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    Logan 02 Heartsong

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      "Don't you think she would have been able to stop him?"

      He opened his eyes and shook his head.

      "No. I don't know. What if she couldn't? I did it for her," he insisted. "I couldn't help it," he admitted. "But, I haven't looked down that hole at you, if that's what you think. I swear. I'm not a peeping Tom. Really," he pleaded, his face contrite with his effort to convince me of his need to have me forgive him.

      "I believe you," I said, and he relaxed. "You should repair it though."

      "I will. I just forgot about it," he said. "The sofa was over it, so I just forgot about it."

      I nodded and put my hair clip back in. Then I started for the trapdoor. He reached out to take my hand.

      "Melody, you don't think less of me because of that, do you?"

      "No," I said. I smiled at him, but in my heart I was confused. I didn't know exactly what to think or feel at the moment. I needed time. "I better go down before everyone starts wondering where I am," I said.

      "Maybe we'll take a walk after dinner or something."

      "Maybe," I said. I nodded at the work table. "Thank you for the sailboat."

      He smiled and watched me descend. When I entered my room, however, I gazed up at the ceiling. Now that I knew it was there, I could see the small hole. A second later, it was darkened. Cary had covered it.

      But had he closed his heart on all that had made him drill the hole? Only time would tell, I thought.

      What had he seen down here and what had it done to him? I wondered. How confusing and wonderful, exciting and yet frightening sex was, I thought. I didn't tell May, of course, but I could see it was the greatest mystery about ourselves. It inspired us, made us do creative things and yet strange things, weird things.

      May had turned to me for answers on the beach, answers I had no idea myself where I would find. In a real sense both she and I were orphans. She had a mother who refused to acknowledge her needs and I had no mother to help me with mine. Whatever discoveries I made through my awkward stumbling, I would bring to May so she would benefit. Perhaps this was another reason why I was brought here, I thought.

      But all these good plans and good intentions were soon to be shattered.

      Uncle Jacob apparently had walked in on May and Aunt Sara just as May was signing a question that made Aunt Sara turn blue in the face. And what followed was about as furious as a hurricane. I had just gone down to see what I could do to help with dinner, but when I reached the bottom of the stairway, I heard Uncle Jacob call my name. He spit it out the way he spat out hateful Biblical names like Jezebel and Satan, Delilah and Cain.

      I stepped into the living room. He was standing near the fireplace and when he turned, it looked as if embers from the fire had jumped into his eyes. There was no doubt that if he could have set me afire and turned me to ash, he would have done it in a heartbeat. I held my breath. No one had ever looked at me with such disdain. It chilled me to the bone.

      "How dare you?" he said. "How dare you come into my home and pollute my child? I warned you about this. I told you it was in your blood."

      I shook my head, tears of confusion clouding my vision.

      "What have I done?"

      "You have filled her mind with unclean thoughts, with pornography."

      "I have not. All I did was tell her how babies are made. What's wrong with that? She's old enough to know these things now and you and Aunt Sara should be telling her more."

      His eyes widened.

      "Your mother was a whore," he said through clenched teeth. "It's no surprise she bore a daughter like you." He nodded, satisfied with his thoughts. "The old sayings are full of truth. The apple doesn't fall far from the tree. I forbid you to talk to May on this subject, do you understand?"

      I shook my head defiantly at him and recalled the Biblical quotation Cary had given me at lunch.

      "Judge not that ye be not judged," I fired back at him.

      He recoiled as if I had been big enough and strong enough to slap his face. His mouth moved, but nothing came out. He backed up a bit and then waved his finger at me, but not as firmly or with as much confidence as before.

      "Just . . . mark my words," he said and turned his back on me.-

      I spun around just as Cary came down the stairs. I was crying now, the tears streaming down my cheeks. "What's wrong?"

      "The high and the mighty Logans have spoken again!" I spit through my teeth and charged up the stairs.

      "Where are you going? It's dinner time."

      "I'm not hungry. I'd rather starve than sit at the same table with him anyway," I cried and went into my room, slamming the door behind me. My body shuddered with my sobs. When I stopped to take a breath, I saw that Cary had put the beautiful sailboat on the shelf.

      I went to it and wiped my cheeks as I stared at the tiny parts and the two people inside the cabin, looking happy and in love.

      "No wonder Laura got into a sailboat with Robert," I muttered. "She just wanted to get away from here, get away from all this."

      They did, but they died to do it, I thought. I looked at Laura's picture on the dresser.

      Did you know what would happen to you that day, Laura? Did you deliberately sail into a storm? Maybe you were running away from a lot more than they all knew, or maybe you had seen something beyond the darkness, something more attractive and full of more hope. I wish I had known you; then maybe together we could have confronted the Logan misery.

      I went to the window and gazed out at the ocean. The horizon seemed to mark the edge of the world. No wonder people believed you could fall off if you sailed too far. Tonight I wished I could do that. I'd rather take my chances in another world and escape the misery, the sadness, the deceit, and the loneliness I found in this one.

      Almost two years before, Laura had stood at this window and looked out at that dark horizon. Did she see an answer? Did she see hope?

      I wear your clothes and I sleep in your bed, and maybe, just maybe, I dream your dreams, Laura. Do I?

      Answers, like the wispy clouds that drifted past the stars, lay beyond my reach. I gazed up, tantalized, tormented, feeling more and more lonely and afraid of what tomorrow would bring.

      6

      Revelations

      .

      The knock on my door was so gentle that at

      first I thought I had imagined it. I was lying on my bed, staring up at the ceiling, drifting with my own childhood memories, memories that floated by like an old-time silent movie, the characters and events passing in silence: silent laughter, silent tears, Mommy and my step-daddy being playful, Papa George gazing up from his paper, Mama Arlene standing nearby, a soft, loving look on her face, everyone waving, applauding, arms held out, my stepdaddy lifting me into the air, Papa George standing over me as I practiced on my fiddle. The memories became more liquid, rushed by faster, scenes merged, faces were swept away, the silent music stopped and there was my step-daddy's gravestone before me, growing larger, taller until there was nothing else in my vision.

      The knocking grew louder.

      "Yes?"

      The door opened and Cary entered sheepishly,

      carrying a tray with my dinner.

      "Hi," he ventured.

      "Hi."

      "Ma wanted me to bring this up to you." "I'm not eating anything in this house again," I

      said. "I'm just resting a while and then I'm leaving." "Don't be silly, Melody," Cary replied and put

      the tray on the desk. "Where will you go?"

      "I don't care. Anywhere but here. I'll find work

      as a waitress or a scrub woman some place." Cary laughed.

      "I mean it. You know I left before and I can

      leave again, Cary."

      "Okay, but in the meantime, if you don't eat,

      you'll only get sick and spite yourself. Go on. I'll keep

      you company. It's good meat loaf. Ma does a great job

      on that."

      "I know she does. She told me. It's your father's

      favorite," I said, spitting the wor
    ds at him. Cary

      shrugged.

      "Doesn't make it taste any better or any worse. I

      like it a lot too, and so does May. And so will you," he

      added. "Come on, eat so I can brag how successful I

      was."

      I gazed at the food. I was hungry and it was

      stupid to permit Uncle Jacob to make me suffer. I rose

      from the bed and went to the desk. The aroma of the meat loaf was enticing and I had to admit, it tasted wonderful and succulent, all the flavors just perfectly

      mixed. Cary sat watching me.

      "I think your mother became a wonderful cook

      just so she would have some place in the house where

      she could be away from your father much of the

      time," I said.

      "They were different before Laura died," Cary

      revealed. "We were all different. We did more things

      as a family. Dad wasn't as uptight about everything.

      We went for rides, went to restaurants, took walks on

      Sunday. During the cranberry harvest, we were all out

      there working, and then there would be a big feast and

      celebration. Dad even danced with Ma."

      "I don't believe it. Dancing is surely sinful," I

      said between mouthfuls.

      "Everything became sinful after Laura's

      drowning. I told you. He blamed himself."

      "Why was that, Cary? You've told me that, yes,

      but I don't understand. If your father lived such a

      moral life, read the Bible every night, made sure you

      were all so prim and proper, why would he feel

      responsible for an accident?"

      Cary shook his head.

      "That's between him and his own conscience, I

      suppose. I never asked him," he admitted.

      "Maybe you should. If he's going to make

      everyone else suffer, he should at least explain why,"

      I insisted. "If we suffer, we suffer because of our own

      sins,"

      Cary claimed. Then he looked away. I knew

      why. "Maybe what you think is a sin isn't," I said

      softly.

      "It's not a sin to love someone too much." "Yes, itis. he said quickly. "Remember

      Adam?

      Remember Original Sin?"

      "Should I? Did I commit that, too?"

      I started to smile. "All right, tell me." "After Eve ate of the fruit and was doomed to

      be cast from Paradise, Adam ate so he would not be

      without her. That's loving too much," he explained. "Just like a man to find another way to blame a

      woman for his own mistakes," I said. Cary's eyes

      widened.

      "What?"

      "That's just a Bible story, Cary. Do you really

      believe it?"

      He turned away again.

      "The Bible is full of lessons that prove true in

      our own lives," he recited mechanically.

      I tried to see through his rehearsed words to the

      true heartfelt feelings that lay behind them. There was

      something more he wasn't telling me. I could feel it in

      the silence and see it in the tight way he held his jaw. "Everyone seems to want to bury his head in

      the sand in this family, Cary. It seems to be in the

      blood," I said dryly.

      "What do you mean?"

      "What do I mean? Right from the start,

      Grandma Olivia and Grandpa Samuel created a lie

      about who my mother was. My mother continued the

      lies and so did my step-daddy Chester. They put

      Grandma Belinda away so no one would learn the

      truth, whatever that is, and everyone went along with

      it, including your parents. Your mother told me lies

      are like termites eating at the moral foundation. If that

      were true, you'd all be living in rubble," I said. Cary didn't argue. He nodded, looked horribly

      sad and tired. He stared at the floor for a while and

      when he finally lifted his head, his eyes were glassy,

      tearful.

      "I lied too," he said. "I didn't make that hole in

      the floor just to watch over Laura when she was

      seeing Robert Royce. I made it before. I didn't know many girls and Laura was the softest, prettiest person in my life. Until she started seeing Robert, we did everything together. We never hid anything from each

      other.

      "One day," he continued, "she started to lock

      her door. Everything in her life became so private and

      secret. She grew up faster, I suppose, even though we

      were twins. I felt left out, alone. I never had many

      friends at school. Laura was starting to make more

      friends, be invited to things without me. We were

      drifting apart. I don't know why I did it," he said. "She

      locked me out and I wanted to spy on her, I suppose,

      and see what it was that she would do by herself, 'why

      she wanted to be alone."

      He raised his eyes to me again, this time tears

      emerging and trickling down his cheeks.

      "I never told anyone this before."

      "And you think that was your sin?" I asked

      softly.

      "It was," he said. He took a deep breath. "I

      watched her without her knowing and at her most

      private times," he confessed.

      My heart was pounding. The silence between

      the words was loud and revealing, as was the look in

      his eyes. I thought about the times I would have hated anyone spying on me. He was right: it was a serious

      violation.

      "I'm sorry for it," he concluded. "The morning

      she left with Robert to go sailing, I was angry at her

      and she was angry at me and we never had a chance to

      make up. She had found out I had been watching her

      with Robert," he said. The pain in his voice made my

      heart ache.

      "How?"

      "I said something that only someone who had

      been spying on het- would know. Maybe I wanted her

      to know; maybe I couldn't keep it inside anymore, the

      guilt. She never came back, so I could never tell her

      how sorry I was.

      "That's why I went looking for her as long as I

      did. There were times during that search I stood up in

      my boat and shouted over the water, 'Laura, I'm sorry,'

      shouted until my throat ached. But she was gone. It

      was too late. She died hating me."

      "I'm sure she didn't really hate you for it, Cary.

      She was angry, but you two were too close for hate to

      have a chance to set in any roots," I said trying to

      soothe his fears.

      He shrugged, a small smile of gratitude on his

      lips. "I was telling you the truth about the hole

      upstairs.

      I put the sofa over it and wiped it from my

      memory." "I believe you, Cary."

      "I didn't want you to think I was invading your

      privacy, too."

      I smiled at him and he wiped the tears from his

      cheek.

      "I believe you, Cary. I really do."

      "Well, you ate. I guess I can brag," he said. He

      stood up, his eyes fixed on me, strong, loving, and

      very caring. "Don't run away, Melody. Ma's angry at

      Dad for what he said to you and he's feeling low. If

      you just pretend he never said anything--"

      "More burying of the truth?"

      "Sometimes, that's easier, I suppose." "Easier, Cary, but there's always a price to pay

      when we hold a funeral for honesty, isn't there?" "Maybe. All I know is I don't
    want you to

      leave."

      "I won't leave," I said finally. "I still have some

      unfinished business, like finding out who my real

      father is," I added dryly.

      Cary took the tray.

      "I'll take it down myself," I said. "I don't need

      your father complaining about me being waited on,

      too." "I don't mind waiting on you," Cary said. Our eyes met again and the memory of our

      kisses and caresses upstairs in his attic workshop

      rushed back over me. I felt a flush come into my face,

      a tingling up and down my body. It was almost an

      ache, a craving, and it was so strong, it actually

      frightened me. Yet for all the warmth that flooded

      through me, I still felt an eerie chill as I thought of

      Cary's odd behavior and feelings for his sister.

      Thoughts and feelings that were definitely wrong,

      even sinful, Uncle Jacob would call them. I couldn't

      help wondering if the feelings Cary claimed to have

      for me were really leftover desires he'd had for Laura.

      Would I ever be loved or wanted for who I really

      was? But even as these thoughts flew through my

      mind I felt my body respond to Cary, felt the

      undeniable pull in my most secret places. What was

      wrong with me that I could feel both repulsed and

      attracted at the same time?

      Perhaps Uncle Jacob was right, perhaps I was

      truly a sinful wanton. Maybe there was something

      flowing through our veins, something lustful, sinful,

      evil. After all, I thought, I am Haille Logan's

      daughter. Maybe I would hurt Cary just the way Mommy had hurt young men, men like Kenneth Childs. Cary took a step toward me and I moved

      quickly to seize the tray and step around him. "I'll take it down now," I said, avoiding his

      eyes. I knew if I looked, I would find two dark pools

      of disappointment.

      When I reached the bottom of the stairway and

      turned, I saw Uncle Jacob in his chair listening to the

      news on the radio. May was sprawled on the rug by

      his feet, reading. Of course, she didn't hear me. Uncle

      Jacob's eyes fixed on me a moment and then shifted

      away, guiltily, I thought. I continued to the kitchen. Aunt Sara wasn't there and the dishes were still

     


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