After two terrible, freezing nights, Matthew moved for the first time. He didnโt wake up, didnโt open his eyes, but he moaned and made this terrible clicking sound, like he was suffocating.
A trapezoid of blue sky hung above them. It had finally stopped raining. Leni saw the rock face clearly, all the ridges and indentations and footholds. He was burning up with fever. Leni made him swallow more aspirin and poured the last of the Bactine on his wound and rewrapped it in new gauze
and duct tape.
Still, she could feel the life ebbing out of him. There was noย himย in the broken body beside her. โDonโt leave me, Matthewโฆโ
A distant whirring sound reached down into the darkness, theย thwop- thwop-thwopย of a helicopter.
She unwound from Matthew and scrambled into the mud. โWeโre here!โ she shouted, sloshing to the break in the rocks where the sky showed.
She flattened herself to the sheer rock wall, waved her good arm, screaming, โWeโre here! Down here!โ
She heard dogs barking, the buzz of human voices. A flashlight shone down on her.
โLenora Allbright,โ yelled a man in a brown uniform. โIs that you?โ
* * *
โWEโRE TAKING YOU UP FIRST, Lenora,โ someone said. She couldnโt see his face in the mix of sunlight and shadow.
โNo! Matthew first. Heโs โฆ worse.โ
The next thing she knew, she was being strapped into a cage and hauled up the sheer wall. The cage banged into rock, clanged. Pain ricocheted in her chest, down her arm.
The cage landed on solid ground with a clatter. Sunlight blinded her. There were men in uniforms all around, dogs barking wildly. Whistles being blown.
She closed her eyes again, felt herself being transported to the grassy patch up the trail, heard theย thwop-thwop-thwopย of a helicopter. โI want to wait for Matthew,โ she yelled.
โYouโll be fine, miss,โ someone in a uniform said, his face too close, his nose spread like a mushroom in the middle of his face. โWeโre airlifting you to the hospital in Anchorage.โ
โMatthew,โ she said, clutching his collar with her one good hand, yanking him close.
She saw his face change. โThe boy? Heโs behind you. Weโve got him.โ He didnโt say Matthew would be fine.
* * *
LENI OPENED HER EYES SLOWLY, saw a strip of overhead lighting above her, a line of glowing white against an acoustical tile ceiling. The room smelled cloyingly sweet, full of flower arrangements and balloons. Her ribs were wrapped so tightly it hurt to breathe and her broken arm was in a cast. The window beside her revealed a pale purple sky.
โThereโs my baby girl,โ Mama said. The left side of her face was swollen and her forehead was black and blue. Wrinkled, dirty clothes told the tale of a motherโs worry. She kissed Leniโs forehead, pushed the hair gently away from her eyes.
โYouโre okay,โ Leni said, relieved.
โIโm okay, Leni. Youโre the one weโve been worried about.โ โHow did they find us?โ
โWe looked everywhere. I was beside myself with worry. Everyone was. Tom finally remembered a place his wife had loved to camp. He went
looking and found the truck. Search and Rescue saw some broken branches on Bear Claw Ridge where you fell. Thank God.โ
โMatthew tried to save me.โ
โI know. You told the paramedics about a dozen times.โ โHow is he?โ
Mama touched Leniโs bruised cheek. โHeโs in bad shape. They donโt know if heโll make it through the night.โ
Leni struggled to sit up. Every breath and movement hurt. There was a needle stuck in the back of her hand, and around it a strip of flesh-colored tape over a purple bruise. She eased the needle out, threw it aside.
โWhat are you doing?โ Mama asked. โYou have two broken ribs.โ โI need to see Matthew.โ
โItโs the middle of the night.โ
โI donโt care.โ She swung her bare, bruised, scratched legs over the side of the bed and stood. Mama moved in close, became a stanchion of support. Together, they shuffled away from the bed.
At the door, Mama lifted the curtain and looked through the window, then nodded. They slipped out; Mama closed the door quietly behind them. Leni inched painfully forward on stockinged feet, following her mother down one corridor to the next until they came to the brilliantly lit, coldly efficient-looking area called the intensive care unit.
โWait here,โ Mama said. She went on ahead, checking rooms. At the last one on the right, she turned back, motioned for Leni to follow.
On the door behind her mother, Leni sawย WALKER, MATTHEWย written on a clipboard in a clear plastic sleeve.
โThis may be hard,โ Mama said. โHe looks bad.โ Leni opened the door, went inside.
There were machines everywhere, thunking and humming and whirring, making a sound like human breathing.
The boy in the bed couldnโt be Matthew.
His head was shaved and covered in bandages; gauze crisscrossed his face, the white fabric tinged pink by blood seepage. One eye was covered by a protective cup; the other was swollen shut. His leg was elevated, suspended about eighteen inches above the bed by a leather sling, and so
swollen it looked more like a tree trunk than a boyโs leg. All she could see of it were his big, purple toes peeking out from the bandages. A tube in his slack mouth connected him to a machine that lifted and fell in breaths, inflated and deflated his chest. Breathing for him.
Leni took hold of his hot, dry hand.
He was here, fighting for his life because of her, because he loved her.
She leaned down, whispered, โDonโt leave me, Matthew. Please. I love you.โ
After that, she didnโt know what to say.
She stood there as long as she could, hoping he could feel her touch, hear her breathing, understand her words. It felt like hours had passed when Mama finally pulled her away from the bed, said, โNo arguments,โ firmly, and led her back to her own room and helped her back into bed.
โWhereโs Dad?โ Leni said at last.
โHeโs in jail, thanks to Marge and Tom.โ She tried to smile. โGood,โ Leni said, and saw her mother flinch.
* * *
THE NEXT MORNING, Leni woke slowly. She had a split second of blessed amnesia, then the truth tackled her. She saw Mama slumped in a chair by the door.
โIs he alive?โ Leni asked.
โHe made it through the night.โ
Before Leni could process this, there was a knock at the door.
Mama turned as Mr. Walker entered. He looked exhausted, as haggard and unmoored as Leni felt.
โHey, Leni.โ He pulled the truckerโs cap off his head, crushed it nervously in his big hands. His gaze moved to Mama, barely landing before it returned to Leni. A wordless conversation took place between them, excluded Leni. โLarge Marge and Thelma and Tica are here. Clyde is taking care of your animals.โ
โThank you,โ Mama said.
โHow is Matthew?โ Leni asked, struggling to sit up, wheezing at the pain in her chest.
โHeโs in a medically induced coma. Thereโs a problem with his brain, something called shearing, and he might be paralyzed. They are going to try to wake him. See if he can breathe on his own. They donโt think heโll be able to.โ
โThey think heโll die when they unplug him?โ
Mr. Walker nodded. โHeโd want you there, I think.โ
โOh, Tom,โ Mama said. โI donโt know. Sheโs hurt, and it will be too much for her to see.โ
โNo looking away, Mama,โ Leni said, and climbed out of bed. Mr. Walker took her arm, steadied her.
Leni looked at him. โIโm the reason heโs hurt. He tried to save me. Itโs my fault.โ
โHe couldnโt do anything else, Leni. Not after what happened to his mom. I know my son. Even if heโd known the price, he would have tried to rescue you.โ
Leni wished that made her feel better, but it didnโt. โHe loves you, Leni. Iโm glad he found that.โ
He was already talking as if Matthew were gone.
She let Mr. Walker lead her out of the room and down the hall. She felt her mother behind her; every now and then she would reach out, brush her fingertips against the small of Leniโs back.
They entered Matthewโs room. Alyeska was already there, with her back to the wall. โHey, Len,โ Alyeska said.
Len.
Just like her brother.
Alyeska hugged Leni. They didnโt know each other well, but tragedy created a kind of family relationship between them. โHe would have tried to save you no matter what. Itโs who he is.โ
Leni couldnโt answer.
The door opened and three people came into the room, dragging equipment with them. In the lead was a man in a white coat; behind him were two nurses in orange scrubs.
โYouโll need to stand over there,โ the doctor said to Leni and Mama. โExcept for you, Dad. You come stand by the bed.โ
Leni moved to the wall, stood with her back pressed to it. There was barely any distance between her and Alyeska, but it seemed like an ocean; on one shore, the sister who loved him, on the other, the girl whoโd been the cause of his fall. Alyeska reached over and held Leniโs hand.
The medical team moved efficiently around Matthewโs bed, nodding and talking to one another, taking notes, checking machines, recording vital signs.
Then the doctor said, โOkay?โ
Mr. Walker leaned down and whispered something to Matthew and kissed his bandaged forehead, murmured words Leni couldnโt hear. When he drew back, he was crying. He turned to the doctor and nodded.
Slowly, the tube was pulled out of Matthewโs mouth. An alarm sounded.
Leni heard Alyeska say, โCome on, Mattie. You can do it.โ She pulled away from the wall, stepped forward, brought Leni with her.
And Mr. Walker: โYouโre a tough kid.ย Fight.โ An alarm sounded.
Beep. Beep. Beep.
The nurses exchanged a knowing look.
Leni knew she shouldnโt speak, but there was no way to hold back. โDonโt leave us, Matthew โฆ pleaseโฆโ
Mr. Walker gave Leni a terrible, agonized look. Matthew took a great, gulping, gasping breath. The alarm silenced itself.
โHeโs breathing on his own,โ the doctor said.
Heโs back, Leni thought with a staggering relief.ย Heโll be fine.
โThank God,โ Mr. Walker said on a sigh.
โDonโt get your hopes up,โ the doctor said, and the room went quiet. โMatthew may breathe on his own but never wake up. He may remain in a persistent vegetative state. If he does wake, he may have substantial cognitive impairment. Breathing is one thing. Life is another.โ
โDonโt say that,โ Leni said too softly for anyone to hear. โHe might hear you.โ
โHeย willย be okay,โ Aly murmured. โHeโll wake up and smile and say heโs hungry. Heโs always hungry. Heโll want one of his books.โ
โHeโs a fighter,โ Mr. Walker added.
Leni couldnโt say anything. The high sheโd felt when he took that first breath had gone. Like getting to the top of a roller coaster: there was a nanosecond of pure exhilaration before the headlong plunge into fear.
* * *
โTHEYโRE DISCHARGING YOU TODAY,โ Mama said while Leni stared up at the television suspended on the wall in her hospital room. Radar was babbling some story to Hawkeye onย M*A*S*H. Leni hit the off button. Sheโd spent years wishing she could watch TV. Now she couldnโt care less.
Really, she had trouble caring about anything except Matthew. Her emotions were impossible to access. โI donโt want to go.โ
โI know,โ Mama said, stroking her hair. โBut we have to leave.โ โWhere will we go?โ
โHome. But donโt worry. Your dadโs in jail.โ Home.
Four days ago, when sheโd been in that crevice with Matthew, hoping against hope that theyโd be rescued before he died in her arms, sheโd told herself theyโd be okay. Matthew would be fine, theyโd go to college together, and Mama would come to Anchorage with them, get an apartment, maybe serve drinks at Chilkoot Charlieโs and collect big tips. Two days ago, when sheโd watched them pull the tube from Matthewโs mouth and seen him breathe on his own, sheโd had a split second of hope, and then it had crashed on the rocks ofย may never wake up.
Now she saw the truth.
There would be no college for her and Matthew, no do-over as a pair of ordinary kids in love.
There was no way to lie to herself anymore, to dream of happy endings.
All she could do was be there for Matthew and keep on loving him.
I think you stand by the people you love.ย That was what heโd said, and it was what she would do.
โCan I see Matthew before I go?โ
โNo. Heโs got an infection in his leg. They wonโt even let Tom get near him. But weโll come back as soon as we can.โ
โOkay.โ
Leni felt nothing as she dressed to go home. Nothing.
She shuffled through the hallway beside her mother, the casted arm held in close to her body, nodding at the nurses who told her goodbye.
Did she smile in acknowledgment? She didnโt think so. Even that small a thing was beyond her. This grief was unlike any emotion sheโd experienced before, suffocating, weighty. It pulled the color from everything.
They found Mr. Walker in the main waiting area, pacing, drinking black coffee from a Styrofoam cup. Alyeska was seated in a chair beside him, reading a magazine. At their entrance, both tried to smile.
โIโm sorry,โ Leni said to them.
Mr. Walker came closer. He touched her chin, forced her to look up. โNo more of that,โ he said. โWe Alaskans are tough, right? Our boy will pull through. Heโll survive. Youโll see.โ
But wasnโt it Alaska that had nearly killed him? How could a place be as alive as Alaska, as beautiful and cruel?
No. It wasnโt Alaskaโs fault. It was hers. Leni was Matthewโs second mistake.
Alyeska moved in beside her father. โDonโt you give up on him, Leni. Heโs a tough kid. He made it through Momโs death. Heโll get through this, too.โ
โHow will I know how heโs doing?โ Leni asked.
โIโll give updates on the radio.ย Peninsula Pipeline.ย Sevenย P.M.ย broadcast. Listen for them,โ Mr. Walker said. โWeโll bring him home as soon as we can. Heโll recover better around us.โ
Leni nodded numbly.
Mama led her out to the truck and they climbed in.
On the long drive home, Mama chatted nervously. She pointed out the extreme low tide in Turnagain Arm and the cars parked at the Bird House Tavern in the middle of the day and the crowd of people fishing at the Russian River (combat fishing, they called it, people stood so close
together). Usually Leni loved this drive. Sheโd search the high ridges for specks of white that were Dall sheep and sheโd scour the inlet for the sleek, eerie-looking white beluga whales that sometimes appeared.
Now she just sat silently, her one good hand lying in her lap.
In Kaneq, they drove off the ferry, rumbled over the textured metal ramp, and rolled past the old Russian church.
Leni took care not to look at the saloon as they drove past. Even so, she saw theย CLOSEDย sign on its door and the flowers laid in front. Nothing else had changed. They drove to the end of the road and through the open gate onto their property. There, Mama parked in front of the cabin and got out. She came around to Leniโs side, opened the door.
Leni slid sideways, grateful for her motherโs firm grip as they walked through the tall grass. The goats bleated, packed in together, and stood in a clot at the chicken-wire gate.
Inside the cabin, buttery August sunlight streamed through the dirty windows, thickened by motes of dust.
The cabin was spotless. No broken glass, no lanterns fallen on the floor, no overturned chairs. No sign of what had happened here.
And it smelled good, of roasting meat. Almost exactly when Leni noticed the scent, Dad came out of the bedroom.
Mama gasped.
Leni felt nothing, certainly not surprise.
He stood there facing them, his long hair pulled back into a squiggly ponytail. His face was bruised, a little misshapen. One eye was black. He was wearing the same clothes Leni had last seen him in and there were dried flecks of blood on his neck.
โY-youโre out,โ Mama said.
โYou didnโt press charges,โ he answered. Mamaโs face turned red. She didnโt look at Leni.
He moved toward Mama. โBecause you love me and you know I didnโt mean any of it. You know how sorry I am. It wonโt happen again,โ he promised as he reached for her.
Leni didnโt know if it was fear or love or habit or a poisonous combination of all three, but Mama reached out, too. Her pale fingers
threaded through his dirty ones, curled in to take hold.
He pulled her into his arms, held on to her so tightly he must have thought theyโd be swept away, one without the other. When they finally pulled apart, he turned to Leni. โI heard heโs going to die. Iโm sorry.โ
Sorry.
Leni felt something then, a seismic shift in her thinking; like spring breakup, a changing of the landscape, a breaking away that was violent, immediate. She wasnโt afraid of this man anymore. Or if she was, the fear was submerged too deeply to register. All she felt was hatred.
โLeni?โ he said, frowning. โIโm sorry. Say something.โ
She saw what her silence did to him, how it shredded his confidence, and she decided right then: she would never speak to her father again. Let Mama slink back, let her twine herself back into this toxic knot that was their family. Leni would stay only as long as she had to. As soon as Matthew was better she would leave. If this was the life Mama chose for herself, so be it. Leni was going to leave.
As soon as Matthew was better.
โLeni?โ Mama said, her voice uncertain. She, too, was confused and frightened by this change in Leni. She sensed an upheaval in emotion that could move the continents of their past.
Leni walked past them both, climbed awkwardly up the loft ladder, and crawled into bed.
* * *
Dear Matthew,
I never really knew the weight of sorrow before, how it stretches you out like an old, wet sweater. Every minute that passes with no word from you, without hope of word from you, feels like a day, every day feels like a month. I want to believe that you will just sit up one day and say youโre starving, that youโll swing your legs out of bed and get dressed and come for me, maybe carry me off to your familyโs hunting cabin, where we will burrow under the furs and love each other again. Thatโs the big dream. Strangely, it doesnโt hurt as much as the little dream, which is just that you open your eyes.
I know what happened to us was my fault. Meeting me ruined your life. No one can argue with that. Me, with my screwed-up family, with my dad, who wanted to kill you for loving me and who beat my mother for simply knowing about it.
My hatred of him is a poison burning me from the inside out. Every time I look at him something in me hardens. It scares me how much I hate him. I havenโt spoken to him since I got back.
He doesnโt like that, I can tell.
Honestly, I donโt know what to do with all these emotions. Iโm furious, Iโm desperate, Iโm sad in a way I never knew existed.
Thereโs no outlet for my feelings, no valve to shut them down. I listen to the radio every night at sevenย P.M.ย Last night, your dad broadcast how youโre doing. I know youโre out of the coma and not paralyzed and I try to make that good enough, but itโs not. I know you canโt walk or talk and that your brain is probably irreparably damaged. Thatโs what the nurses said.
None of it changes how I feel. I love you.
Iโm here. Waiting. I want you to know that. Iโll wait forever. Leni
* * *
LENI SAT IN THE BOWย of the fishing skiff, leaned over, fluttering bare fingers through cool water, watching it cascade and pool. The cast on her other arm looked starkly white against her dirty jeans. Her broken ribs made her conscious of every breath.
She could hear her parents talking softly together; her mama was closing the cooler, full now of silvery fish. Dad started up the engine.
The boat motor started; the bow planed up as they sped for home.
At their beach, the boat crunched up onto the pebbles and sand, made a sound like sausage sizzling in a cast-iron pan. Leni jumped into the ankle- deep water, grabbed the frayed line with her one good hand, and pulled the skiff aground. She tied it to a huge, limbless driftwood log that lay angled on the beach and went back for the dripping metal net.
โThat was quite a silver Mom landed,โ Dad said to Leni. โI guess sheโs the dayโs big winner.โ
Leni ignored him. Slinging the gear bag over her shoulder, she headed up the steps, making her way slowly to dry land.
Once there, she put her gear away and headed to the animal pens to check that their water was okay. She fed the goats and the chickens, stayed to turn the compost in the bin, and then started hauling water from the river. It took longer with only one strong arm. She stayed outside as long as she could, but finally she had to go inside.
Mama was in the kitchen making dinner: pan-fried, fresh-caught salmon, drizzled with homemade herb butter; green beans fried in preserved moose fat; a salad of freshly picked lettuce and tomatoes.
Leni set the table, sat down.
Dad took a seat across from her. She didnโt look up, but she heard the clatter of chair legs on the wood, the squeak of the seat as he sat down. She smelled the familiar combination of perspiration and fish and cigarette smoke. โI was thinking we would head over to Bear Cove tomorrow, pick blueberries. I know how much you love them.โ
Leni didnโt look at him.
Mama came up beside Leni, holding a pewter tray of the crispy-skinned fish, with bright green beans tucked in alongside. She paused, then set it down in the middle of the table next to an old soup can full of flowers.
โYour favorite,โ she said to Leni. โUh-huh,โ Leni said.
โG-damn it, Leni,โ her father said. โI canโt abide this moping. You ran off. The kid fell. Whatโs done is done.โ
Leni ignored him. โSay something.โ
โLeni,โ Mama said. โPlease.โ
Dad shoved back from the table and stormed out of the cabin, slamming the door shut behind him.
Mama sank into her chair. Leni could see how tired her mother was, how her hands trembled. โYou have to stop this, Leni. Itโs upsetting him.โ
โSo?โ
โLeni โฆ youโll be gone soon. Heโll let you go to college now. He feels terrible about what happened. We can get him to agree. You can leave. Just like you wanted. All you have to do isโโ
โNo,โ she said more forcefully than she meant to, and she saw the effect her shouting had on Mama, how she instinctively shrank back.
Leni wanted to care that she was frightening her mother, but she couldnโt hold on to that caring. Mama had chosen to dig for treasure through the dirt of Dadโs toxic, porous love, but not Leni. Not anymore.
She knew what her silence was doing to him, how it angered him. Each hour she didnโt speak to him, he became more agitated and irritable. More dangerous. She didnโt care.
โHe loves you,โ Mama said. โHa.โ
โYouโre lighting a fuse, Leni. You know that.โ
Leni couldnโt tell Mama how angry she was, the sharp, tiny teeth that gnawed at her all the time, shredding a little more of her away every time she looked at her father. She pushed back from the table and went to the loft to write to Matthew, trying not to think about her mother sitting down there all alone.
* * *
Dear Matthew,
I am trying not to lose hope, but you know how hard it has always been for me. Hope, I mean. Itโs been four days since I last saw you. It feels like forever.
Itโs funny, now that hope has become so slippery and unreliable, I realize that all those years, when I was a kid thinking I didnโt believe in hope, I was actually living on it. Mama fed me a steady diet ofย heโs tryingย and I lapped it up like a terrier. Every day I believed her. When he smiled at me or gave me a sweater or asked me how my day was, I thought,ย See?ย He cares.ย Even after I saw him hit her for the first time, I still let her define the world for me.
Now it is all gone.
Maybe heโs sick. Maybe Vietnam broke him. And maybe those are all excuses set at the feet of a man who is just rotting from the inside.
I donโt know anymore and as much as I try, I canโt care.
I have no hope left for him. The only hope I can hold on to is for you. For us.
Iโm still here.