The tenth circle, p.10
The Tenth Circle,
p.10
Lauras breathing caught. No.
I picture him with you, and I dont even know what he looks like.
It was a mistake, Daniel-
Mistakes are something that happen by accident. You didnt walk out the door one morning and fall into some guys bed. You thought about it, for a while. You made that choice.
The truth had scorched Daniels throat, and he found himself breathing hard.
I made the choice to end it, too. To come back.
Am I supposed to thank you for that? He flung an arm across his eyes, better to be blind.
Lauras profile was cast in silver. Do youdo you want me to move out?
He had thought about it. There was a part of him that did not want to see her in the bathroom brushing her teeth, or setting the kettle on the stove. It was too ordinary, a mirage of a marriage. But there was another part of him that no longer remembered who he used to be without Laura. In fact, it was because of her that hed become the kind of man he now was. It was like any other dual dynamic that was part and parcel of his art: You couldnt have strength without weakness; you couldnt have light without dark; you couldnt have love without loss. I dont think it would be good for Trixie if you left right now, Daniel said finally.
Laura rolled over to face him. What about you? Would it be good for you?
Daniel stared at her. Laura had been inked onto his life, as indelible as any tattoo. It wouldnt matter if she was physically present or not; he would carry her with him forever. Trixie was proof of that. But hed folded enough loads of laundry during Oprah and Dr. Phil to know how infidelity worked. Betrayal was a stone beneath the mattress of the bed you shared, something you felt digging into you no matter how you shifted position. What was the point of being able to forgive, when deep down, you both had to admit youd never forget?
When Daniel didnt respond to her, Laura rolled onto her back. Do you hate me?
Sometimes.
Sometimes I hate myself, too.
Daniel pretended that he could hear Trixies breathing, even and untroubled, through the bedroom wall. Was it really so bad? The two of us?
Laura shook her head.
Then why did you do it?
For a long time, she did not answer. Daniel assumed shed fallen asleep. But then her voice pricked on the edges of the stars strung outside the window. Because, she said, he reminded me of you.
Trixie knew that at the slightest provocation, she could stand up and walk out of class and head down to the office for refuge without any teacher even blinking. She had been given her fathers cell phone. Call me anytime, he said, and I will be there before you hang up. She had stumbled through an awkward conversation with the school principal, who phoned to tell her that he would certainly do his best to make Bethel High a haven of safety for her. To that end, she was no longer taking psych with Jason; she had an independent study instead in the library. She could write a report on anything. Right now, she was thinking of a topic: Girls Who Would Rather Disappear.
Im sure that Zephyr and your other friends will be happy to see you, her father said. Neither of them mentioned that Zephyr hadnt called, not once, to see how she was doing. Trixie tried to convince herself that was because Zephyr felt guilty, with the fight theyd had and what had happened afterward as a direct result. She didnt explain to her father that she didnt really have any other friends in the ninth grade. Shed been too busy filling her world with Jason to maintain old relationships, or to bother starting new ones.
What if Ive changed my mind? Trixie asked softly.
Her father looked at her. Then Ill take you home. Its that easy, Trix.
She glanced out the car window. It was snowing, a fine fat-flaked dusting that hung in the trees and softened the edges of the landscape. The cold seeped through the stocking cap she wore-who knew her hair had actually kept her so warm? She kept forgetting shed cut it all off in all the smallest ways: when she looked in the mirror and got the shock of her life, when she tried to pull a long nonexistent ponytail out from beneath the collar of her coat. To be honest, she looked horrible-the short cap of hair made her eyes look even bigger and more anxious; the severity of the cut was better suited to a boy-but Trixie liked it. If people were going to stare, she wanted to know it was because she looked different, not because she was different.
The gates of the school came into view through the windshield wipers, the student parking lot to the right. Under the cover of snow, the cars looked like a sea of beached whales. She wondered which one was Jasons. She imagined him inside the building already, where hed been for two whole days longer than her, sowing the seeds of his side of the story that by now, surely, had grown into a thicket.
Her father pulled to the curb. Ill walk you in, he said.
All live wires inside Trixie tripped. Could there be anything that screamed out loser! more than a rape victim who had to be walked into school by her daddy? I can do it myself, she insisted, but when she went to unbuckle her seat belt she found that her mind couldnt make her fingers do the work they needed to.
Suddenly she felt her fathers hands on the fastenings, the harness coming free. If you want to go home, he said gently, thats okay.
Trixie nodded, hating the tears that welled at the base of her throat. I know.
It was stupid to be scared. What could possibly happen inside that school that was any worse than what already had? But you could reason with yourself all day and still have butterflies in your stomach.
When I was growing up in the village, Trixies father said, the place we lived was haunted.
Trixie blinked. She could count on one hand the number of times in her life that her father had talked about growing up in Alaska. There were certain remnants of his childhood that labeled him as different-like the way, if it got too loud, hed have to leave the room, and the obsession he had with conserving water even though they had an endless supply through their home well. Trixie knew this much: Her father had been the only white boy in a native Yupik Eskimo village called Akiak. His mother, who raised him by herself, had taught school there. He had left Alaska when he was eighteen, and he swore hed never go back.
Our house was attached to the school. The last person whod lived in it was the old principal, whod hanged himself from a beam in the kitchen. Everyone knew about it. Sometimes, in the school, the audiovisual equipment would turn on even when it was unplugged. Or the basketballs lying on the floor of the gym would start to bounce by themselves. In our house, drawers would fly open every now and then, and sometimes you could smell aftershave, out of nowhere. Trixies father looked up at her. The Yupiit are afraid of ghosts. Sometimes, in school, Id see kids spit into the air, to check if the ghost was close enough to steal their saliva. Or theyd walk around the building three times so that the ghost couldnt follow them back to their own homes.
He shrugged. The thing isI was the white kid. I talked funny and I looked funny and I got picked on for that on a daily basis. I was terrified of that ghost just like they were, but I never let anyone know it. That way, I knew they might call me a lot of awful namesbut one of them wasnt coward.
Jasons not a ghost, Trixie said quietly.
Her father tugged her hat down over her ears. His eyes were so dark she could see herself shining in them. Well, then, he said, I guess youve got nothing to be afraid of.
Daniel nearly ran after Trixie as she navigated the slippery sidewalk up to the front of the school. What if he was wrong about this? What if Janice and the doctors and everyone else didnt know how cruel teenagers could be? What if Trixie came home even more devastated?
Trixie walked with her head down, bracing against the cold. Her green jacket was a stain against the snow. She didnt turn back to look at him.
When she was little, Daniel had always waited for Trixie to enter the school building before he drove away. There was too much that could go wrong: She might trip and fall; she could be approached by a bully; she might be teased by a pack of girls. Hed liked to imagine that just by keeping an eye on her, he could imbue her with the power of safety, much like the way hed draw it onto one of his comics panels in a wavy, flowing force field.
The truth was, though, that Daniel had needed Trixie far more than Trixie had ever needed him. Without realizing it, shed put on a show for him every day: hopping, twirling, spreading her arms and taking a running leap, as if she thought that one of these mornings she might actually get airborne. Hed watch her and hed see how easy it was for kids to believe in a world different from the one presented to them. Then hed drive home and translate that stroke by stroke onto a fresh page.
He could remember wondering how long it would take for reality to catch up to his daughter. He could remember thinking: The saddest day in the world will be the one when she stops pretending.
Daniel waited until Trixie slipped through the double doors of the school, and then pulled carefully away from the curb. He needed a load of sand in the back of his pickup to keep it from fishtailing in the snow. Whatever it took, right now, to keep his balance.
3
T rixie knew the story behind her real name, but that didnt mean she hated it any less. Beatrice Portinari had been Dantes one true love, the woman whod inspired him to write a whole batch of epic poems. Her mother the classics professor had single-handedly filled out the birth certificate when her father (whod wanted to name his newborn daughter Sarah) was in the bathroom.
Dante and Beatrice, though, were no Romeo and Juliet. Dante met her when he was only nine and then didnt see her again until he was eighteen. They both married other people and Beatrice died young. If that was everlasting love, Trixie didnt want any part of it.
When Trixie had complained to her father, he said Nicolas Cage had named his son Kal-el, Supermans Kryptonian name, and that she should be grateful. But Bethel High was brimming with Mallorys, Dakotas, Crispins, and Willows. Trixie had spent most of her life pulling the teacher aside on the first day of school, to make sure she said Trixie when she read the attendance sheet, instead of Beatrice, which made the other kids crack up. There was a time in fourth grade when she started calling herself Justine, but it didnt catch on.
Summer Friedman was in the main office with Trixie, signing into school late. She was tall and blonde, with a perpetual tan, although Trixie knew for a fact shed been born in December. She turned around, clutching her blue hall pass. Slut, she hissed at Trixie as she walked past.
Beatrice? the secretary said. The principals ready for you.
Trixie had been in the principals office only once, when she made honor roll during the first quarter of freshman year. Shed been sent during homeroom, and the whole time shed been shaking, trying to figure out what shed done wrong. Principal Aaronsen had been waiting with a Cookie Monster grin on his face and his hand extended. Congratulations, Beatrice, he had said, and hed handed her a little gold honor roll card with her own disgusting name printed across it.
Beatrice, he said again this time, when she went into his office. She realized that the guidance counselor, Mrs. Gray, was waiting there for her too. Did they think that if she saw a man alone she might freak out? Its good to have you back, Mr. Aaronsen said.
Its good to be back. The lie sat too sour on Trixies tongue, so she swallowed it down again.
The principal was staring at her hair, or lack of it, but he was too polite to say anything. Mrs. Gray and I just want you to know that our doors are open any time for you, the principal said.
Trixies father had two names. She had discovered this by accident when she was ten and snooping in his desk drawers. Wedged into the back of one, behind all the smudged erasers and tubes of mechanical pencil leads, was a photograph of two boys squatting in front of a cache of fish. One of the boys was white, one was native. On the back was written: Cane & Wass, fish camp. Akiak, Alaska-1976.
Trixie had taken the photo to her father, whod been out mowing the lawn. Who are these people? she had asked.
Her father had turned off the lawn mower. Theyre dead.
If you feel the slightest bit uncomfortable, Principal Aaronsen was saying. If you just want a place to catch your breath
Three hours later, Trixies father had come looking for her. The one on the right is me, hed said, showing her the photo again. And thats Cane, a friend of mine.
Your names not Wass, Trixie had pointed out.
Her father had explained that the day after hed been born and named, a village elder came to visit and started calling him Wass-short for Wassilie-after her husband, whod fallen through the ice and died a week before. It was perfectly normal for a Yupik Eskimo who had recently died to take up residence in a newborn. Villagers would laugh when they met Daniel as a baby, saying things like, Oh, look. Wass has come back with blue eyes! or Maybe thats why Wass took that English as a Second Language class!
For eighteen years, hed been known as Daniel to his white mother and as Wass to everyone else. In the Yupik world, he told Trixie, souls get recycled. In the Yupik world, no one ever really gets to leave.
a policy of zero tolerance, the principal said, and Trixie nodded, although she hadnt really been listening.
The night after her father told Trixie about his second name, she had a question ready when he came to tuck her in. How come when I first asked, you said those boys were dead?
Because, her father answered, they are.
Principal Aaronsen stood up, and so did Mrs. Gray, and that was how Trixie realized that they intended to accompany her to class. Immediately she panicked. This was way worse than being walked in by her father; this was like having fighter jets escort a plane into a safe landing: Was there any person at the airport who wouldnt be watching out the windows and trying to guess what had happened on board?
Um, Trixie said, I think Id kind of like to go by myself.
It was almost third period, which meant shed have time to go to her locker before heading to English class. She watched the principal look at the guidance counselor. Well, Mr. Aaronsen said, if thats what you want.
Trixie fled the principals office, blindly navigating the maze of halls that made up the high school. Class was still in session, so it was quiet-the faint jingle of a kid with a bathroom pass, the muted click of high heels, the wheezy strains of the wind instruments upstairs in the band room. She twisted the combination on her own locker, 40-22-38. Hey, Jason had said, a lifetime ago. Arent those Barbies measurements?
Trixie rested her forehead against the cool metal. All she had to do was sit in class for another four hours. She could fill her mind with Lord of the Flies and A = πr2 and the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand. She didnt have to talk to anyone if she didnt want to. All of her teachers had been briefed. She would be an army of one.
When she pulled open the door of her locker, a sea of snakes poured out of the narrow cubby, spilling over her feet. She reached down to pick one up. Eight small foil squares, accordion-pleated at the perforations.
Trojan, Trixie read. Twisted Pleasure Lubricated Latex Condoms.
Theyre all having sex, Marita Soorenstad said, tilting her head and pouring the last of the lime-colored powder into her mouth. In the fifteen minutes that Mike Bartholemew had been sitting with the assistant district attorney, shed consumed three Pixy Stix. Teenage girls want guys to be attracted to them, but no ones taught them how to deal with the emotions that come with that stuff. I see this all the time, Mike. Teenage girls wake up to find someone having sex with them, and they dont say a word. She crushed the paper straw in her fist and grimaced. Some judge told me these were a godsend when he was trying to quit smoking. But I swear all Im getting is a sugar high and a green tongue.
Trixie Stone said no, the detective pointed out. Its in her statement.
And Trixie Stone was drinking. Which the defense attorney will use to call her judgment into question. Oosterhaus is going to say that she was intoxicated, and playing strip poker, and saying yes yes yes all the way up till afterward, which is about when she decided to say no. Hes going to ask her what time it was when she said it and how many pictures were on the walls of the room and what song was playing on the stereo and whether the moon was in Scorpio-details she wont be able to remember. Then hell say that if she cant remember particulars like this, how on earth could she be sure of whether she told Jason to stop? Marita hesitated. Im not saying that Trixie Stone wasnt raped, Mike. Im just telling you that not everyone is going to see it as clearly.
I think the family knows that, Bartholemew said.
The family never knows that, no matter what they say. Marita opened the file on Trixie Stone. What the hell else did they think their kid was out doing at two in the morning?
Bartholemew pictured a car overturned on the side of the road, the rescue crews clustered around the body that had been thrown through the windshield. He imagined the EMT who pulled up the sleeve of his daughters shirt and saw the bruises and needle marks along the map of her veins. He wondered if that tech had looked at Hollys long-sleeved shirt, worn on the hottest night of July, and asked himself what this girls parents had been thinking when they saw her leave the house in it.
The answer to this question, and to Maritas: We werent thinking. We didnt let ourselves think, because we didnt want to know.
Bartholemew cleared his throat. The Stones thought their daughter was having a parent-supervised sleepover at a friends house.
Marita ripped open a yellow Pixy Stix. Great, she said, upending the contents into her mouth. So Trixies already lied once.
Even though parents dont want to admit it, school isnt about what a kid absorbs while shes sitting at a cramped desk, but what happens around and in spite of that. Its the five minutes between bells when you find out whose house is hosting the party that evening; its borrowing the right shade of lip gloss from your friend before you have French with the cute guy who moved here from Ohio; its being noticed by everyone else and pretending you are above that sort of celebrity.
Once all this social interaction was surgically excised from Trixies school day, she noticed how little she cared about the academic part. In English, she focused on the printed text in her book until the letters jumped like popcorn in a skillet. From time to time she would hear a snide comment: What did she do to her hair? Only once did someone have the guts to actually speak to her in class. It was in phys ed, during an indoor soccer game. A girl on her own team had come up to her after the teacher called a time-out. Someone who got raped for real, shed whispered, wouldnt be out here playing soccer.












