forever achy and delicate. I have a permanent case of
sparrow’s bones – I must be held gently in the palm, lest I
break. So I prop my feet on the infamous ottoman, and I
tread delicately over the kitchen floor where I bled. We must
take good care of me.
Yet I find it strangely tense to watch Nick with anyone
but me. He seems on the edge of blurting all the time – as if
his lungs are
bursting with words about me, damning
words.
I need Nick, I realize. I actually need him to back my
story. To stop his accusations and denials and admit that it
was him: the credit cards, the goodies in the woodshed, the
bump in insurance. Otherwise I will carry that waft of
uncertainty forever. I have only a few loose ends, and those
loose ends are people. The police, the FBI, they are sifting
through my story. Boney, I know, would love to arrest me.
But they botched everything so badly before – they look like
such fools – that they can’t touch me unless they have proof.
And they don’t have proof. They have Nick, who swears he
didn’t do the things I swear he did, and that’s not much, but
it’s more than I’d like.
I’ve even prepared in case my Ozarks friends Jeff and
Greta show up, nosing around for acclaim or cash. I’ve
already told the police: Desi didn’t drive us straight to his
home. He kept me blindfolded and gagged and drugged
for several days – I
think
it was several days – in some
room, maybe a motel room? Maybe an apartment? I can’t
be sure, it’s all such a blur. I was so frightened, you know,
and the sleeping pills. If Jeff
and Greta show their pointy,
lowdown faces and somehow convince the cops to send a
tech team down to the Hide-A-Way, and one of my
fingerprints or a hair is found, that simply solves part of the
puzzle. The rest is them telling lies.
So Nick is really the only issue, and soon I’ll return him
to my side. I was smart, I left no other evidence. The police
may not entirely believe me, but they won’t do anything. I
know from the petulant tone in Boney’s voice – she will live
in permanent exasperation from now on, and the more
annoyed she gets, the more people will dismiss her. She
already has the righteous,
eye-rolling cadence of a
conspiracy crackpot. She might as well wrap her head in
foil.
Yes, the investigation is winding down. But for Amazing
Amy, it’s quite the opposite. My parents’ publisher placed
an abashed plea for another
Amazing Amy
book, and they
acquiesced for a lovely fat sum. Once again they are
squatting on my psyche, earning money for themselves.
They left Carthage this morning. They say it’s important for
Nick and me (the correct grammar) to have some time
alone and heal. But I know the truth. They want to get to
work. They tell me they are trying to ‘find the right tone.’ A
tone that says:
Our daughter was kidnapped and
repeatedly raped by a monster she had to stab in the
neck … but this is in no way a cash grab
.
I don’t care about the rebuilding of their pathetic
empire, because every day I get calls to tell
my
story. My
story: mine, mine, mine. I just need to pick the very best
deal and start writing. I just need to get Nick on the same
page so that we both agree how this story will end. Happily.
I know Nick isn’t in love with me yet, but he will be. I do
have faith in that.
Fake it until you make it, isn’t that an
expression? For now he acts like the old Nick, and I act like
the old Amy. Back when we were happy. When we didn’t
know each other as well as we do now. Yesterday I stood
on the back porch and watched the sun come up over the
river, a strangely cool August morning, and when I turned
around, Nick was studying me from the kitchen window,
and he held up a mug of coffee with a question:
You want a
cup?
I nodded, and soon he was standing beside me, the
air smelling of grass, and
we were drinking our coffee
together and watching the water, and it felt normal and
good.
He won’t sleep with me yet. He sleeps in the
downstairs guest room with the door locked. But one day I
will wear him down, I will catch him off guard, and he will
lose the energy for the nightly battle, and he will get in bed
with me. In the middle of the night, I’ll turn to face him and
press myself against him. I’ll
hold myself to him like a
climbing, coiling vine until I have invaded every part of him
and made him mine.