Teddyโs parents have strict rules about screen time, so he has never seenย Star Warsย orย Toy Storyย or any of the movies that other kids love. Heโs not even allowed to watchย Sesame Street. But once a week the Maxwells gather in the den for Family Movie Night. Caroline will make popcorn and Ted will stream a film with โgenuine artistic merit,โ which usually means old or tagged with foreign language subtitles, and I promise the only one youโve ever heard of isย The Wizard of Oz. Teddy loves the story and he claims it is his favorite movie of all time.
So when weโre outside in the swimming pool weโll often play a make-believe game called Land of Oz. Weโll cling to the inflatable life raft and Teddy will play Dorothy, and Iโll play everyone else in the movieโToto, the Scarecrow, the Wicked Witch, and all the Munchkins. And not to brag but I pull out all the stops, I sing and dance and flap my Flying Monkey wings and carry on like itโs Opening Night on Broadway. It takes us nearly an hour to reach the end of the story, when the raft turns into a hot-air balloon that carries Teddy-Dorothy back to Kansas. And by the time we finish and take our bows, Iโm so cold my teeth are chattering. I have to get out of the water.
โNo!โ Teddy exclaims. โSorry, T-Bear, Iโm freezing.โ
I spread a towel on the concrete deck at the edge of the pool, then lay out to dry in the sun. Temperatures have soared into the low ninetiesโthe sun is strong and quickly
bakes away my chills. Teddy keeps splashing nearby. His new game is filling his mouth with water and then spitting it out, like heโs a winged cherub in a fountain.
โYou shouldnโt do that,โ I tell him. โThereโs chlorine.โ โWill it make me sick?โ
โIf you swallow enough, yes.โ โAnd would I die?โ
Suddenly he is very concerned. I shake my head.
โIf you drank the whole swimming pool, yes, you would probably die. But donโt drink even a little, okay?โ
Teddy climbs onto the raft and paddles to the edge of the water, so weโre both lying parallelโTeddy on the raft and me on the deck.
โMallory?โ โYeah?โ
โWhat happens when people die?โ
I look over. Heโs staring down into the water. โHow do you mean?โ
โI mean, what happens to the personย insideย the body?โ
Now obviously I have strong opinions on this subject. I believe in Godโs gift of eternal life. I draw a lot of strength from knowing that my little sister, Beth, is surrounded by angels. And I know that someday, if Iโm lucky, weโll be reunited in heaven. But I donโt share any of this with Teddy. I still remember my job interview and rule number ten: no religion or superstition. Teach science.
โI think you should ask your parents.โ โWhy canโt you tell me?โ
โIโm not sure I know the answer.โ
โIs it possible some people die but stay alive?โ โLike ghosts?โ
โNo, not scary.โ Heโs struggling to express himselfโthe way we all struggle, I guess, when discussing these things. โDoesย anyย part of the person stay alive?โ
โThat is a big, complicated question, Teddy. I really think you should ask your parents.โ
Heโs frustrated by my nonanswer, but he seems resigned to the fact that Iโm not going to help him. โWell then can we play Land of Oz again?โ
โWe just finished!โ
โOnly the melting scene,โ he says. โJust the ending.โ โFine. But Iโm not getting back in water.โ
I stand up and wrap my towel around my shoulders, holding it like a witchโs cloak. I curl my fingers into claws and cackle maniacally. โIโll get you, my pretty, and your little dog, too!โ Teddy splashes me with water and I scream loud enough to scare the birds from the trees. โOh, you cursed rat! Oh, look what youโve done!โ With incredible dramatic flair I sink to the patio, waving my arms and writhing in agony. โIโm melting! Iโm melting! Oh, what a world, what a world!โ Teddy laughs and applauds as I collapse onto my back, close my eyes, and stick out my tongue. I give my legs a few final twitches and then Iโm still.
โUh, miss?โ
I open my eyes.
Thereโs a young man not five feet away, standing on the far side of the pool fence. Heโs wiry but well built, dressed in grass-stained khakis, a Rutgers T-shirt, and work gloves. โIโm with Lawn King? The landscapers?โ
โHola, Adrian!โ Teddy exclaims.
Adrian winks at him. โHola, Teddy.ย ยฟCรณmo estรกs?โ
I try to pull my towel over my body, only Iโm already lying on top of it, so I end up thrashing and flailing like a beetle flipped onto its back.
โIโm gonna bring the big mower around, if thatโs okay. I just wanted to give you a heads-up. Itโs pretty loud.โ
โSure,โ I tell him. โWe can go inside.โ โNo, we have to watch!โ Teddy says.
Adrian leaves to get the mower and I look at Teddy. โWhy do we have to watch?โ
โBecause I love the big mower! Itโs amazing!โ
I hear the mower coming before I see it, the loud gasoline engine ripping through the silence of our backyard sanctuary. And then Adrian comes tearing around the side of the house, riding atop a machine thatโs somewhere between a tractor and a go-kart. Heโs standing in the back and leaning over the steering wheel, like heโs racing an ATV, leaving stripes of fresh-cut grass in his wake. Teddy climbs out of the pool and runs to the fence so he can see better. The landscaper is showing off, taking turns way too fast, driving in reverse, even pulling his hat down over his eyes so heโs driving blind. Itโs not the best example to set for a little kid, but Teddy is riveted; he watches in openmouthed astonishment like itโs a performance of Cirque du Soleil. For his Grand Finale, Adrian speeds up in reverse, slams the gearshift into drive, and then hurtles toward us, popping a wheelie, keeping the mower aloft for three terrifying seconds so we can see its furiously spinning blades. And then with a loud crash the whole machine comes down, stopping inches shy of the pool fence.
Adrian hops off the side and offers the keys to Teddy. โYou want to take her for a spin?โ
โReally?โ Teddy asks.
โNo!โ I tell them. โThat is definitely not happening.โ โMaybe when you turn six,โ Adrian says, winking at him.
โAre you going to introduce me to your new friend?โ Teddy shrugs. โThis is my babysitter.โ
โMallory Quinn.โ
โItโs great to meet you, Mallory.โ
He pulls off his work glove and sticks out his hand and thereโs something oddly formal about the gestureโ especially since Iโm in a one-piece and heโs covered in mud stains and grass clippings. Itโs my first hint there might be more to him than meets the eye. The inside of his palm feels hardened, like leather.
Suddenly Teddy remembers something and he starts fumbling to open the poolโs child-proof gate.
โWhere are you going?โ
โI made Adrian a picture,โ he says. โItโs inside. Up in my bedroom.โ
I lift the latch so he can get out, and Teddy sprints across the lawn. โYour feet are still wet!โ I call after him. โBe careful on the stairs!โ
โOkay!โ he shouts back.
Adrian and I are forced to make awkward conversation until Teddy returns. Itโs really hard to pinpoint his age. His body is all adultโtall, lean, tanned, muscularโbut his face is still boyish and a little shy. He could be anywhere from seventeen to twenty-five.
โI love this kid,โ Adrian says. โHe learned some Spanish in Barcelona so Iโve been teaching him new phrases. Do you watch him full-time?โ
โJust for the summer. He starts school in September.โ โHow about you? Where do you go?โ
And I realize heโs mistaken me for a fellow student. He must think Iโm a neighbor, that I live here in Spring Brook, where all the young women attend four-year colleges and universities. I start to correct him but I donโt know how to say โI donโt go anywhereโ without sounding like a failure. I know I could share my whole awful backstory, but for the sake of small talk I just go along with his assumption. I pretend that my life hadnโt gone off the rails and everything had happened according to plan.
โPenn State. Iโm on the womenโs cross-country team.โ โNo kidding! Youโre a Big Ten athlete?โ
โTechnically, yes. But the football team gets all the glory.
Youโre never gonna see us on ESPN.โ
I know itโs wrong to lie. A big part of recoveryโprobably the most important partโis owning your past and acknowledging all the mistakes youโve made. But I have to say it feels pretty nice to embrace the fantasy, to pretend Iโm still a normal teenager with normal teenage dreams.
Adrian snaps his fingers, like heโs suddenly made a connection. โDo you go running at night? Around the neighborhood?โ
โThatโs me.โ
โIโve seen you training! Youโre really fast!โ
And Iโm wondering why the landscapers might be working in the neighborhood after dark but thereโs no time to ask because Teddyโs already running back across the yard, clutching a sheet of paper. โHere it is,โ he says, winded and out of breath. โI saved it for you.โ
โOh, buddy, this is amazing!โ Adrian says. โCheck out those sunglasses! I look pretty good, right?โ He shows me the picture and I have to laugh. He looks like the stick figure from Hangman.
โVery handsome,โ I agree.
โMuy guapo,โ Adrian says to Teddy. โThatโs your new word for the week. It means super-good-looking.โ
โMuy guapo?โ
โBueno! Thatโs perfect!โ
Across the yard, an old man walks around the side of the Maxwellsโ house. Heโs short, with wrinkled brown skin and close-cropped gray hair. He shouts Adrianโs name and itโs clear heโs not happy. โยฟQuรฉ demonos estรกs haciendo?โ
Adrian waves to him, then shoots an amused look in our direction. โItโs El Jefe. I gotta go. But Iโll be back in two weeks, Teddy. Thank you for the picture. And good luck with your training, Mallory. Iโm gonna watch for you on ESPN, all right?โ
โPrisa!โ the old man yells. โVen aqui!โ
โOkay, okay!โ Adrian shouts back. He jumps onto the mower, starts it up, and crosses the yard in seconds. I can hear him apologizing in Spanish but the old man just yells over him, and they continue arguing as they disappear around the side of the house. I have a rudimentary grasp of Spanish from high schoolโI still rememberย el jefeย means โthe bossโโbut theyโre talking too fast for me to keep up.
Teddy seems concerned. โIs Adrian in trouble?โ
โI hope not.โ Then I look around the yard and marvel at the fact thatโfor all Adrianโs high-speed daredevil anticsโ the newly cut grass looks fantastic.
The Maxwells have a small outdoor shower on the back of their house so they can rinse off after swimming. Itโs a tiny wooden stall about the size of an old-fashioned phone booth, and Caroline stocks it with absurdly expensive shampoos and body washes. Teddy goes first and I shout instructions through the door, reminding him to rinse his hair and shake out his bathing suit. When heโs finished, he
shuffles outside with a beach towel wrapped around his body. โIโm a veggie burrito!โ
โYouโre adorable,โ I tell him. โGo get dressed and Iโll meet you upstairs.โ
Iโm hanging my towel and getting ready to enter the stall when I hear a woman calling my name. โItโs Mallory, right? The new sitter?โ
I turn and see the Maxwellsโ next-door neighbor hurrying across the lawn, a short old woman with wide hips and a wobbly gait. Caroline has warned me that sheโs very flaky and rarely leaves her house and yet here she is, dressed in an aquamarine muumuu and covered in jewelry: gold necklaces with crystal charms, big hoop earrings, jangly bracelets, and gemstone rings on her fingers and toes. โIโm Mitzi, honey, I live next door? And since youโre new to the neighborhood I want to give a bit of friendly advice: When those landscapers come around? You shouldnโt sit out by the pool. With everything on display.โ She gestures at the full length of my torso. โThis is what we used to call a provocation.โ
She steps closer and Iโm hit by the skunky smell of burnt rope. Either she needs a bath or sheโs very high, or possibly both. โExcuse me?โ
โYou got a nice figure and I understand you want to show it off. And itโs a free country, Iโm Libertarian, I say do what makes you feel good. But when these Mexicans come through, you need to show a little discretion. A little common sense. For your personal safety. Are you following?โ I start to answer but she keeps talking: โThis might sound racist, but itโs true. These menโtheyโve already broken the law once, when they crossed the border. So if a criminal sees a pretty girl all alone in a backyard, whatโs stopping him?โ
โAre you serious?โ
She grabs my wrist to underscore her remarks, and her hand is trembling. โPrincess, I am serious as a heart attack.
You need to cover your fanny.โ
Above us, Teddy calls through the screen of his open bedroom window, โMallory, can we have Popsicles?โ
โAfter my shower,โ I tell him. โFive minutes.โ
Mitzi waves to Teddy and he ducks out of sight. โHeโs a cute kid. Such a sweet face. Not a big fan of the parents, though. A bit uppity for my taste. Do you get that sense?โ
โWellโโ
โThe day they moved in, I baked a lasagna. To be neighborly, okay? I bring it to their front door and do you know what she says to me? โIโm sorry but we canโt accept your gift.โ Because of the chopped meat!โ
โMaybeโโ
โIโm sorry, honey, but that isย notย how you handle that situation. You smile, you say thank you, you take it inside, andย you throw it away. Donโt fling it back in my face. Thatโs rude. And the fatherโs even worse! He must drive you crazy.โ
โActuallyโโ
โEcch, youโre still a child. You canโt read people yet. Iโm a warm person, very empathetic, I read auras for a living. Youโll see clients knocking on my door all day long but donโt worry, thereโs nothing shady going on. I lost all interest after my hysterectomy.โ She winks at me. โBut how do you like the guest cottage? Do you ever get nervous? Sleeping out there all alone?โ
โWhy should I be nervous?โ โBecause of the history.โ โWhat history?โ
And for the first time in our conversation, Mitzi finds herself at a loss for words. She reaches for a lock of her hair, twisting it in her fingers until sheโs isolated a single strand. Then she yanks it from its root and tosses it over her shoulder. โYou should ask the parents.โ
โThey just moved here. They donโt know anything. What are you talking about?โ
โWhen I was a kid, we called your cottage the Devil House. Weโd dare each other to peek through the windows. My brother offered me quarters if I would stand on the porch and count to a hundred, but Iโd always chicken out.โ
โWhy?โ
โA woman was murdered. Annie Barrett. She was an artist, a painter, and she used your house as her studio.โ
โShe was murdered in the cottage?โ
โWell, they never actually found her body. This was a long time ago, right after World War Two.โ
Teddyโs face reappears in the second-floor window. โHas it been five minutes yet?โ
โAlmost,โ I tell him.
When I look back at Mitzi, sheโs already backing across the yard. โDonโt keep the little angel waiting. Go enjoy your ice creams.โ
โWait, whatโs the rest of the story?โ
โThere is no rest of the story. After Annie diedโor went missing, who knowsโher family turned the cottage into a garden shed. Wouldnโt let anyone stay out there. And itโs been that way ever since, seventy-some years. Until this month.โ
Caroline comes home with a minivan full of groceries, so I help her unload and unpack all the bags. Teddy is upstairs in his bedroom, drawing pictures, so I use the opportunity to ask about Mitziโs story.
โI told you she was cuckoo,โ Caroline says. โShe thinks the mailman steams open her Visa bills so he can learn her credit scores. Sheโs paranoid.โ
โShe said a woman was murdered.โ
โEighty years ago. This is a very old neighborhood, Mallory. All these houses have some kind of horror story.โ Caroline opens her refrigerator and loads the crisper drawer
with spinach, kale, and a bundle of radishes with soil still clinging to their roots. โPlus the previous owners lived here forty years, so obviously they didnโt have any problems.โ
โRight, thatโs true.โ I reach into a canvas grocery bag and pull out a six-pack of coconut water. โExcept they used the cottage as a toolshed, right? No one was sleeping out there.โ
Caroline looks exasperated. I sense sheโs had a long day at the VA clinic, that she doesnโt appreciate being ambushed with questions the minute she walks through the door. โMallory, that woman has probably done more drugs than all my patients combined. I donโt know how sheโs still alive, but her mind is definitely not right. She is a nervous, twitchy, paranoid mess. And as someone who cares about your sobriety, Iโm going to strongly suggest you limit contact with her, okay?โ
โNo, I know,โ I tell her, and I feel bad, because this is the closest Caroline has ever come to yelling at me. I donโt say anything else after that, I just open the pantry and unpack boxes of arborio rice, couscous, and whole grain crackers. I put away bags and bags of rolled oats, raw almonds, Turkish dates, and weird shriveled-up mushrooms. After everything is unpacked, I tell Caroline Iโm heading out. And she must sense that Iโm still upset because she comes over and rests a hand on my shoulder.
โListen, we have a terrific guest bedroom on the second floor. If you want to move over here, weโd be thrilled to have you. Teddy would go bananas. What do you think?โ
And somehow, since she already has one arm around me, it turns into a kind of hug. โIโm fine out there,โ I tell her. โI like having my own space. Itโs good practice for the real world.โ
โIf you change your mind just say the word. You are
alwaysย welcome in this house.โ
That night I put on my good sneakers and go out for a run. I wait until after dark but the weather is still muggy and gross. It feels good to push myself, to run through the pain. Russell has a saying that I loveโhe says we donโt know how much our bodies can endure until we make cruel demands of them. Well, that night I demand a lot of myself. I do wind sprints up and down the neighborhood sidewalks, running through shadows of streetlamps and clusters of fireflies, past the ever-present hum of central air conditioners. I finish
5.2 miles in thirty-eight minutes and walk home feeling deliriously spent.
I take another showerโthis time, in the small, cramped bathroom of the cottageโand then fix myself a simple supper: a frozen pizza heated in the toaster oven and a half-pint of Ben & Jerryโs for dessert. I feel like I deserve it.
By the time Iโm finished with everything, itโs after nine oโclock. I turn out all the lights except for the lamp on my nightstand. I get into the big white bed with my phone and put on a Hallmark movie calledย Winter Love. I have a hard time focusing, though. I canโt tell if maybe Iโve seen it before, or maybe the story is just identical to a dozen other Hallmark movies. Also, itโs a little stuffy inside the cottage, so I stand up and open the curtains.
Thereโs a large window next to the front door, and a smaller window over my bed, and at night I keep them open to generate a cross-breeze. The ceiling fan spins in slow, lazy circles. Outside in the woods, the crickets are chirping, and sometimes Iโll hear small animals pacing through the forest, soft footsteps padding over dead leaves.
I get back into bed and start the movie again. Every minute or so, a moth smacks against my window screens, drawn to the light. Thereโs aย tap-tap-tappingย on the wall behind my bed but I know itโs just a branch; there are trees growing close on three sides of the cottage and they scrape at the walls every time the wind picks up. I glance at the
door and make sure itโs locked, and it is, but itโs a very flimsy lock, nothing that would stop a determined intruder.
And then I hear the sound, a sort of high-frequency humming, like a mosquito flying too close to my ear. I wave it off, but after a few seconds itโs back again, a gray speck flitting around my peripheral vision, always just out of reach. And I think back to the doctor from the University of Pennsylvania and the research experiment that didnโt actually happen.
And itโs the first night I feel like someone might be watching me.