Maybe I need to repeat history to find my present. I can’t help noticing that there’s a huge, skinned log lying along the edge of the road. A woman with a cane could walk across that, if she wanted to.
I am crazy. Even by my own standard, and God knows my threshold has fallen to almost nothing these days.
As I sit there, hands on the steering wheel, staring at the ruined road, my cell phone rings. I know without looking at the number who it is. “Hey, Stacey,” I answer.
“I’ve been calling for an hour.”
“It’s no-man’s-land out here. I’m surprised there’s service. You should see this place, it’s . . .”
“I don’t want a travelogue. Well?”
I am afraid to put it into words, this fragile impossible hope of mine, and more afraid not to. The split between what I imagined and what I now see throws me into a kind of tailspin; I don’t know what to think. “I’m parked on Lakeshore Drive. The woman at the diner said Daniel and Bobby O’Shea live at the end of the road.”
“Wow,” Stacey says sharply. “Is it them?”
“I hope so. Who knows? I could be Brad Pitt/Twelve Monkeys crazy. I’m probably still in the airport, sitting in my seat, drooling.”
“You’re not in the airport drooling. I watched you board the plane.”
“You were there?”
“I didn’t think you’d be able to do it.”
“Yeah, well, I’m stronger than I used to be.” As I say the words, I realize the truth of them. I am stronger now. Strong enough to reach for this dream . . . and strong enough to handle disappointment.
What matters is that I’ve finally made a move. Whether Daniel and Bobby are real or not, I belong here. Soon I will have over two hundred and ninety thousand dollars in the bank. That definitely gives me the freedom I need to start over somewhere. And this is where I want to be.
I look through the windshield. No raindrops blotch the glass. “It’s time,” I say to Stacey.
“Don’t you vanish on me.”
“I won’t.” Even as I say it, I can’t help thinking of Bobby, to whom I made the same promise.
I hang up and toss my phone in my purse. Looping the straps over my shoulder, I get out of the car.
The world is radiant, bathed in the last, fading rays of sunlight. The trees on either side of the road are as big as I’d imagined. Many rise well over two hundred feet into the air; their trunks are as straight as flagpoles. Salal and rhododendrons grow in wild disarray amid the trunks. Moss coats everything—tree bark, branches, guardrails, rocks. Very carefully, using my cane for support, I climb up onto the log that spans the rushing water and walk to the other side. On dry land again, I limp down to the road and follow it. Walking with a cane is slow going, but not once do I pause or consider stopping.
I’ve gone about a mile when I hear the lake, slapping against the shore.
I turn a corner and there I am, on a cherry tree–lined driveway. At the end of the road is a sprawling old Victorian mansion with a huge covered porch. It is the kind of home that the timber barons built at the turn of the century. Even though the roof looks like a slanted mossy hillside and the porch sags dangerously to one side, it is spectacular. A hand-carved wooden sign by the entrance welcomes me to the Spirit Lake Bed and Breakfast.
There are two outbuildings on either side, small clapboard structures with broken windows and ramshackle chimneys.
No red truck with a blue door sits in the driveway.
No dock juts out over the lake.
No pile of kayaks and paddleboats lay piled by the shore.
No ruined vegetable garden shows the first signs of spring. In fact, there’s no landscaping at all. There are only the cherry trees, full of pink blossoms that line the road and lead to the front door. None of it is familiar except the trees and the lake.
I have never seen this place before.
And yet, there by the lake, is the swing set, exactly as I “saw” it.
I’m crazy.
Maybe I’m not really here. The terrifying thought wings through my mind. Maybe I’m in the hospital still, on killer drugs.
In a coma.
I’m Neo in The Matrix before they save him.
I’m . . .
“Stop it, Joy.”
It takes a monumental act of will, but I move forward.
I follow the bumpy asphalt road to its rounded end. I am just about to turn toward the house when I hear a noise. A boy’s voice carried by the breeze.
Bobby.
I turn toward the sound, listening. It’s him. Gripping my cane more tightly, I hurry past the swing set and go into the trees.
There he is, kneeling in his forest church, playing with action figures. Giant trees ring and protect him. Sunset slants through the great, down-slung boughs in purple-hued rays. The ferns and moss are lime green with new growth.
As I limp toward him, my heart is beating too quickly. The spongy, damp ground swallows my footsteps. So it is that he doesn’t hear me approach until I say, “Hey, Bobby.”
At the sound of my voice, his hands freeze. The action figures clatter together and go quiet. Slowly, he turns to look at me.
He is exactly as I’ve imagined him—black, curly hair, bright blue eyes with long lashes, and a missing pair of teeth.
But the way he frowns at me is new.
“Bobby?” I say after a confusing minute. “It’s me. Joy.”
He doesn’t smile. “Sure it is.”
“I’m sorry I went away, Bobby.”
“Everyone said you were imaginary anyway.”
“I guess I was then. I’m not now.”
He frowns. “You mean . . .”
“I’m here, Bobby.”