Scully’s New York Times was still on the floor from
Sunday when the delivery guy dropped off the Monday paper. Peculiar,
thought the building superintendent when he noticed the two papers.
Twenty years I been here I ain’t never known Scully to spend a night
away. Ain’t never known him to leave his paper out like this.
By Tuesday morning the Sunday paper was beginning to yellow and look
brittle. By Wednesday the stack of papers had taken on the look of
weathered kindling. That was when the superintendent decided to use his
passkey and see if anything was amiss in Scully’s apartment. He opened
the door and called out, “Anybody home?”
The only sound he heard was the humming of a refrigerator. Watery light
washed through the single window that overlooked Bank Street. It was
light enough for him to see a worn easy chair near the window. On a
table next to the chair he saw an empty coffee cup and a stuffed
ashtray. Glancing into the kitchenette, he spied an empty table and
clean dishes stacked in the drain. Walking into the bedroom, he noticed
that the bed was made and a Bible was fanned open face down on the
bedside table. It looked as if Scully had just gone out for the day.
Manny the super decided to call the police.
The precinct sent Benny Bardelli around. Benny had been working the
neighborhood for years and knew all the building supers. He greeted
Manny in his usual way: “Hiya doin’, Manny? What’s up?”
“It’s Scully. He seems to be missing. He ain’t been home four five days.
That ain’t like him. Scully never goes nowhere. And that other guy, too,
that homeless guy he took in. He ain’t been around neither.”
“You talking about that guy looks like Lurch on ‘The Addams Family’?”
“Yeah. That’s the one. I call him Frankendude.”
“Did Scully have any enemies you know of?”
“Scully? Naw. The man was a living saint. He run that outfit down by the
meat markets where they took in homeless people and run a soup line and
all. Everybody loved him. Used to be he couldn’t walk half a block
without five six people reaching out to shake his hand. But he shut down
his operation about a year ago, and since then he’s been pretty much a
loner. Don’t seem to ever talk to nobody no more, ‘cept that crazy he
took in. He lost a lot of weight, too. Damndest thing. Musta been one of
them starvation diets. Musta lost fifty pounds in practically no time.
He didn’t look good at all if you ask me.”
“Does he have any relatives you know of? Maybe somebody out of town he
might be visiting?”
“He has a daughter. At least I think she’s his daughter. Mac ...
something or other. Sounds kinda like a man’s name. Lives out in
Seattle. She come here once maybe three four years ago, but she ain’t
been back since.”
“So maybe he went out to Seattle to visit her.”
“He’d a told me.”
Benny asked a few more questions and said he would file a missing
persons report. “That’s about all I can do,” he said. “I imagine he just
decided to take hisself a vacation. He’ll probably show up any day now.”
***
Three thousand miles away in their new condo on Seattle's Queen Anne
Hill, Lane Felts and McKenzie McDonald were getting ready to eat one of
Lane's infamous egg dishes. "I just had a thought, Lane said. "We should
give Scully a call. We haven't talked to him in ages."
"Good idea. Maybe right after dinner."
But right after dinner they got a call from their friend Jamee, and they
forgot all about calling Scully.
Chapter One
The Mohawk Gang
Albany,
New York, 1946
Smoke hung head high in the auditorium.
Chair legs grated the hardwood floor. Men coughed, laughed, shouted
across the room at friends. They fidgeted in their seats and crushed
cigar and cigarette butts underfoot. As if attached by wires, every head
turned when a door in back opened and Scully McDonald stepped out and
jogged down the aisle to the boxing ring. Father O’Day followed close
behind, his hands kneading Scully’s shoulders, man and boy bobbing like
marionettes.
Scully heard shouts of encouragement but could not make out the words.
He felt hands reach out to pat him on the back. He scurried up the three
steps to the ring, bent through the ropes and stepped in. He grabbed the
top rope and did two quick knee bends. Deep breaths, loud on the exhale.
He dropped to one knee and crossed himself, closed his eyes tight and
whispered, “Our Father who art in heaven, forgive me, Lord. I know this
is just a sporting event and you have more important things on your
mind, but please please be with me now. Your will be done, amen.”
He stood up and thrust out his hands to Father O’Day, who shoved the old
gloves on his big hands and laced them tight and slipped the little
plastic mouthpiece between his lips. Scully bit down on the cold plastic
and turned to face his opponent in the opposite corner, a skinny guy,
but much taller than Scully. Scully eyed him as he scissored his feet in
a dance step that indicated a quickness that would surely give him fits.
He looked out over the audience but could not recognize faces. Somewhere
out there on one of those hard slat chairs sat Scully’s father.
Somewhere in Scully’s mind his father’s voice was droning, “Don’t come
crying to me, boy. You gotta take up for your own self” —saying, “You
pitch like a girl” —saying, “Don’t be a cry baby.”
Scully’s father had left for the war in forty-one when Scully was a
chubby eleven-year-old, so shy that pulling words from his mouth was
like yanking a Band Aid off a hairy arm and as awkward as a colt
learning to walk. He hardly knew his father. Now, taller than his father
and no longer so shy and clumsy as he had been then, he still felt that
he didn’t know the old man, and he knew he didn’t measure up to his
expectations. Since coming back from the war in forty-five, his father
had hardly ever been at home. He worked long hours at the packing plant,
pulling in overtime whenever possible, and spent most of his off time
hanging out at Clancy’s Pub. He was almost a stranger to Scully, yet
Scully couldn’t help wanting to show him a thing or two. Show him he
could hold his own in at least this one manly arena.
He rolled his head and looked out at the spectators, and he felt dizzy.
The crowd seemed to be circling him as if they were on a merry-go-round
and he was stationary in the middle. Maybe he should have eaten
something this afternoon. What else could account for this touch of
faintness? Surely not fear. He would not let himself believe he could be
afraid. Everything was spinning. It reminded him of a day long ago when
a group of boys on bicycles had surrounded him and pedaled round and
round in a tightening circle while he turned in place to keep a wary eye
on them. It had happened when he was in the seventh grade at St.
Bridget’s School. He had stayed late after school for a meeting of the
Sock and Buskin Club, planning decorations for the homecoming dance. He
had joined the group because Sister Donovan had said everybody had to
join some extracurricular activity and Sock and Buskin seemed as good as
any. Besides, Annie McCarthy was in the club, the only other seventh
grader, and he had had a crush on Annie McCarthy since fourth grade. She
was the only friend he had in school. All the other kids made fun of
him, calling him Blubber Boy because he was a big, fat crybaby whose
pudgy cheeks would begin to quiver before he burst into tears.
Through the mere process of growing up, he had learned to control his
tears. But the cruel nickname stuck. The other kids didn’t see him as he
was, but as they remembered him, and that was how he saw himself, too.
Annie understood how he felt, because she had also been teased
throughout most of her early years. She had red hair and freckles, and
she wore glasses. The kids called her Freckle Four Eyes. But Annie had a
sharp tongue and knew how to take up for herself. The other kids had
long since quit teasing Annie, not so much because she was able to
defend herself, but because in the sixth grade she blossomed into a
beautiful young woman who seemed to have a natural ability to make
friends, and in the seventh grade she became the first girl ever elected
class president. Her newly gained popularity began to rub off—just a
little—on her friend Scully. Scully was beginning to develop a few
rudimentary social skills. Gradually. And even a hint of confidence. But
he could not completely break the habit of thinking of himself as the
friendless fat boy who broke into tears at the drop of an insult.
He was carrying a stack of books and walking as fast as he could,
because he knew he’d be in trouble if he didn’t get home before his
mother got there. It was Wednesday, bridge day, and his mother always
expected him to fix dinner on bridge day. He could imagine his old man
saying, “Your mama said you didn’t get home till nearly dark. Whaddaya
think? You’re some kind of society kid that can run around all hours
without even thinking about your poor old mama sick in her bed?” Why?
Scully asked himself over and over again. Why does the old man always
say she’s sick in bed, even when he knows she’s up and about preparing
for her bridge club? The fact was, both Scully and his father thought of
her as sickly, even during her better days. She complained of headaches
and mysterious female problems, of sweats and nausea, and many days she
would not get dressed until late afternoon. Sickly or not, she never
failed to complete a seemingly endless list of household chores—washing
her men’s clothes and neatly folding each and every item, even
handkerchiefs and underwear; scrubbing floors, washing the blinds,
pushing her old shopping cart six blocks to the store, and putting a hot
dinner on the table every night but Wednesday when it was Scully’s turn
to cook the family dinner.
He stepped off the sidewalk and onto a field where boys from the
neighborhood often played ball. Crossing the field was a quicker way
home. He broke into a run, leaning forward with that awkward gait of his
that made him look as if he was going to take a nose dive any moment,
which he did all too often. He saw the boys coming on their bikes, three
of them cutting across the field toward him in a sweeping arc. They were
Carson Culpepper and Ray Goodnight and Rodney Laughlin, local toughs who
called themselves the Mohawks. Culpepper was in the lead. He was
pedaling hard in a red and white blur on one of those Arnold Schwinn
Streamline Aerocycles, steamers flying from the handle bars and bits of
cardboard stuck in the spokes going blip-blip-blip-blip-blip like a
taunt. Culpepper cut in front of Scully and hit his brakes, going into a
skid. Goodnight and Laughlin followed close behind. They might have
smashed into Scully if Scully had not tripped and splashed head first to
the ground with a scattering of books.
They circled him on their bikes, leaning hard with feet scraping the
ground on the turns. Scully pushed himself up and brushed off his pants.
There was a bloody scrape on his elbow with dirt ground in. Grass stains
on his white shirt. He picked up his books and began to turn in place,
looking for a way to break free of the circle of bikes. Nobody said
anything. They kept circling and circling. Going slow now and half
pushing their bikes with their feet, then speeding up whenever Scully
made a move to break free.
It happened that Annie McCarthy was passing by about then on the
sidewalk that fronted the field. She saw the Mohawks tormenting Scully,
and she cut across the grass, picking up a large stick and wielding it
as a weapon as she approached them. She stopped outside the circle for a
moment, waiting for an opening to jump inside. Culpepper skidded within
inches of her. “Stay out of this, Annie,” he shouted.
She darted behind him and rushed to Scully’s side. “Stay close to me,”
she said, “and we’ll get out of here. They wouldn’t dare hurt a girl.”
Culpepper braked to a full stop. Goodnight and Laughlin piled up behind
him, a full accordion stop of three boys on bikes. They stood each with
one foot on the ground and one foot on a pedal, and they didn’t say
anything when Scully and Annie slowly walked between them. They kept a
wary eye on her because she was gripping a weapon, and they couldn’t
attack her because ... well, because she was a girl. You don’t hit
girls. They never meant to hurt Scully either; they just wanted to scare
him.
Goodnight stuck out his tongue. Annie held Scully’s right hand with her
left and clutched the stick in her other hand, tapping the ground with
it as they walked to the sidewalk. Culpepper shouted, “Watch out Blubber
Boy! You ain’t gonna always have a girl to hide behind.” Then they
remounted their bikes and took off across the field.
Scully said, “Thanks, Annie. I’m OK Now. I think you can let go my hand
if you want to.”
“Well I think I might just want to hold on for a while if you don’t
mind. It feels kind of nice. Your hand is so warm and soft.”