What good would that do
had become another mantra, and he recognized it was a bad way to
think, a step down the path to acceptance of this place. He didn’t want to go there, no way did
he want to go there, but logic was logic. If the little Gs were comforted by the attentions of the
big G, maybe that was for the best, but when he thought about those girls getting the rectal
thermometer . . . and the lights . . .
“What’s up with you?” Nicky asked. “You look like you bit into a lemon.”
“Nothing. Thinking about Iris.”
“She’s history, man.”
Luke looked at him. “That’s cold.”
Nicky shrugged. “The truth often is. Want to go out and play HORSE?”
“No.”
“Come on. I’ll spot you the
H
and even let you have your ride at the end.”
“I’ll pass.”
“Chicken?” Nicky asked it without rancor.
Luke shook his head. “It would just make me feel bad. I used to play it with my dad.” He
heard that
used to
and hated it.
“Okay, I hear that.” He looked at Luke with an expression Luke could barely stand,
especially coming from Nicky Wilholm. “Listen, man . . .”
“What?”
Nicky sighed. “Just I’ll be out there if you change your mind.”
Luke left the caff and wandered up his corridor—the JUST ANOTHER DAY IN
PARADISE corridor—and then up the next one, which he now thought of as the Ice Machine
Hallway. No sign of Maureen, so he kept going. He passed more motivational posters and more
rooms, nine on each side. All the doors stood open, displaying unmade beds and walls that were
bare of posters. This made them look like what they really were: jail cells for kids. He passed the
elevator annex and kept walking past more rooms. Certain conclusions seemed inescapable.
One was that once upon a time there had been a lot more “guests” in the Institute. Unless those
in charge had been overly optimistic.
Luke eventually came to another lounge, where the janitor named Fred was running a buffer
in big, lackadaisical sweeps. There were snack and drink machines here, but they were empty
and unplugged. There was no playground outside, only a swatch of gravel, more chainlink with
some benches beyond (presumably for staff members who wanted to take their breaks outside),
and the low green admin building seventy yards or so further on. The lair of Mrs. Sigsby, who
had told him he was here to serve.
“What are you doing?” Fred the janitor asked.
“Just walking around,” Luke said. “Seeing the sights.”
“There are no sights. Go back where you came from. Play with the other kids.”
“What if I don’t want to?” That sounded pathetic rather than defiant, and Luke wished he’d
kept his mouth shut.
Fred was wearing a walkie-talkie on one hip and a zap-stick on the other. He touched the
latter. “Go back. Won’t tell you again.”
“Okay. Have a nice day, Fred.”
“Fuck your nice day.” The buffer started up again.
Luke retreated, marveling at how quickly all his unquestioned assumptions about adults—
that they were nice to you if you were nice to them, just for starters—had been blown up. He
tried not to look into all those empty rooms as he passed them. They were spooky. How many
kids had lived in them? What happened to them when they went to Back Half? And where
were they now? Home?
“The fuck they are,” he murmured, and wished his mom was around to hear him use that
word and reprimand him for it. That he didn’t have his father was bad. That he didn’t have his
mother was like a pulled tooth.
When he got to the Ice Machine Hallway, he saw Maureen’s Dandux basket parked outside
Avery’s room. He poked his head in, and she gave him a smile as she smoothed down the
coverlet on the Avester’s bed. “All okay, Luke?”
A stupid question, but he knew she meant it well; just how he knew might have something
or nothing to do with yesterday’s light-show. Maureen’s face looked paler today, the lines
around her mouth deeper. Luke thought, This woman is not okay.
“Sure. How about you?”
“I’m fine.” She was lying. This didn’t feel like a hunch or an insight; it felt like a rock-solid
fact. “Except this one—Avery—wet the bed last night.” She sighed. “He’s not the first and he
won’t be the last. Thankfully it didn’t go through the mattress pad. You take care now, Luke.
Have a fine day.” She was looking directly at him, her eyes hopeful. Except it was what was
behind them that was hopeful. He thought again, They changed me. I don’t know how and I
don’t know how much, but yes, they changed me. Something new has been added. He was very
glad he’d lied about the cards. And very glad they believed his lie. At least for now.
He made as if to leave the doorway, then turned back. “Think I’ll get some more ice. They
slapped me around some yesterday, and my face is sore.”
“You do that, son. You do that.”
Again, that
son
warmed him. Made him want to smile.
He got the bucket that was still in his room, dumped the meltwater into the bathroom basin,
and took it back to the ice machine. Maureen was there, bent over with her bottom against the
cinderblock wall, hands on her shins almost all the way down to her ankles. Luke hurried to her,
but she waved him off. “Just stretching my back. Getting the kinks out.”
Luke opened the door of the ice machine and got the scoop. He couldn’t pass her a note, as
Kalisha had passed one to him, because although he had a laptop, he had no paper and no pen.
Not even a stub of a pencil. Maybe that was good. Notes were dangerous in here.
“Leah Fink, in Burlington,” he murmured as he scooped ice. “Rudolph Davis, in
Montpelier. Both have five stars on Legal Eagle. That’s a consumer website. Can you remember
the names?”
“Leah Fink, Rudolph Davis. Bless you, Luke.”
Luke knew he should leave it at that, but he was curious. He had always been curious. So
instead of going, he pounded at the ice, as if to break it up. It didn’t need any breaking, but it
made a nice loud sound. “Avery said the money you’ve got saved is for a kid. I know it’s not any
of my business—”
“The little Dixon boy’s one of the mind-readers, isn’t he? And he must be a powerful one,
bed-wetter or not. No pink dot on
his
intake.”
“Yeah, he is.” Luke went on stirring with the ice scoop.
“Well, he’s right. It was a church adoption, right after my boy was born. I wanted to keep
him, but pastor and my mother talked me out of it. The dog I married never wanted kids, so it
was just the one I gave away. Do you really care about this, Luke?”
“Yeah.” He did, but talking too long might be a bad idea.
They
might not be able to hear, but
they could watch.
“When I started getting my back pains, it came to me that I had to know what became of
him, and I found out. State says they’re not supposed to tell where the babies go, but the church
keeps adoption records going all the way back to 1950, and I got the computer password. Pastor
keeps it right underneath the keyboard in the parsonage. My boy’s just two towns over from
where I live in Vermont. A senior in high school. He wants to go to college. I found that out,
too. My son wants to go to college. That’s what the money’s for, not to pay off that dirty dog’s
bills.”
She wiped her eyes with her sleeve, a quick and almost furtive gesture.
He closed the ice chest and straightened up. “Take care of your back, Maureen.”
“I will.”
But what if it was cancer? That was what she thought it was, he knew it.
She touched his shoulder as he turned away and leaned close. Her breath was bad. It was a
sick person’s breath. “He doesn’t ever have to know where the money came from, my boy. But
he needs to have it. And Luke? Do what they say, now.
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