thereâs the child, too. Usually in the corner. Sometimes in other placesâon the ground, looking up at the larger figure. In one, the child is in the stomach of the woman. In another, the woman has two heads, and one of the heads is the childâs.
I hear footsteps upstairs. Delicate, soft. Jakeâs mother? Why did I assume she does the painting and drawing down here? I hear more footsteps upstairs, heavier.
I can hear someone. Talking. Two people. I can. From where? Itâs Jakeâs mom and dad, upstairs. Theyâre arguing again.
Arguing might be too strong, but the conversation is not cordial. Itâs heated. Somethingâs wrong. Theyâre upset. I need to get closer to the vent. Thereâs a rusty paint can by the far wall. I move it directly under the vent. I stand on it, balancing myself against the wall. They are talking in the kitchen.
âHe canât keep doing this.â
âItâs not sustainable.â
âHe spent all that time to get there, just to quit? He threw it away. Of course I worry.â
âHe needs predictability, something steady. Heâs alone too much.â
Are they talking about Jake? I put my hand higher on the wall and rise up on my tiptoes.
âYou kept telling him he could do whatever he wanted.â
âWhat was I supposed to say? You canât get by day after day being like that, shy, introverted . . . so . . .â
Whatâs she saying? I canât make it out.
âNeeds to get out of his own head, move on.â
âHe left the lab. That was his decision. He never should have started down that path in the first place. The thing is . . .â
Something here I canât make out.
âYes, yes. I know heâs smart. I know. But it doesnât mean he had to go that route.â
â. . . A job he can keep. Hold down.â
Left the lab? So they are talking about Jake? What do they mean? Jakeâs still working there. Itâs getting harder to decipher the words. If I can just get a bit higher, closer.
The paint can tips and I crash against the wall. The voices stop. I freeze.
For a second, I think I hear someone move behind me. I shouldnât be down here. I shouldnât be listening. I turn to look back toward the stairs, but thereâs no one there. Just the shelves full of boxes, the dim light coming from upstairs. I donât hear the voices anymore, not at all. Itâs quiet. Iâm alone.
An awful feeling of claustrophobia settles over me. What if someone were to close the trapdoor covering the stairs? I would be stuck down here. It would be dark. Iâm not sure what I would do. I stand up, not wanting to think about it further, rubbing the knee I banged into the wall.
On my way back up the stairs I notice a lock and latch on the trapdoor, the one that hides the stairs when itâs closed. The latch is screwed into the wall beside the stairs, but the lockâs on the bottom of the trapdoor. Youâd think it would be on the top side, so they could lock it from the top. The trapdoor can be closed and opened from either side, either pushed up if youâre in the basement, or pulled up if youâre on the landing. But it can be locked only from below.
âDo we know the official cause of death?
âBled out, from the puncture wounds.
âAwful.
âBled for hours, we think. Quite a bit of blood.
âIt must have been terrible to stumble across.
âYes, I imagine it was. Horrible. Something youâd never forget.
T he dining room is empty when I return from the basement. The table has been cleared except for my dessert plate.
I poke my head into the kitchen. The dirty plates are stacked and rinsed, but not washed. The sink is filled with grayish water. The faucet drips. Drips.
âJake?â I call. Where is he? Where is everyone? Maybe Jake is taking out the table scraps to the compost in the shed.
I spot the
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