Chapter 12

Rosemary D’Amato looked exactly like a million
other middle-aged mothers who drive their kids to soccer practice
and try unsuccessfully to find a little time to take care of
themselves. She was overweight with short, dark hair, no makeup,
and an indifferent outfit that did nothing to flatter her figure.
The only difference was that her son had disappeared off the face
of the earth one ordinary morning, and her self-neglect was caused
by apathy. She was sitting in a plastic chair in the waiting area
of the lobby, eyes fixed firmly on her lap, as if fighting off the
memories the station house held.
It made me sad to see her sitting there alone
without someone to support her. I was pretty sure her husband had
moved to another town because he was unable to hold on to the
immense sorrow his wife clung to. I’d seen that happen before. And
I could feel it around her. It was a sense of overwhelming loss
very like what I had felt in the park earlier when little Tyler
Matthews had been taken— only this woman’s sorrow was tempered by
resignation. Yet she could not give it up. Rosemary D’Amato had
held on to her terrible sadness for sixteen years. I didn’t know
where she had found the energy to keep living under such a burden.
I had seen people crippled by losses like that for life and, even
as I’d failed to do anything about it when I’d been a detective, I
had known that grieving loved ones were the final victims of
whatever terrible crime I’d failed to solve.
Maggie was kind to Rosemary D’Amato. Morty was
respectful and grave. Mrs. D’Amato recognized him and a wave of
gratitude welled in her. She clung to Morty like a lifeboat. “I
heard another little boy was taken,” she told him. “Have they found
him?”
Morty led her to a table in the coffee bar. “They
have not found him yet,” he said kindly. “This is Detective Gunn.
She can tell you more. Let me go get you some tea.”
Mrs. D’Amato looked at Maggie apologetically; she
was not a woman who wanted to trouble anyone. My heart ached for
her. What must it be like to have to beg people for scraps of
information year after year—and get only apologetic smiles in
return—because you could not bear to give up the only thing you had
left of your son: the hope that you might see him again?
“Mrs. D’Amato,” Maggie said quietly as she sat with
the woman at a small table by a window through which sunshine
flooded almost obscenely. Such beauty to illuminate such sorrow. “I
don’t have anything to tell you, really. We believe this little boy
was taken by someone who took advantage of the distraction caused
by another crime nearby. We have no idea whether this is a repeat
offender or someone who just took advantage of the situation. I am
afraid it is very unlikely it’s the same man who took your son.
Your son’s abductor was probably a transient.”
“I know,” Mrs. D’Amato said. “But I owe it to him
to ask.” Her hands were clenched into tight fists and she could not
lift her eyes from them; it was as if those fists were her anchors
and without them she might float away.
“I understand.” Maggie took Rosemary D’Amato’s
hands and unfolded them gently, then held them in her own. I had
never really seen this side of Maggie before. She often only showed
her determined side to the public, as if she knew the families of
the victims needed the strength of her anger to get them through
the unthinkable. But with Mrs. D’Amato, she was infinitely
kind.
“I have lost people who were my whole world,”
Maggie said to the downcast woman. “I understand how hard it is to
let go. And I would never ask you to break your promise to your
son.”
Mrs. D’Amato looked up, searching Maggie’s
face.
“I know you promised to protect him,” Maggie said.
“And I know you will never stop trying to find him so you can keep
your word. I give you my own personal word that if I get even an
inkling that these two cases are connected in any way, I will let
you know. But you must promise me in return that you will call me
anytime you need to. I’m going to read over your son’s file, and if
I see anything that’s been missed, I promise to follow up.”
Mrs. D’Amato began to cry. Morty arrived with a cup
of hot tea for her. He had remembered she took two sugars with her
tea, and when he set the packets next to her cup, Mrs. D’Amato
cried even more. I understood then that the hardest thing in the
world was to depend on the kindness of strangers when that was all
you had.
“That poor woman whose son was taken this morning?”
Mrs. D’Amato said through her tears. “She doesn’t know what it’s
going to be like. What each day will bring.”
As if on cue, the doors to the parking lot slid
open and the missing boy’s mother entered, supported by a friend on
each side. She had aged fifteen years in six hours. Her face was
splotchy from crying, her hands shook, and her eyes had the glazed
look of the sedated. I didn’t think she was fit to be at the
station, but my guess was Gonzales wanted a first go at her before
the feds took over. Either that or she was here of her own accord,
desperate for news of her son.
Rosemary D’Amato stared at Callie Matthews as she
shuffled across the lobby, supported by her friends. She had to
look away. “I can’t bear to,” she whispered. “That poor, poor
woman.”
Anxiousness radiated off Maggie, and I knew why.
She wanted to help Rosemary D’Amato, but she wanted to head off
Callie Matthews even more, especially since the only thing that
protected her from Calvano’s ineptitude was a short elevator
ride.
“Go,” Morty told her, reading her face.
“Yes, please go,” Mrs. D’Amato echoed. “I know you
can help that woman more. I’ll be okay. I just had to come by and
check. I know it doesn’t do any good, but I have to.”
Maggie gave her a business card. “Call me
personally, anytime. And make sure Morty knows how to get in touch
with you. Will you do that?”
Mrs. D’Amato nodded and wrapped her hands around
her tea, finding a new anchor.
“I’ll see she gets home,” Morty promised.
As Maggie hurried after the trio of women
struggling toward the elevator, Morty pried off the top of Mrs.
D’Amato’s tea for her and poured both sugars into it. “You’ll feel
better after a cup of tea,” he said. “I know I always do.”
“Are you sure you’re not an Irish cop?” Rosemary
D’Amato asked him through her tears and, just like that, they were
laughing. It was amazing to me how a spark of laughter could heal
the human heart.
“I’m sure,” Morty told her. “My mother was even
more sure.”
They smiled at each other. Their banter was a
ritual for both of them. “How are you?” Morty asked. “Still at the
construction company?”
She nodded. “They couldn’t find a crane without me
to tell them where it is.”
“And your husband?”
She smiled ruefully. “Still in Scranton. His job is
going quite well.”
Morty waited for the rest.
“He wants me to join him, but I still can’t bring
myself to move,” she finally said. “I just can’t. What if Bobby
were to come home one day and I wasn’t there?”
“I’m sure your husband understands.”
Mrs. D’Amato wiped her eyes. “That’s enough for one
day,” she decided. “I know you must get tired of me.”
“Never,” Morty said firmly. “I don’t expect you to
give up until I give up—and that’s just not going to happen.”
She smiled at him. “You’re a good man.”
Morty colored. “Don’t forget your tea. Take it with
you. I’ll walk you to your car.”
“I walked.” She laughed at Morty’s expression. “You
think you’re the only one who can walk a beat? It’s for my health.
The doctor says I need more exercise.”
“Don’t we all?” Morty joked. But I could tell he
was pleased that Mrs. D’Amato was starting to take an interest in
her own well-being again, however small. “In fact, I will walk you
home.” He took her arm, making small talk as they headed for the
door.
That was when I saw the little boy for the first
time. He was so small and frail that he nearly disappeared in a
sunbeam that cascaded across the lobby and fell like a spotlight on
a corner of the waiting area. Mrs. D’Amato and Morty walked right
past him without a glance, but the little boy hopped up from his
chair and followed them out the door. Curious, I followed the
boy.
He was about four years old, dressed in a black and
green striped shirt and wearing khaki shorts. He had brown hair
buzzed short, and his ears stuck out from his head. The back of his
tennis shoes lit up, a style first made popular years ago.
Who was he?
The little boy walked within inches of a tattooed
biker screaming obscenities as he fought off three officers, and
then the boy passed between a weary patrolman and an overweight
drunk being herded through the front door. No one gave the little
boy a single glance.
I didn’t think anyone could see him but me.
We made an odd parade, marching down the sidewalk
in a raggle-taggle formation through the bright spring afternoon:
Morty and Mrs. D’Amato, who had started slowly but picked up steam
as the sunshine lifted her spirits; the boy with his spindly knees
resolutely following them, his little body shimmering in the
afternoon light; and yours truly, bringing up the rear.
We passed by the park where Tyler Matthews had been
taken. Uniformed officers belatedly guarded its borders, and a few
crime scene technicians still searched along its edges. We passed
the cottage where the nurse had been killed. The officer guarding
the door waved at Morty. We reached the thoroughfare that led to a
small business district and passed right by the Italian restaurant
where Robert Michael Martin worked as a chef. The smells of tomato
sauce and garlic were truly heavenly but, alas, while my sense of
smell has returned and I can enjoy the anticipation, there’s no
satisfaction for me these days.
Morty and Mrs. D’Amato paused at a corner for a
traffic light. The little boy had no such qualms. He stepped right
out into the traffic and was across the street before I could
follow. Oblivious drivers zoomed past me, and some drove right
through me as I hurried to keep pace.
The little boy knew where he was going and was in
the lead now, with Morty and Mrs. D’Amato a quarter block behind.
We kept marching in our odd parade of the dead and the living
through the neighborhood on the other side of the business
district. The little boy turned down a side street about three
blocks farther on.
By the time I reached the corner, he was sitting in
the branches of a tree overlooking a small brick bungalow, the kind
with walls that bulge slightly, as if the house was holding its
breath. The yard was neatly kept with tidy flower beds blooming on
each side of the front stoop. The house looked familiar to
me.
The little boy was already nestled in the crook of
the tree and had his spindly legs and jaunty sneakers propped up on
the trunk above his body. I got the feeling that, just like me, he
had his favorite watching spots.
Morty and Mrs. D’Amato had reached the corner. They
turned down the block and Morty gallantly took her arm again as
they approached her walkway. He even tipped his hat as she stopped
on her front stoop to wave good-bye. Norman Rockwell could not have
imagined a more perfect scene of your friendly neighborhood officer
in action. Except for the dead kid in the tree and the dead cop
lurking in the yard, of course.
I thought the little boy would surely follow Mrs.
D’Amato inside. She unlocked her door and stepped into her solitary
fortress. I wondered what the house would feel like after sixteen
years of sorrow had eroded its comforting air, but before I could
follow her inside, I felt the oddest of sensations.
Someone was holding my hand.
I looked down and the little boy was standing
beside me, gazing upward expectantly, his hand occupying the same
space as mine. It was not a tangible feeling. It was not quite that
solid. It was more as if I held a heavy fog in my hand. It tickled
a little, and I wanted to laugh, but the boy’s solemn expression
invited no merriment. I have occupied the same space as the living
before, and it is not pleasant. It tears at my insides, whatever
those insides may be made of. But this mingling of the dead was not
bad at all; it tingled as if the lowest level of electric current
were pulsing through me and had found an exit point where our two
hands crossed.
In fact, it filled my heart with life. I wondered
if he really was like me, or different in some way.
The boy’s steady gaze told me that he wanted
something. I did not know what. When he stepped forward, I
followed, and we walked hand in hand past the busy blocks of the
living, across streets, retracing our steps and heading back in the
exact same direction we had come from. When we reached the park, he
turned and led me across the lawn toward the playground area.
Unseen by any of the living, we drifted past the crime scene tape
that had been stretched across the spot where Tyler Matthews had
last been seen, then past the sandbox and monkey bars. But as we
approached the swings, the little boy took his hand away. I felt
the loss of his energy acutely.
He hopped on a swing and stared up at me,
expectantly.
The kid was dreaming if he thought I could push
him. It ripped me apart to tear the veil between my world and the
physical. But that was not what the little boy wanted. What he
wanted was to pretend.
So pretend we did, like a father and son lingering
in the park on a fading spring afternoon. As the birds sang behind
us and traffic hummed a few blocks away, as the sun descended lower
in the sky and the clouds above turned from bright white to a faint
pink, I stood behind the swing and moved my arms while the little
boy caused the swing to move, first slowly and then faster, picking
up speed until it swung back and forth as vigorously as any living
four-year-old might like. He unnecessarily wrapped his hands around
the metal chains on each side, as I am certain he had no corporeal
presence. But he wanted to be a little boy again, and he needed me
to be his father. I pretended to push him higher and higher,
smiling when he glanced at me over his shoulder. The sun spiraled
behind the boy, setting his whole silhouette awash in fire; he was
a burning bush soaring through the skies.
His laughter rang through the afternoon, high and
pure, unheard, I was certain, by anyone but me. What joy it gave
the little boy to swing on a fine spring afternoon, with someone
there to watch over him.
I thought then of all the days I had missed with my
own boys, of all the afternoons I could have been home with them
but sat, instead, in some lousy dive bar, drinking in bitterness
and inhaling the boozy stench of everyone else’s disappointments as
a way to mask my own. How many hours had I squandered that I could
have spent listening to the high, pure joy of my sons and seeing
them fiercely alive on a sunny day?
I felt a flash of regret so acute, my mind reeled
with longing. I had had so much and experienced so little.
But the pealing laughter of the little boy on the swing rescued me
from my memories and brought me back to where I was. I couldn’t
undo the past and I could do very little to affect the future. But
the present? At least I was here, enjoying the end of a
sunshine-soaked afternoon. I looked around, making the most of it,
and noticed the uniformed officer on guard in the doorway of the
cottage where the nurse had died. He was staring across the street
at us, a puzzled look on his face. I realized what he was seeing: a
deserted playground, a windless afternoon—yet there it was, an
empty swing distinctly soaring first one way and then the other,
without a trace of anyone in sight.
I began to laugh at what he must be thinking, and
my laughter mingled with that of the boy’s. We made a fine pair, he
and I, and for just a moment I felt the exultation of feeling that
I belonged.