Where I Lost Her
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Synopsis
Eight years ago, Tess and Jake were considered a power couple of the New York publishing world-happy, in love, planning a family. Failed fertility treatments and a heartbreaking attempt at adoption have fractured their marriage and left Tess edgy and adrift. A visit to friends in rural Vermont throws Tess's world into further chaos when she sees a young, half-dressed child in the middle of the road, who then runs into the woods like a frightened deer.
The entire town begins searching for the little girl. But there are no sightings, no other witnesses, no reports of missing children. As local police and Jake point out, Tess's imagination has played her false before. And yet Tess is compelled to keep looking, not only to save the little girl she can't forget but to salvage her broken heart as well.
Blending her trademark lyrical prose with a superbly crafted and suspenseful narrative, Where I Lost Her is a gripping, haunting novel from a remarkable storyteller.
Release date: February 23, 2016
Publisher: Kensington Books
Print pages: 384
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Where I Lost Her
T. Greenwood
I stand in the shadowed doorway, staring at the heavy wooden door. I feel the sweat trickling down my neck. The air is hot and fragrant, the smells unfamiliar. Strong. I think the sweetness comes from the jacaranda, those trees that stand sentry along this street, an explosion of violet petals. The pavement is littered with their castoffs, like purple confetti after a parade. The impossible beauty of all that color, the cloying sweetness, brings tears to my eyes. But there is another scent, lingering beneath. Tainting it. It smells like something burned. Like something spoiled.
The phone call came this morning, to the hotel, where we have been staying. Waiting. I have learned such tremendous patience in the last five years, though sometimes I worry the line between patience and foolishness is a thin one. I have been made a fool before. Believed promises. Paid dearly for my optimism and blind faith. And yet, trust is like an affliction. Hope overriding all sensibility. This has become my religion: my faith, like all other faiths, driven by the most simple and primitive, selfish want. Accompanied by a willful and necessary blindness.
Our lawyer said to come right away. She didn’t explain. I assume this means the adoption paperwork has come through, that everything has been finalized. That we are finally being offered passage from the purgatory of that hotel room with its rocking ceiling fan and stiff sheets, with the garbage smell that rises from the Dumpsters two stories below and the thin walls like placental membranes separating us from the other couple, who is also waiting. We see them in the dim hallway, at breakfast in the little café next to the hotel. They are from the Midwest, both of them tall and big and loud. We nod our unspoken acknowledgment to these, our fellow congregants, but we do not speak. And then, this morning, through these thin walls, we heard the sounds of their departure. The man’s husky voice, the woman’s exasperated huffs. And then the sound of a baby crying. Lying in that narrow bed, both of us were wide awake. Listening.
When the phone rang, I almost knocked it on the floor reaching for it. My heart fluttering like a bird inside my chest.
“You must come right away,” she said.
And now, here we stand at that doorway again. I have been here so many times now, it is as familiar as our own heavy door with its leaded-glass window back in Brooklyn. I have studied the intricacies of it, the ornate carvings, the brass knocker shaped like a boar’s head. I know the hollow announcement the brass makes when it knocks against the wood.
“Wait,” you say.
And I can’t believe that you are asking me to wait even another moment. I stare at you in disbelief. But you just reach out and pluck one of those purple tissue paper petals from my hair. Smile. “Okay,” you say. “Go ahead.”
Lake Gormlaith, Vermont, June 2015
The girls.
I see the girls first, before the camp, before the lake even. As we drive the last stretch of the winding dirt road, through the dappled light, I can see them on the wide expanse of grass in front of Effie and Devin’s cabin. They are shadows at first, just silhouettes. Paper cutouts. But as we approach, they quickly come into focus. Sharpening.
They are both barefoot and beautiful. Plum, who is ten now, sits on the ground plucking dandelions, her long brown fingers nimbly weaving them into a chain. This is ten, I think: grass stains, nails bitten to the quick, scabby knees. Zu-Zu, who is thirteen, a dancer, pirouettes effortlessly across the grass. I am stunned, she is stunning: long legs, long neck, graceful hands. This is thirteen, I think: precipice, flight.
I turn to Jake, to see if he sees. I am so desperate for a moment of connection, to share a single glance imbued with something. Remorse? Regret? Sometimes it feels that he is so willful in his refusal to relinquish anything to me, even this: a single, goddamned moment of recognition. Even now. I just want him, for once, to feel what I feel. Instead, he stares straight ahead, navigates this last turn with his hands gripping the wheel, his eyes trained on the road. I don’t know why I persist. I don’t know how this could fix anything. I am alone now in this endless longing, the sole proprietor of this relentless ache. Maybe I always have been.
We used to make the six-hour drive from Brooklyn to visit Effie and Devin in Vermont three or four times a year. Once a season, sometimes more. It used to be our escape from the city, from our hectic lives. But over the years, it’s become an odd sort of self-torture. A masochistic game for which there are no rules. And so, over time, the frequency of these visits has decreased. It has been almost a year now since our last visit. I blame our busy schedules, our ridiculous obligations. But the truth is that it simply hurts too much; their family, this perfect beautiful family, feels like a cruel reminder of everything we’ve lost.
Crushed. This is what I feel as I watch the girls. A crippling heartache.
When they see us, they both stop what they are doing and come running. Jake slows to a stop in the driveway and rolls down his window, beaming at them. His face is like the sun, emerging from behind dark clouds. We have barely spoken since we left New York. But now his eyes are bright. I feel the flutter of something in my chest, but he still doesn’t look at me.
“Uncle Jake!” Plum says, leaning in through Jake’s open window for a hug, her feet lifting off the ground behind her. And then she is leaning across his lap and reaching for me in the passenger seat, placing the dandelion chain on my head. “Tessie!” she squeals. She is all bones and angles. She smells like grass.
Zu-Zu stands outside the car, long arms crossed against her body now, hands cupping her elbows. She is like a reed. Tall, willowy. Her hair is pulled back into a puff of a ponytail. The little glass earrings in her ears catch the light. She is three years older than Plum, but they share the same freckled toffee skin and startling green eyes, that magical, otherworldly beauty that only mixed children seem to have. Zu-Zu smiles as she waits for this ritual to end.
“Okay, okay,” Jake says. “Let me out!” And Plum, like a wriggly toddler, rights herself, scooting backwards so that Jake is able to open his door.
“Did you bring my cheesecake?” Plum asks.
“Greedy, greedy little monster,” Effie says as she comes out the camp’s back door, wiping her hands on her apron, a bohemian housewife in her long chevron sundress. Her hair is still long and dark (as it always has been) except for one silvery strand that frames her face. She keeps it in a sloppy bun today, suspended with a single chopstick.
“Well, hello!” Devin says as he comes out of the woods. He is covered in sawdust and carrying a toolbox. He sets it down and opens his arms.
And we go through all the motions; this particular choreography is one we know by heart: Devin shaking Jake’s hand and then pulling him in for a hug, Jake leaning down to kiss the top of Effie’s head. The smell of pipe smoke and cedar in Devin’s soft T-shirt when he embraces me. The way the girls circle us, waiting for the gifts we always bring from New York, which Jake pulls from the trunk like a magician: Zu-Zu’s favorite salt bagels from Ess-a-Bagel, Junior’s Cheesecake in its striped box for Plum. The girls disappearing into the camp, clutching their respective treats, the screen door banging behind them. Devin and Jake following behind, Devin’s large dark hand spread across Jake’s back.
We are old, old friends.
It isn’t until Effie and I make our way to each other that I forget the next move. We have been friends since we were just little girls. She is like a sister. She will know. She navigates me the way a blind person navigates her own home. She knows my configurations. Even in the dark, she knows when something is askew.
I am askew.
But she also knows better than to say anything. She will wait for me. She doesn’t ask questions for which I have no answers. This is our way with each other. And today I am grateful.
“Thank you so much for offering to do this,” she says instead, adjusting the dandelion crown I have forgotten is on my head. She is talking about Zu-Zu. She’s been accepted into a prestigious summer ballet intensive in the city, and we are bringing her back with us when we leave on Sunday. Effie’s sister, Colette, who recently retired from the same company, has promised that she will be taken care of. Watched over. She will even be teaching some of Zu-Zu’s classes. But I know this world feels far away to Effie, a part of someone else’s dream.
Effie said she couldn’t bear to go. That it would be easier to say good-bye to Zu-Zu here than it would be leaving her in New York. And because Effie is my best friend, and because she asks so very little of me, I didn’t hesitate before offering to come up and get her. To take her back down with us after a nice visit. To make sure she gets settled in. It’s just a weekend, I thought. I miss them. The girls.
Effie leans forward and touches her forehead to mine.
“I’m afraid to let her go,” she whispers.
And I feel my throat constricting. It makes me think of a snake, swallowing a live mouse. The way all the unsaid things gather and squirm there as I try to swallow them down.
“I know,” I say, nodding, eyes brimming with tears I’m not ready to spill.
Effie squeezes my hand. We are sisters, bound not by blood but by a thousand such unspoken things.
Devin and Jake grab our bags from the trunk and carry them down the narrow grassy path to the guest cottage in the woods behind the camp. I watch the leaves enclose them as they go. Jake is fairly tall, but Devin still dwarfs him. I listen to the receding sound of their voices, swallowed by the forest.
“Tessie,” Plum says, grabbing my hand. “Come see my room. I have a new turtle! And I built the Colosseum out of Legos!”
“A gift from my dad,” Effie says, laughing. “It took them almost a week to put it together. It took him, I mean . . .”
Effie’s father, like my own, is a history professor, the kind of grandfather who would spend a week putting together ruins made of Legos with his granddaughter.
Zu-Zu and Plum share the larger room upstairs. It has been partitioned since I last visited, divided by colorful scarves sewn together and strung across the room on a makeshift pulley. Plum’s side is oddly tidy for a ten-year-old, with shelves housing her various Lego creations, including the impressive Colosseum, and a large terrarium where Harold, the turtle, idles.
I lean over and peer into the glass. He sits on a rock directly under the glow of a heat lamp. “Wow, that is one good-looking turtle,” I say.
“Shhh,” Plum says. “He’s sleeping.”
“Oh, so sorry,” I say, and tiptoe over to the divider, poking my head through to Zu-Zu’s side of the room.
Pale pink tights hang from the exposed rafters; a pile of dead pointe shoes sit like some odd monument in the corner. It is a chaos of clutter that is both child and teenager all at once: ratty stuffed animals and library books, a glossy poster of Misty Copeland in “Firebird,” and a mobile made from bottle caps hanging in the window. China teacups filled with jewelry, sticky tubes of lip gloss, and so many dirty clothes.
“Be careful,” Effie says. “Harold is probably not the only animal living up here.”
“Mom,” Zu-Zu says, and plops down on her bed, clutching the stuffed baby seal, Baby Z, I gave her when she was born. I bought him at the New England Aquarium when I still lived in Boston. He is threadbare now. Every bit of fur loved away.
I sit down next to her on the bed, and squeeze her and the seal together. Her hair smells like citrus.
“I don’t mind a little mess,” I say to her.
“Seriously,” Effie says to Zu-Zu. “Can I tell her about the you-know-what?”
Zu-Zu rolls her eyes.
“Tell me!” I say, eager for the scoop.
“So, yesterday, I come in here looking for my flip-flops and smell something funky. Rotten. So I search and search and search. Finally I realize the smell is coming from her backpack, which is shoved under her bed. And inside is her lunch box from the last day of school, which was three weeks ago, by the way. So I open it up, and it’s grapes. And they’ve totally fermented, turned into some kind of hooch.”
I laugh. “That skill will come in handy in the dorms this summer.”
“And prison,” Zu-Zu says, smirking.
I love this girl.
“You can hold Harold if you want,” Plum says then, coming through the place where the divider parts and handing me her turtle. “He’s awake now.”
Downstairs I hear the door slam shut, Devin and Jake’s muffled voices below. We all sit down on Zu-Zu’s messy bed, and I want to curl up with all of them, even Harold, and never get up.
After lunch, the girls want to swim, and so we all walk down to the boat access area where there is a sort of grassy beach. The clouds have parted, and the sun is bright, sparkling in the water. Plum hoists an inner tube over one shoulder and Zu-Zu carries their towels, slung over her golden shoulders. Their feet are bare, the pink pads callused. Devin and Jake walk ahead with the girls, each drinking a beer, and Effie and I hang back.
“I’m so glad you’re here,” Effie says, leaning her head against my arm. “It’s been such a long time.”
I nod.
“You okay?” she asks, pulling away from me.
I nod again, but she frowns.
“We’ll talk tonight?” she asks, and reaches for my hand. And I think about how I used to be the one who fixed things. How I used to be the strong one. When did this happen to me? What have I become?
Effie spreads a soft blue blanket out on the grass, and she and I sit and watch the girls. When we were teenagers, we used to rub baby oil all over our bodies, squirt lemon juice concentrate in our hair, and lie in this exact spot, waiting for the sun. We used to swim the way the girls do now, fearlessly, out to the sandbar in the center of the lake where we stood and howled, and then leapt into the murky depths. We used to live in the water. Fishes. Her grandma, Gussy, called us the Mermaids of Gormlaith. But I have no desire to go into the water now. I don’t remember the last time I even wore a bathing suit.
The sound of the girls’ voices, the joyful splashes, is the best music. I don’t even mind when they bicker and whine.
“Give me!” Plum hollers as Zu-Zu steals the tube away. “That’s mine.”
Devin and Jake have their suits on too and both of them ease into the water, tentatively at first, and then dive under. Jake emerges, shaking his hair like a wet dog, splattering Zu-Zu, who squeals. They dive and surface after long stretches under the water, surprising the girls. Each of the guys puts one of them on his shoulders for a chicken fight. Jake has Plum. She grips the side of his head, and he smiles and smiles. But he doesn’t look at me. Won’t. Can’t.
After the sun goes down, we eat outside at the picnic table, drink. Unlike at home, I am careful here, counting glasses. It is too easy lately to drink too much. To love the warm way it numbs. And I feel Jake watching me; he’s counting my drinks too.
The mosquitoes bite my ankles, and I let my skin prick and tingle and itch. I wait until I can barely stand it anymore before I scratch. I am sunburned from earlier, and relish in the tender pink sting of my shoulders.
“So tell us about this new writer Tess mentioned,” Devin says to Jake. “The kid.”
“Charlie.” Jake smiles. “He is definitely young. But he’s not like a lot of the other new kids coming up. You know, all style, no substance. More concerned with how many Instagram followers they have than with their writing. He’s kind of a throwback. He still writes on a typewriter, for Christ’s sake. He’s not on Facebook. He doesn’t have a Twitter account. It’s pretty incredible when you actually stop to think about it.” Jake plucks a raspberry from the bowl Effie has put in the center of the table for dessert and pops it in his mouth.
He’s talking about Charlie Hayden, a new client of his. Jake is a literary agent; he started his own boutique agency two years ago. We’d already mortgaged our house once for the adoption, so he had to borrow from his parents to get started. It was a gamble, one I was leery of, and the first year was a real struggle, but he slowly built a decent client list, hired a couple other young but well-regarded agents who brought their clients with them. And then a few months ago, he signed on this hotshot kid the National Book Foundation named one of the “5 under 35.” At twenty-five, Charlie’s the youngest of the bunch; he reminds me of an overgrown baby.
We had him over for dinner one night right after he signed with Jake. He talked about Mexico, where he backpacked for a year after he graduated Harvard. He bragged about the prostitutes he slept with, the drugs he took. He was pompous. A real ass. And then, he drank too much and got sick in our bathroom. But rather than calling him a cab, Jake ushered Charlie into the guest bedroom, brought him water, aspirin. Covered him with a blanket. In the morning, Charlie sat at our table drinking coffee and scarfing down the bacon and eggs Jake had made like nothing had happened. He sent us a thank-you note two days later on creamy stationery embossed with his monogram. I don’t care how good a writer he is; he’s a real douche bag.
Charlie’s first novel is going to go to auction on Monday, another reason why we need to get back to the city. Jake has been coddling him, as if he is an infant, or an orchid. He has held his hand from the messy first typed (yes, typed) draft to the finished copy, which went out on submission last week.
But as much as the kid irritates me, I must admit, I’ve read the book, and, if I were still in the industry, I would likely have jumped on it as well. I understand Jake’s enthusiasm; he and I have always been able to see promise. But something about the way Jake babies him sickens me. It’s as though Charlie is his son rather than his client, and a badly behaved son at that. And worst of all, he favors him over his other, better-mannered clients. At times, I wonder if this is the kind of father he would have been. Coddling, permissive.
Jake and I met when I was still working at Norton. I actually acquired his very first client’s debut novel—a writer who has since gone on to write six more novels, two of which have been made into films. For a while, we were considered a sort of power couple in the publishing world, for whatever the hell that’s worth. But I left publishing eight years ago, after we came back from Central America. When words on the page became just that. Words. As hollow and inconsequential as dust. Empty promises made of ink, so pathetically reliant on the paper beneath them.
I make my living now as a freelance copy editor, which requires that I look at each sentence as a mechanical structure, a mathematical equation. I hardly read anything for pleasure anymore besides menus and the occasional manuscript Jake asks me to peruse. I see only artifice now, and none of the art.
I reach for my wineglass when Jake is looking away and swallow. The wine is crisp and cold. It tastes like a bite from a ripe peach.
“He’s brilliant, really,” Jake says, nodding, like he has something to prove.
“He’s kind of a douche,” I say.
Plum looks up. “What’s a doosh?”
“Excuse my French,” I say, reaching for her hand. Plum has separated the delicate fish bones from the meat and laid them across the tablecloth in one remarkable piece. Fragile, yet intact. The ghost of her dinner.
Jake sips from his glass, swishes the wine in his mouth before swallowing. I study the lines of his jaw, which is always set and hard lately, muscles working under the flesh. Unlike most men his age, he’s still got a full head of hair, which he wears long enough that it falls in his eyes. Now he pushes it back, and gestures to me with his chin before looking at Devin.
“What is it our folks used to say, Never trust anyone over thirty?” he says, talking about me as if I’m not sitting right there. “Tess doesn’t trust anyone under thirty.”
His words are sharp.
“He’s just so affected,” I say, though I’m not talking about Charlie anymore, and he knows it.
I look to Effie. I need an ally.
“Everything about him. Seriously, who types on a manual typewriter? And you can hear it in his writing. The affectation, I mean.” This is not true at all, but I am feeling willful. Contrary. Emboldened by that cold, crisp wine.
Jake takes a deep breath, as if to calm himself before speaking.
“Tess hates everything I love,” he says.
Effie shoots me a look across the table.
Jake stretches his neck. This is what he does to keep from lashing out.
“Hey, you guys still need to introduce me to Sam Mason,” he says. “I just finished Small Sorrows. I don’t know how I’d never read it before.”
Sam Mason is a writer, a National Book Award–winning writer who lives in California but owns a camp on Lake Gormlaith. Sam and his wife, Mena, are friends with Effie and Devin, but we’ve never met them. Every time we come, Jake brings it up. Angling. It embarrasses me.
“He just did a benefit reading at the library,” Effie says. “It was really fun.”
“How is the library?” I ask, grateful to change the subject.
“Broke, as always,” she says, smiling sadly. “The basement flooded this spring, so the children’s room had to move up to the annex. A total nightmare. It’s going to cost a fortune for the repairs. But we have a few generous donors, like Sam and Mena, who keep coming through just when we need them.”
Effie drives the bookmobile for the library. Devin teaches art at the college and is also a pretty successful artist himself. He makes assemblages, these gorgeous little shadow boxes. A little bit like Joseph Cornell. They met here, at the lake, where they were both spending the summer twenty years ago. They got married here as well, on the little island in the middle of the lake. Even though I’ve been to dozens of weddings, theirs is one I will always remember. We all had to take a boat out to the island. It was a blue-sky, brilliant-sun kind of day. Rows of white chairs were lined up underneath a canopy of leaves. Effie wore a chain of daisies in her hair. I was her maid of honor. I loaned her my grandmother’s cameo (something old and something borrowed), and we painted our toenails blue. Zu-Zu was her something new, though nobody except for Devin and me knew it yet. She came six months later, followed by Plum. I drove up from New York both times, was with Effie and Devin when each of them was born. We promised each other as kids that we’d share this. Before we knew the world could be so inequitable, so unkind.
Yet every time I begin to feel that painful snag of envy, I need to remind myself that Effie has suffered too. That I hold no monopoly on sorrow. That she has earned this happiness. All of it.
“And Tess told me you’re showing at Gagosian this winter?” I say, turning to Devin. “That is amazing. You must be so thrilled.”
“It’s not a done deal yet. But we’re talking,” he says. “Tessie,. . .
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