because he couldnâthelp himself. They had been out here all these years, with never any trouble to speak of for either of them, and now this, now this.
Martin started to laugh, and once he started he couldnât stop. He laughed so hard that he sat down on the ground, doing nothing to break his fall. He felt his tailbone hit a rock and the pain shoot up his spine. It seemed to him to be happening to somebody else in some other universe. Then his stomach began to heave and he swallowed against it. He was laughing so hard he couldnât inhale worth a damn.
âThis is funny,â Henry said, looking about ready to kill him. âYou think this is funny?â
Martin got an arm up and a finger pointing in the skeletonâs direction. The skull was hollow and blank. He could see how people could have something like that polished to use as an ornament on a desk.
âIt isnât ours,â he said, when he could make himself talk. âThat thing. It isnât ours. It doesnât come from here.â
âWhat the hell are you talking about?â
âItâs much too young,â Martin said.
And that was the truth. Every single grave in the Fair-child Family Cemetery was at least a hundred and fifty years old. The bones were brittle and thin and dry. They werenâtâthey werenâtâ
When the first of the bile came up in his throat, he wasnât ready for it. It slammed into the top of his esophagus like a fist. He threw himself sideways and let it all come up. He wanted to keep it off himself. He didnât exactly make it. His throat felt so raw and torn he thought he must be throwing up ground glass.
He was still throwing up, fifteen minutes later, when the cops drove into the driveway at their front door and Henry went around to let them in.
9
Margaret Anson had gone to bed, but she hadnât gone to sleep. Bennis Hannaford knew that, because she could heard pacing in the room down the hall, punctuated periodically by the sound of drawers slamming, or maybe furniture being moved. Bennis tried to tell herself that this was simple maternal concernâKayla was still out; it was the Friday before Halloween and half past midnightâbut she didnât believe it, and she didnât think anyone else would, either. Her own family was screwed up enough so that she didnât expect much of anything from anybody elseâs, but Margaret had struck her as an unusually cold and ruthless woman. Bennis tried to remember what Kayla had been like, on the one or two occasions when they had met. The occasions had been too brief to allow her to form an opinion. Maybe Kayla would turn out to be just like her mother. Maybe it was the money that did that to people, although Bennis had grown up with money, and around people with money, and most of them hadnât been infected with Margaretâs pinching contempt. Maybe it was just that she should not have made tins trip, for Abigail or anybody else. Bennis had a lot to do at home lately. She had people she cared about and responsibilities of a sort. It had been stupid to give in to her restlessness. It had probably been stupid to get restless in the first place. Sometimes Bennis thought she was the worst mess of anybody she knew. She couldnât make up her mind about anything. She was practically forty, and she still didnât know what she wanted to be when she grew up. Even Gregor got exasperated with her now and then. He was probably exasperated with her right his minute, sitting back on Cavanaugh Street by himself, wondering what it was she thought she was doing.
And then, of course, there was this cough she had. And had and had.
What she was supposed to be doing was trying to go tosleep, which was why she had come upstairs to her assigned bedroom, a low-ceilinged, cramped little space under one of the west ell gables. She had even gotten out of her clothes and put on her nightgown and a robe. It was Gregorâs