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Disappearance at Devil's Rock




  Dedication

  for Cole, Emma, and Lisa; the ones who keep me found

  Epigraph

  Yet at no point is the work of the seer associated with the

  diabolical . . . She is the mouthpiece of God.

  —GERALD MESSADIÉ, A History of the Devil

  You will feel the way I do.

  You’ll hurt the way I do.

  He’s easily abused.

  The devil in his youth.

  —PROTOMARTYR, “The Devil in His Youth”

  Contents

  Dedication

  Epigraph

  Elizabeth and the Call

  Josh at Home and with the Boys at Split Rock

  Elizabeth at the Park, at Home with Janice, Kate, and a Ghost

  Kate Eavesdropping and Finding Coins

  Elizabeth Finds Notes from Tommy

  Elizabeth, Out of the Corners of Her Eyes, and More Notes

  Luis Goes to the Sandersons, Kate and All the Apologies, Luis Asks Questions

  Elizabeth at Split Rock, Camera Set Up, Notes About a Man Named Arnold

  Allison and Luis, Luis and the Devil at the Rock

  Elizabeth Talks to Dave, Dinner for Two, Notifications at Night, a Fight, a Sketch

  Allison at the House, Kate Visits Josh, Hobo Nickels

  Elizabeth and Felt Presences, the Last Entries, Kate and Josh Twice

  Allison Driving in Brockton with the Boys, He’s Not Feeling Too Good, Three Horrors

  Elizabeth at Home and at the Station, Three Statements

  Elizabeth and Kate and the House and the Notes

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Also by Paul Tremblay

  Credits

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  Elizabeth and the Call

  Elizabeth is not dreaming. There’s a ringing sound coming from far away, from elsewhere in the house, not the ringing of actual bells but the digital trill of the landline phone. The phone is cordless, cheap, neglected, often left uncharged and to be found, more times than not, wedged beneath the couch cushions alongside pistachio shells, pens, and hair elastics. Elizabeth actively despises the landline’s inefficiency in regard to their everyday lives. The only calls the phone receives are credit card offers, scam vacation prizes, charities and fringe political groups looking for money, and the occasional mass recorded message from the town of Ames broadcasting the closing of school during snowstorms.

  When the kids were little, Elizabeth wanted to keep the landline so that they’d be able to dial 911 should “anything bad happen.” That was the phrase she used with her moon-eyed munchkins as she flailed at describing the nebulous and exciting emergency protocol of the Sanderson household. Fast-forward past those early years, which were harder than she would ever admit, and all three Sandersons have smartphones. There’s really no need for the landline anymore. It survives because it is inexplicably cheaper for her to keep the phone bundled with her cable and Internet. It’s maddening.

  There’s a ringing sound coming from far away, from elsewhere in the house, and not from the cell phone under her pillow. Elizabeth fell asleep waiting for the Star Trek phaser tone that announces a text from her thirteen-going-on-fourteen-year-old son Tommy. A simple text is a nonnegotiable part of the deal when sleeping over at someone else’s house, even Josh’s. She has already seen an evolution, or devolution, of communication from Tommy over the course of the summer reflected in his sleepover texts: In mid-June it was I’m going to bed now mom, which a few weeks later became night mom, then became night, and then gn, and if Tommy could’ve texted an irritated grunt (his subverbal communication method of the moment, particularly whenever Elizabeth or his eleven-going-on-twelve-year-old sister, Kate, asked him to do something), he would’ve. And now in mid-August, the exact date having changed to August 16 only a collection of minutes ago, there’s no text at all.

  One twenty-eight A.M. The landline stops ringing. The silence that replaces it is loaded with the dread of possibility. Elizabeth sits up and double- and triple-checks her cell phone, and there are no new texts. Tommy and his friend Luis are sleeping over at Josh’s house. They’ve been on a sleepover rotation for a month now. Tommy, Josh, and Luis: the three amigos. She called them that earlier in the summer when the boys were over and watching all three movies of the Batman trilogy. Tommy groaned at her. Luis said, “Hey, is that a Mexican joke?” and Tommy’s face turned redder than a stop sign while the rest of them laughed their asses off.

  Elizabeth is out of bed. She is forty-two and has large, dark brown eyes that always look a little heavy with sleep, and straight, shoulder-length brown hair going gray on the sides. She wears thin shorts and a tank top, and the pale skin of her arms and legs is chilled now that she’s out from under her blanket. The noisy air-conditioning ticks into life, swirling winds of cold, stale air. Kate must’ve sneakily turned the thermostat down below seventy degrees, which is totally ridiculous given she sleeps in a sweatshirt and covered with two comforters. You have to pick your battles.

  No good news ever calls after midnight. Elizabeth knows this from personal experience. Instead of wading into the swelling sea of the blackest of what-ifs, she dares to think that maybe the call is a wrong a number, or a prank, and Tommy just forgot to text her, and she’ll yell at him tomorrow about his selfish forgetfulness. Getting mad is better than the alternative. There are other maybes, of course. There will be thousands more.

  The phone rings again. Elizabeth rushes into the hallway and past the kids’ rooms. Tommy’s door is closed, sealed. Kate’s is open halfway, and she’s still asleep. The ringing phone doesn’t wake her, doesn’t even make her twitch.

  Maybe Tommy’s phone ran out of juice, lost its charge, and he’s being a good boy, calling home on the landline to say goodnight. But if his phone died, then wouldn’t he text her from Josh’s or Luis’s cell phone and not wake her so late with a call? She wonders if Tommy even remembers his own home phone number anymore. He’s been so absent-minded and self-consumed in that new teen world he has just begun exploring, there’s no telling what he’s thinking anymore.

  She’s in the living room, hardwood floor cold and grainy under her feet. Kate was supposed to vacuum up the sand she and her friend Sam tracked all over the house after they’d come home from the pond. Elizabeth finally reaches the end table and extends a hand out to the phone. Its small display screen glows a sickly green. Caller ID reads Griffin, Harold. It’s a call from Josh’s house. So it’s not the hospital or the police or—

  Elizabeth says, quickly, “Yes, hi, hello?”

  “Ms. Sanderson? Hi. This is Josh.” Having read Josh’s father’s name on the display screen, Elizabeth was expecting Harry’s cheerful baritone. It’s like the phone itself is breaking a promise. She wasn’t expecting Josh and the way his voice sounds: so light, careful.

  “What is it, Josh? What’s wrong?”

  “Is, um, is Tommy there? Did he go back home?”

  “What do you mean? Why isn’t he with you?” Elizabeth hurries back into the hallway and to Tommy’s room.

  “I don’t know, don’t know where he went. We went out to Borderland tonight. Just to hang out. And he took off into the woods . . . Is he there? There with you? I was hoping maybe he went home . . .” Josh is talking fast now, reckless with words spilling over each other, overlapping.

  “Josh, slow down. I can’t understand you. I’m checking his room now.” Elizabeth opens Tommy’s door without knocking, which is something she hasn’t done all summer, and she’s thinking Please be home please be home please be home and clumsily slaps at the wall switch. She squints into the obnoxious light, and Tommy’s bed is unmade
and empty. “He’s not in his room.” Elizabeth quickly walks back out into the hallway, turning on lights wherever she goes, looking to see if Tommy is randomly somewhere else in the house, like a misplaced pair of sneakers. He’s not in Kate’s room. He’s not in her room or the kitchen or the living room. She turns on the floodlights to the back porch, and there’s no one there.

  “No. No. He’s not here.”

  “He’s not? You sure?”

  “He’s not here, Josh.” She’s not quite yelling, but there’s that same undercurrent of You’re a dumbass Tommy’s been using with his sister too often lately. Elizabeth runs downstairs into the musty basement, calls out to her son, but he’s not there, either. Why would he be there, anyway? Because. He has to be somewhere.

  “Oh, I’m sorry, Ms. Sanderson. Oh my God . . .” Josh says and then breathes heavily into the phone, sending sharp blasts of static. He’s crying or working up to it. Elizabeth clings desperately to annoyance and anger at Tommy’s clever, gregarious, best friend who has inexplicably morphed into a mewling child, a child who has stupidly lost her son.

  She says, “Okay, wait. Quickly, tell me again. Let’s figure this out. You were at Borderland? What were you doing?”

  Josh spins through his quick and sloppy story of their hiking through the woods behind his backyard and into Borderland State Park, and then Tommy going off into the woods by himself and they haven’t seen him since. Elizabeth hears Josh’s parents talking in the background.

  “When was the last time Tommy was with you?”

  “More than an hour. Maybe two.”

  “Jesus Christ. And you’re only calling me now?” Elizabeth is still walking around her one-level, ranch-style home, fighting the urge to open closets and cabinets, to look under the beds. The landline is pressed against her cheek, and she watches her cell phone screen for a text, for anything from Tommy.

  “We tried to find him. I swear. And we called for him, waited, looked around, but he didn’t come back and we didn’t know what to do, so then we walked back thinking he doubled back on us, but he wasn’t here and he’s not answering his phone or anything.”

  “Did you try calling anyone else? Where’s your mom and dad?”

  “Mom is right here.” Josh is crying for real now. “She wanted me to call you. Hoping he was there. I’m sorry he’s not there. Oh God, oh God—”

  “Okay, shh. We can’t panic. Listen. It’ll be okay, Josh.” She regrets saying that, even if it’s only to placate Josh. She can’t help but feel like she’s jinxing her son by saying that out loud when clearly there is nothing okay about any of this.

  She asks, “Did Luis try calling his parents?”

  “No, not—”

  “Tell him to call his parents. Then call Tommy’s other friends, see if he went over to one of their houses.” Elizabeth is not sure who those other friends would be, whose house he would go to instead of Josh’s, Luis’s, or home.

  “I will, Ms. Sanderson.”

  There’s a pause. Elizabeth needs to hang up but is afraid to. Once she does, then the rest of this, whatever this ends up being, will have to continue.

  She says, “Call me back as soon as you find out anything.”

  “Okay.”

  “Tell your parents—never mind, I’ll call back soon.”

  Elizabeth hangs up and drops the landline headset to the couch, and just like that, the call is over. The air conditioner clicks and whirs to life again. It’s so loud, like a plane taking off. She’s alone in the living room, shivering and cupping her glowing cell phone in her hands. She doesn’t know what to do and thinks about waking up Kate to tell her what’s happening even though she doesn’t know what it is exactly that’s happening. Elizabeth calls Tommy’s cell phone, and it goes right to voice mail. Tommy’s voice says, “Beep, beep-beep, beep, beeeep-beep-beep, beep, beep-a-dee-beep.” Then a pause. Then he shouts a long and protracted “Beep!” And then the electronic beep sounds off and there’s the hiss of you-are-now-being-recorded silence, and she hesitates to leave a message, hesitates to say anything, because somehow she might say the wrong thing and make all this even more wrong than it already is.

  She says, “Tommy, we don’t know where you are and we’re all worried, call me as soon as you get this. Love you, bye,” then hangs up.

  That’s not enough. There has to be something else she can do to summon Tommy back home from wherever he is, short of running up and down the street screaming his name. There must be something she can do before she calls the police. Elizabeth feels that call-the-police clock ticking out on her already, even though Tommy’s friends haven’t called everyone else yet. Everything is already moving so fast and yet so slow at the same time.

  First, she goes back to her text screen and the thread of messages she exchanged with Tommy. She resists the urge to scroll back and read and reread the old texts with the crazy hope that she’ll find him there hidden within his messages from the very recent past.

  Elizabeth is still shivering, and her hands are shaking and heavy; her texting fingers and thumbs the equivalent of a desperate, pleading voice.

  She types: Please call home. Please come home.

  Send.

  She covers her eyes and says to herself and the quiet house, “This can’t be happening. Not again.”

  Then she calls the police.

  Josh at Home and with the Boys at Split Rock

  It’s 2:35 A.M., and Ames police officers Ed Baker and Steve Barbara interview Josh and Luis in the Griffin home. Josh has never felt so childlike, as though the two rigidly uniformed men are representatives of the unknowable and indifferent adult universe that will soon engulf him. The officers are monolithic, even sitting as they are with the boys huddled around the granite-topped kitchen island. Josh is lost inside of his own head; the questions the officers ask and the answers he gives them don’t lead to anywhere recognizable.

  Both sets of the boys’ parents are at the breakfast table a few feet away. They halfheartedly sip their coffees and avoid looking at each other or their sons. They listen quietly, stirring when the boys admit that they were drinking earlier, that they took beer out of Josh’s dad’s always-stocked fridge in the garage and out into the park with them. The parents shake their heads and adjust their sitting positions. Perhaps, under much different circumstances, one or more of the parents would try to play it cool, wink, and wistfully say, “Boys will be boys.”

  Josh’s mom is the only one to speak after the beer revelation. She whispers “We’re sorry” to Luis’s parents. Josh hears Mom even as Officer Baker launches into follow-up questions asking if they used pot or other drugs (the answer is no, and Luis practically screams it). Mom’s apology strikes Josh as such a weird thing to offer to Luis’s parents, because Luis is right there in their kitchen and he’s okay.

  As the interview continues, the boys map out their route and destination on a large map of the state park. The officers do not offer any assurances or promises that Tommy will be found and that he will be okay. They want one of the boys and a parent to accompany them into the state park now, to show them the exact location of where they spent most of the night before Tommy disappeared. Luis volunteers. Josh is ashamed at how relieved he is. He doesn’t want to go.

  Luis and his father leave with the two police officers to go the state park. Luis’s mother follows them out of the house to drive home by herself and call his college-aged sisters. Luis forgets his DC shoes sweatshirt, leaving it hanging on the back of the barstool chair in which Josh is sitting.

  It’s now 3:35 A.M. Josh is alone in the house with his parents. Dad rearranges the suddenly empty chairs around the kitchen island.

  Mom goes out to the floodlit back deck and returns a few minutes later, just off the phone with Ms. Sanderson. No word on Tommy yet. She shuts the slider and locks it, then yanks hard on the handle to double-check that the slider is locked. She says, “Oh, maybe I should leave it unlocked. Just in case Tommy comes back here.” She shrugs.
r />   Then she tells Josh to go upstairs and get ready for bed. He doesn’t argue. He needs her on his side. After they came home from the park to find Mom waiting for them on the back porch, Josh knew she could smell the beer on them because of the way she narrowed her eyes and abruptly leaned away as they tried to explain what they were doing and what happened. He only had a couple of sips (he dumped most of it out like he usually did when no one was looking), but the taste and smell is still there, trapped and stinging the back of his throat.

  Josh goes upstairs, closes the bathroom door behind him, and locks it. Fighting the rising urge to vomit, he washes his face in cold water.

  Dad stays in the kitchen. He washes dishes by hand that don’t really need to be washed right this second, including a small collection of plastic superhero cups he and his friends drank water and soda from earlier. Josh can hear Dad talking to himself even with the bathroom door closed. He’s really talking to Josh, or talking to the Josh from two hours ago. Josh nods along to his father’s spiel while brushing his teeth: Yes, of course, Josh is supposed to be the responsible one, the level-headed one, the one who should know better, the one who was supposed to do the right thing, not the one to be sneaking out of his own house and drinking beer and then participating in whatever idiocy it was they were up to in the park, and now, now something has happened, likely something terrible, and they will never be able to change that or take it back.

  Josh brushes his teeth for an extralong time, the mint starting to burn his gums and tongue, and waits for his father to stop talking.

  Mom is already in Josh’s bedroom. She yawns and wipes her eyes as he walks in. Mom is loving, loyal, and intensely serious and has become more so as Josh has gotten older. The lamp with the long, adjustable neck clipped to his headboard is on. In its spotlight, she looks pale and too skinny. Her thin lips are pressed together, hiding inside her mouth. Gray roots are starting to show at the top of her head at the point where her hair parts. The gray practically glows in stark contrast to her thick, straightened, jet-black hair. Josh usually points out when it’s time for the dye job with his self-proclaimed comedian’s wit and charm. He’s been told more than once that he’ll be a politician someday. It’s supposed to be a compliment, even though all the adults he knows do nothing but bash politicians.