Trespasser (Part XVII)

Time passes quickly, down on Bryer Street.  This is especially true for the men who lived in the neighborhood.  Most of them, like John, worked hard to make a living. They were gone at the crack of dawn, and often times they stumbled wearily to bed long after the sun had set.

The women, for most of them didn’t work outside of their home, were always busy keeping their houses up.  So it wasn’t unusual if they didn’t notice some of the details around them.  Most didn’t think twice about something being out-of-place. More than likely, another member of their family moved it while going about their daily affairs.

There was a time when the neighborhood had a way of taking care of any problems that might arise, but those days were long since gone.  Bryer Street, in the absence of its longtime protector, had slowly grown into something ordinary.  And, even though the residents often gathered together from time to time, each secretly felt that they were growing further apart.

For one, this feeling hurt more than any of the others realized.

It was later in the morning, on the same day that Vanessa would awaken to thoughts of her father’s late night visit, that another of the street’s residents would be entertaining thoughts of his own.  Unlike the little girl next door, he knew exactly what had been stolen from him.

On this particular morning, he sat in the rocking chair on his front porch, slowly rocking in the comfort of the morning shadows, and looking at a small object he had placed on the railing before him.  It was the only thing left from a day when he could sit in this very spot and happily idle the hours away.

“You’d be turning in yer damn grave,” he mumbled in its direction, as if to speak to the person who’d carved it for him.  He groaned in pain as various parts of his body reminded him of his age, not that he needed reminding.  “Best to not daydream my day away,” he continued, this time to himself.  “I”ve got important things that need a-doin’.”

Davie leaned forward and took hold of the railing with both hands, using it to stop his movements just as much as he was using it to pull himself up, and he paused only to look at the house at the end of the street.  The lights were off, not that he could have been able to tell through the morning glare, and the owner’s car was gone.

“Keesha,” he hollered over his shoulder.  “I think I’m a-goin’ for a little walk.”

She didn’t answer, nor did he expect her to.  She was still feeling a little under the weather and would likely sleep until lunch time.  That suited him just fine, because if she knew what he was up to, she’d probably brain him with a rolling-pin.

He chuckled as he took one last look at the figurine on the railing, then nodded his head slowly, as if to confirm that he was doing the right thing.

“It’s what you would have done, my old friend,” he whispered.

A few minutes later, he was slowly making his way toward the end of the street.

Trespasser (Part XV)

The floorboards creaked with the comforting familiarity only years of intimacy could bring.  The sounds were a soothing, gentle reminder to the end of a long day.  He paused only once, on the final stages of he journey, as he looked in through a cracked door and upon a small sleeping figure inside.

She was curled up deep beneath her blankets, softly snoring, where she would remain safe until the morning.  A long sigh escaped his lips, partly from exhaustion, but mostly from the frustration of knowing the things that Davie had recently shared with him.  It might as well have been spoken in another language.

He couldn’t imagine any harm ever coming to his little monkey-butt, his sunshine when the skies are gray, and the very thought that she could be in danger had put him in a very dark place.

What did they even know about Andy anyways?  Handy-Andy, who seemed to know a little about everything, had given him little cause to be suspicious.  But then there were the pictures.  Why the hell was he taking pictures of her, and what could he be using them for?!

He could feel his blood pressure beginning to rise.  His cheeks grew hot, and the blood thundered through his veins.  His nostrils flared as he struggled to get his breathing under control, but his emotions got the better of him.  Hot tears leaked from the corners of his eyes as he fought away the dark images haunting him.

“The fuck,” he whispered to nobody in particular.  His words were full of anguish, born from a day overflowing with hardships heavier than he was accustomed to bearing.

“Daddy?”

He nearly jumped out of his skin when her little voice broke the silence.

“Is that you,” she asked sleepily.

“Yes pumpkin,” he answered softly.  “Go back to sleep.”

The weight melted from his shoulders when she spoke, chased away by his absolute love for her.

“What time is it?”

“It’s late, kiddo, that’s all you need to know.”

As he answered her, he crossed the room and approached her from the right side of her bed.  Then, as she crawled back up to her pillow, he sat on the edge of the bed where they shared a brief hug.

“Nessa,” he asked softly.

“Yeah daddy?”

“You would tell me if there was something wrong, wouldn’t you?”

“Yeah daddy,” she answered.  He peered searchingly into her confused eyes, seeking for any signs that might indicate otherwise, but there was only the innocence he knew.

“What’s the matter daddy?”

“Nothing baby,” he answered before placing a kiss on her forehead.  “I just worry.”

“Don’t worry,” she said sweetly.  “Everything’s going to be okay.”

He smiled as he tucked her in, pausing only to give her another kiss before turning to leave.  It was amazing how quickly she’d changed the direction of the dark tides rolling inside of him, with only a single word.

“I love you daddy,” she said as he slowly closed the door behind him.

“I love you too, Nessa,” he said with a smile.

He turned to walk down the hall and by the time he got to his room, he had nearly forgotten everything but the last few minutes.  Not much longer after that and even those were a distant memory.  Twenty hours after waking, he finally returned into sleep’s embrace.

 

Trespasser (Part XIV)

The drive home was agonizing.  Not only did his thoughts torture him the entire way, but so too did his aching muscles.  The only comfort was the low rumble of the engine in his 1984 Ford pickup.  The horses thundered when he pressed down on the pedal, but at a steady speed, like the one he was cruising at now, it sounded as a stampede would from a mile away.

From time to time, his eyes would begin growing heavy, but he would catch himself with a quick jerk of the head.  It was a small movement, violent, and its only intention was to shake the sleep from his bones, but it wasn’t going to work for much longer.  As he rolled down the window for a little fresh air, he replayed the short conversation with Davie in his head.

“It’s about Vanessa.  Even now, she’s…”

She’s, what?  Getting into some sort of trouble?  That wasn’t very likely, but then again, he hadn’t been around much, as of late.  With the extra shifts he’s had to cover, there have been times when days would pass before he had a chance to sit down and relax with his family.

He tried to imagine the mischief that she could be getting herself into, but nothing even came close to believable in his eyes.  Could she be stealing?  Not very likely.  She spent most of her time lost in her own imagination, and material objects were only as precious as she made them out to be.  She still played with that unfinished figurine of hers!

Just that thought alone ruled out any destructive behaviour.  Most times, she didn’t move from one spot for hours, so it wasn’t very likely that she was tearing the neighborhood up. She was loud, at the very most, and that wasn’t very often.  There were times when he’d be working outside and he’d have to stop just to make sure she was still there.

“Ugh,” he moaned wearily.  While he was almost home, three o’clock was just around the corner.  Six came even sooner.  But before he could lay down, he had a promise to keep.  Davie was waiting up, with whatever important information that he thought he needed to know, and if anything, he was a man of his word.

As he fought to stifle off another yawn, he tightened his knuckles around the wheel in determination.  Only twenty more minutes stood between him and the answers to his questions.  Hopefully, only a half an hour stood between him and his bed.