaned her muzzle against his neck and shoved just a little when I spoke. The little white dog turned to Rod and barked, lifting his chin and kicking up his forepaws almost off the floor. “Good boy. You're right. Bobby is your name.” The dog's tail fanned a wag out behind his rear end. Rod smiled and looked deeply into his eyes, which made me smile, which made Fawn smile which is the funniest-looking thing you’ve ever seen. “Next question.” Bobby's front paws patted at the ground anxiously in front of him. “Do you miss your mommy?” Bobby barked once, then dropped his chin to his feet and began to whimper. My hand landed on Bobby's head to comfort him. 121 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “I'm sorry, little man but we have to make sure you understand. Okay?” The dog sat up slowly and barked once that he understood. “You're very smart, aren't you?” Yip! He gave Rod a quick answer. “Okay. You don't have to agree with everything.” Rod straightened out his legs and groaned. “One more question. Now listen carefully. Again, Bobby. Once for 'yes,' twice for 'no'.” He rubbed the little dog's head and lifted his chin to his face, gazing into the depths of his dark, ebony eyes. “Okay. Here we go. If I told you mommy didn't talk to you, would you believe me?” It was a complex question. Rod was testing him hard now. With each of his two quick yips, Bobby's head flicked to the left then to the right. Rod filled his chest with air, not sure he believed what he was witnessing but willing to move forward with his plan. Finally, he breathed out. “Okay. That's good enough for me, little guy.” He rolled up onto his knees and pushed off the ground. “Wanna go for a walk?” Bobby jumped up on his hind legs and lunged with his forepaws onto Rod's legs, barking like crazy and acting, as I used to say, like an animal. Obviously, the Q&A period had ended and all rules were out the door. Fawn and I swirled around the room. “We we’re going on an adventure, Fawn!” “K!” Rod laughed out. “Come on. Let's go to town. We need to talk to someone. We need to find mommy's killers. Don't we, son. You and me.” He picked Bobby's halter and leash off the end of the stair's railing. The little 122 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE dog continued to yip and bounce until Rod finally got the lashing over his head and clasped the halter's latch. “We're off!” 123 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE FORTY-TWO “LOOK, SCOTT. STRANGE THINGS HAVE been happening lately.” “Like what?” The big policeman sat back in his swivel chair, making it creak in pain. He crossed his arms and smiled through the long set of interior windows, acknowledging someone who passed by outside his office down the hall. The blinds sat at half-mast. The glare of fluorescent lights washed over everything in the room, paling and discoloring every item. “Well, like, um...” Rod looked over at the person walking by and then back to his friend. He peered into Scott's eyes determining how he might take the talking dog information. “Um. Well, let's just say that what I didn't see before, I see now.” Scott squinted and looked at his watch. “Rod. That doesn't explain anything to me. What's going on?” “I just don't think I can say at the moment.” Scott hefted himself out of the chair and stood. “Well, Rod. I'd love to help you with whatever strange things you think are happening, but I have a job here. Work to do. You know.” He moved toward the exit, holding his hand out. Rod looked around uncomfortably, not expecting to be dismissed so casually by his friend. I sat on a stack of folders held in a metal three-tiered tray. The top shelf, where I sat, had been labeled Inactive Cases. Rod noticed the label first, then his eyes moved up to the tab of the top folder. Typed neatly in black, on a bright 124 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE white sticker read the words, DEMSEY, HANNAH 2011/12/5. “What's this?” Rod stood and reached over to pick up the file. I shuffled my rear off the stack, and seeing what Rod was reading, I threw my hands up in the air, as if to say, What the …? I ticked my head at Fawn, who loped up next to my side and looked. She began to bat a hoof at the stack. Scott rolled his eyes regretting he hadn't hidden the file or, at the very least, turned it over when Rod walked in. “You're not looking for them anymore?” Rod's voice sounded weak, disbelieving. “Rod. They're gone. We can't always catch the bad guys.” He shoved the door closed again. “Sorry, man.” “Sorry? Man?” “Rod. Look. We have other cases that need attention.” He took the file from Rod and replaced it onto the stack. “It's not closed. It's just on … hold.” He turned back to Rod. “I know what you're thinking here but—” “You have no idea what I'm thinking. If you did, we wouldn't be friends anymore.” Rod turned to the door and walked out. 125 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE FORTY-THREE HE GRUMBLED ALL THE WAY home. Creating scenarios of what to say next time they met up. Things like, Friends? You call yourself a friend? and, Kissing some higher-up's butt? Trying to make captain or something, Scott? You know, scenarios that place blame on someone who really isn't to blame. By the time we reached the house, he was so wrapped up in his internal argument that he wasn't paying attention. Rod let Bobby out of the car but then left him behind, outside and went inside by himself. He slammed the door so hard it made the French doors rattle and the large Christmas bell I'd hung on the knob chime. He didn't notice Bobby wasn't with him. He still grumbled angrily to himself as whipped out a mug from the cupboard and filled it with coffee. He only realized the dog wasn't in the house with him when he heard the screeching of tires on the road, then the honking of a horn. “Bobby!” He yelled, dropping the cup and thermos onto the counter and running back outside. “Bobby!” He screamed yanking the door open wide. He heard the swishing sound of rubber on the road as the car drove off. A deer trotted across the yard, skirting a bank of blackberry bramble and disappeared. 126 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Then, Rod looked down. Bobby sat next his feet in front of him on the black rubber welcome mat. His tail whipped back and forth when Rod saw him. “Oh dear God! Bobby! I don't know what I would do if I lost you too!” He fell to his knees and embraced the little dog, who returned the greeting by licking his face. “I'm sorry. I'm so sorry.” 127 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE FORTY-FOUR THAT NIGHT ROD KEPT BOBBY close, cradling him against his stomach. What some people call spooning. It gave me reason to glow. A shower of microscopic stars, like a shimmery, drizzling cloud, fell onto my head, spilling off landing all over Fawn while she lay next to me asleep. It was impossible to sleep that night. The vision of Bobby and Rod together there, that way, was all I needed at that moment. While I sat staring at them, Bobby stretched out his hind legs and his whole body tightened. He yawned and looked right at me. I cocked my head and Bobby slipped out from under Rod's arm, allowing it to fall softly in front of his chest. Bobby slinked up to me and we gazed into each other's eyes. When he panted, the smell of his breath, a scent between morning mouth and wet sugar, puffed into my face. I couldn't help myself any longer. It was as if my human body got tangled in my spiritual self because the urge to press my lips onto Bobby's head overtook me. Unspoken rules were placed in us the moment we died. Like a child’s understanding of the difference between right and wrong, we knew what we could and could not do. And we were never to breach our dimensional planes and contact live humans or beasts—physically or otherwise. But the urge pulled me so strong that I leaned toward him. 128 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Fawn must have felt me breaking a rule and awoke. She batted her hoof at my arm, trying to stop me. We were not supposed to engage our loved ones especially. And kissing was the highest angelic crime we could commit. The punishment? An eternal life earthbound, never finding the road to Heaven. But, it was too late. My whole essence had been fully committed. A clap of thunder shuddered outside, rattling the windows. The floor below me rumbled. The bed swayed. But my lips had already connected on Bobby's head. That’s when I felt the initial stages of transformation set in. And, yet, an opulence of love blanketed me in a warmth so complete, so earthly, so honest that my body sparked and sizzled into form. When I finally lifted up from the kiss, Fawn looked confused and scared. She bolted and kicked her heels. She snorted and brayed. “Wha-at?” Guilty! As charged. I knew my sin, knew what I had done. But my body ached. It was miserable not being able to communicate the way I had once done with Bobby. I missed him so much, missed the way we used to be together—our walks, our talks as physical beings able to touch one another, to hug him. But there was no soothing Fawn. Her head remained down. Her eyes diverted from my gaze. Fawn continued to act out, bucking and batting the air on hind legs then stomping the ground in front of her. 129 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE And, still, through all her fussing, I kissed Bobby's head, happily, to the point I began humming a tune. Through each kiss, of each eye, I hummed. Up to his forehead the song flowed from me. I kissed his muzzle on both sides of his face. I could really feel him now, this time, the texture of his fur, the splits between each strand, down to his skin, the warmth of his skin, the fullness of it, the shape of his small body, each joint in his legs and the silky moisture of his nose. Breathing in his smell— something between dog conditioner and popcorn—made me smile, eyes shut tightly enjoying the moment, the thing I would come to own as my “now” memory. And the song went on, tickling my lips as it flowed into my mouth over my teeth and tongue. It was a melody so familiar, one that my mother used to sing as she cradled me on this old gray knobby rocking chair she loved so much. While she hummed I laid on her lap fighting off sleep, the song so simple and that old rocking chair making the song so real—Sailing Sailing Over the Ocean Blue... So, when Rod awoke, I was caught unaware. And, when he bolted up in bed, we all froze. Even Bobby. “What the hell!” he screamed, knocking me out of my joy. I fluttered back off the bed and fell on my butt. It sort of hurt. Fawn followed, spinning and patting at me, at the ground. She flipped out. Bobby yipped at Rod, who had balled up his fists and pressed them onto his face covering his mouth. His look of terror was one I'd never seen on him before, even from the first instance I’d made contact. 130 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Rod tried to control his breathing. He huffed and swallowed and kept saying, “OhmyGoodness! OhmyGoodness!” In a monotone, I chanted, “Go to sleep, Rod.” “The hell I'll sleep!” He shuffled his back against the headboard, keeping his bed covers pulled up tight to his chest. His hands shook. “Go to sleep.” I repeated in the same eerie tone. “Quit saying that!” I looked at Fawn. She shook her head and looked as disgusted as I supposed a deer can look. My visit this time seemed different somehow. I rolled up onto my knees and brushed off the knees of my red twill pant legs. When I finally stood, his eyes tracked me. However, I couldn't be quite certain. It was dark and all. So I tested him to make sure he could actually see me. And Fawn. I jumped to the right landing on both feet. Rod gasped. Fawn brayed. But he didn't take his eyes off of me. I jumped to the left, landing on both feet again. He gasped again and, likewise, Fawn brayed again but he refused to drop his gaze from me. “Well, it's obvious you can see us.” I placed both my pudgy hands onto my hips. He swallowed hard. “Oh ... my ... God.” “Yes. Yes. We understand you're upset. You can see us, right?” Rod looked around the room, more confused than ever, balling up the sheets into his hands. 131 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “Well?” I goaded. “Um. Oh good G—. Um, yes. I can see you,” he whispered. “You don't have to whisper.” “I saw your picture at Belle's.” “Yes. And...” “Hannah?” I couldn't believe he didn't recognize me. “Well, who else?” I turned to Fawn. “And, Fawn. You should at least say 'hello' to her.” “Who?” “Fawn, Rod. Her name is Fawn. Wow. Rude.” He squinted and looked to my left, then my right. “Well!” “Yes. Um. Yes, hello Fawn.” My hands slid from my hips and I crawled back onto the foot of the bed again where Bobby was, still. “I miss Bobby so much.” Fawn floated up and tapped me on the shoulder to get my attention. “What?” “Huh?” Rod responded. His confusion was started to annoy me. “I wasn't talking to you.” “Who were you talking to?” His question stunned me. The whole time I assumed that he could see us both. Fawn drifted through the air and landed on the bed next to Bobby, who turned and yipped at her. “Bobby likes Fa-awn! Bobby likes Fa-awn!” I chanted. But Rod remained frozen. It became obvious to me that he felt coerced into speaking. “I don't bite, you know.” 132 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE He shook his head quickly. “You're afraid of me?” He shook his head again. “Liar. Are too.” He cleared his throat and, at last, shifted his body a smidge. Then, he spoke. “I'm in shock.” He released the wad of sheets from his hands. The wrinkles looked wet and permanent. “In shock.” I rolled my eyes. “You're a scared-y cat.” “I am not.” His voice sounded stern as if he were reprimanding me. “Liar.” “I'm not a liar either.” “Are too.” I raised onto my knees, petted Bobby and spoke to him. “Rod is a liar.” I lifted my eyebrows and nodded my head. “He's a scared-y cat too!” “I am not!” I looked up at him, still smiling. “Are too!” “Am not!” His eyes were big but his face had mellowed. The tenseness was gone and I paused just before finishing the argument. “Are too, are too, are TOO!” I giggled so hard. Rod lifted his hands to his ears. Jamming a finger into each one and wobbling them hard. I looked back at my dog and began humming again. “That song.” He said as he pulled his fingers from his ears. “What about it.” I continued now, singing it, “Sailing, sailing over...” 133 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE When Rod joined in, stopping me, “ocean, blue.” Then, he went on: “La la la la dee da dee da dee da dee da dee dooo.” “That's terrible.” “I don't know the words.” I giggled again. “Neither do I.” “Why that song?” “It's a memory.” I corrected myself. “My past memory of my Mom. She used to rock me to sleep and sing it to me. See, when we die, well, it's not really dying, now, is it?” I smiled hard at Rod, showing him my teeth. I swiped a finger and brought my lips together tight. Then, started explaining again. “See, we're given three memories. Just three. One for the past, one for the present and one for the future.” I placed my hand back onto Bobby and stroked his head again. “Mine are of my mother, my husband and my dog. In that order.” Rod sat up straighter against the headboard. He seemed a little more at ease but I knew the slightest start would freak him out, so I behaved myself. “So, you have a husband?” I cocked my head at him as if he were an idiot. Fawn batted at me, scolding me for thinking that way, acting that way. “You're my husband, Rod. I had a husband. We don't have spouses here.” I looked over at the glaring red numbers on the digital clock. It was 2:47. “You have to leave?” “Soon.” “Where will you go?” 134 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE I smiled. “I'm everywhere and nowhere. It's wonderfully free here.” Fawn snorted. “Yes. I know.” “You know what?” “Fawn says we should leave.” “She does?” “Well, yes, she just...” And, at that juncture I realized Rod couldn't see or hear her. “You can't see her, can you?” He shook his head. “She's right here, on the bed. She's standing, which of course she shouldn't be, not on the bed. Mother would be so angry about that.” “Mother?” “Belle.” I egged him on. “You know, my mother?” And I understood he still didn't believe. He didn't believe, although we stood before him, spoke to him, sang in fact. He still didn't believe. Astonishing. “Why is it so hard for you to believe that I'm here?” “Well, holy crap, Hannah, if it is you … I mean, after all, you were killed.” “So, you can't think that I'm still alive but in a different form? You can only believe me to be dead?” He looked down into his lap. “That's kind of pathetic, Rod. I mean I'm right here.” I petted Bobby's head again and kissed him. Fawn freaked again but, really, the cat was out of the bag, already. What was the point to worry now? “Stop, Fawn. He sees me.” “I have questions.” His voice startled me. “What questions?” “Well, what's it like?” 135 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE I knew what “it” meant to him. It meant, how is it being dead? I stroked Bobby's head and then looked at Fawn. “It”—I emphasized the word—”is so easy to explain but very difficult to understand.” “Try me.” Rod started to seem like his old self again. “Okay.” I did a backflip off the bed and landed in a perfect Olympian ten for him raising my hands high above my head. He seemed to chuckle. “I never could do that before!” “What else?” “Hmm. Well, like I said before. I'm everywhere and nowhere. If something pulls me away from you and Bobby—like Mom, for instance—I'll be with her too but with you all at the same moment. But, I'm not really in any of those places because I am not earthbound. Does that make sense?” “I think so.” He crossed his hands casually on top his lap, like he was watching a show on TV or something. “Go on.” Obviously he wasn’t freaking out any longer. That was good. “Go on, huh?” He nodded. “Okay.” I paused to think of what more I could tell him. “Well, I can see everything, in my world, of course. But, I'm not God. Not by a long shot! Sheesh!” I giggled at him, scrunching up my nose, which seemed to make him happy. So, I crossed my eyes. “You were a silly little girl.” “Were?” “Sorry. You are a silly little girl.” His voice faded. He looked down again, pondering the next question, then 136 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE he looked up at me. “Um. Do you remember...?” He stopped, making me cock my head. I looked at Fawn. “Do I remember what?” He shook his head and looked down again, asking the question, not looking at me. “That day?” “That day?” He corrected his intonation. “That day.” “That day,” I repeated exactly as he had, then finally realized what he meant. “Oh. That day. My last day.” I felt a rush of shivers embrace me and my electricity shot off my skin. I shuffled over to the edge of the bed, resting my thighs against it and caressing Bobby's back again. “Yes. I remember.” Fawn bucked her back legs. “Fawn remembers too.” Then, as if he'd been struck by a bolt of lightning, he got it. “Fawn!” We both stiffened. Bobby sat up. Rod closed his eyes and slapped the palm of his hand onto his forehead. “The fawn.” He opened his eyes wide, his hand still planted on his head. “The fawn that was killed alongside the road. With you.” I looked over at her. “Yeah. Fawn. That fawn.” I put my arm over her shoulder and we stood together. “She's here with me. We're together now. We'll always be together. From now on, that is.” I ruffled her head under my hand. She looked up at me and, well, she smiled. At least, I could see she smiled. “We died together and now we'll live together for eternity.” I petted her again and pulled her in tight to me. “Not bad, that.” I began humming Sailing again. As I hummed I felt myself begin to fizzle. 137 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “That's a great tune.” I just smiled. “You won't forget this time, Rod.” “Won't forget?” “Our visit.” “You did come before.” “Uh-huh.” I smiled deviously, feeling myself dwindle right before Rod's eyes. “But I made you forget. I can't make you forget now.” “Why not?” A spark flew off my cheek. “Silly. I kissed Bobby! Too intimate a gesture for an angel and a creature of the earth. Too much, um, emotion, one might think.” Fawn flitted over to the bed and pushed Bobby. Bobby shuffled away, looking insulted. “She wants you to go to Rod, Bobby.” Fawn nuzzled him again. Bobby looked a bit dejected but brightened up when Rod patted the bed beside him. “Come here, son.” He pulled him in close as I began to disappear again. They both watched in terror. “Son.” I giggled as my voice cracked in and out, becoming choppy. “I love that. Always, loved, that ... when, you, called, him 'son,' Rod.” He smiled but his face turned sad and he looked down at the dog. Even then you could see warmth spilling from his eyes, covering Bobby. To me, it appeared like satin ribbons fluttering down, milky white pouring over him. “I. ha-ve… to… g-o-o.” The crackling became obnoxious. I was disintegrating back to the other realm. 138 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Rod was distracted by the little dog but looked up and saw me fading in and out. “Wait!” he called, “Who killed you?!” But just as I was about to speak, a zephyr zipped around me, and in a puff of twinkling rainbow ash, Fawn and I took our leave. 139 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE FORTY-FIVE OUTSIDE UNDER THE THICK UMBRELLA of the large fir tree in back, Fawn clawed a divot into the ground. Thousands of little gnats fluttered around us. Angel gnats. Boy, were they pesky. But for a little while they took my attention off of Fawn. Still, she brayed and whinnied like a mule, pulling my focus back to her. She spun and kicked her legs at me and reared up, threatening me. “All right! Already!” I crossed my arms and planted my feet, bending one leg at the knee, turning it out ever so much in order to tap my toe at her. “You've made your point!” She was bucking mad still. At me. At me becoming visible to Rod. Explaining that now I'd have to reverse it somehow. “How will I do that?” Fawn's head shook long and slowly in each direction. “Well if you don't know, how the heavens am I supposed to know, Fawn?” When she looked up at me, I swear she glared. “It's not like I can take back a kiss!” Then, her eyes softened. Then they widened. She nodded. “Take back a kiss? How?” Fawn paced in circles. First, she circled right, stopped, then she'd circled left. Rinse and repeat. It became quite annoying and I was just about to stop her when her body went rigid. She looked up to the sky as if 140 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE listening to someone speaking to her. She nodded as if agreeing. Then, she turned back, looked at me and glared again! 141 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE FORTY-SIX “I WILL NOT DO THAT!” I yelled at Fawn. She stood her ground. Her whinnying amplified and she bounded and leapt with such furor, I thought she might fall. Her eyes reddened with a fire behind them I hadn't seen before in her. She seemed such a placid little doe just minutes before. Now, Miss Sinister Venison was standing in her place. She planted her hooves firmly into the soggy ground and scraped at it as if a bull in a pasture aiming for a target. “You better not charge me, you wicked little thing!” I screamed when she ran at me. I screamed but giggled as well, not really believing that she would trample me. I headed off in one direction and she caught up fast. So, I turned, but soon she caught up and was on my heels. I veered to the left, then the right. She stayed up with me. Finally, I jumped in the direction of the big fir's trunk, hugging it, revolving around it, trying to lose her. Then, she stopped. We both panted, exhausted from our battle. I wasn't laughing anymore. “Stop! Stop!” My voice called out in puffy breaths. She dropped her head and took in a few breaths, then looked up and patted the ground again with one hoof. “Look.” Gasp. Gasp. “Look, Fawn.” Gasp. “I don't know how to take back a kiss.” Gasp. “If I did, I would.” Gasp. “You have to believe me.” Her eyes relaxed. Then, they became moist, filling up and then draining out down along her snout and off her lips. She licked at one tear, crossing her eyes as she looked down toward it. After tasting it, she turned away from me. 142 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE I never knew deer could cry. Then, came the sound, a velvety light moo that a calf might call as it searched for its mother. She turned and walked away. We were getting too far from one another. Listening to her, this way, caused a pain to grow in me, one I'd never felt before. Not even as a human had I felt such intolerable anguish. “Fawn. I'm sorry! Stop! Please stop crying.” She wanted to go home. She had tired of our time on earth and tired of our search for the killers. She didn't care anymore. She simply wanted to drift away from the land below us and end up on higher ground, as it is in Heaven. I skipped to catch up to her. Then, slowing my pace, afraid I'd upset her more if I touched her, I just walked beside her. Quietly. I didn't know how to reverse what I had done. Touching Bobby. Kissing him, allowing myself to be seen by Rod in a way he would never forget. Now, we couldn’t go home to Heaven. Not unless I took back the kiss. I had doomed us to spirits who roamed the earth. 143 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE FORTY-SEVEN ROD FELT ENERGIZED THE NEXT morning and pulled the sheets tight to the headboard. He stepped into and out of the pearlescent pile of powder I'd left when my body dissipated the night before, on the floor at the foot of his bed, tracking it all over the place. But he couldn't see the branny gossamer sprinkles. Only those at extremes of the heart—the purest or the most sinful—could spot angel dust. Of course, Bobby could see the dust. He was still on the bed as Rod made it. When Rod tugged again, he jostled Bobby, murmuring soft words to him as he moved from one side of the bed to the other, brushing a hand over the sheets, ironing them out. Then, pulling up the sea-blue quilted coverlet I'd purchased, he covered Bobby as a joke, then pulled the quilt back off of him, fast. “Peekaboo!” Bobby's tail swished behind him, looking like a shaggy flag waving in a slow breeze. His lips split open and he began to pant. Rod moved around to where he laid. He lifted up Bobby, adjusted the coverlet under him and then set him back on top of the quilt. “There.” Bobby lay down, satisfied with his new position. Rod gazed through the window. This morning the sun decided to make a cameo appearance, casting short vibrant lines onto the floor. The beams it threw onto the floor broke against furniture creating dark images of chocolate brown that fell around each angle of the nightstand, off the foot board and 144 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE from Rod's body as he walked about the room, dragging his shadow along with him as he headed into the shower. But the shadow finally gave up its pursuit. A hint of steam from the hot water stuck against the window forming dunes like Christmas snow at each corner bringing hints of lavender and coconut from Rod’s soap and shampoo. In the shower, he whistled the tune I'd been singing the night before. I didn't show my face. He seemed too happy to disturb. 'Twas a lovely sight! And I understood my appearances upset him. Of course they did. That's why these rules like no touching, no contact, no appearances, were created in the first place. Plus, it just wasn't fair to show up so suddenly in front of someone. It's like the X-game of Boo! As Rod whistled, you could hear the sound of a distant ferry lofting by outside, somewhere in the straits. Rod didn't hear at first. By that time, he was out of the shower and fluffing pillows, still cooing to the dog on the bed. But Bobby heard. He sat up, and made a sound between a growl and of smacking lips causing Rod to look over at him. “What?” Then he smiled, looking around the room and added, “Son?” The dog let out a shocking yip, only once. Rod jumped. “Good grief! Bobby. You scared me.” He laid his hand against his chest, walked over to the dog and scratched under his chin. “What's up, little dude?” 145 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Bobby rolled onto his back, allowing Rod to stroke his chest. “You're quite the manipulator, you know?” The ferry's horn blew again, making Bobby roll up into a sitting position at the edge of the bed. He barked again, this time, toward the window. “What is it?” He looked between the dog and the window. “Is something outside?” Rod moved in that direction and flung open the bottom casement. A cold breeze drafted through the room and lifted the corner of the sheet. Bobby's hair rustled to one side as Rod leaned out. “I don't see anything, son.” But then another blast from the ferry sounded off in the distance. The vessel was somewhere on the water en route to some unknown destination, probably to Canada. Bobby barked again. “The ferry?” Bobby's tail flew back and forth in quick bursts. “That's a ferry, Bobby.” He tried to explain but Bobby began to bark furiously, whipping his head from side to side and backing up with each snap of the jaw, barking. Rod pulled the window down again and twisted the latch in place to hold it down securely. “Shh. Bobby. Hush.” When Bobby refused his command, Rod got angry and yelled at him. “No! Bobby. Shut up. This instant!” The dog's head fell immediately to his paws. His eyes diverted from Rod's gaze when the ferry blew again, making Bobby lift his head to Rod. “It's the ferry. Just the ferry.” 146 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE He came back to the bed and sat next to Bobby. “It's okay. It's just a ferry.” He explained, patting his head. And, they sat listening to the horn blare again, twice more, then three times. Bobby sniveled. Rod looked perplexed. A gauzy cloud eclipsed the sun and the room went gloomy. Rod brought his free hand up around his neck and rubbed it while keeping his other hand on Bobby's back, trying to soothe him. The two sat there for a few minutes more listening as the ferry coursed across the ocean then, finally, it stopped. Bobby looked so sad. Rod frowned, feeling like he wasn't able to communicate the way he thought he could with his own dog. Then he fell back onto the bed. As he lay there, he thought about the night before— how wonderful and frightening it had been for him to see me, but how he awoke happier today. In fact, he remembered waking with a song in his head. Sailing, Sailing... Just then, a ray of sunshine glistened at the edge of the same lofty cloud scudding by, creating a streaming meandering tinsel around the cloud. When Rod sat up again, Bobby looked at him wagging his tail tentatively at first, slowly. His mouth parted open and he panted as he watched his master. When Rod began to hum the song again, his face glowed in the sun's light. His skin went from shadowed and ashen to bright and healthy pink as the sun brightened the room completely. 147 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE But his jaw slackened. He began to understand. He continued humming the song louder now, causing Bobby to sit up in attention. When the words began to form over Rod's tongue, more in a whisper at first then building, I knew Rod had realized why Bobby was transfixed by the ferry. “Sailing sailing over the ocean blue!” he boomed, at the top of his voice while he sang the words. Then he looked at Bobby, “Holy cannoli. The ferry. Were you reminding me about last night?” The sun broke out completely, as if the orb itself wanted to join him in this state of delirium. The star hung inside a brilliant blue canvas and shone on the bed, lighting it with warmth, warming Rod's face as he lifted each arm to the side, taking in the heat radiating, enveloping him. Finally, Rod turned to Bobby. He was wagging his tail with so much force his entire body wiggled. And, as he wiggled, he grumbled and panted. “Do you want to go to the ferry, Bobby?” And, the little dog yipped. Once. 148 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE FORTY-EIGHT BOBBY CLIMBED ONTO ROD'S LAP as he pulled his truck up along the sidewalk. It was a sort of loading zone where people dropped off or picked up friends and family at the ferry terminal. Rod liked driving his truck. It wasn't fancy, didn't have chrome bumpers or roll bars, didn't even have a decent paint job. In fact, the truck looked old and used, with its white paint chipping off from a ding in the door, a dimple in the fender, and a wobbling line of oxidation running from the tip to the end on the driver's side from someone, a kid most likely, who'd keyed it years ago. The interior didn't look much better. Stuffing from the seat threatened to explode out of a deep worn split in the upholstery. Rod didn't care. He thought all of the truck's imperfections gave the truck character. Made it look like a real man's. Plus, without the creaking hinge, he just wouldn't feel the same about it. “Hold on, Bobby. Let me get your leash.” Rod clipped the silver metal oval ring of the lead to the dog's halter. “There you go. Let's take a walk.” As he spoke, the door squawked open and the little dog jumped from Rod's lap, landing squarely onto the concrete walkway. Bobby shook out his coat, then looked up to watch Rod slam the truck door closed. Rod pulled the leash tight, coiling it around his hand, keeping Bobby within safety's range. Cars poured through the ferry lane into a line where a single ferry worker had been assigned. The man looked 149 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE overwhelmed, his blotchy face reddened with stress. Rod had seen the guy before, he figured from around their small island somewhere. He wore a thick heavy khaki uniform that was stained with car oil, or what looked like car oil, anyway. He wore a reflective yellow government grade vest striped with orange trim. His boots looked like something you'd get from Army Surplus and he wore a thick flapeared cap with fluffy ivory-colored insulation that looked like the same material used in faux deerskin seat covers. He looked stuffed into his outfit and looked uncomfortable but warm. His arms swung back and forth, like a pendulum, toward the ferry sitting in the water then back to the lineup of cars, then back again to the ferry. He pointed his fingers as he directed and curtly responded only to those drivers who asked questions of him and nodding blankly to those waving at him. For them, he accentuated his gesturing. You could hear him repeat robotically, “Juan Cortez. This-a way! Juan Cortez. This-a way!” The sky played hide-and-seek with the sun still ablaze for the moment, making the day gleam in vibrant psychedelic colors. An aqua sea, rippled below as shallow waves busted high along boulders piled up in a retaining wall that formed a berm around the U-shaped marina. The cold wind made Rod's nose feel as if it were running, and he swiped his hand under it, just in case. The lone ferry bobbed between clusters of pylons coated with thick shiny creosote and streaked with white excrement from gulls and cormorants who made nests out of crannies along the length of each pylon. 150 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE The white and green ferry was anchored to a movable ramp and showed years of streaking rust trailing down its sides like zebra stripes. Rod's attention was pulled away by a small commuter boat, not more than fourteen feet in length, heading to shore as it made a course from one of the smaller nearby islands. Probably Deer Island, where no ferry service existed and no cars were allowed. Just golf carts. A foghorn blasted and a rumble of car engines gunned to life. Gulls cawed as they circled the ferry and the loudspeaker blared out, like a bullhorn, the next scheduled departure for Juan Cortez. A brush of wind whipped up and smelled of brine and decaying fish. It felt cool, cooler than Rod had planned for. He pulled his light corduroy jacket tighter around his neck. “Come on, Bobby.” He shivered as he walked toward the man directing cars toward the ferry's opening. The man’s expression was somewhere between bored and pissed off. “Hey man.” Rod chimed out. “Look. I'm busy. Can it wait?” “Sure.” Rod dropped his head and turned slowly to leave but Bobby jumped up onto the man's leg, wagging his tail at him. “Hey little guy,” the ferry worker said, and seemed to soften. “It's okay.” The guy now said to Rod. “What’s up?” he said to Rod. “It's not like I'm doing brain surgery here.” He rolled his eyes and thumbed to the cars. Then he yelled out, “Juan Cortez. This-a way!” 151 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “Thanks, man.” Rod pulled Bobby off the guy. “He's cute. What kind of little dog is he?” “A Westie.” “A Westie?” “Yeah. A West highland Terrier. They hail from Scotland.” Rod said, imitating Sean Connery and making the guy chuckle. “This-a way!” he yelled again. “So, whatcha need?” “I'm wondering if you know anything about these ferry cams.” “Sure! Whatcha need to know?” By now, the line had thinned out and the cars in the last lane were starting their engines, shifting into gear and getting ready to move. “Hell. They can handle this without me.” The guy turned fully to Rod. He was a few inches shorter but broader, like a wrestler, thick-chested, big-boned and stocky. His hair was jet black and soaked with sweat beneath the cap, which he now slid off his head. Rod noticed the guy's name tag: DANNY. He held out his hand to him. “Hey, Danny, I'm Rod. Rod Demsey.” “Demsey. Why do I know that name?” He squinted his eyes as he looked into Rod's face, trying to remember but came up with nothing. “Huh. Well, nice to meet you, Rod. What's the little guy's name?” He looked down at Bobby. “This here is Bobby.” Rod smiled as he spoke his name. “Hey Bobby.” Danny dipped down into a squat position and petted Bobby's head. “You're a cute little fella. Aren't you?” 152 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Rod grinned widely at Bobby. I'd always told Rod that he was an attention-seeking magnet. “He's an attention-seeking magnet.” “Why, yes. Yes, he is.” Danny said as he pulled out of his squat back to standing. “So, the ferry cams? What about 'em?” “Where are they positioned?” “Oh. Well,” He pointed over behind Rod's shoulder, “One is back over there on the telephone pole. See?” Rod searched and found it easily. “Ahh. Yes.” “Why do you ask?” They began to walk in the direction of the ferry toward the dock now and Rod wiped a finger just above his top lip under his nose. “Well, um. I'm trying to find someone.” “With the ferry cam?” He asked as if Rod was kidding. “Sounds ridiculous, huh?” “Well, shoot. There's only that one there,” He thumbed back behind him as he walked toward the water, toward the ferry landing. “The quality ain't that great. It's more of a promotional thing for the islands, you know, used for the ferry system and on the SantaMariaIslandCam.com site.” Then he added, “The quality ain't for snot if you ask me.” “Who regulates it?” “Well, the ferry does but it goes out to other sites as a courtesy.” “Where is the monitor?” Danny pointed to the ferry dock's building, in the direction we walked, a place where they gave out seasonal 153 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE scheduled runs, sold tickets, kept a vending machine and two toilets for public use. “It's in our office. We make sure it's working okay and that it's on. Sometimes people forget to turn the dang thing on after switching out tapes. Can you believe it?” Rod shook his head and got quiet but continued to walk next to Danny, with Bobby in tow. “Anything else?” “No. I just...” Rod stopped walking, which stopped Bobby, which stopped Danny who turned to them. “It's just, what?” “Nothing. It's nothing. Come on Bobby.” Rod wanted to ask him how it might be possible to see footage from the cams but instead he turned, held up a hand and said, “Bye, Danny.” He walked away. “Bye, Rod,” But Danny didn't leave. He scratched his head with the hand he still held his cap in. Then he called out, “Demsey, ya say?” His words stopped Rod, making him turn around. “Yes. Demsey. Rod Demsey.” “You Hannah's husband?” Rod looked down at his feet, at Bobby, and nodded. “Hannah went to my church.” Danny explained and walked back toward Rod closing in the space between them. “She was a nice woman. A good woman. My wife and she used to sit together. A recent development, anyway, after the fudge issue settled.” He smiled like it was the stupidest thing he'd ever heard of. “Fudge. Can you believe it? Sorry, man about not coming to the funeral service.” He held out a hand to shake again. “I had some viral thing that had me laid up for three days.” 154 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Danny looked over Rod's shoulder, avoiding his eyes. “Man, you must be so, so...” But he didn't really know what he wanted to say so he just said, “Sorry about your loss, Rod. Really sorry.” They still held each other's hands, finally releasing them when Rod nodded to him. “Thanks, Danny.” “A motorcyclist, huh?” Rod looked up. “Have you seen anyone?” “Huh-uh. But, hey. I only work Monday through Friday, seven a.m. until four p.m. If they left on Saturday or Sunday, chances are I missed 'em. But Gliddy's been all up in arms about it. I think there's a little bit of guilt left over in her.” Rod chuckled thinking about Gliddy and how she seemed so upset at the reception. “You tell Gliddy that Hannah never even talked about that anymore. Well, after the initial upset anyway. Will you?” “I will, Rod. Thanks for saying so. Maybe she'll get some peace knowing that.” “Well, we'd better go.” Rod pulled at the dog but Danny bent down again to say his goodbyes to Bobby. “You be a good boy, Bobby.” Then he stood and offered his hand again. “You take care too, Rod. And, hey. If you ever need anything ever, just call on us.” “Will do. Bye. Thanks.” Danny watched him walk back to his truck and load Bobby into the cab and he watched as he started the engine and drove off, waving to him as he passed on the street where Danny remained. Then, he pulled his cap back down tight onto his head and turned toward the ferry building. 155 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE FORTY-NINE AT THE HOUSE, BOBBY CLAMBERED over to Rod's lap. But, this time Rod paused and stared at the front door. I insisted we paint the door red, to keep evil spirits out! The sun crept behind a bank of southerly clouds. Rod leaned forward, looking up to the sky, noting that he could make out the edges of the clouds the shape of a big deformed turtle. A soft breeze ruffled the noble firs and spruces that edged the north side of the drive. The sun blinked into view for just one second and hid again, but in that second, moisture on the conifers' needles covered them like millions of amber diamonds. Then the sun disappeared again, stealing the diamonds away with it. As they sat inside the truck, the only thing you could hear was their breathing—Rod's long and somber, and Bobby's panting. It felt meditative. I shut my eyes and soaked it all in. The sounds made me feel dozy, like when I was still alive at night in bed, just before drifting off to sleep. Rod turned his attention back to the red door again. My eyes blinked open. Coming home sent a pang of emptiness into his stomach. Although the rooms felt warm, he never quite felt warm enough. 156 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE As I followed, I left a trail of shimmering dust. Somehow I knew that once the dust ran out, I’d be earthbound forever. Although the house was filled with furniture and artwork, he never felt it was quite full enough. And, although he had a roof over his head, he never felt quite secure enough. Not like when you have someone to come home to, to share it all with. He didn't know if he ever might get that feeling back again, that sensation that gives you a sense of comfort and lets you know you're welcome there, that you're loved. He figured he probably wouldn't for a long, long time. His cheeks flushed and his eyes burned. “I can't go in there right now, Bobby. What say we take a walk?” Bobby's ears pricked up and his eyes brightened. He loved the word walk and Rod knew he could persuade his little dog easily just by saying it. “A walk? Wanna go on a walk?” Bobby quivered and whined until Rod opened the door. He leapt off of Rod's lap and onto the driveway then ran to a nearby bush to perform his outdoor duties, lifting his leg in an arabesque and turning his face in the direction of Rod, as if to say, See? I'm doing it outside! “Good boy, Bobby.” 157 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE FIFTY IT SHOWED SUCH STRENGTH FOR Rod to bring Bobby down this stretch of road. It showed bravery. Bobby looked like the lead sled dog on the Iditarod, pulling so hard that he made a tightrope of his leash with Rod leaning back, trying to restrain him. “I know. I know.” Rod whispered. They'd kept up a pretty decent clip on their walk and now Rod was showing signs of exertion. His face wore a thin mask of moisture. “Slow down, boy.” They had about one hundred feet to the spot. The spot where I had died. Correction: where I had been killed. Going there only thirteen weeks after showed such heroism. But, in no way did I expect it to be easy for him, for them. As Bobby tugged closer still, Rod began to cave. It happened in stages. His face bent. His free hand, the one unfettered by the leash, came up and covered his mouth. He choked back a loud moan and released Bobby's leash, letting him run freely to the exact location. His four short legs scrambled beneath him so quickly that he looked like a dog chasing after a rabbit. When he got to the scene where I'd taken my last few breaths, he sniffed the ground frantically, searching for me there in the ground. Fawn had pulled away from me again. Watching this caused her too much sorrow. She reared up at me, then 158 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE spun and trotted off. Even the distance between us didn't cause me as much pain as seeing Bobby here, hoping for my return. My heart felt as if it would tear and I wailed out in my despair. Bobby sat stricken when he heard my suffering. I began to twirl and thought I would topple at any second. And, there was Fawn, in the distance, loping her funnylooking rocking-horse trot, away from me. “Wait!” But she refused me. The tether between us had begun to fray and stretch, and I wasn't sure that it wouldn't snap in two, cleanly. 159 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE FIFTY-ONE I LET FAWN GALLOP OFF. When she saw I wasn't leaving Bobby, that I wasn't chasing her any longer, she paused, and just watched. A quick breeze kicked up and rustled my hair. It swept over the earth and bent the tips of alders that lined the road, looking as if they were taking a bow in front of some celestial audience. I turned and swept over to Bobby. Rod was only a few feet away, still walking slowly, gripping both arms around his stomach as if he might hurl. “Hey, little man,” Rod groaned out. Bobby's little ears perked up and he began to pant and whimper. “I know,” I said, bending down in a squat next to him. “See, I don't know how long I'm allowed to stay here with you. I wasn't supposed to touch you. I wasn't supposed to kiss you.” Bobby's tail wagged slowly. He sat in the grass that trimmed the road, just before it spilled off into the ditch. His eyes looked so tender and kind that my hands, once again, rose to cup his face. Fawn brayed out, sounding like a donkey, one more warning. But it made no matter to me. This one moment, feeling these purest of pure emotions, was worth more to me at that second than any length of a lifetime in heaven. That's what I believed then, and that's why I touched Bobby again. It felt like static electricity when I laid my hands on my dog. And that became my future memory. The one I could always reach for. 160 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE I didn't even twitch but Bobby squirmed under my touch. “Shh. Shh. Sweety. It's okay.” I turned and looked to Fawn. Watching her there, with Bobby's chin in my hands, Fawn's head dipped low to the ground. She simply turned away, slow and sad, and like that night I appeared to Rod, her body shattered into a million dusty particles. All except one big bucket-sized crystalized teardrop that formed in her place and fell to the ground. It crashed like cymbals at the end of an orchestral score. A few last fragments fell like ticker tape onto the ground and then drifted away in the mournful whooshing breeze. And, Fawn was gone. 161 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE FIFTY-TWO I TURNED BACK TO MY DOG. “Look, Bobby. You must get Rod back to the ferry. His answers are there.” I tipped my head and gazed into his soft sable eyes. “Understand?” He yipped once. His bark sent me high into the firmament and I twirled with delight. Rod, noticing Bobby's odd behavior again, walked up next to him. “She's here, isn't she?” Bobby yipped. “Hannah. Will you show yourself?” I swirled around him. My mind went crazy and I didn't know what to do. Just a single kiss would elicit my form in front of him. Then, swooping down closer to Bobby, I swirled him too. He watched, making small circles with his head as I zipped around. “Hannah. Come on! This is making me crazy. I need to know I'm not going absolutely freaking nuts!” Rod pivoted in place, switching the lead, alternating the rope into each hand as he turned in a full circle. But, then he heard the crunch of footsteps on gravel and realized someone might've heard his insane chatter. But he had seen her, he kept saying to himself. He had seen his dead wife as the spirit of a young girl. He turned to the sound and spotted a woman, maybe in her early thirties, walking toward them from across the street. “Hey there,” she shouted to Rod. “Hello.” Rod turned to Bobby. “Come on. Let's go.” 162 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE But, then turned back to the gal, who was now walking to the mailbox on her side of the street. “Um. Miss?” When he spoke, she turned fast. “Yeah.” She took in a short gasp of air. “I'm sorry. I didn't mean to startle you.” “No. It's okay. Sorry. Um.” She giggled uncomfortably. “My name's Jenny. Jenny Calley.” She held the contents of the mailbox against her chest like a baby. “Do you live here?” “Oh.” She tipped her head and gave Rod a weak smile. “No. No, I don't. I'm just housesitting for Ida Mae.” She stopped talking and pulled at a lock of straggly mousy hair that had fallen over her cheek and, in the process, dropped a few envelopes. “Shoot. Oops.” She giggled again and bent over to pick at the scattered letters but as she did the hair she tried to tame fell loose again. When she tried to catch her loosened hair, all of the other items from the mailbox fell onto the road. “Oh God,” she exclaimed. “I'm such a dolt.” Rod pulled Bobby's leash and they both walked over to help. “I can't believe that happened.” The worn cotton of her dress threatened to unravel in places. She wore a dingy cotton tee shirt under it like someone might wear under a pair of overalls. Her hair was pulled back in a pink rubber band. “Don't worry. I do it all the time.” She chuckled at Rod. “Right. You're just bein' nice now.” They both stood at the same time. 163 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Rod smiled. “I wondered if you heard about the accident here.” He tipped his head to the spot near the ditch. “Yeah. I heard. Awful thing.” She shook her head. “People can be so sick.” She rolled her eyes and then squeezed them tight. “I can't believe they just left that poor little thing on the side of the road.” Rod took a breath in. “It was a fawn.” She made a tsk-sound between her teeth. He hadn't even considered the deer that had been killed, realizing that this woman was more concerned about the animal than his own flesh and blood. “Moved it myself. One of Ida Mae's, I'm certain of that. She feeds 'em. She's gonna die when she finds out. Haven't had the heart to tell her, ya know, on the phone.” Bobby began to walk away back to the ditch but came to the end of his lead, dragging Rod's arm around behind him. “Wait, Bobby.” He pulled him back with a bit of coaxing. “He's a cute li’l fella, ain't he.” She smiled down, clutching the mail to her chest again. “Yes. He is.” “Bobby, ya say?” “Yes. His name's Bobby.” “Cute.” She took a deep breath in. “Well, I better go. Got another house to check in on.” She nodded. “Bye.” She said with a sort of southern kick to it. “Bye,” Rod responded. “Oh, and thanks.” 164 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “Sure, but I don't know what for.” She waved as she walked off. “Bye!” Rod tipped his head at her and then walked off with Bobby, dragging him past the spot near the ditch and farther down the road, away from there, back to their home. 165 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE FIFTY-THREE “QUIT ACTING OUT.” ROD SPOKE through clenched teeth and jerked Bobby's lead, hard, as he dragged him away from the accident site. “Stop. I can't do this.” Bobby still strained against the lead looking behind them, wanting me to follow. But I couldn't seem to move. Without Fawn, I felt a complete and utter disconnect, like I might just sink to the earth’s core. It felt like standing in the road with a car approaching fast, with my feet nailed to the ground. Without Fawn, my range had shrunk. My presence felt strongest in the exact place I'd died but began to fade at the edges. Then terror cloaked me. An understanding that without Fawn I might be stuck roaming this exact spot— partially on, partially off—forever. I watched Rod slump onto the side of the road, near a grassy embankment just around the corner of where he and Jenny had spoken. My hands reached for him but the tips of my fingers began to disintegrate. I quickly pulled them back. Bobby's rope remained tightrope tight he leaned so hard toward me. “You have to get Rod to take you to the ferry!” I screamed to him. “Come on, Bobby!” Rod moaned as he pulled the leash in, alternating with each hand, shortening the distance between them. Bobby's feet stayed planted and 166 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE he shuffled uncomfortably backward around the corner but continued, leaning in toward me. “I can't go,” I yelled to him. “Get to the ferry, Bobby! Get to the ferry!” Then, with one final thrust, Rod pulled Bobby out of my sight. 167 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE FIFTY-FOUR “FAWN!” I YELLED. MY BODY walked the entire circle of my small perimeter as I called out. “Fawn! Can you hear me?” My body felt weighted down and when I looked at my feet I noticed they were plodding against the earth, actually, within the earth, dragging like yoked oxen, carving a trench through the dirt. Even so, I felt thin, whispery thin, to the point I could walk through things, like the bramble that lined the backside of the ditch and the barbed fencing that hung between each jagged cedar fence post. But I'd lost my buoyancy in this spot and felt as though the earth had started to weigh me down. I called out again to Fawn but she didn't come back. She didn't respond. It made me think that she might be lost too, outside my perimeter. Her feelings had been hurt when I turned away from her and went to Bobby. Now I was alone. The hum of a motor sounded from around the corner up the road toward our house. When it appeared, it was barreling straight for me. I tried to run but couldn’t. I pulled and pulled, trying to move my feet, to make my way over to the ditch. The car raced closer. I pulled on one leg, attempting to dislodge it from the doughy earth. Nothing. The car was only a few feet from me so I put my hands over my eyes. 168 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE As it passed through me, I felt a hot wave drift through me. It felt so real, so palpable that it made me dizzy, sick dizzy. I sat down right there on the road, my feet sunken into the planet, as if stuck in a patch of wet cement. Was this my destiny? Literally trapped ankle-deep in the ground? Stuck to the spot where I'd died? I had to locate Fawn. I felt as if my very survival depended on it. 169 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE FIFTY-FIVE EVERY CHANCE BOBBY TOOK TO sniff the ground, Rod tightened his pull, jerking him up and back into a trot next to him. “Heel, dammit, Bobby!” The dog corrected his behavior but when the anger quieted, he'd forget and once again, the way he used to, before, he'd looked to the ground, for a spot to get some familiar but distant whiff. Then, Rod would yank Bobby by the collar, reminding him that this walk needed to end sooner than he had hoped. “Ridiculous.” Puffs of air spewed from Rod’s lips, like a radiator cap ready to blow off. “You fool!” But he didn’t mean the dog. Wrenching Bobby's leash all the way back home. Giving up on the search. 170 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE FIFTY-SIX “WHAT DAY WOULD YOU LIKE to see the doctor?” The receptionist spoke quietly through the phone when she asked Rod. “Um.” He paused and looked at the calendar on his laptop, which cast an odd glow across the kitchen counter where he sat, beer in hand. The second one since he and Bobby returned from their walk. When he put down the beer, his hand shook wildly. He stuffed his hand under his arm to steady it. He felt his heart pounding through his chest. “Just a sec.” He held the phone away and took two deep breaths. Then he grabbed the beer and downed four fast gulps. He blinked hard and focused again on the computer. All the days on the screen looked the same, empty boxes, Sunday through Saturday, all except for the occasional holiday. “Um. Tomorrow?” “He's completely full tomorrow.” Rod let out a huff and realized he sniveled out Oh my God in the process. “I'm sorry, Mr. Demsey. If you need to see him sooner, we can fit you in at the end of today.” “Today?” “Yes.” Rod could sense a smile enter her voice. “Today. He can see you if you wish.” “What time?” “4:30 p.m. Will that work for you?” 171 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE He looked at the computer. It was 11:04 a.m. “Yes. That will work.” “Great, Mr. Demsey. We'll see you soon.” Her voice sounded hopeful and kind. Rod took a deep breath and let out a sigh. “Oh good. Thank you. Thanks for fitting me in.” “Anytime, Mr. Demsey. We always try to fit people in need into the schedule.” In need. “Yes. Right. 4:30?” “That's right, Mr. Demsey. 4:30. PM.” She added making her tone sound somehow dripping sweet, like he was a child needing someone's hand to hold onto and she was there extending hers. When he hung up his face flushed red. He felt like an idiot. A simpering whimpering noodle of a man. He'd seen people like that before and always hated them. Thought they should buck up, as his father used to say, “Buck up, son. It's gonna get worse than this.” People should listen more closely to their parents. Of course, realizing this now didn't help in the least. The worst had come and gone but the going had left him useless, listless, with nothing more to look forward to than lawn care and dog walks. He'd only told her he wanted out and that he was leaving because he was angry. He knew he would never have gone through with it, never. He knew he would never let the topic of him leaving go that far. But he knew this too late. So how do you tell that to someone who has died? How do you take back something like that when you'll never see her again? 172 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Do two negatives multiplied together make a positive? That’s what we learn in math class. Rod wondered if it were true in love. It sure didn’t seem to. How do you multiply two bad acts together? It didn't matter now. All he had left was a crushing hopeless feeling. Buck up. Deal with it. Live with it. Because, in the end, you can't change the past and there's no way out of the pain you're suffering until you die. No matter how much you might want to now. 173 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE FIFTY-SEVEN THE ACRID SMELL OF ALCOHOL and disinfectant filled the air as Rod sat waiting in the examination room. Well, the office. Dr. Strick's office. Again. He held his hands together, which felt absurdly cold and sweaty, in a death grip on his lap. His knees pressed with such tension against the other that they ached. His heart thumped audibly in his own ears and when he looked down he could see his shirt shivering from each beat. Was that sweat he tasted? Really? Sweat? On his own tongue? The only good thing was that the buzzing in his ears had stopped. But he wasn’t sure if that was really good because he hadn’t noticed Hannah’s presence hanging around lately. He felt foolish sitting there. And, just as he was about to spin out worrying on things about what men should and shouldn't need, the heavy maple door swung open, bringing with it the distinct smell of men's cologne. From Rod's estimation, he figured sandalwood. Spicy. Sickening. “Rod!” The doctor's voice boomed but he kept his eyes down on the chart in his hand as if reading his name. Then, he held out his hand and introduced himself. “Dr. Strick.” Rod felt his eyes pinch. “Yes. I know. I've come to see you before.” 174 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “Of course you have. It says that right here.” He tapped at the paper. Strick dropped into the chair across from Rod. “That’s right. Of course. I remember. You had a little mishap here, as I recall.” Strick looked down and scanned his notes. “Yep. There it is.” Rod rolled his eyes. “Not to worry. You're not the only one. I seem to have that effect on people sometimes.” Strick chuckled. “Seriously. It happens. Don't give it another thought. You should consider yourself lucky it happened here and not while you were driving or walking down the stairs. Right?” Strick sounded way too upbeat for Rod, but he had to agree with him on when to have and when not to have a fainting spell. “So, Rod. Oh. You don't mind I call you by your first name, right?” Rod wasn't sure how to answer the question. No, might mean yes. And, yes, might mean no. “Rod's fine.” “Great then. Rod.” He smiled and lowered a pair of readers from his head onto the bridge of his nose. “Give it to me. What seems to be the problem?” Strick pulled a mechanical pencil from a pocket in his lab coat, clicked it into use and flipped over to a new sheet of paper within the chart, set the nib down onto the sheet and looked up, expecting Rod to answer and Rod half expecting him to take dictation as he rattled off all the problems he'd been having over the past three months, since his first fiasco of a visit. 175 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Rod took in a deep breath. He felt the uncomfortable urge to just blurt out everything. Which shifted in seconds to an urge to crumble and then again to cry. Anything. Something. But Rod did nothing. Couldn't form a word. Stared at the doctor as if doing so might make the words form. He cocked his head to one side. He lifted his eyebrows. Made a face that looked as if he needed a bowel movement. Shrugged his shoulders, again. Opened his mouth. But nothing. At all. Came out. Through all of Rod’s display, Strick appeared hopeful, then sad, hopeful again and then defeated. He dropped his charisma act. “It's me, isn't it?” Strick's face went slack. “I'm not very good with my newer patients. Especially at the beginning. Act happy?” He smiled. “Act sad?” He pouted out his bottom lip and frowned. “It always gets to this point where I have to stop acting.” Strick lifted his readers onto his head again and sat back in his chair. Rod leaned back too. “You seem a tad nervous, Rod.” One side of the doctor’s face pulled up into a half grimace. Rod breathed in deep and then barely speaking said, “Not nervous. Embarrassed.” “I'm sorry, Rod. I didn't catch that.” Louder, he repeated, “I'm not nervous. I'm embarrassed.” “Embarrassed? At a psychiatrist's office?” 176 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Rod looked him squarely in the eyes. Strick cocked his head as if to say, “Really?” And then, all the walls fell down. Rod brought his hands up to cover his face and rested his head in them on his lap. He shook his head slowly at how ridiculous it sounded. “Look here, Rod. No one, and I mean not any of my patients should ever feel embarrassed with me. Look at me!” Tom had his hair combed in what could only be defined as a beginner's comb over. His ears were overly large. He had a paunchy midsection and he was short. Things Rod hadn't noticed before when he crashed at that first visit. “Now...” Rod began but Tom cut him off with his hands lifted in defense. “Look. We all go from young and cute to old and unattractive in a matter of a few years. It doesn't bother me. Not really. Okay. It bothers me but there's nothing we can do about it. Right?” “Right.” Rod's response didn't sound as convincing as Tom hoped for. “Hey. Let's start this way. Follow my lead. I think you'll know the first answer. Take a breath.” He waited until Rod breathed back out. “Again. Take another one.” He waited again. “That's right. Okay. Here it goes.” He squinted into Rod's eyes. “Ready?” Rod nodded tentatively. “Okay, then. Here's your first question, since we're on the subject, if there was anything in the world you could change, what would it be? And, I have lots of tissue so have at it.” 177 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE FIFTY-EIGHT DR. STRICK STOOD NEXT TO ROD at the receptionist's counter as she checked the doctor’s schedule for the next four weeks. Rod couldn't believe he was setting up appointments to see a shrink. His mind rolled to before, a place that seemed safe, and he analyzed what the Rod back then would think of who he'd become. Pathetic. Weak. Mewly. “Mr. Demsey?” “Oh. Yes. Sorry. That's fine. I have nothing on my calendar for the next month.” He sort of smiled at how sad it sounded, but the truth was the truth. No need to hide it. Especially there. Strick patted Rod on the shoulder, grabbed his shaking hand, and pumped it once. “See you in a week. A week. That's all. You be okay?” Rod nodded. “Good. But, if you think you need to talk before then, you have the number. I can be reached, literally, twentyfour-seven.” He turned to leave but then stopped and looked back at Rod. “Now that's sad.” 178 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE FIFTY-NINE THE SUNNY CHILL OF THE day startled him. Rod only remembered how the interior of the office felt stiff and warm, too warm. Still, the March temperatures hadn't wanted to move much higher than the forties so, Rod zipped his jacket up to just under his chin and pulled out a pair of leather driving gloves. When he looked toward his truck, he noticed Bobby already peering through the back window. His forepaws hung over the top of the seat and he held his mouth parted in what looked like a smile—a dog smile but a smile nonetheless. Bobby shook under the motion of his tail wagging. A fierce happy wag. “Hey Bobby.” The dog yipped once and looked away but then quickly looked back at him as he pulled himself off the seat. By the time, Rod got to the truck, he'd jumped up onto the arm of the driver's door. “Get down.” Bobby yipped and pulled himself back and off the armrest. “Thataboy.” Rod opened the door and Bobby moved toward him. “Stay back.” But Bobby persisted acting as if he wanted out. “Do you need out? To pee-pee?” The little white dog's body shivered feverishly at Rod's words. “Okay. Hold on.” Rod clipped his leash onto the dog's halter. Then, with one swooping motion, Rod 179 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE grabbed the little dog under his belly and glided him down to the ground. Bobby bolted over to the landscaped area of the office complex at the edge of the parking lot. He lifted his leg and did his duty but then acted like he wanted to linger about, sniffing the ground and stalks of plant life. Rod let him. He was in no hurry to get back to an empty house. As he let the dog maneuver about the grounds of the building, Rod noticed a couple coming out of the same door. He recognized the guy from the ferry. He figured the woman must be the guy’s wife. What was her name again? Shoot. There they were walking straight over. The woman saying something quietly, behind her hand. They were smiling like teenagers caught in the act. The ferry guy— what was his name, now?—nodded as they approached. Rod felt himself nod back. He searched his memory desperately to remember his name. What was it again? Was it... “Rod! Hey, man.” Rod instinctively switched Bobby's lead into of his left hand, held out his right and their two hands connected. “Hey...” “You remember Gliddy, don't you?” “Of course I do. Hey, Gliddy. How've you been?” She tipped her head and made a face of pity, a look he'd become accustomed to over the past several months. “I'm fine, Rod, but how are you doing?” She tipped her head the other way. Amazingly, none of her red curly locks moved. In either direction. They stayed there almost like a helmet. A helmet with curls. 180 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “Getting along.” She elbowed her husband. He responded as if he were on a witness stand. “Oh. We go to marriage counseling.” At that Gliddy elbowed him harder. “Danny!” Danny. His name was Danny. “Not that!” She pressed her eyes into his and tightened her jaw. “The other.” “What other?” Danny looked totally confused. The exchange made it obvious to Rod why they were in therapy. Then Danny bent his knees once in an Aha! moment bounce, and shouted, “Oh!” And, smiling apologetically at Gliddy, he said, “That!” He popped himself in the forehead with the butt of his hand. “Oh, yeah. Okay.” Danny looked between Rod and Gliddy. “Duh.” He rolled his eyes and continued, “Okay. Well, yes. Thanks, Gliddy. I, um, I was looking through some old video of the ferry cam.” “Yeah?” Rod's word sounded long and drawn out. He held Bobby's leash in a death grip. 181 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE SIXTY ROD STOOD BEHIND DANNY WHO sat perched on a cheap, yellow naugahyde-covered stool. The thing creaked as Danny moved to type or turn around to see Rod's expressions. Especially, when he landed on something he deemed of great importance. The ferry terminal office smelled like a combo platter of the BBQ pork sandwich and cigarette smoke that seeped in from outside and looked governmentefficient in its décor—chalky composite tile floors, eggshell white painted walls and window trimming, chipped sky blue Formica counters that ran in an L-shape of two walls, a stubby black metal microphone used for announcing ferry arrivals and departures, a corkboard with the latest ferry schedule secured with pink plastic thumbtacks, a 1980s bone-colored phone. And a thin laptop, a printer and a video monitor that housed the controls for the ferry cam. Rod breathed in when Danny pointed to the next still screen he'd copied and pasted into a file he'd labeled, DEMSEY-FOOTAGE-12192011(b).wsdot.com—two weeks after Hannah's death. “Wow. Two weeks later?” Rod leaned onto his left leg and placed a hand onto the counter. “I did a little diggin'.” Danny turned to Rod and smiled. Rod smiled back but didn't take his eyes off the computer's display. “There.” Danny pointed again and turned to check Rod's face. “I don't see...” 182 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “The fatboy.” He pointed to an unmanned motorcycle on one side of the ferry. “Oh.” Rod bent in to get a closer look. “No one's on it.” “They went upstairs inside the ferry.” Then his finger slid over the screen to the other side of the gaping auto deck. “Look.” It landed on two men in motorcycle gear standing outside on the upper deck standing on opposite sides of the platform but when he pulled in for a close-up, the picture became grainy and distorted. “Two of them?” “They both boarded late. There's probably more bikes at the front but we don't have a shot of that.” “Why do you think...?” “Here.” Dan shrunk the screen and reversed the footage to when they boarded. “Right. Here.” He said as he clicked through to another scene. “This one shows them in action.” Rod felt a sudden urge to use the bathroom but remained stuck to the floor next to Danny. He knew it was just his nerves playing havoc with his bladder. “See?” Danny looked up at Rod and pointed sliding his middle finger across the screen, following the two bodies as they moved. “They split up.” “Looks like it, why else would one take the port set of stairs and the other the starboard set?” “Play it again.” The words sounded like a command. “I mean, will you? I want to see it again.” 183 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “Sure.” Danny pulled the gadget on the video's screen back to its start position and the footage began again. They both watched as if for the first time. Locked. Mesmerized by what they were witnessing. “I talked to Scott. I hope you don't mind that but I asked him about the crime scene. For a few specifics. Ya know, for public information.” “Ahh.” “Anyway, I just wanted to check and thought you might be interested in what I'd found.” “Yeah. I am.” Rod's eyes stayed locked on the screen until he felt Danny watching him. Rod straightened his back and looked at him. “Thanks, man.” He rubbed a hand through his hair, turned away from the computer and leaned against the Formica counter. “Wow. I don't know what to think.” Danny grimaced but then turned it into a smile as he spoke. “I showed Scott too.” Rod seemed to hear him in slow motion because it took him a few seconds to respond. “Oh. That's good. They need to know.” “That's what I thought.” Danny pushed the laptop closer to the wall, spun on his stool, and leaned his back against the counter like Rod. “I mean. I can't imagine why they didn't scour through these things in the first place.” “Well, like you said before, they're shot in segments not sequential. Right?” “Right. But, still ... you know ... you'd think.” “Right.” Rod turned to Danny. “So, what did Scott say?” 184 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “He said, they'd ‘look into it.' Ya know. The standard cop answer when they don't know what to say.” One side of Rod's mouth lifted in a half-smile. He held out his hand to shake Danny's. His hand felt rough and cold and somewhat sticky from eating his sandwich. “Wow. Thanks, man. I mean. Maybe this is something. Right?” “Maybe.” Rod turned to leave but stopped at the door. “Oh. Hey. Can you blow up that shot of the bike? I mean, can you see the plates?” Danny spun back to face the counter. Rod stood behind his shoulder again. Danny pulled his computer closer again, clicked and dragged a portion of the image, copied and pasted it into a new document and then resized it. He hit print and the printer squeezed out a fuzzy image with six distinct green numbers displayed on the Washington state-issued white license plate. They lived in the same state. Rod felt his heart palpitate. He was walking but he didn’t know how his legs were still holding him up. Danny watched him as he moved within the confines of the small terminal office. “You may want to check with Scott. See what they think.” Rod pointed to the ferry schedule to the very next departure from Santa Maria to the mainland. “Huh?” “You might wanna call Scott.” 185 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Rod smiled a fake smile at Danny then said, “Of course. Sure.” Then he moved toward the door and pushed out. 186 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE SIXTY-ONE “HEY, ROD.” THE UNIFORMED GAL sitting at the entrance checkpoint just inside the stock metal, double-safety doors at the police station chimed with a cheery voice when he walked in. Her name was Sandy. Rod knew her from around town just like everyone knew everyone else—from around. “Sandy.” He pressed his lips tight. “Is Scott around?” “Sure thing. I'll buzz you in. He's in his office.” She pressed the switch that unlocked the secure door. “He expecting you?” She asked, a little too late, after unlocking the doors that housed the offices inside the station. Rod didn't answer and Sandy didn't stop him but he could see she shrugged her shoulders and was about to twirl to stand, possibly to stop him but the phone rang and Sandy responded, “Santa Maria County Sheriff's department. Is this an emergency?” Rod walked, unchecked, around a set of file cabinets by the door to Sandy's post and over to the door where Scott worked. He rapped once on the open door, which bore a thick plank of oak with a name plate that read SCOTT JOHNSON and below his name read his title UNDER SHERIFF. Scott looked up and smiled. “Rod!” Scott wore his standard police-grade khaki uniform, thick black belt and clipped to it his holster was a 9mm handgun—all standard issue—and he extended his hand. 187 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “How the hell are you? You know, I've been thinkin' about you...” But, Rod's face didn't budge. His teeth were set firm, as if biting on a bullet. He ignored Scott’s hand and instead closed the office door behind him. “How long have you known?” Scott gestured for him to sit down. “No thanks. I think I'll stand for this one.” He walked up to Scott, chest to chest. Way too close. Scott paused, squinted slightly and turned to go back behind his desk. He placed his shooting hand on his holster. “You better sit.” “I said, I'm fine.” “Do as you please.” Scott sat down slowly and squinted again. He tapped his fingers on top of his desk. “I asked you a question.” “Please. Repeat it.” “I said, 'How long have you known?'“ “Enlighten me. Known what?” Scott frowned. “The video from the ferry cam?” Scott’s face slackened, went blank and Rod couldn't read him. It was a look between shock and embarrassment, anger and sympathy. “Yes. Well. We're looking at the case again.” “I would assume so!” Rod grabbed the back of the guest chair, picked it up just inches and slammed it back down into place. “How could you? Dammit, Scott. Don't you think that's a little information that I might want to hear about?” 188 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “It's an ongoing investigation...” He was about to say the standard protocol mumbo-jumbo but Rod cut him off, again. “Baloney! Scott. It's me.” He jabbed a finger into his own chest and then added, “Me!” He slammed his fist onto the back of the chair. “I'm between a rock here, Rod.” Scott looked sad. “Don't you think I wanted to tell you?” He swiveled his chair out and stood. “Don't you think that? Of course, I wanted to tell you, but...” He walked over to where Rod stood in front of him now and placed both his hands onto Rod's shoulder. Rod twisted away from him. “Look. We have to make sure of several things.” Rod looked at him as if to say, Yeah. Like what? “It's standard operating procedure. What can I say? Because you're one of my best friends...” Rod huffed at his comment. “...because you're one of my best friends,” He repeated slowly for the words to settle in Rod's mind, “I'm supposed to stop doing my job? When this is a time you need me to do my job the best that I can?” He slammed a palm down onto his desk. “Dammit. Rod. We cannot afford to mess this up. I want to find this bastard just as much as you do.” Scott walked around his desk and sat back down. “I'll keep you informed each step I take. How does that sound?” “It sounds like you're appeasing me.” “Come on, man. I can't involve you in your own wife's murder investigation. If they've left the state there 189 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE are extradition rules, forms, lawyers,” Scott said bitterly. “You know how complex this is. The incident is categorized as vehicular homicide. If we do everything right, we can get it to court with intention, we can amp up the charges to murder. I. Do. Not. Want this one screwed up.” Murder. The word made Hannah's death seem so much worse than it had been before. This was the first Rod had heard it referred to as such. He sat and let Scott have his say. “Okay?” Scott asked. Rod stood without responding. “Okay?” Scott repeated demanding Rod to respond. “What do you want me to say?” “I want you to say you're okay with it.” He spoke unconvincingly, “I'm okay with it.” As they looked at each other, Rod's eyes burned. Scott searched Rod's face. Then he smiled, in an attempt to cover a look that might show Scott what he was going to do in the next few hours. That's all he felt he had. A few hours. He couldn't wait for protocol. He had to act. “Look. We're on it.” Scott turned Rod toward the door with a hand on his back. “Like Blue Bonnet.” Then he added, “And, by the way, next time you pop in for a visit, Rod? Do it nicely. Ya gotta come in here nicely. I certainly don't want to put you on our blacklist.” Then, he chuckled. It sounded happy, too happy maybe. Rod took Scott's comments as words of warning. 190 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE SIXTY-TWO “WELL, CRAP, SCOTT. HE OUGHTA know.” Danny's skin moistened and his face turned red as he spoke into the receiver. He pulled the handset away from his ear and mouthed a profanity at the mouthpiece and rolled his eyes then put the receiver back to his ear. “Yeah. Whatever. I gotta go.” Then stopped. “Yes. Like I said, he left on the last boat.” Waited again then spoke. “Because, I told you, if he didn't board, then no harm no foul. But he did, on the 11:05 and now I'm calling.” Danny paused again listening. “Dammit, Scott, I was loading a flippin’ boat, that's why I didn't call sooner. I called as soon as I got done.” He rolled his eyes as he listened once again then interrupting he said, “Scott. Scott! Listen man. He's got a photo of one of the bikes. It has a clear image of the plates.” He jumped and pulled back the phone again, then he barked out his response. “He said he got their information via some reverse look-up online. Look. I gotta go. Take it out on them, not me!” He slammed the receiver down onto the outdated phone. “Holy Cannoli!” Danny stood as if jumping into action. “What am I, the flippin’ ferry police now?” He stomped around the counter where the phone sat innocently. “If you did your job, I wouldn't have to play outfield for y'all, now would I? Son of a bi--” But just as the word was being formed on his lips, a walk-on passenger pushed through the door to ask him a question. 191 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE SIXTY-THREE AS THE FERRY PULLED AWAY from the dock, Rod watched as the land became smaller and smaller. Perspective was a funny thing. The farther away you got from your target, the less chance you had to hit it. He honestly wondered if he was closing in on it or losing sight of it. Rod pulled on Bobby's leash. He just needed a little fresh air. The ocean smelled like pond water, like rotting kelp, but he breathed it in as if breathing for the first time. He checked his pocket. The tear of paper was still there. Of course it was. He'd torn off a scrap from a sheet of paper by the computer, something he'd been using to scribble on. The internet search of www.freelicenseplatesearch.com wasn't exactly free, but certainly worth the twenty bucks he had to pay to learn the name and get the address from the plate of the motorcyclist who ran down his wife. “Come on, Bobby. Let's get to the car.” He led Bobby to their vehicle and placed him inside. “Move over, son,” he said. Then he stood in the fold between the door and the car letting the brisk breeze wash over him. He could feel an end nearing. It felt, somehow, cleansing. 192 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE SIXTY-FOUR AS ROD CLIMBED INSIDE THE car, the ferries motion nearly made the car door close on his leg. The scent of his coffee dragged at his tired eyes and pulled him inside the car with his dog. That’s when his cell phone buzzed. He slammed the door, straightened his legs and reached into his pocket. He examined the digital display. It read: JOHNSON, SCOTT “Crap.” He grumbled. Bobby looked over but then curled up on the passenger seat. He rested his head on the console and watched Rod. Rod answered his phone, “What?” “Where are you?” Scott asked. What no “Hello, Rod. How are you? “What's it to you?” “Don't do anything stupid, Rod.” “Well, stupid is very subjective. Plus, it's a very large subject, as I've been finding out.” “Cut the bull, Rod. You can't go near these guys. You have no proof at all...” “Look, Scott. Tell it to the judge.” He hung up and powered down his cell. “I don't need you telling me what I should and shouldn't do.” He cursed at the phone. Bobby lifted his head, making Rod look over at him and pat him. “Sorry 'bout that, Bobby. Daddy's angry with Uncle Scott.” Bobby licked his lips once, yawned, set his head back down and squeezed his eyes into a tight line in an 193 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE effort to sleep. Rod sipped at his coffee. The cream and sugar in it turned his stomach. Rod reached past Bobby's head to the glove compartment. He breathed out a sad sigh and unlatched the glove box. Of course, it would still be there. He'd put in there himself. What? Would it have unlatched the lock itself and walked away. No. Still... ...he had to look at it. Had to see. And, there it was. Bright and shiny. His .357 lay innocently inside the yawn of the compartment. Innocent? No. Efficient. ...Deadly. 194 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE SIXTY-FIVE AS THE FERRY UNLOADED AT the Anacortes dock, Bobby sat up to peer out the window. Rod's heart thudded once in anticipation of what his next few moves might be. He blew out air from between his lips. The ferry worker pointed at his car then directed him to drive out of the lane, to the front of the boat and off the boat onto the ramp, and onto his destination. He'd made the same trip a thousand times before, mostly with Hannah sitting next to him in the car where Bobby now sat. Just after the first stoplight onto the road that led into town, 12th Street, a sign sat proudly: PORTAL TO THE SANTA MARIA ISLANDS! All in white lettering and in italics like someone's handwriting, juxtaposed with a blue sky as the background. As Rod drove the slow road toward the center of town, he thought about Anacortes. The town had been named after the wife of the explorer who discovered it, Amos Bowman. His wife's name was Anna Curtis and that was just about the sum of Rod's knowledge of the history of Anacortes. He made a silent vow to learn more after today. He'd have lots of time to read after doing what he was about to do—exacting vengeance on Hannah's killer. 195 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE SIXTY-SIX SCOTT WATCHED AS EACH THICK wave curled up and under the front, sides and back of the county sheriff’s twenty-eight-foot boat. The phrase “weather permitting” crossed his mind and he made a sign of the cross. “God willing,” he thought, and kissed a clenched fist afterward. He stood with a tight hand on the steerage at the stern. Wearing cadmium yellow rain gear that made him appear even bigger than he was and a lot like the logo of a Gorton's fish sticks commercial, Scott muscled the small craft through the vast water of the Santa Maria Straits toward Anacortes. The gunmetal lenses of his steel-rimmed sunglasses blacked out his eyes completely but you didn't need his eyes to tell what kind of mood he was in. A permanent scowl on his lips, caused creases to droop off his jowls also causing his neck muscles to bulge and throb. Rod had to be stopped. A spray of water drenched him. But he continued to maneuver against the jarring attack on the boat from the chop of the ocean. He spit out saltwater and yelled over his shoulder at someone standing inside the cabin of the cruiser. “Where are they?” “Still five miles due east of us.” The voice returned. “Damnit! That's at least fifteen minutes ahead of us.” Scott pounded the wheel but then another high wave knocked the boat from the starboard side, making him 196 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE grab hold of its wooden grip again. “I have this boat at full tilt. If I push any harder we could go under.” “Can't we call ahead? Stop the ferry, boss?” “And tell 'em what? We have a grieving husband who may or may not try to find someone who may or may not live in Anacortes?” He fielded another onslaught of high waves, cutting across them to keep from toppling the small craft. “Nah. Wish we could.” He wiped an arm across his upper lip. “Consider this more of a complimentary call. No charges just yet.” 197 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE SIXTY-SEVEN ROD TURNED OFF OF 12TH Street onto M Avenue. He wiped his hands smearing sweat on his pants and then he let off the gas pedal. As he slowed, he scanned address plaques, looking for 1106 24th St, #73. Twelve blocks to the east, he knew where it was, and yet he guided his car down the corridor as if it were the first time he'd driven through this town. The neighborhood sidewalk heaved in places where grass and weeds shot up through cracks, giving the area a shoddy feel. The cars parked along the street looked chipped and dented. Seeing the disrepair of assets lining the community somehow gave more meaning to Rod's quest. Like the person who killed Hannah could've given no more of a damn about her than he did his own rat-trap of a home. Or car. Or sidewalk. His eyes burned and he rubbed his sleeve against the bridge of his nose. Redirecting his eyes back onto the street plaques, he inadvertently caught his reflection in the rearview mirror. He looked like a rabid dog. He tilted the mirror up to avoid seeing himself again. Only seconds before he'd been a block away. Only a day before, he'd given up all hope of ever finding Hannah's killer. A month whirled past his mind like an old film flipping backwards on its reel. Three months, only three months ago, almost to the date, Hannah was still alive. No. It wasn't a perfect marriage, but he remembered the last time she kissed him. 198 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE They had just had another stupid spat. Something about the cracked corn that had spilled in her car. When he had seen the mess on the floorboard he unwound. Totally lost it. For what? It was her car. But timing was everything with them. When she was happy, Rod was angry. When Rod was angry, Hannah was hotter than a missile. Timing had undone them and it was timing that killed her. Bad timing. Just a bunch of crappy timing. A marriage will always be rocky when a couple's timing is off. Or, until together they make a directed effort to reset their clocks to work in unison. He continued to scan and stopped at an intersection just before what looked like tenement housing with rows of copycat windows stacked seven total, top to bottom. The dwelling sat well off the beaten path, nearly hidden from tourists who might get the wrong impression of the town. A town known for its upper crust and its expensive side, this neighborhood was definitely a deal breaker for attracting new residents. Rod barely checked oncoming traffic to the right before continuing into the center of the four-way stop. He heard a horn blast from his left. It came from a small truck, gray-blue, with one door rusted out. It was only a foot away. The woman behind the wheel, scraggly-haired and middle-aged, flipped him off. He felt his shoulders shrink as he cowered from her outrage. He mouthed he was sorry, lifting his arms off the steering wheel as if to say, What happened? 199 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE But she mouthed something back that looked a lot like a slam against his own mother. One he'd used himself, once, when he was a hotheaded punk. He thought age had a way of softening a person's mind. Maybe not for that lady. But he did know that the death of a family member had a way of lobotomizing a person’s soul. So he rolled along meekly, away from the woman, and edged his car toward the curb of the large colorless building at 1106 24th Street. 200 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE SIXTY-EIGHT “WHEN DID THE SANTA MARIA ferry arrive?” Scott bellowed from the police boat to a ferry worker at the dock controls. He angled the craft as if parallel parking up to a mooring, next to a ready cleat to tie off his rig. “On time!” The ferry worker chimed, happily. “What time is on time,” Scott growled back. “One p.m., sir.” “Son of a...” He gnarled as if spewing out lava. “We lost five minutes.” But then Scott reacted fast. “Rex,” he barked at his assistant, “tie this son of a mother's carcass off.” “Yes sir.” He jumped out from under the protective canopy, grabbed the steering wheel and let Scott de-board the boat. Scott leapt a yard over the gap between the wooden pier and the boat as it rocked under his feet farther away from the dock. “You can handle it?” He turned back to Rex asking. “Yep. Can and will.” Scott didn't say thank you. Instead, he double-timed it across the dock and to the parking lot where the Santa Maria County kept a vehicle for business use on the mainland. He breathed hard as he jogged, grumbling the entire stretch about losing another five minutes. He looked at the top of the vehicle. It had no emergency lights. Only the Santa Maria County logo painted on its door. Scott could taste bile in his mouth. He slowed his gait and as he did, he pulled out a set of keys. Jogging as he 201 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE went and clicking the open switch on the car's remote key operator. He only had about twelve feet to go. Again, he looked at his watch. Yep. And. Son of a mother's carcass. Five minutes on the dot. He was now thirty minutes behind Rod. 202 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE SIXTY-NINE I WAS STILL STUCK IN the road. But, now, I’d sunk to mid-calf-deep. I stopped cringing as cars raced through my spirit body. In fact, I braved them all, standing proudly, enjoying the whisking feel of winds thick and sultry rushing into me and oozing out the other side. Almost. I could sense each car slowing as it spent time within me. I wondered if the drivers and passengers felt my presence too. I could certainly feel them and witness the good and the bad of everyone in every car, truck, tractor and bus. The good feelings lifted me up by millimeters out of the pavement, while the bad ones sunk me lower. Over the past few days, I had witnessed more bad acts than otherwise. Still, my spirit soared and I remembered someone saying, from a point neither past nor present but somehow from all times, to count all tribulation as joy. So I lifted my hands when a school bus, shorter than those that I’d seen in the big city, rounded the bend and plowed into me. A load of school kids sang a tune from a cartoon. The lilt funneled into me well before the bus entered my spirit and for an indeterminable amount of time but they sang loudly, along with the driver whose smile felt like the cool water, so natural and purifying it was. And, as it passed through the other side, it tugged me up, higher, back to ankle deep. It turned down around the corner and onto the road where I used to live. 203 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE My heart fell. I missed my family. Bobby. Rod. My Mother. Fawn. Where could Fawn have gone? I called out not so quiet that would seem like a whisper, but not screaming either, “Fawn.” And waited. And waited some more. But, no one answered back, not even my own echo. Silence. “Fawn!” I yelled a little louder this time. Nothing. Just complete silence. I touched my cheek. An angel tear sparkled on the tip of my finger. Pearl and opal fluid formed a droplet that soon broke apart and trickled off. The tear seemed to give me permission to cry. I sat on to the road, brought my head to my knees, and covered my face. 204 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE SEVENTY THE SOUND OF ANOTHER CAR headed my way broke the moment. At the same time, a tiny lone baby raccoon had begun to cross the road. “No!” I screamed. But, of course, the small creature couldn't hear me. The car, a silvery blue SUV, continued to pick up speed after making the corner and plowed down the corridor. Faster than the speed limit. Toward where the tiny animal was making its track. I figured the little beast couldn't be more than a month old. It must've gotten separated from its mother. Shooing at the little fellow didn’t work so I screeched, shook my arms and flailed with as much emotion as I could muster. No! Turning, I saw the blue car was almost on top of us both. NO!!! I screamed and, covering her eyes, let whatever was coming next come. When the car's tires locked and the gears whinnied out in pain, my hands opened like a set of barn doors. The SUV skidded to a curving stop. Rubber on the ground formed two parallel charcoal S marks when the brakes grabbed and the tires stopped spinning forward, forward, forward... A larger raccoon appeared chattering from the side of the road, where the littler one had emerged. It was puttering, cooing and whooping, calling its baby back to cover. To safety. 205 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE The woman inside the vehicle appeared stunned. She clasped both hands tight on the wheel, with her chin on top of it. After watching the baby raccoon escape, she rolled her eyes, leaned back against the driver's seat and blew out in a sigh of relief. Checking again, to both sides of her car and once into her rearview mirror, the lady maneuvered the gear shift and eased the car forward in an extra cautious manner. I stood up as her car neared and lifted my arms. It was a good decision for me. The car was filled with good people—the woman and her kids in the back seat. They filtered through me and lifted me out of the mire. I smiled, tipped my head back and giggled as I pivoted. Finally, one foot was free. As they drove off, the little girl in the car turned and plastered her hands to the rear window. She looked right at me and waved. I waved back and giggled. Then, she must’ve realized I was a spirit because her eyes widened then she covered her mouth with both hands just before turning the corner and driving off. 206 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE SEVENTY-ONE THE LITTLE GIRL'S PINK FACE was smudged with food. With the door open, Rod smelled a toxic whiff of cigarette smoke leaching through outside where the two of them stood, the girl looking up at him and Rod looking down at her. “Shut the door!” A woman’s voice rang out from inside. Rod peered deeper behind the girl into the darker pit of her home but the little girl stepped out and closed the door behind her. “Hi.” Rod said looking back down at her and forcing a smile. “Hello.” Her voice sounded like Minnie Mouse to him, making him smile for real this time. She smiled back. A tooth was missing, layering more innocence on her already pure presence. “That your Mom?” She nodded her head and her mouth parted like she might scream for her mother. “It's okay. Don't worry.” Rod bent down to her level. “I'm just wondering if Tucker is here.” His hands trembled at saying the boy’s name. The waif shook her head again, no. “Do you know where I can find him?” This time she stepped across the threshold and closed the door behind her. As she walked past Rod, she shook her head again, but this time ran to get her two-wheeler—a miniature version of an adult woman's bicycle and with pink 207 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE handles, pink fringe, and a white plastic basket clipped to the handle-bar and training wheels that would keep her from tipping the bike when she rode. “I can take you,” she chirped. Rod felt a curious connection to the girl who looked markedly like Hannah's picture as a child. He figured that most little girls must appear as pixie waifs around this age, full of that thorough innocence that reminds you of a daisy. “You can?” “Sure.” She toed the kickstand out of the way, mounted her training bike and stood on the pedals propelling herself forward with the bicycle. “See?” She asked Rod. “I can ride a two-wheeler!” Glee exuded from her. “You're good.” “Thanks.” Her lips formed broke into a big smile, a contagious expression that Rod mimicked back. But then his smile evaporated and he asked, “Where is Tucker?” “At the Brown.” She chimed. “The Brown?” “You'll see.” It was all a game to her. Rod tipped his head, and took a deep breath, trying to regain his courage. The little girl would lead him to Tucker. The person who killed Hannah. He'd get answers. Once and for all. 208 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE SEVENTY-TWO “OH.” ROD STOPPED. “WAIT A SEC.” He veered away from the girl toward his car and opened the passenger door. He clicked open the glove compartment, pulled out the weapon, stuffed it into his waistband, and snapped up his jacket. Then he grabbed the leash and beckoned Bobby over. The dog jumped from the driver's seat onto the passenger's and his crimson tongue lopped out with excitement and his tail wagged with anticipation and the prospect of. “Yeah. We're going for a walk.” Rod confirmed as he let Bobby jump down to the dingy dove-colored slab of sidewalk. He slammed the door as he walked back toward the little girl and blipped his remote once to lock the car. “Okay.” His tactic worked. The little girl only noticed the dog, not the gun. Her eyes got even bigger than before, if that was possible. “A puppy!” she squealed. But when Rod got to her, she wouldn't move. Her demeanor had changed. She looked scared, in fact. “What?” He asked. “Mom says I'm not to talk to strangers.” “Oh. Well...” And as he was about to tell her his name, she interrupted him. “I'm Ruthie.” She stuck out her petite hand. He looked at the size of her arm, this time taking in how tiny this girl was, this Ruthie. The smooth skin that only kids have, a peachy softness, the physical equivalent to innocence exemplified. Her eyes were big doe-y pools 209 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE of question marks swirling with a promise of future, like becoming a ten-year-old one day, then a teenager, then an adult. Those visions little girls have of being like her mother, or sister if she even had one. The ideal future lived there in Ruthie's eyes. “I'm Rod.” He grinned and stuck out his hand to meet hers. “This is Bobby.” The little dog sat with perfect manners. Limply, like a fragile toy, she lifted her hand up once, then down, in their handshake, as she'd most likely seen other grownups do. Then she slid her hand, a fifth the size of Rod's out of his hand to pet Bobby's head. “He's so cute,” she said in her Minnie Mouse voice. Bobby wagged his tail again and Ruthie looked up at Rod as if for assurance. “He likes you.” “Come on! Let's go see Tucker!” she chimed. Then Ruthie plastered her hands onto the bike's bars, stood high on both thick rubber pedals and pushed with a bunch of, what Rod would call, effort down the sidewalk. The same sidewalk that would lead them to her brother. Tucker. 210 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE SEVENTY-THREE I SAT AND PULLED, BOTH hands clutching my left ankle, with as much effort as possible. As my sentient adult self, I could've been able to wedge the other foot out of my shoe and then out of the ground. But as a kid in the afterlife, my earthbound strength was not nearly enough to unlock my feet. The grainy pavement poked nubs into my rear end but I refused to relent. Then, another car drove around the corner. This time, I leaned back, lying back onto the ground, allowing it to miss me. A fierce, definite sensation melted over me. Rod's face came into view. Just his face. Like a snapshot in a photo. He looked tired. His shaggy hair was grizzled somehow and his beard stubbled. Lines formed around his red eyes. He looked like he’d reached a maximum level of stress and couldn’t take one more thing to happen. I remembered that look. This was the first time since I’d gotten stuck in the ground that I’d seen him. His frown indicated worry, hatred and sorrow all at the same time. A thin layer of moist film covered his raw, angry eyes. He looked demented and dangerous. That's how contorted his brow looked. I saw a distinct edge one can only describe as pain. And, if pain were to have a color, it would look like Rod's skin—pasty and sallow. He 211 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE frightened me and my heart broke as I viewed this image of him. Then, Rod’s vision seemed to call to me. I didn’t see the car coming and stood the moment as it zoomed through me—one filled with bad energy that anchored my legs deeper into the tarry terrain. I buckled and began to weep—for me, for Rod, for my dog. A thick wind whipped my hair into my face. I hollered for Fawn, but again got no response. I squinted my eyes so hard my eyes almost disappear into their sockets. I breathed in super deep—once, twice, three times— and yelled with everything I had in me. “Rod!” 212 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE SEVENTY-FOUR ROD, RUTHIE AND BOBBY STOOD waiting for the coming ferry traffic to let up. It seemed like miles long. But when he couldn't wait any longer, he put out a hand to an oncoming car, making it stop and the three of them crossed 12th Street. A police car coming from the other way stopped for them too and let them cross safely. Rod nodded to the cop, a stocky-looking woman with her hair knotted under her cap. She frowned at Rod for jaywalking and pointed an angry finger to the side of the road. Then, she rolled down her window and called out, “Use the crosswalk next time, sir.” Rod lifted up an apologetic palm and called out that he was sorry. The trio hustled over to the other side of the road. Rod lifted Ruthie's bike up by the handlebars and seat and set the small bike up onto the sidewalk so that Ruthie didn't have to dismount her trusty two-wheeler. Bobby stayed out in front of both of them at the end of his lead and, once they got onto the sidewalk, he shook his coat then sat and waited for Rod and Ruthie to get situated. “Okay, Ruthie. Where is the Brown?” “There and down that way.” She pointed up to the Anacortes main drag of Commercial Road, curving her finger left past 12th Street. Rod could see the street end where the ocean began. The Brown was somewhere between them. “Downtown?” 213 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Ruthie gave an exaggerated head-bob. “Uh-huh.” Then added her usual Ruthie-ism: “You'll see.” They all started walking again but then Rod stopped as if he'd walked into an invisible wall. “Did you hear that?” His question sounded more like someone waking from an odd dream. “Huh?” Ruthie answered. He turned to look behind him, for someone. “Did you say something?” “Nuh-uh.” She shook her head, making her mousebrown curls flip around her face. “Someone called my name. Sounded like a girl.” He spun around looking to the other side of the road but no one was there. “That’s weird. I thought I heard...” He trailed off, confused. “Oh well.” They started walking again but Rod glanced behind himself just to make sure, but saw nothing. “Do you still want to see Tucker?” He looked down at Ruthie. “Yes.” He paused. “Yes. I do.” 214 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE SEVENTY-FIVE I SCREAMED AGAIN, THIS TIME with more force, “Rod!” And pointed my ear to the east, hoping to catch a sound of anything, a voice, something that resembled a reply. But, the wind whipped, scudding clouds over the tree tops, over swatches of farmland and bending a hedgerow of poplars that lined old Farmer Johnson's road. His cows stood near the fence close by watching me. Some were the color of chalk, some were black but with all them standing there together, they looked distorted like a crazy set of piano keys. They brayed and cluttered my hearing along with the wind. A distant plane coursed overhead. A melancholy church bell rang, but was muffled by rustling branches and the sighing wind. I called out, even harder than before, hoping he would hear me. “Rod!” Then once more. But, only the earth and the whistling sky answered. 215 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE SEVENTY-SIX RUTHIE STOPPED OUTSIDE AN ANTIQUE door to a tavern. A brass sign swung from the eave over the walkway and read THE BROWN LANTERN. Ruthie pointed to a stained-glass door. The window was in the shape of a lantern. “Here,” Ruthie proclaimed proudly. “Oh.” Rod's heart jumped. “The Brown.” “Okay. You're a great scout. Thank you, Ruthie.” She smiled proudly and jumped up onto her pedals acting as if she were going to push off and ride away, back home. “Wait. Ruthie.” She stopped but planted her feet evenly on both pedals standing high on her bike, in a neutral position. “What?” “Well, um. I can't take Bobby inside a food establishment.” “Oh.” “Yeah. So, um. I'm wondering if you can go in and get your brother for me.” “Tucker.” “Yeah. Right.” Adding a name to Hannah’s killer didn’t help. Rod didn't want to add any human quality to him. He paused but then said his name back. “Yeah. Tucker.” “Sure.” And, at that, Ruthie jumped off with both feet, landing in a semi-squat. She stood up straight like a tiny Olympic gymnast, looked at Rod for approval, who 216 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE nodded and smiled at her. Then, with all of the clumsiness of a child, she ran to the door, pulling it open with a great amount of effort, and screamed into the dark tavern, “Tucker!” With her full voice. Rod stuck his foot in-between the door and the door jamb holding it ajar. From inside, Rod heard a male voice respond. It sounded far off, deep inside the building, “Ruthie, what the hell are you doin' here?” The boy's voice pitched up in anger. “Hold on. Dammit Ruthie. Wait outside. And shut that door behind you!” Ruthie walked back out and looked up at Rod. “He's coming.” “Great.” Rod's face twisted as he tried to form a smile. His heart thrummed fast. “Can I go home now?” He almost didn't hear her. Then two things happened... The door of the Brown blew open. And Rod heard a girl’s voice calling his name again. 217 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE SEVENTY-SEVEN “CASCADE CALLING DAVID-2, WE have an urgent request from SMC-2. Pick up.” Patrol Captain Jim Little bit a chunk off his apple. He was heading east down R Street toward Highway 20, keeping traffic to a crawl as he motored along the 25 mph strip. The call, dispatched from Mount Vernon— otherwise known as “Cascade”—originated from the Santa Maria County Sheriff's Department. He figured upper echelon, with the number-two ranking. He placed the apple he'd been gnawing on fully into his mouth, picked up his radio handset and depressed the talk button. “David-2 here. Whaddup?” The words muffled around the apple jammed in his mouth. Jim sounded young for his fifty-two years, but the apple subtracted ten more years. He released the button for the dispatcher to speak. “A possible fight in progress.” Cascade alerted him. Jim dropped the apple between his legs. “Possible?” “That's what SMC-2 says.” “Where?” “The Brown.” “Good gravy. Sometimes that place...” he said, then depressed the button. “Has anyone from the Brown called this in?” “David-2, sir, we only have data from SMC-2, sir. Out.” Jim blew out air through his lips. “Wonderful. Great. I'm responding.” 218 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE He pulled off to the side and let the car idle. He emptied his handgun and then popped open a case and reloaded it with six red-tipped bullets. Then, he flipped the car into drive and Officer Little swung his vehicle around the other way, due west but didn't flip on the sirens or his lights. He swore silently again at the island out there that seemed to send over more than their fair share of criminals off the ferry straight into Anacortes. After mulling it over, Jim flicked the switch to his lights and sped up another five miles over the speed limit. 219 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE SEVENTY-EIGHT “TUCKER!” RUTHIE RAN AND JUMPED into his arms when her brother emerged. “You smell like beer.” She giggled. A siren wailed in the distance, sounding like a dying bird. It was heading toward town. A wind kicked up and knocked Rod off balance. When it did, he reached under his jacket and grabbed at his belt. The door swung closed slowly behind Tucker but then reopened quickly when another boy, a shorter one with curly red hair, came through. Even though the ferry cam image had been grainy, Rod could tell these were the ones. The two young men standing there in front of him were Hannah’s killers. Rod and Tucker's eyes connected for only a second when Rod grabbed his head and bent forward. “Ahh!” He roared as an electric jolt shot through his head, causing him to lift both of his hands to his temples. In his right hand, he clutched his gun. Tucker gasped. Ruthie's face looked stricken. She screamed. The red-haired boy cowered behind Tucker as he stood there holding Ruthie in his arms. Rod's face contorted. He looked behind him, searching for the voice calling him. “Do you hear that?” He yelled in pain. “Oh, man?” Tucker's voice shook with fear. “Hear? That girl. She keeps calling me.” “Hey man. I don't hear anything.” 220 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE But, all at once it stopped, the pain and Hannah’s voice. Rod stood slowly. His face looked sweaty, oily. Deep wrinkles carved out frames around his eyebrows, around his eyes and his mouth. He brought down the gun, not realizing he was wielding it around like a baton. They stood there, shoulders moving fast with their breathing, looking at one another. Tucker's face went white. He was holding his breath, waiting for something to happen. Then his face turned red. He looked at Ruthie, then past Ruthie. Rod thought he might bolt, take off. So he lifted his gun. Then, everything changed. Tucker's demeanor went dark, like a light switch being flipped off. Staring off in the distance, the one siren had become two and Rod could see their flashing lights heading toward them, a mile down the road. Then Bobby barked and jolted Rod. “Bobby. No.” Rod commanded but Bobby had gone into attack mode. He lowered his shoulders to the ground and bared his teeth, then scuffled closer to Tucker but reached the end of his leash. Rod had never seen Bobby act this way. He wasn’t acting like a dog who just heard a knock at the door. He was acting like a dog who wanted to kill. Then Rod knew for sure. These were the guys who killed Hannah. Ruthie began to wail. And, several scenes played out across Tucker's face—terror, fear, anger, and finally, realization. 221 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “Oh man. We didn’t mean to.” He turned to the other boy and became emotional. They both started getting upset. Then, Tucker turned back to Rod, “Look, if you're going to shoot me, man, then just get it over with.” Tears welled up in his eyes. But he wasn't sobbing or making any noise but tears streamed from his eyes. “But, man, all I ask is that you let me put Ruthie down. Let her go, man. I mean. She had nothing to do with that lady.” He was confessing about killing Hannah. Rod’s gun shook in his hand next to his leg. Bobby growled and yanked out of Rod's grip and latched onto Tucker's pant leg. Tucker didn't flinch while Bobby yanked and gnarled. The sirens grew loud. Ruthie was screaming and Tucker hid his face in her neck and wept. The boy behind them was crying too holding onto the sleeve of Tucker’s jacket. Wheels sped up, grinding close to them in the street. Then they screeched to a stop. “Put the gun down, sir.” Jim's voice barked through the electric police car megaphone. Rod looked down at his hand. The gun appeared useless, limp. “Sir. Put. The gun. Down.” He glanced over to the police car. Then raised the gun at Tucker. 222 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE SEVENTY-NINE “SIR, DO NOT FIRE. I’M warning you.” Officer Little demanded. “These two,” Rod’s voice cracked, “freaks killed my wife!” Ruthie continued to cry. “They have to pay.” And Rod cocked his gun. The world sounded like one big firecracker exploding everywhere. Tucker kneeled fast covering Ruthie with his hands. The red-haired boy fell to the ground behind Tucker. Bobby yelped and ran toward Rod, who was lying on his back. The little dog was frantic, yipping wildly. But Rod didn't move. He didn't breathe. A set of tires screeched to a skid and stopped. Then came the sound of feet running toward Rod at full tilt. “Dammit, Jim. What the hell were you thinking?” Scott shouted and fell next to Rod’s body. “Oh. Dear Lord. No.” Bobby whimpered next to Rod. Jim Little walked up to Scott. “You know ‘im?” “He’s my friend.” Scott shook his head. “His wife was murdered, run down on the street a few months back.” He stood and faced Officer Little. “This is,” he shook his head again, “tragic.” Little put his arm around Scott’s shoulder. “He don’t worry, man. It’s gonna be okay. They're rubber. He'll be fine. Watch.” Jim Little bent down removed the gun from Rod’s hand, pocketed it, then compressed Rod's chest. Rod sputtered and sucked in a 223 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE deep pocket of air. Then Rod let out an anguished moan and rolled to his side. He grabbed his stomach. And, Scott got in his face. “What the hell, Rod! Were you gonna shoot this boy?” “It's empty.” He choked out and pushed up off the ground. He looked like he’d been kicked in the gut by a horse. Scott's face turned purple. “Why, you stupid mother of a gin drinker's ass. You could've been killed.” Rod looked around and sat up on the pavement, focusing on the Anacortes cop talking to Tucker and the other boy. The two boys seemed to be fighting each other now. “Just tell them, Tucker!” the other one said while Ruthie clung to Tucker’s leg, still bubbling out tears and whimpering her brother's name repeatedly. Tucker buried his fists deep into his eyes. “Oh God. Help me!” The words crashed out of him. Words that seemed to have been building all his guilt. “Oh man!” Then he burst into tears. “Okay. Okay!” He crumbled his next few words and then lifted his hands out of his eyes to the sky as if asking for forgiveness. “We did it. Oh man. We did it.” He said quietly. “Oh my God. I'm so sorry.” He looked at Rod then fell to his knees, holding of Ruthie for support. “I'm so, so terribly sorry.” The red-haired boy cried too. “It's true. It was an accident. Oh man. Oh man. We'd been drinking.” He blubbered. “Oh man. I'm sorry, man.” This time the boy spoke directly to Rod. “Oh God. If I could take it back. I was so scared.” 224 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE He crumbled to the ground next to Tucker. “Oh please forgive me.” He said to Rod. “It was an accident.” Bobby sat next to Rod who was still sitting on the ground. He was crying too but patted the dog’s head, something that soothed them both. But Rod did something strange. He wiped an arm under his nose, wiped the tears from under his eyes and crawled on his hands and knees over to the three of them. Ruthie and Tucker sat crammed against each other. When Rod reached them, he grabbed Tucker by the shoulder with one hand. Scott made a move closer. Jim followed. But Rod paused. He stared into Tucker’s red, wet eyes. Then pulled Tucker into his arms. Tucker’s tears shook his body but Rod held him tighter, trying to quell the boy’s sadness. While he held Tucker, Rod glanced over at the other boy and extended a hand to him. The boy fell forward into Rod and the four of them, Ruthie smashed in the middle, stayed there until their emotions drained out. All the lies. All the secrets. All the pain. It crashed out of them. Then, Tucker looked like he might collapse but Rod held him up. Bobby nudged through their bodies, climbed onto Tucker’s lap and snuggled into his stomach. He laid his head on his leg and rolled his eyes to Tucker and then back to Rod. They remained there, each seeming to understand the other's pain. 225 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE In one solitary act of grace and forgiveness, a simple hug and a moment that dissipated all too soon when Jim and Scott approached to dispense with necessary procedural duties. A crowd of passersby and patrons from The Brown had formed. Scott pulled Tucker up by one arm. “Come on.” Tucker was still crying and clinging to Rod, who was still clinging to him. Scott began to lead Tucker away but not before the boy apologized again making sure Rod heard him and that he meant it. Tucker wiped his face with the bare skin on his arm and patted Ruthie on her head. “Go home. Tell Mom to come to the jailhouse.” He looked at Scott for confirmation. Scott nodded. “Now, Ruthie.” Ruthie cried but did as her big brother said. She jumped onto her two-wheeler and sped down Commercial back toward her home. Then, Jim walked over to them and pulled the redheaded boy off the ground away from Rod and Bobby. His eyes looked wet and red and swollen. He grabbed Rod's hand before they led him away and Rod grabbed back, with both of his hands covering the boy’s. “Mister. I tried to miss her.” Rod looked down at his feet. “She was on the ground. I didn’t see her. I’m so sorry.” The boy crumbled again, “I hid my bike.” And then he bawled. Scott and Officer Little led him to a separate police car. 226 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Bobby snuggled against Rod’s leg. He gazed at Rod in what he’d come to know as Bobby’s dog smile. “That’s right, boy. It’s done. We can go home now.” 227 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE As the hart panteth after the water brooks, so panteth my soul after thee, O God. Then shall the lame man leap as a hart, and the tongue of the dumb sing: for in the wilderness shall waters break out, and streams in the desert. Part III EIGHTY “I'LL BE OVER NEXT WEEK, Tucker.” Rod waited as Tucker spoke, then he said, “Yes. I'll bring Bobby too.” After hanging up, Rod sipped a steamy cup of coffee. He thought about how much he hated Island County Jail but figured Tucker hated it more. So he'd taken up a routine of going to see him, with his Bible in tow, for weekly visits. He and Bobby. 228 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Rod looked down at the little dog as he slept. He went to the door and lifted Bobby's leash from a black hook that look a lot like a raven. It was something Hannah had gotten, something that remained a sweet reminder of her in their home. “Come on, Bobby. Let's go for our walk. We've been avoiding this far too long.” As soon as he heard the leash's clasp jingle, the dog raised his head in attention. “That's right. We're going for a walk.” The dog scuffled out from under the stool. He pranced about as Rod tried to fit the little dog's head through the halter. Bobby darted around excited and making the process difficult. “Hold on, Mr. Popcorn.” Rod took a breath. The memory stopped him. Hannah used to say the same thing as she haltered Bobby. He longed for a time when his memories of her wouldn’t hobble him. For a time in the future when his memories wouldn't ache in his chest. 229 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE EIGHTY-ONE A CRISP SUMMER MORNING SUN pirouetted among branches and speckled the ground, making it look like the rump of an old trail horse he once rode as a kid, long ago. So, many years ago that he'd forgotten the horse's name. Chip, or something. Snip. An old swaybacked Appaloosa they named Snip. They’d named him because he used to turn his head and bite riders' feet as they slung in the stirrups. When Rod looked to the right, he realized Bobby and he were standing in the exact spot on the driveway that Hannah stood the day she died. When he’d called to her to tell her he was leaving. “Hannah!” he remembered yelling to her and halting her progress. She stepped back into view, so he could see her again. He remembered her asking again, “What?” She had been in a good mood and smiled. She smiled at him. He wished so much he hadn't said it but the words sort of tumbled without control. He was still trying to hurt her and said, “I'm moving out.” All the brightness in her face vanished. Her smile faded. She turned her head and looked down the road in the direction they were headed. She didn't move for a moment. He remembered feeling miles apart from her standing there. He knew it wasn't what she expected. But he wanted to injure her, to cut her. 230 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE How foolish. “Hannah, if you can hear me. I’m so sorry, babe. I miss you so much.” At the memory, Rod's legs went weak, as if they'd lost all their blood. He couldn't move. It felt as though his feet had become cemented to the ground. A rush of heat rose quickly up and over his back covering his chest and face. Then Bobby yanked forward on his leash. That yanked Rod out of his trance. But the memory continued. Hannah didn't answer. She just turned away from Rod and walked out of sight. It made him wonder at what point on that last walk, she'd started to cry. When her face crumpled the way it did, like a little girl's who couldn't find her favorite toy. How far she walked so that he wouldn't see her or hear her. She just walked away. Bobby led Rod down the road the same exact way Hannah and he used to walk. The same way they'd gone the last time he'd seen Hannah walking Bobby. He wondered how many times the vision would replay, how many times they would end up in that same spot again so he could somehow make it right. Bobby walked like nothing was wrong, like the little soldier he'd been proving himself to be. Like Colonel Popcorn. Rod had taken to calling him by Hannah’s nickname. He held his head so high and sniffed the air. He marched with meaning, a sense of importance emitting around him. He knew the route well and was taking Rod for the walk, not the other way around. 231 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “Okay. Lead the way, Bobby.” Rod let the leash slip out to the full extent of the line. But, Bobby stopped at mid-step and shook out his coat, hard, and sniffed at the air as if he caught the scent of a deer. Then he put his nose down. He stepped up his gait. Rod kept up with him. He was getting a familiar feeling. The feeling that Bobby expected to see Hannah. Even after all this time of absence and living without her, he felt as if the dog always knew he'd see her again. And it broke Rod's heart. 232 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE EIGHTY-TWO “YOU’RE KILLING ME, YA KNOW? How can I explain that she’s gone? How can I make you understand?” Bobby’s tail wagged once, stopped, then he grumbled and put his head down. “I’m sad too.” Rod knelt next to his dog and petted his back. Tourist season was in high gear and yet few cars traveled their neighborhood that day. Still, Rod kept alert for them anyway. He looked down the road and then back the other way. I was still locked in this weird time warp, this space where, now, no one could hear me. Not Rod. Not Bobby. Not Fawn. My heart was breaking at my fate but mostly how Rod and Bobby were torn up each time they visited this spot—the place I died and, the way it looked, I would forever remain. And then the understanding entered me of why spirits were never supposed to make contact with humans. It was so that humans would not be led to believe that the spirits were greater than God. So humans would not keep trying to search for the spirits and instead to keep their hearts turned to and focused on God. I felt terribly guilty and began to cry. Soft rose petals fell out of my eyes and tumbled around me. “I’m sorry,” I called out to Him and then as if forgiven right then and there, Fawn appeared. “Fawn!” 233 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE She trotted over to me but I guess I yelled a smidge too loud because Bobby barked. It startled Rod. “What was that for?” Then he yipped again and pointed his nose at me. Rod tried to see whatever Bobby was barking at but he was staring only a few feet ahead of him, not across the street or deeper into the woods. Then Rod moved to Bobby, basically stepping in front of me and nearly on top of my body. Rod knelt down. “Hey,” I tried to push him out of the way but he only tottered like he’d lost balance for a second. Then he righted himself and began another conversation with Bobby. “I know, son. It’s hard to leave this spot. It kills me each time we come here…” But Bobby moved around to his side so I was in his sights again. I opened my eyes wide and giggled, “I love you, silly boy.” “Hey, Bobby. Come over here.” But Bobby refused even with Rod pulling at his lead. Rod stood and watched the dog. He was acting strange again and looking at something in the road. I put my hand out but my fingertips were too far from his head. My range of motion had shrunk considerably. I wanted to touch him so badly. The feeling was so strong. A mother’s love for a child could undo the soul. Wind rustled his hair and Bobby closed his eyes gently. 234 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Fawn nudged me again and bobbled her head. “I know, Fawn.” Then rose petals fell from my eyes again. My heart wrenched in pain and I begged God to stop the feeling. I begged so hard that Fawn mewled. It was quite a sight, I’m sure. And the rose petals kept pouring out of me. When, all at once, one fizzled just outside the perimeter of my existence, where I’d been cordoned off, where my feet were stuck, and it floated like a pendulum down, down, down and landed right on the tip of Bobby’s nose. “What the—?” Rod nearly fell back into the ditch when he witnessed the petal. Bobby remained frozen, his eyes locked onto his snout. His little eyes crossed and I couldn’t help but laugh. “Oh my good—” Rod proclaimed. His face melted. He leaned over Bobby’s head and lifted the pink petal. “Where’d this come—?” “Whoops.” I said to Fawn who was lying inches off the ground rolling around, kicking her hooves in the air. “You think this is funny? Now I’m in deeper trouble than before?” But as Fawn continued her silly act, Rod spoke again, “Hannah? Are you here?” I couldn’t hold back, “Yes!” I cried out in a scream that pierced the sky. And another rose petal fizzled through the perimeter and landed on Bobby’s nose again. Bobby sat still as if obeying a command. I’d done it again. Broken the boundary between heaven and earth. “Uh-oh.” I covered my mouth. My eyes were so wide I felt like I could see the entire universe. 235 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE I hadn’t made the rose petals appear. I hadn’t even asked for rose petal tears and yet there they were. Rod lifted the second petal off Bobby’s nose. “If you’re here, give Bobby another rose petal.” I looked at Fawn and frowned. I couldn’t believe Rod still needed proof. So I did nothing. Not for Rod. But when Bobby began to whimper and bark again, my heart swelled. “Please God, please?” He knew what I wanted before I ever asked. I knew that since I’d broke a heavenly rule, I had to make amends. Rod and Bobby were hurting and I had to resolve the matter or stay in this spot until I did. So I clenched my eyes shut and prayed. I prayed for children—those living and dead, those human and not. I prayed for humanity—those who believed in God and those yet to believe. And I prayed for Rod. For his soul to find peace and to understand God’s amazing grace. His mercy. Because it was by his grace that all of what happened next played out the way it did. When I opened my eyes, I knew I had to say goodbye. “Bobby. The only reason I’m still here is because I made contact with you and your Dad.” Bobby put his head between his forepaws as he listened. “But I have to go now.” He grumbled and sat up. “I know. I don’t want to but… I have to.” Then he began to whimper. I couldn’t handle it any longer so I just turned and put my hand on Fawn, “I think I need your help, to pull me out of this,” I gestured to the earth around me, “this situation.” 236 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Fawn turned away from me and then looked back. She tipped up her head and pointed with her nose to her rear end. “Really?” I asked. She nodded twice so I placed both my hands around her tail. It was like holding onto a joystick. The little deer acted like a small tow truck pulling me out of the mud. My feet plowed a trench that got shallower and shallower as she walked forward pulling. Then finally I was unlocked from the earth. Bobby barked twice. “Yes, Bobby. I have to.” He barked two more times. I looked at Fawn who was telling me, in her deer way, not to do what I was thinking. Not to run to Bobby and embrace him. So, I turned and joined Fawn and we walked up and up along a path that led us away. A gate made of sapphire and amethyst stood before us and opened. Beyond the gate was a field so vast, so lush that no green I’d ever seen compared. And the music! It was as though Mozart, Beethoven and Bach all got together to compose a symphony. My jaw dropped open. Then we saw someone at the gate. It was a man. I waved and he waved back and smiled. It was my father. My human father. And I was about to run to him but something stopped me and wheeled me backwards, back, back, back… Like a bungee cord snapping me in the opposite direction. 237 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE EIGHTY-THREE ROD HAD NO CONTROL OVER Bobby. The little dog had gone bonkers. Drool fell from his mouth. He growled so viciously that Rod stepped to a safe distance from him. All he could do was watch his dog and, every couple of seconds, say ‘no.’ As I tumbled back toward earth, I saw that Bobby was still watching for us after we left. “Oh Bobby. No. Baby.” I whispered. By then my body was hurtling toward the earth like a small meteor. Within seconds, I landed. I landed with such force onto my back that I grunted. I had to stay there for a couple of moments until I gathered myself. And, as I was just about to get up, Bobby jumped onto my stomach. “Oof!” I grunted. He stood with all fours on me and panted. Then he laid down onto my stomach. We were face to face. “I’m going to get into so much trouble!” But by then I was giggling. He scooted up to my face. Now, we were nose-tonose. “Don’t do it.” I warned him. I mean, how would I ever get to heaven? Now, this is the thing… I’d always thought of Bobby as a good boy but I’d never thought of him as welltrained. He parted his lips. I caught a whiff of his breath. It smelled like meat sticks and pumpkin cookies. 238 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE And that was my undoing. I began to laugh when I did he plastered my face with dozens and dozens of dog kisses. I giggled and begged for him to stop but he wouldn’t. So I stopped begging. My arms wrapped around him and I kissed him back—all over his face and head and neck. Rod watched as Bobby laid there licking the ground. Then Fawn nudged me. She was still with me. We were still together. I wasn’t condemned this time. Because, this time, I wasn’t the one piercing the veil. Bobby was. “Bobby, you silly boy. I have to go. I have to go, now.” That time he seemed to understand. We both did. “Please never forget that I will always love you. Always.” He barked once and sat up strong. But Rod was a wreck. His hand covered his face and his shoulders were shaking. Then he said, “I'm sorry.” He lifted his face to the sky, “Hannah, you’re here, right?” He waited but then added, “I want you to know I didn’t mean it. That I'll always regret my last words to you. How we left things...” And he crumbled. How could I explain that I didn’t blame him? That I forgave him because I understood all of our humanness? How? Now that I was on the other side? So, I whispered into his ear, so softly I could barely hear myself, “I’m sorry too. I forgive you and I’ll always love you.” 239 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE And, just then, a rose petal fell, catching his left cheek and landing on his shoulder. He picked the petal off his shirt and then spoke my name. Bobby barked once. Before turning away for the last time, I blew a kiss to Bobby. His tail was wagging hard. Rod knelt down next to him and was still looking at the three rose petals in his hand. The ones God sent him as proof. Then Fawn and I were whisked up again to the gates and when we walked through, I hugged my father. He told me that he missed me so badly. I figured I knew how he felt. Then he asked about Fawn. When the gates closed, I looked down through a most spectacular prism of gems at Bobby and Rod. Bobby was wagging his tail and looking at Rod who was shielding his eyes from the brilliant light blazing through the woods—a light that broke, refracted and intersected between trees from the wind bending branches. 240 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE EIGHTY-FOUR A CARNELIAN BERRY FOUND ALONG their path told Rod that the days had grown into summer. Long slender shafts of grass, no longer dry from the winter, had all but been devoured by a lush loden canvas that seemed to whorl in colors, as if God had used a brush slathered in paint that He slapped onto the earth's surface. The blue sky dragged them out that Sunday. Six months later, in June. The first day in June. And, it looked like a good day to take the dog for a walk. A good day to walk, to think about his wife and how much he had loved her. How much he still missed her. Bobby, to anyone who knew them, was his dog now. He slept with Rod on his side of the bed where Hannah used to lay her head. And, now, Rod's idea of self-worth revolved around this small animal, their dog. Hannah once told him that self-worth rated a close second in importance to the average person's survival instincts. Now, Rod, supposed it did with him too. He knew if any harm might come Bobby's way, he would lay down his life for his dog. He had to speculate that same reasoning might've been part of what led to Hannah’s death. Why else would Bobby survive and not her? He had to believe Hannah had made sure Bobby was safe. As they walked, Rod considered all the things he had left to do, that he had left to accomplish. Like going through Hannah's things. The sad task of giving some of her belongings away and keeping some. How does a person make those choices? 241 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE But by spring this year, the house needed a new coat of interior paint. The paint would help cover up rotten memories of a cold time in his life. Rod wanted to feel cheerier by now. Maybe a sunny yellow coat of fresh paint would help. Even sky-blue walls sounded good lately. “How you doing, Bobby?” The words spilled out easily, soothing Rod, like pulling on a warm sweater over cold shoulders. “Come on, Bobby. This way, son.” And the two turned, left, down the road, the way that took them toward the water. THE END 242 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE 243 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE You just finished reading THE DEER EFFECT by Susan Wingate. If you enjoyed this story, please leave a review at the following link: http://amzn.to/1zhXcCk And you may also enjoy Susan’s other books which you can find at: www.susanwingate.com. You can also find Susan on the following social sites: Facebook: www.facebook.com/authorsusanwingate Twitter: www.twitter.com/susanwingate Pinterest: www.pinterest.com/susanwingate Google+: https://plus.google.com/u/0/107176228678049355232 And you can read Susan’s blog Writing from the Couch at: http://bit.ly/PS56HD 244 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE ABOUT THE AUTHOR Amazon Bestselling Author, Susan Wingate’s stories have been hailed by international bestselling author Michael Collins as “writing of the finest quality.” Susan Wingate pens gritty crime fiction, thrillers, and visionary metaphysical suspense. Her family drama entitled “Drowning” won the Forward National Literature Award in the category of drama and instantly became a #1 Amazon bestseller. Her mystery novel “Bobby's Diner” also became an Amazon Bestseller. Susan began writing as a child when she learned her father was a writer. A vibrant public speaker, Susan offers inspiring, motivational talks about... …blah, blah, blah. That's the stuff my agent wants you to know. You can find out all that mumbo-jumbo throughout my website. I hate redundancy. So, if you really want to examine my career, check out the pages for my books, awards and FAQs. What I want you to know is a little about me, the person. I like to golf. I want to learn to fly planes. I've parasailed in Mexico... Ixtapa-Zihuatanejo, to be precise. I ride horses and love animals of all kinds. I'm one of these people who removes spiders from the house and then sets them free outside. I save moths from spider webs when they get caught. This frustrates the spiders who I have saved but, what do you do? This is what I call a "conundrum." 245 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE I live on five acres of rural land that is heavily wooded and is home to a herd of deer who I feed. I feed all the wildlife here, the raccoons and birds alike. We have eleven cats, two dogs, and twelve birds--doves and three pigeons who are rehab birds. I enjoy eating chips and salsa to the point of addiction. I don't think there are any rehab centers for chip-and-salsa-addiction but maybe if we all ban together we can show the powers-that-be how devastating this addiction is to one's rear-end. I'm sure we'll see growth (wink) in that area of "intervention-need" soon. Pizza is second on my list of addictions. So far, Papa John's has a fortress-strength special interest group blocking the way for any rehab facilities for pizza addiction. It's a conspiracy, I tell ya. 246 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE HERE’S ANOTHER READING TREAT FOR YOU… an excerpt from Susan’s novel entitled, WAY OF THE WILD WOOD, a Christian fantasy. WAY OF THE WILD WOOD by Susan Wingate A person might wonder the particulars of how a precocious girl got lost in the wild wood. But! Until a person walks a single step into the wood, all the wondering shall get lost with the girl. PROLOGUE If you asked— “Who are you, Meg Nightly?” Best bets will prove her feet setting a pace so fast away from you that in a start, you’ll bolt off running after her to hear the answer. That if you asked, “Why do you love those cats so much?” She’d call back to you as she runs that they’re her only friends, “Now that momma is gone! Now that Pa is sad.” Your efforts, trying to catch Meg, will find you at the edge of the woods. A yin and yang place of sun so bright on one side the blinding verdant flora appears iridescent crystalizing before your eyes with dragonflies sewerroach-long with wings the size of hummingbirds, or ones no larger than a rug needle bright as rubbed carnelian moving with helicopter finesse chasing gnats for dinner, where a single gold and black caterpillar inches her way 247 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE forward to the end of a dead alder twig hanging over a stubby mag of moss as she pads her crown—a costume of gossamer tendrils covering its length—to a spot where she comes to rest at the thinnest place, the end of her world, a stick where she will subsume herself in a cocoon until she emerges weeks later as a gypsy moth displaying creamy wings like showy square dance skirts, lined with jigs and jags of black geometric decorations. The light on that side of the forest, the yin side, contrasts starkly with the yang, the dark side where shadows and gloam foam-thick hide tree frogs, hide their lime green bodies shiny as a yolk’s, slimy as a clam among the repetitious gradations of green, green and more green. Where a misplaced hand can meet up with a snake’s fang or the jaws of a disturbed wolf spider. Where a misplaced foot will find you in a trench so deep, so steep, climbing out without the help of rope and pulley is not an option. And you don’t want that. The light and dark have different smells too—one side smelling like toad bread baking in a cast-iron skillet, the other like cold chopped parsley—both have good and bad points. One makes you want to sit for a spell and sip cinnamon tea on a chaise lounge and the other makes you want to wash your clothes on a rock. Each activity has a time and a place, a season, but you can guarantee the sunny side has a waiting list for reservations miles long while the dark side has an insatiable appetite for new customers but finds few. There, at the forest edge, you stop because you fear something— the clog of growth, pillar upon pillar of lazyarmed cedars, daggers behind each Nootka rose blossom, 248 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE scotch pines so cocky they look as though each branch has lifted its hand just for you, just to flip you off. With timothy grass so seductive, swaying their hips making you sway yours, hypnotizing you into a primal dance once started it cannot be stopped. Or, the labyrinth of ancient mystical Garry oaks holding hands with each other lining a dizzying path, gnarled and dark old witches, leading you away from safety. You fear something right then, right there at the edge of the woods because if you don’t fear it now, you will later. You dare not breach the corral of webbed brush, the spears of the bramble, the fallen evergreens—a girth protecting the forest from those not capable of outlasting a trek among its creatures, pits and poisons. You’ll stop. The hair will stiffen your nape, down your spine under each follicle as your skin blisters into a billion tiny knots warning you away. Then you’ll call after for Meg when she enters the forbidden land and she will and she will answer you but in a voice distant and muddled, in a voice sounding much like a gull’s cry through the fog, a song sung in the rain. Not clear. No, not at all. And when you call her name again, a dragonfly blue as a neon sign, will rise as a decoy up from a mound of dead grass wet from dew capturing all odors within it— grubs that chew its roots, roses from mere proximity, nettle blossoms so sweet and alluring many forget their deadly personality. Your heart will seize when the fly soars up making you trip backwards into a bush, the nettle, the guard of the woods demarcating areas none 249 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE should stray out of, creating barriers none should cross lest you find devils hiding within their saw-tooth leaves or sitting on the string of beads growing at the tips of their spires where only devils will dare to sit. Other sounds will drag your attention away from the direction of the girl as she runs the narrow path away, away, away… a kit fox squealing, a chitting nestling, a fawn puling for its mother to return with food. These baby sounds—hidden and elusive will take you here then turn you there until you spin around in a corkscrew so many times that when you stop, you’ll find you’ve landed in a kaleidoscope of opals—starry bursts appearing before your eyes with lightning bolts jagging your peripheral vision and you won’t be able to determine up from down, left from right, in from out. That’s when you’ll find yourself drifting, lost, lost and alone with Meg as she leads you deeper and deeper that way, down, the way of the wild wood. CHAPTER ONE Without a mother, a child will lose her way. And, after the mother stopped caring, she was no long able to buffer the daughter’s abuses by the father. She didn’t intend to walk in the room the exact moment her mother pulled the gun. Or see her mother’s body whip back on to the bed but that’s what happened. At eleven (and a half) since the winter of her birth, feeling too old for her age and with more questions than normal, Meg Nightly—tan-skinned, washed-out hair, taller than most other kids in the sixth grade, dry-elbowed, 250 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE lanky like her father only pretty like her mother, but mostly curious—needed a break from her current situation. With her bony knees curled snug to her chest, held tight by her spindly arms with skin smooth the way only a child’s skin can be smooth, she sat hunched on a snag of bare roots at the base of an ancient Garry oak perched on a cramped ridge, sky high on a Mountain Goat trail, the one that crossed in front of their cabin, looking out over Whisker Ridge and contemplating what was left of her world since her mother’s death. Meg remembered the wide bandages wrapped around her mother’s chest. She looked like she had broken a rib not like she was dying of cancer. With a sunburned nose and putty freckles, making her appear as though someone spattered her with paintbrush full of watercolors, she stared at the vast landscape before her, the river a good one hundred feet straight down, a funnel of smoke from an errant fire miles and miles off in the distance curling up in a lazy turtleshaped cloud, she viewed the roll of the land as it buckled up and down in varying shades of greens, yellows and browns with that stray patch of burnt orange California poppies, the one hanging on to the season with more strength than she knew she had and with butterflies flitting from pistil to pistil in swarms trying to leach the last of summer’s sweet nectar. Her eyes connected in a flash when a red fox leapt out through a cover of tall wheat after something racing for its life. She sat staring at all this (some might call it beauty, some might call it primitive), not noticing the 251 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE scene at all and twisting and twisting a lock of hair around a pudgy finger, hair that only six months before framed her high cheekbones and her delicate chin and looked as shiny as yellow taffy, now took on the texture of a sandy stone. It was a week today since her last bath. Not that her father much noticed. He didn’t notice much of anything these days, not without the help of Meg’s mother. In a time when and in a place where neighbors turned their attention away about how to best raise a child, Meg—with all her adolescent sensibilities, all her wistful childish ideals, her hungry hazel eyes and time passing with a slow and madding pace—now owned a direct link to her father, Pa, as she called him. This direct link she used anytime of the day, on any day at any hour and with the persistence of a gerbil on a spinning wheel. She kept up her voracious attack on him about the how’s and the why’s of her mother’s sudden passing. Her strained voice, her tears made her Pa shrink. And because he could barely stand to look at her face, a face resembling every nuance of his late wife’s, he went sullen inside and blocked every effort to hear or understand her. Because understanding might mean his own undoing. Her quest for knowledge began by waking him from naps while he slept on their beaten down couch. Tugging on his arm proved a volatile and unfruitful undertaking. Meg learned this fact with an exclamation point after he shook her by the shoulders and yelled at her that “Questions should be written down and asked later… if at all! If they’re still important!” 252 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE But her attempts to find answers didn’t stop there. She learned fast not to attack him the moment he arrived home from work. He stormed around, snarling, his back turned to her and snatched his first beer of the evening. Upon slamming the refrigerator door he whirled around, letting his left hand sail freely out in a roundabout manner, with an open-palm, that clipped her across the nose. Connecting so suddenly with his large, rough hand that, when she began to bleed, she didn’t realize it at first. With her head thrust to the side, she barely grasped what had happened. She only recognized something was off when his eyes widened, when his chin quivered, when the first few droplets of blood pooled in-between her feet. Pa ran to the sink for a dish rag and, speeding back, placed the rag above her lip. Only at that point did his jab send forth its full weight. With eyes wide as fifty-cent pieces, she struggled not to cry, she struggled to keep tears from welling up and she struggled to forgive the incident as a mishap, although she wasn’t sure. She struggled to understand why he didn’t apologize and then she struggled at how he seemed to forget about cracking her in the nose entirely. But, then again, Pa forgot most things more easily than she did. He refused to look at her bruised face because to acknowledge the injury meant remembering that he struck her and Pa was getting good at forgetting things, like, that her mother ever existed or what her mother might’ve done in the same situation or that she needed a new pair of gloves for Church or to go to Church 253 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE at all during the “days of bruises,” bruising that contrasted vividly against paler skin across the bridge of her nose, making her appear as if she were donning a blue mask. And because of her new blue mask, she took to imagining herself as a super hero and then took to calling herself, The Blue Bandit. She wore swimming goggles and a moth-eaten towel the color of a Robin’s egg tied to her neck and zoomed through the house missing chairs in the way, missing her Pa’s feet resting on the footstool, swishing dangerously close to the hair on his head. She zoomed out the door, lifting off the ground as she leapt from the porch, puttering sounds through her lips like a jet engine and screaming for her mother. And Meg ran. Circling their cabin in dizzying repetitions, she called to her mother, saying how she was a super-hero now and for her mother to call her The Blue Bandit. “Come back, Ma! Come back! I’m the Blue Bandit. Can you see me, Ma?” She ran to the edge of Whisker Ridge where she bolted to a stiff stop, jettisoning out her arms pretending to fly off the edge of the world and down, down inches over the small snaking river, the water flowing through a jag of brown broken tree trunks, tripping over monolithic gray boulders bigger than a school bus, bigger than Pa, big enough to crush him. The edge of Whisker Ridge where she pretended to soar off the cliff face and down from their hilltop existence to the town where people lived, where they talked and laughed and smiled, where they shopped and ate and played in the small gated schoolyard safe from 254 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE evil things, where they read books on park benches and listened to pink transistor radios on beach blankets in the sun by the fly-soaked lake on hot sunny days, where the world smelled like roasting hotdogs and her mother kissed her forehead and lips, fluttered butterfly kisses on her eyelashes, stroked her cheeks and where mother kissed Pa and he sashayed her in a polka under the Noble Fir right next to the water’s edge, where the place oozed out love and joy—all the things they used to do during their time as a family before mother died. The only letup from the never-ending clawing inside her belly… Was she hungry? Was she angry? …the only letup was her time out alone on the ridge or at the edge of the forest because out there her imagination took over and she became the girl she used to be—the one with a mother. The ridge held dreams and the forest, secrets. She was tired of dreaming. She needed to find something—an answer to why. *** The woods spoke and Meg listened. Of course, Meg never told a soul this. It was her secret. They called to her. In bed, at night before sleeping the woods conversed with her. Telling her they needed visitors, they were lonely and wanted a fresh face to gaze upon. They spoke not in words but in their own lullaby, as they swayed their windy hips and arms in a hula dance and their swingy plunky song with words rhyming and chiming, beckoning her to come anytime, morning, noon or night. 255 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE The woods conducted a chorus of accomplices. Tambourine crickets, opera owls, bongo frogs, castanet beetles—entire string, percussion and reed sections. The music of the woods rocked her to sleep, like the music she listened to on her radio—the crackling between stations at the loss of the signal. The swell of music and the thunder of bass drums all through a tinny speaker giving the noise a surreal flavor, something distinct and mystical. The woods understood Meg’s sadness and let her know that they existed for her alone. She talked to the woods and they listened to her. They comforted her when she cried showing her their big woolly branches that would hide her if she would only come to them. And they asked, begging her to let them give her comfort and to soothe her sorrow. Especially on windy days, they whipped their arms, pulling at her, signaling her over to them. They appeared bigger than life when she walked to the edge. The woods towered over her in stark contrast to the grassy field that flooded her and Pa’s land where their house sat and the house itself, a matchbox next to the woods. They towered high above the land, an enormous closed door just waiting for her to unlock so she might enter. Still, though, Meg obeyed the rules her mother had laid out for her—to never go into the forest. Remembering the dangers implied by her mother—animals not spoken of in words but eluded to in her mother’s dire facial expressions, with her eyes widening and in her voice becoming serious and deeper, more stern. 256 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Her mother insisted that Meg mind this one rule, if no other. Now, with her mother gone, she didn’t believe the rule still applied. *** Small fat toes, caked with a week’s worth of grit, wriggled, syncopated with the sound of the goldfinch’s warble—a street musician, a jazz flutist, hat upside-down collecting silver and gold from passersby—while the goldfinch nibbled at a crust of bread tossed by Meg. Runted, adolescent bones and hairless skin gave away her true age. The nose patently a child’s nose, small and sloping, skin smooth as a block of butter, Meg still felt older than the way people treated her. If you believed what people said about things, Meg didn’t. Asking questions first, making up her mind second about everything— certainly about the alleged danger of the woods—the only person who ever Meg believed was gone. A lesser fuchsia was growing outside her window next to the grandfather of all fuchsia’s, one that clung to the side of the small cabin, toppling over the roofline and growing along the splintery shingles like ground cover up there. In fact, this plant grew so close to the house that its trunk buckled the ground beneath the dark first stretch of baseline timber. Each timber built upon the next, alternating between white chinking and coffee brown beams until the walls reached a short six feet in height. Each timber looked to be two hundred years old but had already stood up to the gale-force winds, roof-high snow and searing dry heat of the ragged summers known 257 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE around Whisker Ridge—with a bad land attitude, the spot where their cabin sat, only allowed the strongest of people any chance of survival. The hot pink fuchsia with a sapphire blue nipple dripped in front of Meg’s window making the scene look like a framed, color photograph. When the picture moved Meg pretended she was watching someone else’s television set, maybe The Wild Wild World of Animals, a TV show she’d seen once long ago at her uncle’s, at her mother’s brother’s house. Depleted from months of neglect, a worn silken sock her mother turned into a thistle feeder, served a single goldfinch its final helping of tiny blacks seeds, seeds turning to dust from exposure to the elements. The finch, bright as the morning sun singing a cheery song during its meal, hopped along the silk casing with the ease of an ice skater. When another yellow bird landed next to it, the first flitted off, probably due to some instinctual understanding of allocation and distribution of resources letting the next get a go at the scraps remaining. Their food source would dwindle long before summer’s end. Meg worried. She had no money to replace the seeds mother used to buy at the feed store. She was only eleven and her father never slipped her a penny! The way mother did before she died. “You save this or spend it. Wisdom loves a wealthy man but it’s your choice, Miss Meg.” Her mother’s words landed softly each time she handed over some of the warm coins she held in her palm. Meg’s smile turned sour when she remembered spending the remnants from her glass piggy bank. 258 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Dull on the inside, a hint of someone’s charcoal barbecue sent Meg’s stomach rumbling. The peanut butter toast she fixed that morning had worn thin and needed replenishing. A can of tomato soup and a sleeve of soda crackers was all Meg remembered seeing in their cupboards. Bouncing to the edge of her twin bed, she got sidetracked by the creaking and began to jump up and down— trampolining on top of the mattress, landing cross-legged on her behind, then straightening her legs, tightening them in support of the new position, knees bent for balance, springing higher each time, with her muscles bulging out from the effort under her cut-off denim shorts so ragged the fringe appeared like cotton balls instead of stringy thread. Her polka-dot chambray blouse billowed and settled when she stopped and felt damp from the exercise. Meg bounded off the bed, skipped to the door, opened it and began singing a single refrain to Sweet Caroline, “Sweet Caroline, good times never seemed so good,” over and over, in turn irritating her father. “Stop!” Was all he needed to say, halting Meg’s croon, halting her skipping through the house, and walking with as much speed as she walked with to the counter where she nearly halted her lunch when she dropped the can of soup onto the wooden floor, denting the rim. “Damn, girl!” Pa didn’t look up from his newspaper but she saw his red billow up from under his shirt to his neck and get lost somewhere under the tangle of his flax hair. The red of his skin made the hair look more blonde than its usual sand coloring. 259 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Reaching down to retrieve the soup can, using both her small hands and mustering all the focus she could muster, Meg picked the can up and replaced it onto the butcher block counter near a design of shapes—rings from the sweat of her father’s beer bottles, the outline from an oily fork, a rectangle of sticky paper from the cereal box, and near a plate filled with scraps containing stale toast and smears of peanut butter from earlier that morning. Opening the soup can made Meg’s arm muscles burn in pain from twisting and twisting the metal can opener. Where it once slid with grace and ease around the lip of a can, it now stalled and stuck against a thin ridge along its blade more often than it spun. Rust filled the gears exacerbating the effort to move around the muck of the blade. She wanted to ask her father for help but after he barked at her, she reevaluated asking him anything. He probably had another bad day at work. Well, she had another bad day at school! And it was continuing after school and into the evening. He got home late again, smelling of the bar—the cigarette smoke, the liquor, a hint of some woman’s sickening perfume. It had only been eight months since her mother had died. Her father carrying on like this needed to stop. The final click told Meg the soup can was opened. The disk dislodged now looked like a round raft floating on the barn red consommé and it was taking on soup threatening to sink if she didn’t fish it out. “Dang thing.” She dipped her fingers knuckle-deep into the contents 260 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE within the can. When she snagged the disk between her index and middle finger, she pulled out the metal and let the soup drip onto the counter adding more artwork where she placed the disk. Meg transferred the soup into a pot and struck a match to light the gas stove. The burner coughed out a ring of flames that flew out into the air about a foot long and then syphoned back down circling the coil. When the initial flame burst from the burner, Meg’s body spasmed and she pulled back to a safe distance. “Dang thing!” She repeated, this time to the stove. “Shouldn’t curse, Meg.” His voice carried low and sleepy from the couch. “Dang thing nearly burnt my face.” “Still— shouldn’t curse.” Meg clicked her tongue against her front teeth and rolled her eyes. He shouldn’t be carryin’ on like a wet dog neither but there he is doin’ so anyhow. “Sorry Pa.” The hot bisque in the saucepan formed pea-sized pockets of air that bubbled up from the scalding bottom finally exploding to the top. Bubbles formed and exploded exponentially now, the flame licking a circle around the edge of the pan’s bottom, forming a thin skin against the inside of the pot. Bubbles puffed out a rapid beat. Meg placed her hand near the metal of the saucepan close to the bottom, near the burner. Maybe Pa would comfort her if she hurt herself, accidentally. 261 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Her hand there was so close the heat could melt plastic. She paused and looked at her father. He didn’t give one hoot about her. As she turned back toward the stove her hand glanced the metal, it felt like dry ice and seemed to draw her hand closer like getting snagged by a jumping cactus. Meg jerked. The slightest nick burned her knuckle before pulling it away. She placed her knuckle in her mouth to soothe the small burn and then flicked off the flame. *** Pa drank more now because when he drank he forgot. Because of this, Meg learned that her mother’s death was not a stagnant occurrence but had a constant flow and evolution to it—a living thing, a slithering one-celled organism that did not stop when they placed her withered body into the ground. No. Her death was an event that continued to metastasize daily evidenced by her Pa’s fits of drunken crying, evidenced by Meg hiding from him out on a ledge just over the lip of Whisker Ridge, by running (cape and all) to her room and scrambling beneath the bed’s box spring or burrowing deep in the closet behind the hill of dirty laundry. Not exactly noble or worthy hiding places for a super hero. Pa simply burst through the door as he raged, dragged her by the foot out from under the bed or by the hair out of the closet. The acrid smell of his stale breath filling her with terror, screaming at her about things he refused to explain to her, “Shut up about her!” He’d scream and then he’d beat her butt until she wept, until she couldn’t breathe from weeping so hard. 262 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE And she learned to notice the signs of his temper begin to bubble out of control—like discreet movements meant to trick, sleight of hand. She watched for his giveaways when she sensed she’d pushed him too far— fingering his waistband, the first sign, sitting stiff, arching his gaunt shoulders together like an ostrich attempting to fly—a futile and pathetic gesture. When he slipped a thumb between his dirty denims and leather belt then fiddled at the buckle became the beating that sent her into her room and ended with her plunging headfirst into her bed, nearly bashing it on the wall. She counted—five, six, seven, eight, nine cracks with his bare, open hand coming down onto the skin of her thighs. Burying her face in a pillow the wailing, “Please Pa. Please,” between each sob, sobbing that went on long after the attack. She wished she could recognize, in a look, his moods changing sooner. If she could then she could stop whatever she was doing that bothered him. But, it was useless to examine his square jaw or his black eyes for clues. He worked, many years, he said, before having a family, on stilling his face, a face, he boasted that won him lots of money. But if you believed that, then you’d believe anything. They weren’t a family of means. They had no money. Nor could Meg ever remember a time of plenty. She only saw the worming scar from an old bar fight trail under his chin, run up to just under his red earlobe. She only saw the flat wide nose with a single bump that 263 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE angled down where once it might’ve grown straight or even upturned. She only noticed his thin lined neck where his hair met his shoulders, the hair he left growing wild and let go oily, hair that resembled hers more than she wanted. To Meg, her Pa’s face didn’t look like it came from money—smooth or gallant as money brings to a look. So, Meg stopped trying to read her father’s face, a face resembling hers more now after she lost most of her baby fat since the springtime, since the funeral. Yes. It sickened her that she had begun to look like Pa. *** Kneeling on her bed, facing the black window for a trace reflection, using an old portrait of her mother—a tarnished photo with a white crimped frame—Meg played with the makeup her mother left behind, trying to draw it just like she had it in the picture. She wobbled on a line of paint, attempting to draw the charcoal around each eye. She swiped a thick coating of mascara onto her lashes. She made bold strokes on her lids using her mother’s favorite color, an umber powder that looked like crushed mica. Meg used a coral gloss that accentuated her pouty lips. She pulled up her hair in a twist, like her mother’s and placed bobby pins along one side and down the other, just like her mother had done for her only a year before when they went to Church for Christmas. The pins didn’t feel as tight after she finished. They felt loose and her hair began to unfurl almost when she took her hands away. 264 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE “Dang hair.” Chastising herself, she dug around for her mother’s brush and pulled out sticking knots, pulling out some of her hair in the process. “Ow! Dang.” But she continued to drag the brush in strokes down each length of snaggles and as she continued she began to hum the song her mother sang to her when she brushed Meg’s hair… She combed her hair But once a year, Risseldy, rosseldy, Mow, mow, mow, With every rake She shed a tear, Risseldy, Rosseldy, Hey bambassity, Nickety, nackety, Retrical quality, Willowby, wallowby, Mow, mow, mow. And, forgetting her mother wasn’t there, Meg laughed at the lyrics continuing to comb out her hair to the beat of the song. Within seconds however her laughter went sour when she sensed something off. Looking through the mirror at the door, she saw the shadows moving just between the crack and the floor. Was she smelling yeast and hops? Was the smell somehow engrained in a connection with him now? Could her imagination elicit in her olfactory glands the dank smell of yeast and hops by merely thinking of her father? 265 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Then she heard her Pa shuffling his ragged footsteps just outside her room. The sound reminded her of a pit bull digging for a bone, a bone far too deep to get at and buried just outside of its reach, beyond the confines of its pen. *** Because Pa was the way he was now, tight and meaner, hard and brooding, Meg felt like he and all the world closed a door in order to keep secrets from her. And, when he burst through into her bedroom, the brush fell from her hand, she flipped around, her hair flying out like a square-dance skirt, and time feeling like it was slowing down. She gasped and curled back on the bed. Pa didn’t say anything right then but she noticed something she had never seen in him before, the minutest tic—once then twice and what she assumed an effort to stop, an ever slighter third tic. The dimple formed in his left cheek but then disappeared in blinks. “What the hell!” “Pa, I…” “Shut up.” He didn’t yell. No. He kept his voice quiet making it feel worse to Meg than if he yelled. And then he was upon her. He swept down and stole the makeup from her grasp. Some fell onto the bed, some scattered on to the floor. For a moment, he forgot about her. Instead, he attacked the tubes, the small jars, the brushes by flinging them to the right and then to the left, sending it all into the walls, to the head of her bed and to the floor next to her closet. 266 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE The small ivory plastic compact that was streaked with varying shades of brown making it look like marble, shattered as it slammed against the wood of the closet door making chunks of the caked tan powder crack and crumble out. Meg scurried closer, tighter to the corner and pulled a pillow into her stomach and her legs into her chest holding them so tight that her knees turned red. “This is not yours. Don’t touch her stuff. What right…” He bent down to pick up the pieces he’d strewn around the room, kneeling sometimes and other times squatting, gathering all of it into the stomach, into a pouch he made of his soiled denim work shirt. When he stood, he stumbled back onto one foot but regained his balance. “This is hers.” His voice broke. He coughed, clearing the tears from his throat, “Hers. Do you hear me?” Meg nodded with emphasis. Her eyes remained on him. Her breathing ramped up. She were inside a cage with a wild tiger. A painful expression bent his eyes down when he looked at her, looking so adult like that with makeup on. “Wash yer face.” His head tilted by only a millimeter but she noticed it. A muscle in her neck loosened but she continued to hold her legs close to her chest. He turned his head toward the door but kept up his commands. “Go. If your face isn’t washed, I’ll pummel your ass. You hear?” “Yes, Pa.” The muscle in her neck stiffened again. He walked through the door with one hand on the knob but turned back to look at her one more time and that 267 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE time all the poker playing in the world couldn’t hide the sadness he felt as he looked into the eyes of his daughter who reminded him so much of his wife. *** “But Pa…” Meg’s voice poured like water, this time dragging her father’s name out far too long irritating him more than urging. “No! I said. She’s dead. That’s it. Dead. Now shut up about ‘er.” Pa’s words stung like hot pokers on her skin, in her eyes as she remembered their morning tussle. *** Up on Whisker Ridge, Meg sat and adjusted her cape as she gazed out and squinted at the sky. Moisture welledup in her eyes from the glare of the vibrant sun and her hand came up to protect her. Rays, white titanium in their intensity, penciled out short morning shadows behind rocks and trees and shrubs and even sketched contrasts within waves of the tall grass, making the stalks pirouette in a ballet with the wind—shadows shortening and disappearing under the imminent noon sun. But Meg’s questions would not melt with the narrowing shadows. And although she dug, she could not unearth the answers to questions about her mother, not from Pa anyway. Way up there on the Mountain Goat trail, spinning from a sudden wave of vertigo brought on by an impatient gust of wind, one that warned of another dying season, through the stabbing sadness, Meg pressed her fingers inches into the dirt in an attempt to hang on to something, to anything solid, anything kindred and she leaned against 268 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE the trunk of the hard oak and closed her eyes until the woozy sensation dissipated. Hungry always, she figured she could go inside to make a peanut butter and jelly sandwich and come back out on the ridge to eat it. When she let go of the earth, she patted her hands together. A crust of filth caked each of her nails, trimming a half moon outline grit under them and lined each cuticle. But as she scraped at her nails, she gazed over toward the edge of the woods and became hopeful. It filled her like bread to a starving dog. See, something Meg knew for sure was one fact about the fields of Whisker Ridge—how all those wild kittens (it seemed like seven every year) were enchanted, how they arrived early each hot summer, braved the changing seasons up until the first hard frost then disappeared forever seeking shelter within the depths of Fennel Forest. A rare grin widened Meg’s mouth and she breathed in and held it as she remembered their antics, tumbling and clawing, hissing and bounding about as each kitten— a dainty spirited calico that leapt forth one day from the gully, the yellow tabby with sad eyes, a black and white tuxedo looking slick like Fred Astaire, a dark tortoise shell that reminded Meg of a sloppy jam, a snowy white mottled with copper with a bright pink nose so iridescent she didn’t seem real, the Russian blue who loved to hang out by the Nootka rose bramble and, finally, a shy Siamese who liked to hear himself talk. Each kitten leapfrogged between one another in rolls and fits, spurts and leaps, squeals and yowls as they tumbled behind their 269 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE sedate momma cat as she tried to teach them how to catch field mice and avoid toxic lizards and grasshoppers, while she instructed how to properly clean and ear and lick each other’s faces, showing how to run for cover at the site of a turkey vulture and how to bask in the warmth of the noon sun with slivers of dry grass clinging to their short needle whiskers. And even as Meg saw these scenes play out in her mind, the horror of what happened after they disappeared—after that summer’s batch left for good— tortured Meg. They simply never came back and were always replaced by a new set of kittens. The answer to why these kittens never returned paralyzed Meg. Meg tried her hardest to keep upbeat thoughts about the kittens, fashioning stories, stories she relayed to Pa of the kittens finding homes beneath the forest understory. A cat haven where they all sat around a leveled tree trunk on mossy stumps and played card games, drank teacups filled with the most buttery cream and nibbled on mouse tails. No wait. Not mouse tails. Meg altered her imagination to suit a more peaceful cat lifestyle. She rewrote the scene in her mind and whispered her thoughts out there in the field to all the souls of those who might be listening, "Where the kittens nibbled on sweet peas" and as she dropped her hand onto the ground next to her leg, it landed on a tight lacy, yellow flower. "And dandelions!" Meg bellowed. She smiled because she knew these golden-laced flowers were not really weeds but vegetables. 270 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE She made up another scene in her head so that she might shoo out visions of wolves, grizzlies, and raptors living near the woods who preyed on small animals. That's what Pa told her once and it irked her. Meg remembered hating him for the information and, then, hating herself again for hating her father again. "Anyway, kittens barely make a decent meal." Mother had said, recovering for Pa’s horrid suggestion. "Why not just leave the tiny things be, Russell?" Her mother’s pretty voice chimed and she winked at Meg. And, it was only at this moment that Meg hoped— maybe her mother too had disappeared, gone to live within a forest just like the one encircling Whisker Ridge. But her smile faded and her hope felt like the dandelion gone to seed, one deliquescing after a fairywish--open-handed, a kiss blown, hopeful then forgotten. Meg made a silent prayer for so many of the kittens she'd chased, played with over the last seven years living in Whisker Ridge. Made a prayer for her mother, refusing to believe she was gone forever. Made a prayer to stop hating Pa. But Pa flat refused to give her information about her mother’s passing. She wanted him—no, she needed him to explain how her mother died. After a half-year, Meg burned for closure. She hated hating Pa. Wasn’t right to hate your own kin. But right then, right there sitting on the lip of the rock face overlooking the vacant expanse below, again Meg felt hatred gnawing at her belly. She didn’t know what to think anymore. Meg made a second prayer to stop hating her father. 271 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE She accidentally wiped a smudge of fresh earth from her palm across her brow and got up, brushed off the seat of her grimy denim coveralls, untangled a twisted strand of bone-colored hair sticking to a thin layer of perspiration on the side of her face, and frowned when she looked back at the rickety cabin her father built. Where he was determined to hide himself forever. Meg lowered her arms. She untied the knot from her super hero cape and pinched the ends of the towel between her frail fingers. Meg turned toward Fennel Forest again. Something beckoned to her. The wind whipped up just then and seemed to whisper, a voice that, as she listened closely, began to form words. Come, it said. Come to me. I’m your friend. We need each other. She opened her fingers and dropped the cape around her feet. It caused a waft of dusty earth to rise up into a sudden wind that blew the wafting cloud off the edge of the cliff, the dirt cascading in a opalescent smoke grabbing glittering sand on its way down, down, down that waffled and toppled into itself lower still until another breeze caught hold, shifting and shattering the pearl smoke once more before falling so far down there that it disappeared entirely. Meg’s breath caught at the back of her throat and she coughed. The chalky odor of dirt that hadn’t seen rain in months, choked her. She cleared her throat and viewed the cape lying at her boots. It looked ordinary now. A regular old faded blue towel, the kind with tiny loops that were snagged, 272 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE strings pulled out like ripcords, with HIS embroidered across each end. Just a stupid regular old towel. She kicked the thing away from her foot and it nearly slipped off the ridge. She gasped thinking about what kind of trouble she would get into with Pa if she lost one of their few towels. She squinted down in to the gully and then she redirected her eyes over to the forest. She craned her head backwards toward the cabin to see if her Pa was watching. He wasn’t. Why would he be watching her? He could give a flying leap about her. And without looking at the cape, without looking into the gully and continuing to stare at the cabin, a lookout for Pa, with the toe of her boot she nudged the towel closer to the edge. She nudged it again. It rolled in on itself picking up speed until the direction of it curled over the edge of the cliff. But then it stopped. Hooked on a snag of a small root, the towel stuck there, seeming to hold on for its life. Meg didn’t care—the stupid old thing. She shuffled closer to the edge of the rock face, looked back toward the cabin again and, once more, she nudged the soft tube the towel had become. It slipped off slowly and unraveled from the weight of gravity, wafting like a green maple leaf, fluttering and sailing down, folding in and opening, hitting the steep wall and rolling into a tube again, rolling and rolling, until it became snagged on a sharp dagger jutting out of the cliff-face, onto what looked like a broken off baseball bat of a dead 273 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE root. Meg gasped to think how the thing appeared like a flag, one Pa might notice if he ever emerged from the grotto of their home. Meg knew that if her Pa ever saw that towel there, she’d be in for it. She turned back to see if he might come out. But after a few moments without him showing she knew she was safe. And as if God himself understood her fear, he sent a brisk wind that lifted the towel off its hook and cast it deeper into the gulch in a sail once again, soaring and soaring, finally falling somewhere so far down, somewhere hidden within a prolapsed mangle of branches, earth and rock, the towel found a grave of its own, finally disappearing from view. *** With every muscle aching and trying to keep the bottom from scraping, making any sound against the floor, she heaved open the chunky hand-hewn door, her child’s frame lifting it with all her might. Her face tight and bright as a plum, her lungs aching from refusing to breathe for fear, if she made the slightest noise, she might wake her father. There he laid there—a cranky old mutt, paws twitching, growling out every wheezy lungful. Lung air that leaked out yeast and hops from the beer he drank to put himself to sleep. He didn't look young like he used to, like when their small family of three lived in Ash Fork where Meg was born. Life in Whisker Ridge had a way of cutting people down, bringing a mask of age even to the youngest faces. People often mistook Meg for a freshman in high school. She sort of liked their error but understood how it might 274 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE occurred in their hilltop hamlet. A place so remote that, when folks traveled, some preferred travelling from the base of Garret Gulch on foot or by mule forgoing their cars because the ragged terrain chopped at underbellies of their vehicles. Meg snuck around her father. Making sure to avoid each loose plank on the floor. She crisscrossed and tip-toed as far from his head as possible. And avoiding him (as best she could) in her tiretreaded, dusty hiking boots, over bare wooden slats that looked as though they hadn't been nailed down. The musty odor leaching from greying chink so old it crumbled into talc between some of the logs in the walls and with upholstery so worn it looked shiny from the skin from Pa’s face. As she crept past him, she noticed her father's calloused bare foot, mostly his toes. Each toenail had grown grotesquely long. Many were chipped or cracked and one, his right big toe had a chunk out of it, about oneeighth of an inch, curved into a crescent that looked as though a mouse had nibbled out a bite. His foot hung as if it were broken, slung off the arm of the couch like that, at an odd angle. They were trimmed around the sock-line in a crust of dirt and sawdust from the mill. Meg felt her eyes narrow and her lip raise. Moving past him still, she sucked in a silent pocket of air, trying to lighten her step as she made her way around. "You just gettin’ home?" His voice smacked of a nightmare passing. It was sudden and full of fight. Meg 275 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE jolted to a stop feeling her hands go cold and sweat cover her palms. She let out her breath and spoke in a whisper. "Sorry, Pa. Didn't mean to wake you." "Answer me." He tried opening his eyes but one stuck closed. It was all Meg could do not to laugh. His large hands helped when they came up to cover his face, hers to cover her mouth. He rubbed the slow eye harder and continued his inquisition. "You just gettin' home?" "Yeah. Yes." She recovered so he couldn’t yell at her about how to say yes. "You sure do daydream a bunch. Whatcha think about out there?" "Nuthin' Pa. Just stuff." "Stuff, huh?" He pushed up and swung his legs to the floor but cracked his ankle hard against the wooden footstool, the one he used while reading his books. While reading to Meg stories about whales and war and westerns. How her dad loved westerns. How she longed to be a writer too. "Ca-ristmas!" He barked and rubbed the bruised knot forming fast. Meg's body stiffened to attention. "Ever daydream about cleanin' up yer room or learnin' to cook?" Meg sidled closer to her door. She knew what was coming, understood his tone and really didn't want to deal with Pa. She certainly didn’t want to hear about all the disappointing things he felt about her. She wanted to be alone as much as he wanted her mother back, as much as they both did. 276 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Neither were going to get their wish. Not this evening. "Come here." He commanded. "We need to talk." Meg's body loosened. The blood in her head pooled to the soles of her feet and anchored her where she was. Fear locked her to that spot on the floor and she closed her eyes knowing what was coming—the tirade of demands to pick up the house, to do her homework, to get out of his sight. But not before the inevitable swats to her rear or a mean smack across the face that, lately, he seemed to take pleasure in. *** At eleven, Med had already seen too much grief and didn't feel like more right now. She needed a break, a respite, she'd once heard it called by one of the mourners at mother's funeral service. "You need a respite from all this heartbreak, Russell.” She’d said. “One man shouldn't have to endure the amount of pain you've had to bear." The old woman patted Pa on the shoulder and walked away as the processional line moved on, some of the folks crying, some shaking their heads, most trying not to make eye contact with Meg. It's always the kids who suffer--in divorces and when parents die. Always the kids. After his punishments, she only heard the pitch of his commands and insults and fought a fierce fight to keep from crying in front of him. She hated crying in front of him and hadn’t not even at the funeral. 277 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE He had no idea how to raise a child. That was mother's expertise. Her swollen eyes had long since dried but she remembered their talk. It began with a snap of Pa's middle finger onto the thin skin of her forehead. His fingerprints still burned into her arm. And she tested with her tongue the small split across her lip that plumped and oozed, soothing it and measuring its length. She kneeled on her bed, looking into the mirror from across the room angling her head into its reflection to see if anyone might notice the injury. Then Meg got up and went to the mirror. After taking in the swollen redness of her cheek, the bloody lip and knot on her forehead, she turned away. Tears burned in pain of the assault, the cruel comments he slurred out at her bubbled up to the top of her throat. Trying to keep from sobbing, she dived into the bed and buried her head in her pillow. Her tears and muffled wailing stopped instantly. Some boiling sense of courage built in her and she felt more determined than ever. She’d show him. Opening the rusted lock on the cabin's chunky timber door made escape impossible without stirring Pa, even while in another room, as he slept in bed. Meg knelt under the window and unhooked the latch. She patted the window with her flat palms, testing the seal of the window with the sill. It shifted up and remained crack. She became animated and jumped up to stand on her bed her feet sinking deep into the mattress with each step. 278 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE She gripped the lower part of the window frame and pulled up. It slid open, too easily. The night air flowed in cooling her cheeks and soothing her eyes. She closed her eyes. Nature’s aroma cascaded in and around filling her room. Nature’s sounds sang to her heart, her soul and with everything she felt while outside, she felt then and there. The corner of her lips arched up and a gentle countenance replaced the strain only seconds before had her in its grip. But she wouldn’t let the smile grow too wide. Still, she allowed the moment into her room, letting it caress her tender lip. *** Scampering away from the cabin made excitement bloom in her chest. She wanted to laugh but she was also scared. She tripped and saw her father’s light blink on. She froze in place and stopped breathing. Then light in the bathroom blinked on. Meg’s eyes shifted and remained glued to the bathroom window. Her room was between her father’s and the bathroom. After the bathroom window blinked off, Meg dragged in another gulp of air and held it. She waited, her eyes wide, her body paralyzed waiting for her bedroom light to switch on. If he found her room empty, he might beat her to death. How could he ever understand her longing? It wasn't a question. Not really. It was a statement that burrowed straight to her father's sensibilities, his practicalities. His own longings. His own fears. 279 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE But, Pa's days went like this: Ride Minnie all the way down to the mill, rip a mile of trees through the saw, an hour-long mule ride back home, take a two-hour nap, get up, eat, then sleep and repeat. After his light switched off, Meg defied her jailer. She was free. Free to leave behind her abuser. To hide in the forest. To find whatever answers lie in the way of the wild, wild woods. Tonight she would see beyond the wall of trees that hid--she just knew--a myriad of secrets and surprises. She might even find her lost kittens. Hope galloped in her ribs. *** The forest buzzed in night sounds with crickets chirping, tree frogs singing and a thin, almost imperceptible tinkling of air on the tips of pine needles, sounding like a million spiders tap-dancing the 8-legged tango, like rain pattering on a window pane--a most delicate percussion. The scent of pine carved a wedge between night and day in sharp tangs and fireplaces burning. Day smelled like God’s kitchen with sheets of grass warming, pots of honey melting and kettles of dew vaporizing. Meg walked with her flashlight, the shimmering beam spreading into a Y and shattering into darkness as she trudged closer to the tree line. The light flicked once making Meg shake it then give it a bump with the heel of her hand. Doing the trick, the light reestablished a steady glow. Pa warned her never to go into the woods without him and, if she did go? To always take twine to tie onto 280 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE sturdy shrubs along the path so she could find her way out. Maybe that's why the wild cats never returned. They didn't have twine or the thumbs with which to tie. Maybe her mother had lost her own twine. Maybe mother wasn't really dead. Maybe she just got lost somewhere. Meg held all the maybe’s in her heart as she wiped an itch from her nose, a twitch from her chin, the burn away from her eyes. Hope soared in her chest, hope she might find a cluster of all her many lost kittens just waiting for her to come for them, with twine in hand leading them back, back home with Meg. Hope she'd one day see her mother again. Stocked with soda crackers, the twine and her canteen, the pack strapped to her back felt heavier now than when she climbed from her room and, as she approached a long statue of evergreens, a chill ran down her spine. The row of trees looked like an enormous zigzag of loden cut-out dolls holding each other's feathery hands. She trembled at the way they peered at her there in the dark, like guards of a fortress eyeing her and protecting the dense arboreal portcullis from unwanted visitors like her. Or, perhaps they were protecting visitors from what lurked within the woods. And, what lurked within? She'd heard all the tales of dryads, Big Foot and the Whispering Pines that lured little girls like her into an oblivion never to be seen or heard from again. 281 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE "No!" Meg shook her thoughts away. Hair tangled and whipping, she wouldn't allow one negative rumor to deter her right now. "Stop this nonsense!" She shifted the backpack down onto a slippery spot of dewy grass, sighed and chastised herself for conjuring such hideous fantasies. She eyed a few shrubs that sat under the tree guards then pulled out the spool of thin rope and twisted some around her pudgy finger like her mother did when she once showed Meg how to tie a ribbon tail onto a kite. She fumbled with a fern’s frond as it slipped between her fingers playing cat and mouse with her. The twine felt slack and knot shimmied off at first but when she rolled the loop lower down the leaf’s shaft it held and she accepted the knot as good enough. "It will suffice." She murmured, her hands pressed in fists on her hips, mimicking her mother, her mother’s word and not really understanding what suffice meant at all. For a toy's tail, one with nothing pulling against its knot, suffice was all anyone would ever need but for a knot that would help you find your way in and out of a puzzle of trees--a knot, a good one, meant either survival or death. Meg lowered her hands and combed a straggle of hair from her eyes. She scooted her right foot a smidge closer to the line of tree trunks. Then she dragged her left foot up to meet her right. She took a deep breath in, waited for a sec and duplicated her action by stepping closer yet again. The bank of trees hadn’t attacked her. They hadn’t done anything, said a word to dissuade her. 282 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Then, finally, after three repetitions—one foot after the next—Meg vanished behind that first array of dark trees. CHAPTER TWO The crunch of decaying leaves and broken twigs under her shoes distorted a strange and newer sound. Yet as she walked closer, the new sound overtook the crunching under her soles and halted her. Upon hearing the noise, like strains from one hundred violin strings, she stopped fast in order to listen closer. And as fast as she stopped, her breathing stopped. Then, the strain of odd music stopped too. Odd noises for a forest, anyway. She waited a handful of heartbeats when she decided to walk again. And, as if toying with Meg, the noise started up again upon her very first step. When again she heard its music, as before, she stopped only to hear the sound stop too. Meg squinted. "I hear you, darn it!" She yelled out a distant dare. "You cain't scare me!” Her voice pitched up in the lie. “I know yer foolin'!" She looked around and placed both hands onto her hips in shaky bravura. Meg then proceeded with a single, terribly, terribly slow lift of the knee forward hoping to trick the sound into beginning again. And, stopping mid-step with her leg still slung in the air, the odd sound bought into her trick. The violins soared up to her ears in a symphony so loud she couldn't mistake identifying the actual noise. Not ever. 283 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE The violins were not violins at all. They were the sound of hundreds of kittens mewing in unison! Meg's eyes widened. Her chinned dropped but not her knee and she instinctively called out, "Kitty! Here kitty, kitty, kitty!" All at once the forest went deathly silent. Only then did Meg lower her knee. She pulled in a deep breath of air and waited, watching, listening, spinning in one slow circle around and around, her twine wrapping around her ankles with each turn. Then she spun again in the same direction. Then once more and as she turned she looked up into the treetops trying to spot even one iota of movement. When she did, a huge set of eyes, face-forward glowed at Meg. A chill snaked down her back and prickled her skin, lifting each hair follicle on edge. "Hoo hoo hooooo!" The glowing eyes blinked. "Oh! Yer just a silly ol' ow-wel." Meg dropped the end of her twine and rubbed her arms. The owl called once more and then must have turned its head because the eyes disappeared. But just as the she figured the bird had turned away from her, she felt a feathery breeze flutter against her left cheek that's how close the owl had flown toward her. Meg gasped and jumped back, tripped and fell on her rear. She looked toward her feet and saw that her way back home, the twine, had tangled up her legs. "You crum, you." She cursed the owl. But it didn't matter because no one, except of course the animals of the forest could hear her. 284 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE As she sat there, she peered deep into the trees which looked as if they had folded their arms across their chests in defiance against this girl, this, this anomaly in their land. Meg thought she noticed one grimace at her. "Kittens!" Her face full of worry and hope if one's face can appear with both, she loosened the twine from around her feet, stood and put her hands on her hips again. Tricksters! Owls and cats, they were. Full of tricks these animals of the woods. She blew out her breath. Looked over one shoulder turning in a semi-circle then looked over the other, her turn following the direction of her head. "I know you're here." She called. "I'll lead you back to safety." Her voice tipped up as she offered the deal to the invisible creatures. But the forest deafened again. All sounds stopped. No chitting bugs. No chirping crickets. No singing frogs. Nothing. She'd once heard this phenomenon called Dead Air. The stillness crept into her mind, into her heart and she felt scared and so alone just then. A complete absence of sound screamed at her to the point her ears thumped. It was only when a gentle breeze coursed through the trees rustling the branches that the hollow void was silenced. Meg’s arms felt heavy. She wanted to give up and go home. She tugged at the twine, the twine she'd, only seconds ago, loosened from her legs but it was at this point she realized that the length wasn't coming from new twine on the spool and instead from twine she'd used to find her way home if she decided to quit, like now, and double back. 285 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE However, it seemed that quitting was no option. She had turned around so many times in one place that she couldn't even remember from which point she'd entered this spot. Was it there? Or was it from over there? And, because of this dark, moonless night, Meg wasn't able to locate the twine's end. As she gazed at the ground, she knew much of the cord now laid on the ground in that smashed pile next to her thick hiking boots and that the end of the cord was still somewhere... CHAPTER THREE When Pa awoke, the stillness hobbled him. He’d not yet come to terms with the loss of his wife or her body no longer lying there next to his in bed. Even though the pastor told him what to expect it still didn't help. “The physical pain, ya know, pastor. I can’t stand it. My gut aches day ‘n night. It’s all I can do to fight back my tears. When will it all end, pastor? When? ’Cause I don’t know how long I can hold up.” Pa leaned back into his chair—a losing boxer into his corner sitting, the wind sucked out of him. “Russell. And here’s the thing. It’s different for everyone.” Pastor Ted leaned forward and placed his elbows on top of his desk, then clasped his hands. “A ballpark idea would be nice.” The rims of Pa's eyes moistened and plumped as he fought the tears, his nose blushed and his chin quivered. “Look, Russ. The experts say it usually takes about a year to a year and a half.” 286 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE Pa let out a sigh. He wasn’t certain but figured he could handle another eight months then Pastor Ted went on. “I don’t want you to think you’ll magically feel great after this time, Russell. That’s not what happens. Sometimes people recover a lot sooner, some a lot longer. It just depends.” “On what?” “Everything. Anything, really. Nothing.” "What kind of answer is that?" Russell flamed quick and slammed a hand on the chair’s wooden arm. “Jesus Christ!” He rolled his eyes understanding his immediate sin. “Sorry Ted.” The Pastor sat back in his chair. He frowned but continued. “This is the deal, Russell. It just takes time.” He checked Russell’s expression for signs of another outburst but this time saw none. “I know that answer is holds one hundred percent zero comfort at this point in time but someday,” and he repeated it for emphasis, “someday, you won’t feel like you want to die yourself.” “Can’t die, Ted. What’d Meg do, both parents dead like that?” “Yeah. Well, don’t even think that way. You just keep coming in here. Come and as often as you need. I’m here. My door’s always open.” Pa shifted in his chair and acted like he wanted to rise, to leave but Pastor Ted stopped him in a half stance. “And, Russ?” “Yep.” “If Church is closed. Call me. Please. That isn’t me just being nice, it’s what I want you to do. What I need you to do. K?” The pastor pulled a business card out of 287 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE the holder on top of the crowd of papers on his desk and handed it to him. Pa looked at it as if inspecting a longawaited dollar bill. Then the pastor repeated. “Anytime.” “Yep.” Pa rose, straightening his back, shook the pastor’s hand and left. That meeting was three months ago when Meg waited for her father on a bench between the sanctuary and the offices and closer yet to the large open window of the church's kitchen. Russell remembered that day back then when back then made his skull ache. Now? Meg had gone missing. He hadn’t minded at first, yesterday, during the day like always. She'd leave and sit in the field for hours. But when she didn’t show up last night and well past midnight, then two and now at three in the morning in its pitch and chill. Now it was he who felt a new kind of pain. An agony seared inside his chest. He felt a new kind of desperation that sliced up his heart. 288 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE THANK YOU FOR READING Susan Wingate’s soulful novel “The Deer Effect” and the excerpt of her Christian fantasy “Way of the Wild Wood!” And, please remember, to leave a review and tell all of your friends about Susan Wingate’s books. As you know ‘word of mouth’ is not only the best way to sell, it’s also the highest compliment you can give. You can sign up for Susan’s occasional email at her website www.susanwingate.com. Simply, click on the page labeled Newsletter and you’ll not only receive great writing tips and information about the publishing industry but you will also get a few freebies too! 289 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE 290 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE 291 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE 292 1 The Deer Effect SUSAN WINGATE 293 1