“He will alright,” Cuthbert said.
“I know. It’s just strange. It feel strange,” Ferron said. He looked back again. This is when he noticed the Toyota—the cream-colored one with the two men. The car was behind a truck, but Ferron recognized it from the headlights. They were on in the broad daylight. He kept looking back. The Toyota stayed with them.
After about an hour he asked Cuthbert to stop at a roadside kiosk. Cuthbert nodded and stopped in front of one of the vendors. Ferron did not move. He looked through the rearview mirror, watching for the Toyota. The Toyota slowed and parked at another kiosk a few yards behind. Ferron stepped out and walked to the vendor, still watching the Toyota. The men were not buying anything. Four boys were shoving plastic bags full of oranges into the windows of the car.
“Buy me a bag too, eh?” Cuthbert said.
Ferron bought two bags of oranges and came back to the car. Cuthbert started the engine.
“Wait,” Ferron said. He was staring in front.
Cuthbert looked over at his cousin. Ferron peered into the rearview mirror. Cuthbert turned around and then looked in front.
“You feel they following, eh?”
“What you think?” Ferron asked.
“Maybe. But is a free country, man.” Cuthbert started the car and swung onto the road. The Toyota followed.
In Kingston, Cuthbert lost them. He drove into Beverly Hills at breakneck speed, took a secluded side road, and then doubled back down onto Hope Road. By the time they were in Cross Roads, there was no sign of the Toyota. Cuthbert smiled. “Bitch!” he said. They continued downtown to the funeral home. It was still light when they reached.
seven
For the next two days Ferron had the old sensation of wanting to run. This time he was trying to resist the urge, but in the past he’d done that kind of thing a lot. When things became too pressured, he would pack a bag, take a van downtown, and get on the first bus to any destination that suited the length of time he had to escape. If he had a day, he would take a bus to Edgewater—that dry landfill of a suburban experiment which overlooked the Kingston Harbour. He would walk along the scarred, salt-white roads toward the large marl hill where only the most rugged of bramble survived. It was always hot, blazing, unrelenting. He would crawl down a narrow pathway to a small crevice in the face of the hill. This faced the sea and was completely hidden from the road. He would sit there and stare at the sea for hours, simply allowing his mind to empty. Nothing happened around there. The occasional plane would land at Palisadoes, a boat would trundle by, and a few sea gulls would dive at some prey on the water. Nobody would know where he was. He would disappear for the whole day relishing his return to the dorm to the chorus of “Where you was? People was looking for you . . .”
When he needed to disappear for longer periods, he would take the bus to St. Mary. It was always to the same place, a small community called Clonmel where an old girlfriend of his had grown up. He had spent one summer there working with a church theater group and had become a part of her family. They always welcomed him with fried fish, buttered hardo bread, and milk. They asked no questions. Mr. Robertson was a plump, cheerful man who worked for the Education Ministry, but farmed in St. Mary. His wife was a retired schoolteacher who still ran the small primary school built on their property. All their daughters, seven of them, were either in boarding school, at the university, working in Kingston, or abroad. The parents lived alone and welcomed Ferron’s visits. He would stay for several days, and they would let him stay aloof, go for long walks, or simply talk about anything at all. Nobody knew where he was. Nobody needed to know.
There was one farther destination he would use when he did not want to see anyone at all. He’d used it when his need to write had been greatest—or his need to make sense of his life. There was something about this place—like a place of punishment. Whenever he felt he’d hurt someone, or failed himself, he’d go there to wallow in self-pity, to suffer from the fear of being alone in the woods, with fantasies of being attacked or killed by some wandering person. The plyboard shack was in an open lot somewhere in Jack’s Hill. He’d discovered it when he was going on a long hike into the hills. Someone must have intended to live there, but changed their mind. They had probably thought better of such seclusion. It was stark, had scarcely any furniture but was quite dry. He’d made a mental note to return there when he needed to. One evening, on a whim, he decided to take the chance. It had been after an argument with Lucas, or something painful like that; he found the hut and spent the night. The fear nearly destroyed him, but he left the next morning feeling somewhat cleansed by the ordeal. He spent three more nights there during the very difficult period of examinations and final assignments; then it became a writing retreat. Nobody, as far as he could tell, knew about the hut, nobody except one of his hallmates. He thought he needed to let at least one person know, so that if he died there, the body would not be left to rot to nothing.
The last time he’d been there was when the wedding to Delores was in its first incarnation. Two weeks before the event, he’d panicked. He was also working on several postgraduate assignments. At home he grew silent. He could feel heaviness and gloom consuming him. It was not long before he knew he was going to go into the hills to wait out the wedding. He watched friends and relatives planning everything. The old man asked him what was wrong. He did not answer. The old man said laughingly, “You’re going to bolt, aren’t you?” Ferron laughed, and the two just sat there laughing, and nothing else was said.
He’d bolted the next night. It was that escape to the Jack’s Hill hideaway that now most occupied his thoughts . . .
* * *
When his sister and Delores eventually found the hut and tried to bring him home, he’d been there for several days. There were clothes strewn all over the bed and sweat-stained socks stank in a pile behind the door. Books and letters were scattered where he had left them after a frantic search for a lost chapter of his thesis. This document supposedly contained the secret to the completion of the project he was working on. He’d found it, but was wrong. The writing was weak and the only relevant aspect of the paper was a sentence that was in itself a naive misinterpretation. He stopped working on the assignment. He’d brought several packs of beer with him and stayed indoors drinking. After the beer he went hungry; he had no more money.
He’d spent hours standing at the window looking out into the woodlot. The earth was parched. Whatever grass survived the onslaught of the tractor tires was withered. Huge tire marks crisscrossed through the dried mud. The trees started uncertainly a few chains away from the building. There were stumps and felled trunks tangled among the hardy bramble. Gradually the forest assumed a sturdier character. Beyond that was darkness.
He’d seen the sky purple gently above the treeline, heard the faint sound of traffic on the highway about a mile away. It would get dark soon. Acid burned in his stomach. He’d felt hungry and worried, certain he had an ulcer, but the pink antacid fluid had dried up in the bottle that lay on its side on the floor. He couldn’t afford another bottle. Probably couldn’t even make it out to the highway . . .
* * *
The food was finished but that hadn’t worried him. Hunger would draw something out of him. It produced a mediocre poem about writing. The creative secretions stopped.
He went to bed early and did not sleep until it got light. No clear moment of structured thought came to him during the night. In the afternoon, when he could think clearly, he could not recall his thoughts of the night before. He burned the poem and placed another sheet of paper in the machine.
His eyes began to ache again. He rubbed them and winced at the pain. They felt heavy and watery. A grating