Wild Horses by Rebecca Anderson Part 8 of 8

Printer-friendly version

... and so it all comes to an end. Not a perfectly happy ending, but not a very dark one either, at least not for Emma, and there are the bitter sweet memories.

Wild Horses

A novel, based on a true story

by Rebecca A.

Chapter Twenty-three.

Two weeks before Steve's trial Julia gave birth to a healthy seven
pound baby girl. Dan flew me down to Jackson, and Pris met me at the
airport, and we both went to see her and Pete and the baby. They all
looked wonderful. She had Julia's face, but she had Steve's eyes,
from her grandmother I suppose. Pris took about two hundred photos,
and I took a mere twenty with a camera that Dan had lent me. I
hugged Julia and got to hold the baby and joked with Pete about how
many identities the baby would grow up with. It gave me a small
shock to see Julia and Pete together with the baby and realize that
they were parents. They were only a few years older than me, and
here they were with this small, very dependent little person who
needed them so much. When I looked at Julia nursing the baby I
almost wanted to cry. It was all very, very beautiful, and yet very
sobering too.

While we were there I finally got to meet Mrs. Hammond. She swept
into the room and made a beeline straight for the baby, and started
off talking to Julia without even acknowledging any of the rest of
us. I didn't really mind, because it gave me a chance to take stock
of this woman. Steve's mother. She had already seen the baby before,
but that seemed to make little difference, and she fussed and
spluttered over the child as though she'd never seen a baby before,
let alone had two herself nearly twenty-five years earlier.

Valerie was a good looking woman, although I could see that her
drinking had taken its toll. She had the same gorgeous bone
structure that Julia did. When Julia introduced us I saw her eyes
for the first time, and I could see a lot of Steve in them, until
Julia mentioned that I was Steve's girlfriend and whatever sparkle
had been in them went cold. She eyed me up and down and seemed to
find me wanting, so she turned back to Julia without even saying
hello and continued talking as though neither Pris nor I was even in
the room. I looked at Pris and she shrugged. The two of us sat down
in the chairs at the side of the room and talked quietly to Pete for
the next half hour until Mrs. Hammond left.

Julia looked good, although I could tell she was tired. Pete looked
even more tired, but it was obvious the two of them were very happy.
I joked with Pete about anarchy and children. Pris ventured that
kids were anarchic enough without needing any political philosophy,
and Julia laughed. Pete, she said, had told her he was going to get
respectable now that he was a father. "As if", she said, smiling.
Pete looked both guilty and offended at the same time.

Pris and I had dinner with Pete that night, and then stayed
overnight in Jackson in the same scummy motel on the north side of
town that Pete was holed up in. The Hammonds still weren't really
acknowledging Pete as the father of their granddaughter. He
pretended not to mind "that bunch of asswipes" as he called them,
but it was obvious he was hurt. I said I hoped that they would come
to their senses for the sake of the baby, but looking at Pris and
Pete I could tell that none of us thought that was very likely.

Coming back to Atlanta was hard. I was glad I had been to see
everyone, but I knew that not seeing the baby would make prison seem
doubly confining for Steve, and I wasn't sure how I was going to be
able to talk to him about it. I made sure to get the photos
developed before my trip out to the prison on Monday night, so that
at least I had something to show him, but I couldn't help but feel
as I passed them across the table that I was watching him on the
brink of losing it. I was right, I could see in his face that he was
both happy, for Julia, and tormented, for himself. I hoped Julia
would be able to come back to Atlanta to visit soon, so that he
could at least see the baby.

Over the next three visits I could see that Steve was getting worse.
He'd been moved into solitary confinement after a fight. I was still
allowed to see him because of my paralegal credentials, but he was
denied other visitation rights, and only allowed out of his cell for
one hour a day, alone in the yard. I knew only too well what he was
going through. I had sustained myself at Brand through books, and
Steve had music. His guitar playing was extraordinary now. I had
never heard such intensity before. I arranged to have his Gibson
brought in, and one afternoon we played together, Steve on the 12
string and me on the old Ibanez, singing some of the old songs we'd
last performed more than eight months earlier. At first I thought
the guard was going to stop us from playing, because after all it
was hardly a legal conference, but he relented and stayed out of
sight and let us continue. It was beautiful, but sad, too, because
both of us were reminded of how things had been before Steve was
arrested. We sang some Neil Young together.

"I was lying in a burned out basement

With the full moon in my eyes

Hoping for a replacement

When the sun burst through the sky"

Each time I visited in the next month I hoped that we could continue
playing, because I had thought that they might have helped him get
through the times alone, but somehow even in solitary Steve managed
to get heroin, I guess from one of the guards, and he was
glassy-eyed when I saw him. He was still prepared to play, but
somehow I didn't have the heart for it.

"There was a band playing in my head

And I felt like getting high

I was thinking about what a friend had said

And hoping it was a lie."

He was lucid and clear again on the Friday evening before he was due
to go to trial. Unfortunately I wasn't in great shape that night. It
had been a long, tough day at work while Bill was preparing a big
case, and I was exhausted by the time I arrived. I had started that
morning at 7.30am, and apart from all the work I had been doing for
Bill and Shelley I was trying to help Bob's assistant Debbie
finalize some of the stuff for Steve's trial, too, so I stayed at
work until 5.30 instead of my usual 3pm Friday finish.

As I was finishing up Elaine called me over. "Emma, I got something
back from Social Security -- something about your file." I swallowed
and asked what the problem was, but Elaine said she was just
mentioning it so we could make some time to meet on Monday. I knew
what the problem was -- the numbers wouldn't match up. I had no idea
what I would do when she confronted me with the evidence, but I
would have to think of something quickly.

I didn't make it out to the prison until 7pm. I was surprised but
pleased to see Steve happy and apparently drug free. When we were
alone and out of sight I hugged him, and he kissed me for the first
time in almost a month. It was beautiful. I thought to myself
afterward that I would never be able to kiss Wiley again, because
there was only one man who would be able to move me like that. We
broke apart nervously, and made small talk for a while, before Steve
touched my hand and told me, quite out of the blue, how much he
loved me, how much he had always loved me.

***

On Saturday night Wiley drove me home after we'd been out dancing
with some friends. I was high from all the exercise, and probably
still a little drunk from some beer we'd had earlier at his friend's
house. So when he turned the engine off to talk to me before I went
inside, I was relaxed, and not at all nervous as I had been the
first time we'd dated.

Wiley was talking about his Dad's business. We often talked in the
car after we'd been out together, and when he talked about serious
personal stuff he often looked straight ahead through the windscreen
rather than directly at me. As we sat there that night he was
staring ahead as he talked about his plans for the future.
Encouraged by me, he had started to think that he could do medicine
if he put his mind to it, but he still wasn't sure how to break that
to his parents.

"I think they'll be okay, Wiley. They'll probably be pleased that
you've decided to follow your heart." I smiled reassuringly.

He turned to face me. "I've always been following my heart, Emma."
He leant across the car and I could tell he was going to kiss me. I
remembered my vow of the night before, but I was weak, and I didn't
offer any resistance. His lips met mine, and his arm went around me
and his other hand moved to my shoulder.

I don't know why I didn't resist him that night. I can't entirely
blame the alcohol, or the fact that dancing with him always left me
sexually charged. It wasn't any of those things on their own. It was
that I liked him, and although I loved Steve I was lonely. I was
lonely. Even though I didn't get the charge from him I got from
Steve, it was a beautiful kiss. Different than Steve's, but
beautiful. For a few moments I almost forgot where I was, and let
myself go, but eventually I pulled back. "Wiley, I --"

"-- Shhh," He said, running his hand over my shoulder and down my
arm to take my hand. "It's alright, Emma."

"No, Wiley, it's --"

"-- Let it go, Emma. You've been good to him, but you can't live
life like a nun. He'll understand."

I pulled back further. "What do you mean?"

"I know about Steve, Emma. I know how hard it's been for you."

I was taken aback. Were we talking about the same thing? "What do
you know?"

"Well..." He moved his arm from around me so that he could sit up
straighter and give me a little bit of space, although he kept
holding on to my other hand. "I was, you know, intrigued by who the
heck this mystery boyfriend was who you never seemed to go out with,
even though you said he was in town. And I remembered the name of
your band... So, I was working at my Uncle's a few months ago and I
think I said something about how great your singing was and how you
used to be in a band, and this other guy who works there said he'd
heard the band. He was in the audience the night you ... the night
that the shooting happened." Wiley looked down at our hands, and
then back up to my eyes. "I wasn't trying to pry, it was just
something I found out."

I nodded. I didn't know what to say. I was sorry he'd found out that
way. I wondered how hard it had been for him to learn that he was
seeing the girlfriend of a junkie murderer? "I should have told you,
Wiley. I'm sorry. I didn't know how to."

"It's okay, Emma. You were right, it really wasn't any of my
business..." He put his hand to the side of my face. "I can't
imagine how tough it's been for you."

I didn't know what to say. When I didn't say anything Wiley kissed
me again. For some reason I let him keep kissing me. Then I think
something broke inside me and I started crying, sobbing huge,
desperate sobs and gulping for air in a very unromantic way. Wiley
put his arm around me again and tried to console me. "Shhhh. It's
okay... it'll be okay."

Eventually I cried myself out and we both sat there in the car, not
saying anything. It felt good to be in his arms, and eventually I
lay my head on his shoulder to relax. When I turned my face back
toward him he kissed me again. I sniffled, broke the kiss, and then
giggled. "Sorry. I'm a mess, huh?"

He didn't say anything, just kissed me again. And then again. I
raised my hand up to the back of his neck. He kissed me more
passionately. I put my other arm around him and he began to kiss my
neck. I think I moaned. My neck is ... it's my weakness. I felt his
hand move to my shoulder, and then, a few moments later, to my
breast. He was still kissing me, little feathery whispery kisses
across my neck and behind my ear, and then he began to stroke my
breast. I felt his hand undo the top button of my blouse, and then
the next button, and then begin to caress me through my bra. I
didn't care. He was whispering in my ear, very softly, between those
feathery kisses. "I love you, Emma... I love you. I've never
forgotten you since that first night we met, in Oxford."

I wasn't really hearing him. My insides had turned to jello. He had
his hands around the back of my blouse as he kissed the front of my
neck and then down, down. I could feel him undo my bra, and then
feel his finger stroke my erect nipple, then both of them. He
nestled his face in my chest, and slipped the bra up over my breasts
so it lay on my chest above them. He had his hands on both my
breasts and his face in my cleavage, and then his mouth was on my
nipple and I think I gasped. It felt so good. Oh, it felt wonderful.
Ohhhhhhh...

He moved one of his hands to my shoulder and then to my neck, to
caress it. Oh god. I wanted him so much. But we couldn't...

I felt his hand go from my neck down to my leg, and then underneath
my skirt. I raised his head from my chest. "Wiley..."

He lifted his head briefly. "It's okay, Emma." Then he sucked on my
nipple while his hand caressed my other breast.

"No, no, it's not, Wiley. Not here." I lifted his hand from my breast.

He lifted his head again, and kept it up. "Emma..."

I slid away from him and pulled my bra down over my breasts. It felt
awkward getting them into the cups that way. "No, Wiley. We can't."

He looked at me with a wounded look on his face.

"Wiley, I just can't. I'm sorry."

"Sorry, Emma." He straightened up and took his hand off my leg.

"Well, then we're both sorry."

"I'm not really sorry," he said with a small grin.

I laughed and hit him gently. "Bastard. Taking advantage of me like
that."

"I do love you, Emma," he said more seriously.

"I know. Oh, Wiley, I don't know what to do."

"It's okay, Emma. I love you, but I recognize ... you know, you love
Steve, and ..."

"It's not just that, Wiley. I'm very... very fond of you, too." I
couldn't bring myself to say love. I think I did love Wiley. Not the
way I loved Steve, but there was something there in my heart for him
all the same. But I wasn't ready to say that then. "But it's not
just Steve, it's... well, there's other stuff, too. But I can't talk
about that." I sat up and straightened my clothes.

"I'm a patient guy, Emma."

"I've noticed." I said. "Although not so patient tonight."

He smiled a slightly sad smile and reached out a hand to stroke my
hair. "I don't want to make life difficult for you, Emma. You let me
know if you change your mind, okay?"

***

Sunday morning I made my way out to the prison. It was a pleasant
morning, and I was on the side of the bus that got the most sun, and
in any other circumstances I think I might have been tempted to nod
off during the journey. But my trips out to the prison were never
very lighthearted ones, and I'd been more worried than ever about
Steve in the few weeks leading up to the trial, especially as his
drug use had increased. Instead I sat on the bus and brooded about
the forthcoming trial, and the certainty that Steve and I would
never be together, free, again.

The guard admitted me to the lobby and I made my way across to the
checkpoint to have my bag inspected. The guards had long since
stopped frisking me for contraband, which at least gave me some idea
of how drugs were getting into the prison.

As I made my way across the ten feet or so of floor I caught the eye
of Jerry, the head guy on duty that morning, and he averted his eyes
from mine. I was taken aback. It wasn't as though I could call any
of the screws friends, but over the ten months I'd been coming to
the prison I'd gotten to know them pretty well, and Jerry had never
behaved that way before.

"Morning," I said to Keith, the guard who would normally search my bag.

Keith looked nervously at Jerry, and then turned back to me quietly
and said, "Morning Miz Donaldson. I'm 'fraid we can't let you in
this mornin'."

"Pardon?" I said.

"If you're here to see Hammond," Jerry said, finally giving me his
attention, "then we can't let you in."

"What? What do you mean?" I looked around, as though somebody else
could help explain what was going on, and then I saw Dan and Bob
Douglas coming through the door from outside.

Dan met my eyes and I knew that something terrible, horrible, was
about to happen. He and Bob crossed the floor in what seemed like
slow motion and he took my arm. "Emma. They called just after you
left. It's Steve. He's dead."

***

Chapter Twenty-Four.

Everything fell apart. Everything. I don't recall what I said. I
don't know if I said anything at the time. I don't even remember
leaving the prison. I do remember the inside of Dan's Jaguar as he
and Bob drove me home -- back to the Arsenaults', I mean. I wasn't
really sure where 'home' was any more.

I didn't cry. I didn't cry at all. For a few hours I just went
through the motions of living, nodding when people spoke to me and
drinking the things they gave me. A doctor came to take a look at me
but I don't remember too much about that. By late afternoon Cindy
and Dan had decided it was okay to leave me by myself so long as I
took the medication the doctor had left and slept. Cindy counted out
two pills for me and I swallowed them and put myself to bed. It was
while I was lying there, before sleep, that I thought of Steve, in
the prison the night before, calmly taking too much junk, alone in
that gray blank hole of a cell while I lay in Wiley's arms,
betraying him. And then I cried.

I didn't dream. I suppose it was the medication. I had been half
afraid of sleep, afraid of what Steve would say to me when I dreamt,
but whatever drugs the doctor had prescribed knocked me out
completely. I didn't wake until early Monday.

It wasn't quite light yet outside. I lay in bed looking out through
the window at the color of the sky as it slowly began to lighten. My
head felt woolly and thick. I suppose that was the residual effect
of the drugs. A little part of me was surprised how calm I was. I
remembered the things Bob had said the day before, about Steve's
overdose and the call that he had received at 5am Sunday, and I
remembered the call that had come through from Pris in the
afternoon, trying to cheer me in some small way. I remembered Cindy
and Dan's concern, and Cindy carefully rationing the sleeping pills
as though she was afraid I would overdose. And I remembered my tears
the night before. But that morning what I felt was different,
something calm, almost resigned. I wondered whether it was the same
emotion Steve had felt before he had shot himself up that last time.
I knew the overdose was deliberate.

Mostly I just felt an overwhelming sense of emptiness. The last time
I saw him hadn't given me clues about him killing himself. Not that
I had recognized. He hadn't said goodbye with any more gravity. He
had been clean, and he had told me he loved me with more fervor than
usual, but I had put the intensity of his kisses down to his being
drug-free for the first time in weeks.

I thought of his face, and his arms around me, and the feelings I
had when he touched me. I thought of the time we had spent together,
in Brand, at the cabin the night Travis was killed, at the river
near Oxford, in the bar at Elroy's. I heard his voice, in my head,
singing the songs he loved so much. And then I thought him singing
"Tired of living, is easy to do," then the interview room at the
prison. And I thought of some of the other inmates I'd seen.

I felt hollow, as though everything that ever mattered had been
suctioned out of me.

I got up and put on my robe. Dan would be getting up soon for his
morning run, and I wanted to be on my own. I padded down the stairs
to the kitchen and poured myself a glass of orange juice, then
carried it over to the window. The sky was just beginning to be
tinged with yellow. In a few moments it would be light.

I sat down at the kitchen table and noticed the bottle of pills on
the kitchen counter. I leant over and picked them up. Take two at
night, the label said. I held it in my hand and looked at the
remainder of my orange juice. Then I undid the top of the bottle and
smoothly, in one motion, poured the entire contents, maybe 30 pills,
into my mouth. 'Fuck,' I thought, as I raised the orange juice to my
lips. 'It's too many, I'll never be able to swallow them all.' I got
about half of them down and knew I had to spit the remainder into my
hand. Quickly I stood and spat out about fifteen pills. They left a
horrible bitter chalky taste in my mouth. I went to the fridge and
got out the orange juice, then put the remaining pills back into my
mouth and swallowed them with the orange juice straight from the
container.

Then I slowly walked up the stairs to go back to bed and wait for
death to come free me.

***

It was because I had to get the orange juice again that I fucked it
up. If I had been able to swallow all the pills in one go I would
have calmly screwed the cap of the pill bottle back on and replaced
it on the counter and nobody would have noticed for at least a few
hours, and by that time everything would have been over. But when I
got up to get the orange juice a second time I still had half a
mouthful of pills, and the horrible taste they left in my mouth as I
expelled them into my hand interrupted my chain of thought so I
forgot to screw the cap back on, leaving it and the bottle on the
kitchen table like a bright red flashing alarm for Dan to find when
he came downstairs a few minutes later to begin his morning run. He
didn't even come up to check on me first, he just dialed the number
for the ambulance immediately and yelled for Cindy. I think I can
dimly recall that shout, but I could be imagining that. Your brain
does strange things when it's just about to slip into unconsciousness.

It was Pris's face I saw first. She was sitting right next to the
bed, with one hand clutching mine under the hospital blankets. The
first thing I though when I saw her was that the light on her face
from the lamp over my bed made her short dark hair shine like it was
sprinkled with gold. She saw me open my eyes and the look on her
face made me snap them shut again. "She's awake," I heard her say,
but I didn't hear anything else and she say anything else.

I didn't want to talk to any of them. I still didn't want to talk to
anyone. I kept my eyes closed and lay still, hoping they would go
away. I kept still for what seemed like fifteen minutes, believing
they would think I had gone back to sleep and would leave without
saying anything. But when I opened my eyes again. they were still
there, Cindy and Pris seated in the chairs beside the bed and Dan
standing behind them.

If I felt worthless before I took the pills I felt even more
worthless now. Fuck, I couldn't even commit suicide properly.

"Emma, I know things have been bad, but everything is going to be
okay," Dan said gently.

I stayed mute.

"It's alright, honey, you don't have to say anything," Cindy said.
Looking at her eyes I could see genuine compassion. That made me
feel worse. I didn't want everyone to feel sorry for me, or feel
sympathy for me. I didn't deserve any of it. Looking at Pris and
Cindy and Dan made me feel even more in debt to them, and even more
undeserving, and when Cindy opened her mouth to say something else
that enormous well of self-pity I was collecting inside me swelled,
and a few tears ran down my cheeks.

Pris reached over with a tissue to wipe the tears from my face. The
look of concern on her face was too much for me, and I burst into
great, heaving sobs of pity, for myself, for Steve, for everyone who
had ever had the misfortune to meet me and watch their lives turn bad.

"I, I can't..." I said.

"You don't have to," said Pris. "You don't have to do anything."

"You don't understand. It's not just Steve, it's everything." I was
gasping out my words between sobs. "It's me. I just can't --"

"It's all right, Em," Pris said, and she stood up and took my head
in her arms and let me sob into her sweater. "There's nothing wrong
with you."

The enormity of everything I had to say sat in my mouth like a huge
wad of cotton. I couldn't begin to think how I could get words out
that would mean anything. I let her hold me for a long time.

Eventually I stopped crying. "It's alright," Pris said again.

"You don't understand." I sat up, still hugging Pris as she hugged me.

"What don't we understand, honey," Cindy asked gently.

"I'm a boy!" I blurted out. I really hadn't meant to. Although I had
run a scene in which I confessed to Pris over and over again in my
head I had always imagined telling her calmly, and carefully, in a
way that wouldn't make her think of me as a freak. I had never
managed to get the scene to play right in my head, and at that
moment I understood why. There just isn't any calm and easy way to
say something like that.

"You could have fooled me,' Pris said lightly.

I hesitated, and then threw caution to the wind. "No, really!" I
pulled myself away from her and looked straight into her eyes. "My
name is Michael Boyle, and I was at James Brand for rape and murder
and I escaped with Steve and I'm a boy."

I could see Pris and Dan exchange glances as though they thought I
was crazy.

"Goodness, so you used to be a boy" Cindy said. "Is that all? Honey,
you don't want to worry about that."

We all looked at her.

"Some things make sense, now, but you shouldn't worry about a little
think like that. I've known lots of girls like you, without half
your charms," Cindy continued. "Daddy's house always seemed to be
full of them. I sometimes wondered whether half the girls I met
through the music business weren't really boys. Have you ever met
Amanda Lear? She's a friend of Mick's. I think she's Salvador Dali's
mistress now. A little spot of bother about gender never stopped her
from getting ahead in life."

"You don't --"

"-- Don't be silly," she said. "It doesn't matter what's between
your legs, Emma, it's what's in your head that counts. And you're as
much of a girl in there as I've ever seen. Now, what was this other
nonsense about rape and murder?"

I looked at Dan, and then at Pris. I think Cindy being so
matter-of-fact about my revelation had suddenly made them believe in
what I had said, and I could see shock in Dan's eyes, but a kind of
recognition in Pris's. She reached out her hand and touched me on
the cheek. "I believe you, Emma, if that helps."

"I'm sorry," I muttered, and turned to Dan. "I'm really, really
sorry. I didn't want to deceive you."

"I'm not sure I do," Dan said. "Believe you, that is. No offense,
Emma, but you don't look like... well, you know. And I think I know
you well enough to know you'd never murder anyone."

I looked at the three of them, looking at me, and I drew a deep
breath and began to tell them my story.

***

Chapter Twenty-Five.

I was discharged from the hospital the following day. Dan and Cindy
came to pick me up. Pris had been there almost continuously ever
since she'd flown in. Although I was still feeling hollow and
miserable I had to concede that it made a difference to me, having
her around. It especially helped when the doctor showed up to talk
to me for the first time. Unlike my previous stay at Northside they
found out all about my odd physique this time, because they'd had to
undress me to remove the fouled nightgown I was wearing when I was
brought in. The doctor was trying to be discreet but I asked Pris to
stay, and it helped to have someone who cared about me present to
fend off some of the more difficult questions about how I came to be
the way I was.

I didn't tell him the truth, of course. One of the first things
Cindy had said when I finished explaining myself was that I should
keep the how and why of my situation to myself until after I was
discharged, and it turned out to be good advice. I pretended to the
doctor that taking hormones had been entirely my idea. He seemed
shocked enough by the whole thing that he didn't delve too deeply
into detail with his questions.

After I got back to Dan and Cindy's Pris made sure to be with me
almost all the time. It didn't take a genius to figure out that the
three of them were making sure I wasn't left alone to do something
stupid to myself. Over the next few weeks I understood how stupid it
was, but at first I just felt so depressed and powerless that I
would have seized almost any opportunity to try again if I thought
it might have worked.

It was Pris who managed to get me thinking about life again. As
opposed to dwelling on everything that had already happened. Her
first question to me after I had finished telling her my story had
been "so, do you want to be a boy? Is that the problem?" I realized,
for the very first time, that I was much more comfortable being Emma
than I ever had been being Michael. It wasn't just the way my body
was that made me feel that, it was something inside myself. In the
past I had told myself that I was happy being Emma because of Steve,
but now that Steve was gone I couldn't rely on that anymore. I
reached inside myself and I saw ... Emma. For better or worse, that
was who I was. There wasn't any Michael. He belonged to a world that
was years ago and far away.

The one thing I hadn't counted on having to deal with was Wiley. He
had been begging Dan and Cindy to let him see me for at least two
weeks before I relented and said I was ready. I wasn't, but there
really wasn't any way for me to put him off any longer. I knew even
before I saw him that he would be upset about me trying to kill
myself. He was, of course, but he held that in for the first few
minutes after Cindy let him in to see me in the living room. We were
alone, standing about ten feet from one another, trying to negotiate
the space between us without injuring one another.

"Are you alright?"

"Yes, I think so," I said.

"Really?"

"Yes. I'm not about to slash my wrists, if that's what you're
worried about."

"Emma, don't. I'm not trying to make you feel bad."

"I know. I'm sorry, Wiley."

"Well." He paused and looked around the room before his eyes came
back to me again. "I was surprised. But then I heard about your
boyfriend, and --"

"Wiley?"

"Yes?"

"I don't really want to get into the reasons why, okay? I'm sorry. I
don't want to dwell on it too much. Yes, I was screwed up. I'm sorry
about that. I'm okay now. Well, not okay, but, you know..." I
shrugged and sat down. Wiley came and sat next to me.

"Um. So..." I began. I wasn't sure where I wanted this to go, but I
knew that denying everything wasn't going to work any more. "So,
there's something I have to tell you, and it might go some way to
explaining why. But it might also mean you won't ever want to see me
again."

"I doubt that, Emma. About not wanting to see you again, I mean.
What are you going to tell me? That you've done something terrible,
I bet."

I started to interrupt, but he shushed me.

"No, wait. It doesn't matter, Emma. I don't care what it is, I just
want you to know that I care about you, and I know you're hurting
and I know it will take you a long time to forget about what
happened to Steve --" He must have seen my expression change because
he quickly corrected himself. "Not that I'm saying you'll ever
forget him. But, you know, I'd like to think that you care about me,
too. And I love you, and whether we have any future together or not
I'd like you to know that you can count on me to be there when you
need me."

"Wiley, I..." I wasn't any surer of where to start than I had been
with the Arsenault's at the hospital. I sat for a few moments to
collect my thoughts.

"It's okay, Emma," Wiley interrupted. "Whatever it is, it's okay."

"Wiley, I'm not who you think I am," I began. I looked him in the
eyes and then it was so hard to say. "I'm, I'm not really a girl."

At first he looked puzzled, then he smiled. "You're growing up, Emma."

"No, Wiley. What I mean is that I used to be a boy."

His smile faded and he looked puzzled for a moment, and then a wave
of fear passed briefly across his face and he looked for a few
moments, almost as though he'd been confronted with a gun. "What?"

"What I said. I used to be a boy."

There was an agonizing silence. I could see his eyes move across my
face, and then my chest, and then that look of confusion cross his
face again, and then the look of fear.

"You, you... You had a sex change."

"Not exactly. Not, um, not yet."

"Oh, my god." He stood up, and took several steps away from me. I
stood up too. He stepped toward me as though he was going to touch
me. The expression on his face told me he wasn't sure whether he
knew that I was real or not. "God. You're not joking, are you?"

"No, Wiley, I'm not."

He took several more steps back.

"Emma... Emma. What's your real name?" He held up his hand. "No. No,
I don't want to know that."

"I had to tell you, Wiley."

"Uh huh."

Neither of us said anything for a few moments.

"So, you and Steve were..." Wiley began, but his voice petered out.
He shook his head as though he was trying to clear it. "Emma. I
don't know if I can discuss this right now. I don't know if I can
still feel the same way about you. I don't know... I don't know
anything, not any more."

He looked me directly in the eyes for a moment, and then turned and
left the room. A moment later I could hear the front door open and
then close. He was gone.

Pris was in the room almost immediately after Wiley had left,
hugging me tightly and holding my head to her breast. "Don't go
thinking about it too much, Emma. It's for the best. If he can't
love you the way you are..."

***

Wiley came back three weeks later.

Pris had gone back to college. I was sitting in the kitchen having a
cup of tea before bed. Dan and Cindy were still out at a business
dinner. It was so unusual for someone to knock at our door without
an invitation that I was briefly startled. There aren't too many
people go door to door in Buckhead, especially at 11.00pm. I glanced
out the window next to the door before I opened it. He must have
noticed me move the curtain to do that, because our eyes met through
the glass. It looked like he had been crying.

Hesitantly I opened the door. "Wiley."

"Hi, Emma. Uh, do you mind if I come in?"

"Um, it's kind of late, Wiley."

"Uh, yeah. I know that. It's just..." He looked around, then back at
me, and shrugged. "Only for a few minutes. Please?"

I was reluctant to let him in, but I swung the door wider, and he
came into the hallway. I led him into the kitchen. "I'm just having
some tea. You want some?"

"Uh, no." He shuffled his feet. The thing is, Emma... I came to say
I'm sorry."

"Sorry?" I stood next to the kitchen table and picked up my tea.
Wiley came across and stood close. Close enough to touch me if he
wanted to. I was momentarily nervous.

"Yeah, you know. I behaved like a jerk."

"I dunno, Wiley, you know, if that was the way you felt --"

"It was. But I was, well, confused. I mean, it's not something
anyone ever said to me before."

'Hah, I bet." I laughed quietly, bitterly. "So you have a bunch of
questions, I guess."

"Well, maybe, if you want to talk to me about it."

I wasn't sure about that. "Wiley, you really hurt me."

"I know. I know. I fucked up. Emma, I'm sorry."

"I mean," I started, then stopped. "I had to tell you, Wiley. Up
till then, through everything, the thing with Steve, you know, you
stuck by me. I misinterpreted it, I guess. I thought if you were
just trying to get into my pants --"

"There was that too," Wiley smiled. He pulled my hair back from my
face and took my chin in his hand to turn me to face him. "Emma,
stop torturing yourself. It's okay. Yes, I love you. Yes, I've been
in love with you since the first time I saw you at that party all
that time ago in Oxford. So yes, the attraction I felt for you,
well, there was a big physical component. But you should know me
well enough by now to know that a pretty face and a great body
aren't enough for me. I fell in love with you, with the you that's
inside your incredibly beautiful body --"

"It's alright, Wiley. Stop. Okay."

He kissed me, and I let him, and we hugged, and I let him do that, too.

***

Pris made me promise to use some of my free time to come back to
Mississippi. I was reluctant to go, because there were so many
ghosts for me there, but she laid the trump card on me right away.
Elroy. Elroy had called me almost every day since I had been
released from the hospital. Pris told me he had wanted to come and
see me but she had persuaded him that I needed time before I saw too
many people. Now, Pris said, it was time.

The other trump was the baby. I hadn't seen Lindy, as Julia and Pete
had called her, since immediately after her birth, in Jackson. They
were all living back in Oxford, "far enough away" from Julia's
parents that Pete didn't feel too uncomfortable.

I flew into Memphis, and Vanessa met me at the airport. I hadn't
seen her since that time after our first gig in Memphis, but she
hadn't changed at all. She swept across the gate lounge like a force
of nature, and gathered me into her arms before I could properly say
hello. When she let me go again I could see scores of people staring
at us, but I didn't mind. I still didn't know Vanessa all that well,
but I couldn't help but like her style. It was easy to see why she
and Cary had been friends.

Vanessa and I caught a cab downtown, to the Peabody. When I had said
that I wanted to overnight in Memphis Cindy had insisted I stay at
the Peabody. For once I didn't argue. I had never forgotten the
place after the first night I had met Vanessa there, and I had never
stayed in a proper hotel before, just scummy motels on the road
while we were touring. It turned out that Cindy knew someone who
knew someone who knew the CEO of the company that owned the place,
so I got a good rate. I put all the charges on the card Dan had
given me, as we'd agreed.

After I had checked in Vanessa and I sat downstairs in the bar, and
I enjoyed myself watching Vanessa intimidate the waiter into not
carding me. She gave me news from Cary, who was happily shacked up
with a sugar-daddy industrialist twice his age. I had sent Vanessa a
letter after my release from hospital, so she already knew about
Steve's death, but I had to fill her in on everything that had
happened to me before that, and the events since. We talked on
through our third vodka and tonic, and then went a few doors up from
the hotel for burgers and beers. We were sitting at a table in the
burger place when two cops came in and sat at the table behind me.
For the first time in my life I didn't become anxious. I had nothing
to fear from the police now. I had a place in the world, a kind of
family again, and people who loved and protected me. For the first
time in my life I felt like I belonged.

At noon the next day Pris arrived at the hotel to drive me back to
Mississippi in a shiny new Volkswagen Rabbit convertible. "Cindy
convinced me it was okay for Daddy to finally buy me a car," she
said as the porters loaded my suitcase into the trunk. "But I think
he's grumpy because he hasn't seen it yet. Pete and Julia helped me
pick it out."

Julia had moved out of our old apartment and into a small house on
the south side of Oxford, not far from where Pete's old place had
been. He had a studio in the garage of their new place, which he
used mostly at night as a place to paint and write and do whatever
illegal things he was still doing. He spent all day taking care of
Lindy while Julia went to classes. All of Oxford was scandalized
about them "living in sin", which made Pete happy as a clam.

The first night I was back in Oxford, we stayed in. Pete cooked, and
Julia and Pris and I talked and I got to play with the baby. "Pris,"
Julia informed me, "isn't nearly clucky enough and makes a terrible
baby sitter, Emma, so we were kind of hoping you'd move back here
and take it on for us." She looked completely serious and I must
have looked worried, but then she laughed, and I knew she wasn't
serious. Pris scowled, but from what I could see that first night
back Julia was right -- Pris was perfectly lovely to the baby, but
it was obvious children weren't her thing.

It was very different for Pete and Julia. Children were their thing,
and they were very happy. Lindy filled their lives completely, but
in the very best possible way. Some people become terribly boring
after they have a child, because all they can ever talk about is
their child, or the world as it effects their child. As I played
with Lindy that night I could tell that she was the absolute center
of everything for them, but although I could see that they weren't
getting much sleep there was a lovely calmness about both of them,
and they never allowed the conversation to get bogged down in 'baby'
stuff. They both went to bed much earlier than they had in the days
when I'd last lived in Oxford, and they were super-attuned to every
movement Lindy made, but they were great company and I loved seeing
them both again. Especially Julia. I wasn't conscious of it that
night, but later I realized just how happy I was for her, and how
good it made me feel to be around someone who was so happy in herself.

The next day Pete offered to drive me over to Elroy's, because he
had some business to do over near there. Neither of us said much as
Pete's Microbus rattled its way toward Tupelo with Lindy asleep in
the back, but if I had been scared about confronting Elroy since my
attempt at suicide, I needn't have been. As soon as Elroy saw me he
swept me up into a hug. We both began talking and it wasn't until at
least an hour later that we paused and looked at one another and
laughed. It was a Friday, and Elroy had to prepare for business that
night, so I helped out behind the bar, and with some office work
that Elroy had neglected. It was almost like old times. That night
his new house band was on, a bunch of young Tupelo boys whose
enthusiasm made up for their lack of finesse. While I was watching
them my mind went back to those happy times we'd first jammed
together, clowning around and exploring songs we barely knew. I was
just beginning to tear up when I felt Elroy's hand go around my
shoulder. He hugged me and then he started swaying to the music with
me. I smiled, and we swayed together and I felt much better.

It wasn't until very late that night as he drove me back to Oxford
that he lectured me about what I had done, but he tempered it by
saying that he remembered the way he had felt when his wife and
daughter had been killed, so he couldn't say he didn't understand it.

"There's only one thing I want from you, Emma," he said. "I want you
to have a life."

I spent a week in Oxford. It felt good to be back around the people
I'd come to love, but there were so many reminders of Steve that I
found it hard to keep myself together several times. I knew that
there was no way I could go back there permanently, no matter how
much I loved Julia, Pris and Elroy.

***

My job with Tickenor, Douglas and Bremmer was over. I'm sure Bob and
Bill would have considered taking me back, but I had taken too much
time off work and everyone there knew I had tried to kill myself and
I really didn't think I could face seeing everyone there all at
once. I phoned Bill to apologize for letting him down, and I went
downtown to have coffee with Shelley. We agreed to stay in touch,
and over subsequent years we became firm friends. Bob Douglas
remained a great ally and managed to sort out my social security
problems without raising any undue suspicions.

One night a few weeks later, Dan sat back in his chair after dinner
and said quietly that there was something he and Cindy needed to
discuss with me. The way he said it sounded ominous. Although he and
Cindy had been wonderful, and although it seemed to me at least
superficially that my revelation to them hadn't changed their
feelings for me, I couldn't really believe that Dan could still feel
the same way about me as he had before he knew. And I very much
doubted that Cindy could feel the same way about a scruffy
half-boy-half-girl from the Chicago projects as she had about me
before. I couldn't help but thinking that things must have changed
between us, no matter what they said when I was in hospital.

I was wrong, of course. Dan invited Cindy and me into his den, and
sat me down and offered me a drink. I think I must have been
shaking, afraid of what was coming. Where would I go? How could I
support myself? There was Wiley, but..."

"Emma, what are you going to do with your life?" Dan began as soon
as he sat down.

"Pardon?"

"Well, you're very bright. It seems a shame to have you stuck as a
clerk in some law firm."

"I don't think I have that job any more, sir." I took a gulp of the
whiskey he had poured for me. It burned my throat.

"No, I don't suppose you do. But even if you did, I hardly think
it's what you want to do with your life, is it?"

"I don't know, sir."

"Enough with the 'sir'. I thought we got over that last year."

"Uh, yes. I think it's the desk." I giggled. "It has a kind of
formality, you know? Like I'm being interviewed."

Dan smiled. "Yes, I guess it does. Mmmm. Perhaps you are being
interviewed. Emma, have you thought of going to college?"

"Uh, no sir. I don't even have my high-school diploma."

"Yes, I know."

"You're certainly smart enough to get one, if you apply yourself,"
Cindy said.

"I suppose so."

"Well, here's the deal, then." Dan said decisively. "Cindy and I
have been talking, and we'd like you to keep on staying in Atlanta,
if you want to. I understand you are back on speaking terms with
young Wiley --"

"-- He's not, we're not ... in a relationship. I'm not ready for
that yet." I said.

"-- Well, all in good time. If you want to keep staying here, we'd
love to have you. You've become part of the family."

Dan continued on. He and Cindy were offering to provide for me as
long as I promised to sit my high school equivalency and apply for
college the following year.

"It's a very generous offer, uh, Dan." I said. I looked over at
Cindy to let her know I was including her in my thanks. "I don't
know that I really deserve it, but --"

"Nonsense, Emma. Just don't say no." Cindy said.

"Thank you."

"That's better. Um, there is one other thing," Dan said.

"Yes?"

"Your, um, future." Dan said, hesitantly. "You meant what you said
to Pris, about always being Emma?"

"Yes. Yes, I did."

"Cindy was thinking..." Dan said. "She knows some people, and they
know something about this, and there's a doctor in Casablanca. Do
you know about this?"

I shook my head. "Not much. I discussed it with Vanessa, that woman
I told you about in Memphis? She knows a little bit about it. I
think there are doctors in America that do it too."

"Is this what you want?" Cindy said.

"I think so. I think I'd just like to be like everybody else."

"Well, you can't go to an American doctor until you're twenty-one,
apparently."

"I didn't know that."

"Yes, but you can go overseas now, if you want."

I shrugged. "Um, there's one problem."

"Cindy is offering to pay for it." Dan said "From her own money,
nothing to do with me."

I was momentarily stuck dumb. I looked at Cindy. She smiled.

"If you want it, Emma."

"Um... This is all a bit... ah, much." I finished the last of my
whiskey and looked back and forth between them. "It's just... a bit
unexpected... I don't want to seem ungrateful, but can I think about
it for a while?"

"Of course." Cindy walked over to the whiskey decanter and came back
to pour us all another drink. "But that's not all we wanted to talk
to you about tonight. Emma, everything you've told me... Well, it
seems like everything has just *happened* to you. You haven't made
things happen. You've had some horrible things..." She seemed to be
at a loss for words for a few moments, and she looked away for a few
moments, but eventually she collected her thoughts and turned back
to me. She looked me very directly in the eyes. "Emma, the thing is,
you can either go through life just letting things happen to you, or
you can make things happen. you can take control of your life and
make whatever you want of it."

I didn't say anything, but I was thinking of what lay ahead of me.
No education, no skills, no money. It was easy for Cindy to say
'make whatever you want of it' but she wasn't the one with a
criminal record and a false I.D. But she must have seen the doubt on
my face, because she went on.

"I don't mean you have to do it on your own, Emma. You know that Dan
and I care about you, and we'll help you out any way we can." She
anticipated me beginning to interrupt her and she raised her hand.
"No, don't interrupt, I don't much care for your 'I don't deserve
it' remarks. Dan and I are quite capable of deciding what we can and
can't do with our money, thank you very much, and anyway this is my
money. My point is, just giving you money isn't going to make you
happy. I'm very happy, we're both very happy, to help you in any way
we can, but it's going to take effort from you. Ambition,
commitment. Emma, you've got to want *life*."

I didn't say anything for a few moments. Cindy was right, of course,
and in different words she was echoing what Elroy had said in a
gentler manner. I knew that. But I wasn't sure how I could be what
she wanted. I had never felt ambition. There were things I enjoyed,
like singing, but I couldn't think seriously about that as a career,
and I had never considered my own life in any terms other than the
present. Maybe it was because I had spent so much of my adolescence
in Brand, and never had a reason to think about what I would do when
I got out. Or perhaps it was that I couldn't conceive -- then -- any
normal life for myself after what Blaha had done to me.

Then I mentally slapped myself. I was falling into the exact same
trap Cindy had just described. I was dwelling on the past, and on
all the reasons why I was too fucked up to do anything with my life.
I needed to focus on the future.

"I didn't mean to upset you, Emma," Cindy said gently.

"Huh?" I said, coming out of my reverie. "Uh, no, um... you didn't,
sorry. I was just thinking, and, you know, you're right, actually."

"I know that," she said, smiling.

Dan laughed. "She's always right about stuff like that," he said.
"That's why I married her."

***

That night I had a very vivid dream. I dreamed I was performing, to
a huge crowd in the old cafe on Division Street, which seemed to
have expanded to the proportions of the big place we had played in
Memphis, with a band comprised of Steve, Brett, Bo and Elroy. Leon
was on stage, too, holding a guitar but not playing. From the
audience I could hear a voice calling me, calling for more, and
more, insistently. I could see Vanessa and Julia and Pris in the
front row, and behind them were a few people from Oxford with
Shelley and Anthea from work, and then beyond them Cee, standing
next to Mary Wozecky. When Cee stepped aside I saw Cindy and Danny
standing with my Mom, all smiling. They were the ones stamping their
feet and calling out. Steve was playing right next to me, rocking
his guitar around me and smiling and singing. My Mom was calling to
me, but she was calling me Emma.

***

Chapter Twenty-Six.

Pete may have been an anarchist, but he was a gentle man, and I
can't believe he would have been the one to start it. In my mind I
can see him trying to settle Julia's father, trying to use humor to
take the sting out of whatever family horror had just struggled to
the surface of the conversation. But I never met Mr. Hammond so I
don't know whether or not he had a sense of humor. I do remember
that Steve had told me he was a gun nut, and that he had a vicious
temper, and I think after one of the stories he told me when we were
in Brand I always associated his father's name with the image of my
own vicious and brutal father. Which means I'm probably prejudiced
and will never make sense of what happened anyway.

The police report went something like this: there was a family
argument, and it got progressively worse, and Mr Hammond stormed off
and returned to the kitchen of their house in Jackson a few minutes
later with a pistol. According to the statement the police took from
Julia before she died at the hospital, Mr Hammond aimed the gun at
Pete, and Mrs Hammond stepped between them and somewhere in the rage
the gun went off and Mrs Hammond was hit. Pete attacked Mr Hammond
and the gun discharged and hit Julia, and then Mr. Hammond shot Pete
at close range. After that he turned the gun on himself. For some
reason he never thought of the four year old child sleeping in the
bedroom on the other side of the house, for which we should all be
grateful.

Mrs Hammond survived. It was in all the papers, but I didn't read
the papers. Pris called me and told me, and she and I went to
Jackson with Wiley and Dan and Bob Douglas. There wasn't anything we
could do, of course. Julia died in hospital before we got there.

Oddly enough I didn't cry at the hospital. Cindy's first thought was
about Lindy, and she and I spent a half-hour tracking the child
through the maze of hospital bureaucracy until we found her, and all
I could think about was how much she meant to Julia. When the nurse
told us that Lindy would probably be put into state-managed foster
care the thought of tears was the furthest from my mind. I held
little Lindy's hand and looked over at Dan and Bob, and then at
Cindy. There wasn't any way I was going to let that happen, and I
wasn't going to cry either. I made Dan promise me he would help me
work out a way to take care of her.

Based on Julia's will, and on some work Bob did, and on Mrs.
Hammond's complete disinterest in the baby, we managed to get child
services to release Lindy into Dan's care, and we all went back to
Atlanta together, to the big house in Buckhead, where Cindy redeemed
all the nasty things anyone had ever said about her by being the
soul of sensitivity and going out of her way to make everyone feel
as relaxed as we could in the circumstances. It was only then, when
I could relax and feel that everything was going to be alright, that
I cried.

When I finished crying I phoned Wiley, and told him he would have to
take on a lot of responsibility if he wanted to have any kind of
relationship with me. Starting with a child and marriage.

***

With Dan and Cindy's encouragement I started college. Initially I
planned to study law, because I knew a lot about it from working
with Bob and I thought I could make a difference to society by
helping people. But I was wrong. As Cindy said, I lack the show-off
gene that's necessary to be a good lawyer. I transferred into arts
and sciences, and after some hiccups while I went part-time to look
after Lindy, I graduated summa cum laude with a major in English.
Ironically the subject I had the most trouble with was music. I
never could study theory properly. Elroy told me it was because I
was too rock and roll for academia. During my breaks from college I
played some gigs with John Davis and did some session work as a
backing singer with some bands in L.A and Memphis, including a bunch
you would certainly have heard of. At Elroy's urging and the
invitation of a well-known A&R executive I was persuaded to cut an
album in 1985, mostly of songs I had written after Steve's death,
but although it was well reviewed, and got me a lot of invitations
to perform with more famous people, it never sold well and I didn't
see any real money from it.

Wiley and I kept seeing each other, and in my sophomore year we
married. He finally got the courage to talk to his parents about
what he wanted, and then went on to study what he'd always wanted,
medicine. Money was very tight, but we managed. He did well in his
studies, and has been well-rewarded by his choice of career.

I decided against having any surgery. I worried from time to time
about the possibility of being discovered for what I was, but from
what I read of the state of surgical technique it sounded like an
unsatisfactory compromise. Wiley said it didn't matter to him, and
even though Cindy stood by her offer to pay there were other things
that came up that required money and meant I had to borrow from her
and Dan, and I felt indebted enough. I think Cindy may have been
slightly disappointed that I didn't do it, but if she and Dan ever
thought less of me they never said anything.

In 1988 I was seated next to Keith Richards at a dinner that Aaron
Carter was hosting at Spago in Los Angeles. Keith was urbane and
witty in a quiet, casual way, and when I didn't fawn all over him he
relaxed and we chatted cordially. He had a wicked, low chuckle and a
talent for devastatingly funny sotto voce remarks about other people
at the table. I can't remember anything we talked about, but it
wasn't music. I remember being struck by just how ravaged and beaten
his face had been by heroin and alcohol, much more than I had ever
seen in photographs, and feeling momentarily glad that I had never
seen Steve's face drained of its vitality and beauty in that way,
but I didn't dwell on the moment and I'm sure Keith never noticed
the flash of sadness on my own face that memories like that usually
bring.

***

Epilogue.

So here I am, on this day, my thirty-eighth birthday. I'm three
years younger than that, of course, but I long ago stopped using my
real birthday and used the real Emma Donaldson's for everything.
From time to time I've wondered whether anyone is ever going to
catch up with me about that, but I suppose once you have enough
history in a particular identity it never occurs to people to
question who you are, and anyway these days my social security
number matches Emma Kennison, my married name. Pete was a thorough
man, and I think Bob Douglas may have done a few adjustments to some
documents at Dan Arsenault's request.

Lindy is seventeen now, older than I was when I first met Wiley. As
I'm writing this she's about to head off East for her first year of
college. Wiley is outside helping her pack her little Toyota with
more stuff than I thought she owned. Of course she's taking all her
music gear, which means more keyboards and computers than I've seen
in most professional studios. She's become quite the musician, even
if it is on the rave circuit where it seems to me to be mostly
knob-twiddling and punching computer keyboards instead of getting
down and playing. I can hear her bossing him around, and although I
can't see his face I know he's smiling and nodding and letting her
have her own way as much as she wants.

He and I have had a good marriage so far. I know he's been faithful
to me, and he's been a good father to Lindy. Since she's been
talking about college I've been worrying about us, about what we'll
do when there are only the two of us, and last night Wiley raised
the idea of adopting a couple of kids. I'm thinking maybe surrogacy
might be a better idea. He has no children of his own and that nags
at me, although he says it doesn't matter to him, but the fact that
he's thinking about children at all says to me that it's important
to him.

Yes, it still bothers me, too. I would have liked to have had my own
children. But I've been very fortunate to have Lindy, and there's no
point getting lathered up over something that's impossible. Elroy
and I taught one another that, although we didn't ever say it that way.

Wiley and I can provide a good home to more kids, whether they're
adopted or Wiley's. We're both young enough to still be able to
think about it. Wiley is a partner in a very successful practice
here, and three years ago he went in with some friends in the
development of a new hospital. I'm happy enough teaching at Georgia
Tech, although trying to teach English to kids who spend too much
time online and not enough time reading books is sometimes a
challenge. We don't have to worry about money these days. We bought
a small house last year here in Buckhead. It's around the corner
from Wiley's folks, and a few blocks away from Dan and Cindy's
place, although they're not here very often these days since Cindy
inherited her dad's place in the Bahamas. We see them from time to
time when they're in town, and Dan still makes me laugh and smile.
He and I jam together with a couple who live up in Roswell, and a
few months ago we all played a half-assed gig together at a bar a
friend owns.

I don't miss professional music. There was always a buzz from
performing in front of an audience, and sometimes I think back to
some of the wonderful moments I've had working with some great
musicians, but the hype, and the money guys, and some of the
no-talents who have enormous egos, all take their toll. The music
was great, but the music industry is awful, so eventually I ditched
the industry. I still get some royalty checks from 'No Questions',
and a hip-hop duo sampled the vocal hook a couple of years ago and I
got payment for that, too.

I think I enjoyed singing with Lindy when she was a little girl more
than anything else. She was a big fan of Tom Lehrer when she was
about twelve, and we used to sing those songs together all the time.
"Poisoning Pigeons In The Park" was our favorite. That and Dusty
Springfield songs. Lindy probably wouldn't admit to liking them now,
since she's become so serious about music herself and hates all the
stuff I love, but I used to sing around the house, like my mother
did, so Lindy knows all those old songs well.

I still see Pris from time to time, although not as much as I used
to. Ten years ago she finally came out completely and moved to New
York with Barbara, a very striking lawyer she met at a party at Bob
Douglas's place one Christmas. They both seem ecstatically happy but
she doesn't get back to Atlanta all that often and my commitments
don't allow me to get to New York to see her more than once a year.
Lesbianism was something that crept up on Pris gradually, but once
she'd made the choice she embraced it wholeheartedly.

Elroy sold the bar outside Tupelo and opened another one in downtown
Oxford, just off the square. He ran it successfully for six years
until he died suddenly, of a heart attack one morning as he was
sweeping leaves from the sidewalk outside.

I miss him, and I miss Julia, but what I miss most is Steve. I feel
guilty admitting it, because Wiley has been very good to me, and
every time I think of Steve I feel like I'm betraying Wiley in some
small way. But there are times when I hear fragments of music
running through my head, or smell the magnolia on the night air,
feel the sun on my skin in a certain way, and I hear Steve's voice
in my head, feel his touch on my neck, as though he was next to me
again. Sometimes I think I space out for a few moments at those
times, and I've noticed Wiley looking at me oddly afterward.

"I remember something you once told me

And I'll be damned if it didn't come true

Twenty thousand roads I went down, down, down

And they all led me right back home to you."

Damn, do you know how often the Rolling Stones get airplay all these
years later? Sometimes I'm glad Steve isn't around any more so he
can't see what happened to those guys, and I can't disagree with
Lindy's disparaging remarks about Mick -- she's right. But I can't
hear those songs from 'Sticky Fingers' and 'Exile On Mainstreet' and
'Beggar's Banquet' without hearing Steve singing them, and feeling
my heart come apart. There isn't a single day that's gone by since
Steve's death that I haven't felt that terrible pain of heartbreak
and loss, and I know that's not fair to Wiley but it's just
impossible for me to overcome. Whatever it was that I had with
Steve, it's forged something in me that's been impossible to break.
Wild horses couldn't drag me away. Steve wasn't the one who changed
my life in the most radical way, but he was the one who showed me
how to find my soul. Goddamned junkie bastard, I still love him so
badly it hurts.

I'm still not completely sure how I feel about what happened to me
when I was a teenager. As I said when I started telling this story,
I don't drag the past around with me like a ball and chain, but I
admit that I still feel hatred toward Grieves and Blaha. Not for
what they made me become -- I have enjoyed a lot of my life and I
like who I am now. No, I hate them for their abuse of power. I hate
them for their ignorance, and their contempt for the feelings of others.

It was all so long ago, that sometimes it seems like it happened to
a different person.

I guess it did.

I'm going to step outside in a few moments to kiss Lindy and wish
her a safe trip. We wanted to go up there with her to see her settle
in, but either she's too embarrassed to be seen with us or she just
wants to be more independent. Wiley and I will hug each other
afterwards and settle into this new phase of our lives as
empty-nesters, and then we'll kiss and I'll forget all about this
story, until the next time I hear the sound of a twelve string
guitar, or an old Rolling Stones song, and I think of Steve.

fin

Distribution: Feel free to archive or otherwise distribute, provided
it (and this preamble) is unedited and no fee is charged for access.
This story may not be distributed from any site that charges money,
is members-only, or uses that ridiculous "adult check" thing (or any
similar system).

up
90 users have voted.
If you liked this post, you can leave a comment and/or a kudos! Click the "Thumbs Up!" button above to leave a Kudos

Comments

WildHorses ...

... was my first involvement with TG fiction as either a writer or editor. It's a hard act to follow. Before posting it here I re-read it for the first time in several years and I still enjoyed and admired Becky's writing.

I've no idea where Becky is now. We lost touch a year or two ago, but she gave her permission for me to distribute he story onto free sites. I think 'Big Closet' is a worthy home and I'd like to thank Erin for her support for our peculiar genre and this one in particular.

For those of you who've got this far and are reading it for the first time I hope you enjoyed it ... and thanks for persevering - there's a lot of words.

Geoff

Thanks for posting

erin's picture

Geoff,

And thank Becky, where ever she is, for writing such a powerful story.

- Erin

= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.

Re-reading

Read this when it first appeared elsewhere and enjoyed it again now. Good stuff, thanks for bringing it back to everyone's attention.

-- Donna Lamb, Flack

-- Donna Lamb, ex-Flack

Some of my books and stories are sold through DopplerPress to help support BigCloset. -- Donna

A Different Ending?

I also seem to have read this story before. The scene where Michael finds Maria with her raped and dying imprinted itself on my memory. But, I seem to remember brother Danny not being killed, but having gone out of town to find work. Returning, he believes Michael to be guilty of Maria's death. Much of the rest of the story is the same, except Emma is returned to Brand because her singing fame and using her mother's maiden name, Boyle, causes her to be recognized by Blaha. Here, Emma's life is in danger because what Blaha had done to Michael wasn't quite legal -- he was a pervert. Danny returns to the story and believes Emma when she says something or another to reveal her innocence and the guilt of Tony. Finally, Emma goes to find Cee in San Francisco. Emma's getting married and stuff, I don't remember happening. Is this a rewrite of that story?

I am a grain of sand on a near beach; a nova in the sky, distant and long.
In my footprints wash the sea; from my hands flow our universe.
Fact and fiction sing a legendary song.
Trickster/Creator are its divine verse.

--Old Man CoyotePuma

In short, no.

This isn't a rewrite of any story as far as I know - unless subconsciously. I was involved quite a lot though not quite from the very beginning but certainly the chapters from about 1/4 the way through are original if the evidence of them in their raw state is any evidence. I think the inspiration came from a news story that Becky read somewhere.

More importantly, did you enjoy it? You don't say.

Geoff

wow

rebecca.a's picture

no, this is pretty much the only version of the story that's ever been written. i have a version floating around on my laptop somewhere that corrects a couple of minor errors, but there's nothing that varies plot-wise.

discovering someone's read a version that different is a bit like discovering you have a doppleganger somewhere. intriquing, but disconcerting all the same. :)


not as think as i smart i am

5:09 am

Its 5:09 am and I have just finished reading all eight parts of this story after seeing a link about music in TG stories. What a beautifully written tale.

Audrey.

Thankyou for the story

A very gripping story, thanks so much.

Hugs

Wild horse couldn't drag me away

From finishing this story.It was a long read but a good one that when I started I just couldn't stop till I finished.Thanks for sharing it Geoff and I hope you make contact with the author again.Amy M

An extremely gripping story

I am glad I found this story. I enjoyed it immensely. I would have thought Emma would get the surgery, so it is a different ending than I would have expected. I was also wondering why they didn't consider adding children while Lindy was still a baby, though I guess what with getting her and her husband getting a degree and jobs while raising Lindy would have been enough of a challenge. Nevertheless, I couldn't put the story down until I finished it.

A thoroughly interesting and

A thoroughly interesting and compelling story, worthy of being published. It is definitely a dark tale although I could not put it down until I finished it....and a very apt title.

Very Compelling

It's taken me three days, off and on, to complete this wonderful story. It has been very compelling. I like your character development and the action throughout. You kept it flowing.

Emma certainly let things happen to her for the first several years of her life. It was excellent that she finally took advice and got control of her life from there forward.

Thanks for writing this.

Much Love,

Valerie R

A popular concept in the New Millenium :|

Aljan Darkmoon's picture

The Hammonds still weren't really acknowledging Pete as the father of their granddaughter. He pretended not to mind "that bunch of asswipes" as he called them, but it was obvious he was hurt. I said I hoped that they would come to their senses for the sake of the baby, but looking at Pris and Pete I could tell that none of us thought that was very likely.

The phrase “Sperm Donor” comes to mind… :|

Moving...

RachelMnM's picture

I am deeply saddened that I've read and finished the final chapter of this very well written story. Emma's story hooked me deeply and her journey with every supporting character made this story feel real, believable, and heartfelt. I felt her struggle, was constantly trying to figure out the direction it was going - wrong pretty much the entire read, and saddened by a love lost. It ended right, was a long read (like if LOTR was twice as long), and I just keep feeling like I wanted to be her neighbor or someone close to her to keep in her presence. The intimate scenes were done to suck you in closer to the relationship unfolding in front of your eyes and I would have loved to felt more of that connection with her husband, had he touched her as deeply as her first love. So many things happening in this story, but a triumph with tragedy certainly worth experiencing. Highly recommend... Thank you! Loved it all!

XOXOXO

Rachel M. Moore...