Chapter no 29

Nothing More to Tell

 

โ€ŒIโ€™m almost out the door at Saint Ambrose, getting ready to meet up with Shane by the woods for our leaf project, when I hear them.โ€Œ

โ€œThereโ€™s no mistake. Someone saw. A kid finally came forward to tell their parents, and the parents told me.โ€

Itโ€™s Mr. Larkin, talking to someone in his classroom. Iโ€™m about to keep walking when a familiar voice stops me in my tracks.

โ€œYou sure the kid was telling the truth?โ€ my father asks.

I stop and press against the wall, even though thereโ€™s no one around to see me. I stayed after for extra help in math, and everyone else is long gone. Dad never mentioned coming here, and I donโ€™t know why heย wouldย come, unlessโ€ฆ

โ€œItโ€™s a reliable source,โ€ Mr. Larkin says. Thereโ€™s a long pause, and then he says, โ€œAre you trying to deny it? If you are, I can get the police involved

โ€”โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ Dad says heavily. Another pause, until he adds, โ€œIโ€™m not denying it. Iโ€™ll get it back to you, okay? Every last cent.โ€

Shit. Shit. Shit. My heart starts pounding as I clutch the strap of my backpack tighterโ€”my stupid backpack that, once again, doesnโ€™t have the turquoise envelope inside. I waited too long to return it, and now Mr. Larkin knows.ย He knows.

โ€œItโ€™s not that simple,โ€ Mr. Larkin says. โ€œWhy not?โ€ my father asks.

โ€œBecause itโ€™s theft. The administration needs to know, and so do the authorities.โ€

No, no, no, no, no, no, no.

A hard edge creeps into my fatherโ€™s voice. โ€œYou just said you wouldnโ€™t get the police involved if Iโ€”โ€

โ€œI never said that,โ€ Mr. Larkin interrupts.

โ€œCome on, Will,โ€ my father says, and I can almost hear him swallowing his anger before adding in a calmer tone, โ€œCanโ€™t we keep things between us?โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ Mr. Larkin says. Curt and dismissive, like he wonโ€™t even consider it.

โ€œYou donโ€™t understand what this will do to Tripp. Itโ€™s not just about the money. Itโ€™sโ€”โ€

โ€œTripp isnโ€™t my concern,โ€ Mr. Larkin says in the coldest tone Iโ€™ve ever heard him use. He barely even sounds like the same person.

They keep arguing, and my stomach keeps churning until Mr. Larkin finally says, โ€œAll of this sounds like aย youย problem, Junior. Not aย meย problem. Now, if youโ€™ll excuse me, I have someplace to be.โ€

I flatten myself behind the trophy case as he storms out. โ€œYou donโ€™t get it, Will,โ€ Dad calls after him, his voice hoarse and almost desperate. โ€œYou canโ€™t do this!โ€ He steps into the hallway, hands on his hips as he watches Mr. Larkin walk away. โ€œYou canโ€™t do this,โ€ he repeats in a quieter tone.

My heart pounds as I slowly back around the corner without my father seeing me, and slip out a side door. I make my way outside, and when I reach the parking lot, my eyes hit on an unwelcome sight: Mr. Larkin, walking toward the exact same woods where Iโ€™m supposed to be. I freeze in place, indecisive. I donโ€™t want to run into him, not after everything I just

heard. Should I go back inside and talk to my father? But the thought makes me too nauseated to consider for long, so I keep walking.

Mr. Larkin does the typical adult thingโ€”instead of hopping the fence, he walks all the way to the edge of Saint Ambrose, where thereโ€™s a break between our fence and one of a neighboring yard. I head for the kidsโ€™ shortcut, which is a low, sagging bit of fence thatโ€™s easy to jump. I toss my backpack over, then wait a few minutes to make sure that Mr. Larkin is well on his way to wherever heโ€™s going.

Tripp isnโ€™t my concern,ย Mr. Larkin said. The words shouldnโ€™t hurt as much as they do, because I have a much bigger problem. Tomorrow, the entire school will know that my father is a thief.

The bell rings, signaling the end of after-school help at Saint Ambrose, and I take that as my cue to haul myself over the fence. Then I make my way to the birch grove, where Iโ€™ll be able to see Shane when he arrives.

Shane, of course, is late, and we argue until we finally split up. Itโ€™s a relief to be alone, listening to music while adding leaves to my collection, until I realize Iโ€™ve lost track of where I am. I pull out my earbuds, get my bearings at the ridge near Shelton Park, and start to make my way back to Saint Ambrose.

Then the screaming starts.

I crash through trees to follow it, and stop short when I see something blue among all the brown and green. Charlotteโ€™s coat. Her hands are covering her mouth, but theyโ€™re not doing much to muffle her screams. Shane is standing next to her, a big rock in his hands and a dazed expression on his face. Heโ€™s looking down, staring at the ground, atโ€ฆ

Oh God.

Mr. Larkin is lying on his back, unnaturally still, his eyes wide open and staring at nothing. The leaves beside his head are stained red. โ€œIs heโ€ฆโ€ I trail off and step closer, even though every cell in my body wants to run away.

โ€œI donโ€™t know what he is,โ€ Shane rasps out. Heโ€™s still clutching the rock, and itโ€™sโ€ฆHoly hell, itโ€™s literally dripping with blood. Shaneโ€™s hands

are smeared, and I watch in horror as a spatter of red lands on his Saint Ambrose chinos.

Maybe Mr. Larkin tripped,ย I think. He tripped, and hit his head on that rock. But somehow it doesnโ€™t look like that. It doesnโ€™t look like that at all.

โ€œShane,โ€ I say in the calm tone I use when Iโ€™m trying not to scare my neighborโ€™s neurotic Chihuahua. โ€œWhat did you do?โ€

โ€œNothing,โ€ Shane says in the same hoarse voice. โ€œWhy do you have that rock?โ€ I ask.

โ€œIโ€ฆIt was next to him.โ€

Something glints on the ground beside Mr. Larkin. I kneel for a closer look, and my heart jumps into my throat. For a second I canโ€™t breathe, canโ€™t do anything except stare at the bright silver disc nestled among the leaves. โ€œMy lucky medallions,โ€ Dad always calls them when he twirls his key chain on one finger.

Why is one of my fatherโ€™s medallions next to Mr. Larkinโ€™s dead body? Because Mr. Larkin has to be dead, right? I havenโ€™t dared to feel for a pulse, but nobody could be this still for this long unlessโ€ฆ

Charlotte hasnโ€™t let up. โ€œStop screaming,โ€ I say tightly. โ€œI canโ€™t think when youโ€™re screaming like that.โ€

She starts gasping then, struggling mightily to get herself under control, as I quickly palm the silver disc and stuff it into my pocket. I glance at Shane to see if he noticed, but heโ€™s staring at the bloody rock in his hands. โ€œI heard yelling,โ€ he says suddenly. โ€œLike, people arguing. Then it got quiet, andโ€ฆI saw Mr. Larkin. Just lying there.โ€

My blood, already running cold thanks to the silver medallion, turns to ice. โ€œI heard yelling,โ€ Shane said.

I heard yelling earlier too.

A series of images flashes through my brain. The things I heard and saw: Dad and Mr. Larkin arguing, Mr. Larkin cutting him off and heading for the woods. And the things I imagine: Dad following, finding Mr. Larkin, losing his temper, and doing something horrible.

Something you canโ€™t take back.

Now what? I have to think. My dadโ€”he didnโ€™t mean to do this, I know it. He was just trying toโ€ฆGod, he was trying to protect me, wasnโ€™t he? Heโ€™d told Mr. Larkin, โ€œYou donโ€™t understand what this will do to Tripp.โ€ He must have come here to plead his case again, and lost his temper at exactly the wrong moment.

It was an accident, Iโ€™m sure of it. But that doesnโ€™t matter when someoneโ€™s dead, right? Theyโ€™ll take Dad away, and then theyโ€™ll take me away too.

I push the medallion farther into my pocket as I carefully scan the ground for anything else my father might have left behind. When Iโ€™m satisfied that thereโ€™s nothing, I return my attention to Shane. We lock eyes, and his are suddenly a lot clearer.

โ€œI heard yelling,โ€ he repeats, and my gut twists. Does he realize what he heardโ€”orย who? I canโ€™t let him speak the words and make them real.

โ€œNo, you didnโ€™t.โ€ I didnโ€™t plan on saying that, but as soon as I do, I know itโ€™s the right move. Well, notย rightโ€”nothing about this is rightโ€”but itโ€™s my only choice. Shaneโ€™s not an independent thinker. Heโ€™s a go-with-the- flow kind of kid whoโ€™s always happy to follow someone elseโ€™s lead, and right now I need him to follow mine.

Shane blinks, and I add, โ€œDo you know how this looks, Shane? Youโ€™re holding the rock that mustโ€™ve been used to kill Mr. Larkin. Your fingerprints are all over a murder weapon.โ€ I can only hope my fatherโ€™s arenโ€™t too. Butโ€”no. He was wearing gloves when I saw him in the hallway, and he wouldโ€™ve kept them on outside. There shouldnโ€™t be anything that ties him to the scene, as long as I can keep Shane contained.

โ€œI didnโ€™tโ€ฆIt wasโ€ฆโ€ Shane drops the rock with a thud, startling Charlotte so much that her sobs catch in her throat. She sniffs and shakily wipes her eyes as Shane adds, โ€œMr. Larkin was already like this. All I did was pick it up.โ€

โ€œI believe you,โ€ I say. โ€œBut if you go around telling people you heard an argument in the woods that nobody else heardโ€โ€”I glance at Charlotte to see if sheโ€™s going to contradict me, but sheโ€™s still wiping her eyesโ€”โ€œand meanwhile your hands are covered in blood? Youโ€™ll look guilty. Like youโ€™re

making stuff up.โ€ Shane swallows visibly, staring at his hands, and I press my advantage. โ€œYou could go to jail for killing Mr. Larkin.โ€

Charlotte blanches as Shane gulps, โ€œReally?โ€

โ€œReally. It happens all the time,โ€ I say, like Iโ€™m some kind of crime expert instead of a terrified kid.

Charlotte clutches Shaneโ€™s arm, pulling him close. โ€œWe canโ€™t let Shane get arrested,โ€ she says urgently, and I say a quick prayer of thanks for Charlotteโ€™s Shane obsession. If we were with any other kid, sheโ€™s bossy enough to argue with meโ€”and ask questions, maybe, about why Iโ€™m laying it on so thick. But Shane? Shane, she just wants to protect.

โ€œWe wonโ€™t,โ€ I say. โ€œWe just need a single, simple story. Weโ€™ll tell everybody that we went into the woods together, that we never heard or saw anybody else, and that we found Mr. Larkin just like this. Shane picked up the rock without thinking, and then we realized that we needed to get help. Right?โ€ They both nod. โ€œGood. Now pay attention, because details matter and our stories have to be identical. Hereโ€™s what weโ€™re going to say.โ€

 

โ€ŒI canโ€™t believe I told her.โ€Œ

Iโ€™ve managed to keep that story inside for almost four years, and now Brynn Gallagher, of all the damn people, knows that my father killed Mr. Larkin and I covered it up. With a naรฏve, childish, boneheaded plan thatย actually worked.ย For weeks afterward, I was afraid the pressure would get too intense for Shane and heโ€™d cave. Or that Charlotte, once I accidentally framed her with the class-trip money, would change her story to deflect attention.

But nothing like that happened. Shane, Charlotte, and I became sympathetic, almost heroic witnesses, and nobodyโ€”with the possible exception of Officer Patzโ€”ever suspected that we were really just a bunch of well-rehearsed liars. โ€œWe tell the police our story,โ€ Iโ€™d told Shane and Charlotte, โ€œand then never, ever talk about it again. Not to each other, and not to anybody else. That way we wonโ€™t accidentally say the wrong thing.โ€

Sometimes I still canโ€™t believe we got away with it. That none of us ever slipped up, or got tired of the pretense, or reached the point where the truth clawed its way out no matter how hard we tried to shove it down.

Until now.

I canโ€™t look at Brynn, canโ€™t stand the thought of what her expression must be. And then dread starts seeping through my entire body, curling around my heart and lungs until itโ€™s almost impossible to breathe. Sheโ€™s going to tell someone; of course she is. How could she not? What have I done, what have I done, what have I doneโ€ฆ

โ€œTripp, no!โ€ Brynn is shaking my arm. I pull away, still unable to look at her. โ€œThatโ€™s not what happened. It couldnโ€™t have happened.โ€

โ€œYour magic truth compass is broken, Brynn,โ€ I say bitterly. โ€œIt happened.โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ she says, tugging harder at my arm. โ€œYou need to listen to me. My dad and Iโ€”we were at school then too. I was working late at the school paper and he picked me up. Only, when he tried to restart the car, the engine wouldnโ€™t turn over.โ€ Her voice is rushed and urgent, her words tumbling over one another. โ€œSo he got out of the car and looked around for somebody who might have jumper cables. There was no one in the parking lot, so I went back into Saint Ambrose to see if I could find a teacher, and I saw your dad.โ€

โ€œSaw my dadย what?โ€ I ask, stomach churning.

โ€œStanding near the trophy case. I asked him for help, and he came outside with me. He got jumper cables out of his trunk and connected them to our car.โ€

โ€œWhatโ€ฆwhat time was that?โ€ I say thickly. โ€œI told you. After school.โ€

โ€œBut when after school?โ€ I press. Dadโ€™s always been in semi-decent shape, and he can move fast when he wants to. When heย needsย to. If Brynnโ€™s dadโ€™s car broke down even half an hour after my father and Mr. Larkin argued, none of this matters. โ€œWhat exact time?โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t know, butโ€ฆโ€ Brynn scrunches her face for a few agonizing moments, and then her expression clears. โ€œOh! The after-school bell rang right after I asked your dad for help, so it would have beenโ€ฆwhenever that is. Three-thirty, maybe?โ€

โ€œThe after-school bell rang,โ€ I repeat. I stare at my sneakers, remembering how I hopped the fence right after that bellโ€”just a few minutes behind a very much alive Mr. Larkin. โ€œYouโ€™re sure?โ€

โ€œIโ€™m positive,โ€ Brynn says. โ€œBecause your dad said, โ€˜Looks like youโ€™ve been saved by the bellโ€™ like a giant dork.โ€ She attempts a smile I canโ€™t yet return, and adds, โ€œTurns out it wasnโ€™t the battery, so my dad called a tow truck, and yours took me home. He hung out with me and my mom and Ellie for a while, till my dad got back from the garage. He was there when the police called. Tripp, my God.โ€ When I finally look at Brynn, her eyes are equal parts sympathetic and horrified. โ€œHow could you not know that? Didnโ€™t he tell you where he was?โ€

โ€œHe saidโ€ฆhe said he was at Saint Ambrose to drop off an invoice, and then he started to say something else, butโ€ฆI interrupted,โ€ I say. Every time my father said a word in the police station, unless it was about me, I tried to stop him.

I couldnโ€™t keep the police from talking to him on their own, of course, so he probably explained the car breakdown then. I never asked, though. For months, every time he tried to bring up that day, I put him off. I was looking at my father through such a distorted lens that everything about him seemed shifty and wrong. All my attention was focused on making sure that Shane, Charlotte, and I had our stories straight, that I never let it slip that my father had argued with Mr. Larkin right before he died, and that nobody knew aboutโ€”

โ€œThe medallion,โ€ I say abruptly. โ€œThe silver disc I found next to Mr.

Larkinโ€™s body. I thoughtโ€ฆI couldโ€™ve sworn that belonged to my dad.โ€

โ€œWell, maybe it did,โ€ Brynn says. โ€œHe could have lost it another day, although itโ€™s strange that youโ€™d find it right there, right then.โ€ Her eyes take on a sudden gleam. โ€œHold on. Mr. Larkin was wearing a silver chain when he died. It was broken, soโ€ฆthe medallion couldโ€™ve come off when he was attacked.โ€ She twists in her seat, newly animated. โ€œDo you still have it?โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t know.โ€ As soon as I got home and had a minute alone, I shoved the medallion into the back of a drawer without looking at it. I havenโ€™t looked at it since, so itโ€™s entirely possible that itโ€™s still there, but I

canโ€™t pivot that fast. Not when thereโ€™s this much at stake. โ€œBrynn, look, I need you toโ€ฆYou gotta be totally honest, okay? Are youย sureย my dad never left you guys? Not at any point?โ€

โ€œIโ€™m positive. I was with him, and so were my parents. My dad came forward to let the police know heโ€™d been in the parking lot that day, and he told them what happened with our car. He was basically a witness to your dadโ€™s alibi. Not that anybody thought he needed one, because heย didnโ€™t.ย Oh my God.โ€ Her hands are in mine now, squeezing hard. โ€œI canโ€™t believe that youโ€™ve been thinking all this time that your dad killed Mr. Larkin. All you had to do wasย ask.ย If you and I had still been speaking, Iโ€™d have mentioned that he helped us out. Your dad might be a thief, but heโ€™s not a murderer.โ€

Heโ€™s not a murderer.

The story I crafted four years ago was just thatโ€”a story. A fabrication. I should feel overjoyed and relieved now, but instead, Iโ€™m numb. I donโ€™t feel any different. I still feel cursed.

“But I covered it up,” I say. “Or thought I did. I was willing toโ€ฆ I let Mr. Larkin be buried with his name tainted, and I never said a wordโ€””

I start to slump back into the cushions, but Brynn pulls me upright. โ€œNo,โ€ she says firmly. โ€œDonโ€™t punish yourself with a new crime before youโ€™ve even accepted that the old one wasnโ€™t real. You were thirteen, scared, and loved your dad. He was all you had, and thatโ€™s a terrifying place to be for a kid. So donโ€™t keep drowning yourself in alcohol because you chose to protect him. That doesnโ€™t make you a bad person. Besides,โ€ she adds, letting go of my hands as if she suddenly decided she shouldn’t be holding them. โ€œThereโ€™s another problem we need to focus on.โ€

โ€œOh really?โ€ I scoff. โ€œWhatโ€™s bigger than me making a false confession about a teacher’s murder?โ€

โ€œYes,โ€ Brynn replies. โ€œBecause hereโ€™s the thing. One of the main reasons Shane didnโ€™t get into trouble back thenโ€”even though his fingerprints were all over the murder weaponโ€”was because you said he and Charlotte were with you the whole time. That all three of you arrived at the woods together, that you never lost sight of one another, and that you found Mr. Larkin together. You werenโ€™t friends with Shane back then, so nobody thought youโ€™d lie about what happened. And while you thought you were protecting your dad, he didnโ€™t actually need it.โ€ Understanding seeps into my foggy mind, and I stare at Brynn as she finishes, โ€œIn the end, the person you ended up protecting was Shane.โ€

Thereโ€™s probably a lot I should say to that, but the only thing that comes to mind is, โ€œWell, fuck.โ€

Just then, the guesthouse door rattles, and we both jump. It creaks open, letting in a blast of icy January air, and for the first time all week, I actually feel the cold. A shadow appears, resolving into a familiar figure as he steps inside and leans against the doorframe. His gaze shifts between Brynn and me before settling on me.

โ€œWhatโ€™s going on, T?โ€ Shane asks.

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