Healing Maddie Brees Read online




  Title Page

  Healing

  Maddie Brees

  a novel

  rebecca brewster stevenson

  Copyright

  Copyright© 2016, by Rebecca Brewster Stevenson

  Rebecca Brewster Stevenson

  [email protected]

  lightmessages.com/rbstevenson

  Published 2016, by Light Messages

  www.lightmessages.com

  Durham, NC 27713

  United States of America

  Paperback ISBN: 978-1-61153-174-9

  Ebook ISBN: 978-1-61153-175-6

  ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

  No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning, or otherwise, except as permitted under Section 107 or 108 of the 1976 International Copyright Act, without the prior written permission except in brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

  This book is a work of fiction. References to real people, events, establishments, organizations, or locales are intended only to provide a sense of authenticity, and are used to advance the fictional narrative. All other characters and all incidents and dialogue are drawn from the author’s imagination and are not to be construed as real.

  Dedication

  for Bill

  1

  Maddie was struck that Mr. and Mrs. Peterson looked exactly the same as they always had. Maybe Mrs. Peterson’s skin was a bit more folded around the eyes, and Mr. Peterson was more gray, somehow—but it was remarkable, really, that these two who had seemed decidedly past middle age in all her growing up years should look so exactly as they always had. It made her wonder, right there at the door when she and Frank greeted them, just how much she understood about the people she had known back then. Because clearly she had gotten some of it wrong.

  The Petersons were passing through town en route from Pittsburgh to Florida. They were old friends of Maddie’s parents, and therefore, declared Frank, friends of theirs. They had known Maddie all her life; she and Frank saw them when they went home to visit her parents; and now, for the first time, they were guests in Frank and Maddie’s home.

  All told, it was a very nice visit. Frank had prepared a lamb tagine for supper, the Petersons had brought ice cream, and Mr. Peterson had astounded Frank and Maddie’s boys with his parlor trick: folding his handkerchief into something resembling a mouse and then “disappearing it” (Garrett’s phrasing) in and out of his sleeve. All three boys were speechless with amazement, but after they’d been sent to bed, the adults could hear their voices piping down the stairs, suggesting possible explanations to one another. The Petersons laughed and exchanged stories about their grandchildren, and Frank caught Maddie’s gaze across the table and held it there with a smile.

  Yet it seemed to her that Frank was gone from the table (he was putting the boys to bed?) when Mrs. Peterson mentioned having seen Vincent Elander. In Maddie’s memory, anyway, she was sitting alone at the table with their guests when Mrs. Peterson mentioned having seen Vincent at a shopping mall or on the street somewhere. Maddie was sure she had asked very politely about his well-being and had not shown any reaction, except for a kind of bland pleasure, at the resurrection, at her dining room table, of an old boyfriend.

  “Ah, Vincent. The Superhero,” Frank said when Maddie told him. Their guests departed, their sons soundly sleeping, Frank and Maddie worked together in the kitchen.

  “Yes, the Superhero,” Maddie replied. She felt a vague irritation that she put down to fatigue.

  The Superhero was an old joke, Frank’s nickname for Maddie’s first boyfriend.

  “Come on, Maddie,” he would say. “I could handle you dating the star quarterback or the captain of the swim team. But this guy? You’ve got to be kidding me. The guy had superpowers.”

  It was a joke: the girls he had dated against the guys she had dated, and always her list had this little asterisk, this little first and last item: that Vincent Elander, her first boyfriend (who happened also to have been a quarterback), could heal people.

  Frank got tremendous mileage out of this. He might look at her, his head turned to one side, or call to her as he was coming up the basement steps, or mutter when he was climbing into bed: “Did I ever tell you about Lisa? Well, she was the captain of the cheerleading squad” (or girls’ soccer team or dance line) “and she had this uncanny ability to fly!” So the joke went, and Maddie had learned to laugh at it, and to play along in company when the conversation went that way: “Hey, did Maddie ever tell you about her first boyfriend?”

  In truth, it was a great story, that incident of the homeless man who came out of nowhere in a torrential Pittsburgh rainstorm to be hit by a car right in front of them (“Right in front of them!” Frank would always repeat after her). People loved the story: it was bizarre and fantastic, but it ended well. And Maddie always finished it the same way: of course her old boyfriend couldn’t really heal people. Of course he couldn’t.

  R

  He was hit by the car. It was night, the rain was pouring down, and he had crossed the intersection when he shouldn’t have. Everyone was waiting for the walk signal, but he came stumbling heedlessly through the crosswalk. Drunkenness will do that to you, and it was drunkenness he exhaled when, after being hit by the car, after rolling off its hood and falling to a crumpled heap at their feet, Vincent helped him up. Maddie cringed and backed away, but Vincent bent down to him and then called him by name, and it was this gesture almost as much as the healings themselves that with disturbing insistence was forever in her mind Vincent: he was seventeen years old; a drunk, homeless man had been hit by a car; and Vincent reached forward to help him, uninhibited by fear or distaste. Vincent had leaned down to see if Willy was all right.

  They had talked with him that afternoon before the baseball game—“Willy,” he called himself, gesturing with his one good hand to his chest. Maddie first spotted him as they were approaching the stadium, walking under the last vaulting leg of the bridge, and she was feeling magnificently independent and in love until he was calling out to them (“Hey! Hey!”) from his square of tattered blanket. Maddie clung closer to Vincent, hastening her steps, awash in sensible descriptors (homeless, dirty, mentally unstable), but Vincent didn’t ignore him the way anyone else would. Rather, he turned and, drawing Maddie along with him, walked over to where Willy was standing to his feet. And then he was emerging from the shade of the concrete column, making his way toward them, his gaze steadily fixed on them. Maddie tried not to shadow Vincent like a child. What was there to be afraid of? They were just going to have a conversation.

  She had stood there taking him in. The whites of his eyes were yellowed and his light blue T-shirt was stained. Once upon a time the shirt had a pocket on the chest, evidenced by a darker patch of fabric in the pocket’s place and a small hole. His jeans were dark with dirt, he wore a black Pittsburgh Pirates ball cap on his head, and his right arm was withered: permanently bent at the elbow and impossibly thin, as if all the muscles had long ago atrophied into dissolution. The fingers of that hand, too, were lifeless and stiff, curled inward, and Vincent talked to him as though he saw him every day, or at least every time he made his way downtown to a Pirates game—a not infrequent occurrence.

  Maddie no longer remembered what they had talked about, but Vincent called him Willy. He seemed to know his name before Willy had even identified himself, but Willy hadn’t known Vincent’s name or hadn’t seemed to. He called him “Buddy.”

  “Buddy?” Maddie said as they were walking away.

  “Yeah,” Vincent answered, “he calls everyone that.”

  Rr />
  When one is a freshman or even a sophomore in high school, it’s possible that upperclassmen can seem a bit like superheroes. The contrast of anonymity and celebrity does it, and Vincent Elander had this celebrity in spades. He was only a year older than she, but this narrow divide made no difference. Maddie would never have considered a crush on him: his status was just too great. The beauty, accomplishment, charisma, and fame fixed him permanently out of her league. Other than knowing who he was, Maddie never gave him a second thought.

  And then he showed up in her church on a Sunday evening—a Sunday evening, when even some of the faithful Sunday morning worshippers didn’t bother to come. And he had that heart-wrenching something-or-other of an experience at the altar, the one that could never be compatible with what Maddie felt surely was a godless life before that. It was in the wake of that momentous spring evening that she learned he was number 22 on the baseball team, that he always crossed the school parking lot on the way to baseball practice, and that once (she remembered it like she had a photograph) she had caught his eye.

  A relationship with someone like Vincent Elander can wrench one forever from anonymity, and the fifteen-year-old Maddie had been shocked by the draw. Add to that drastic change this about Vincent’s healing people, and Maddie sometimes wondered that she had weathered it so well. She saw herself in retrospect emerging from that year, her head raised and eyes wide, shaking the dust from her feet. Only later had she been able to recognize Vincent’s presumption in it: the celebrity-status confidence had been all it took to woo her, and the fact that she succumbed to it would have been the first of many Vincent-related embarrassments had she not told herself level-headedly and many times that it wasn’t her fault.

  She was only fifteen at the time. Almost anyone would have been taken in.

  R

  She was a long time getting used to it: the lighthearted humor with which Frank regarded that strange year in her life. She had been guarded in telling him about it. How much is wise to say, anyway, about previous loves? But even from the beginning, Frank was the sort who wanted to know everything. There could be no secrets, he said.

  And so she had told him as he was taking her to meet his parents for the first time, and he was driving in the rain. She felt reckless in the telling: this brief year in her history was suddenly the hinge on which their entire relationship seemed to hang. The drive was a long one and she unraveled it slowly, careful with the details, wishing it merely the story of the complicated joy and bafflement of a first love. But her resentment of the story itself rang in her voice no matter how she tried to suppress it, and she finished rather abruptly as they got off the turnpike.

  “So what happened after that?” Frank asked. He wanted to know the breaking up part, the predictable end of all the stories in the genre.

  “Nothing, really. He went to college. His family moved away. I went to college. I met you. We don’t keep in touch,” she said.

  “Does he still heal people?” Frank asked her. They were sitting in his parents’ driveway and he had turned off the headlights. The rain was loud on the roof and it fled down the windshield, obscuring her view of the house.

  “He never could heal people, Frank,” Maddie told him, She felt strangely frustrated with him. Had he not been listening? “It was obviously a mistake.”

  “I don’t know how obvious it was,” Frank answered, all unguarded interest.

  Despite the fact that they were sitting in his parents’ driveway, despite wishing desperately to change the subject to anything else, Maddie felt compelled to revisit some important details of the story—which Frank was more than happy to revisit with her. To her rising dismay, he remained unconvinced that Vincent hadn’t healed anyone, and the two of them sat arguing in the car until his father finally emerged, bearing a flashlight and two umbrellas.

  Maddie had tried to be cheerful all evening. Her anger gradually waned in the company of Frank’s parents, but it returned when, much later, the two of them stood whispering in the hallway outside the guest room door.

  And that was when Frank had taken her face in his hands, holding it so that his thumbs curved around her cheekbones, and he told her he was sorry they had argued, that he realized she had been there and he hadn’t, and that she would be the one to know if her old boyfriend had been able to heal people.

  His words went a good way toward assuaging her anger that night, but it took her a long time, nonetheless, to be able to laugh when Frank joked about that year and her superhero boyfriend. She had always had an excellent sense of humor, but some things were just easier to laugh about than others.

  R

  Maddie told Frank that what was strange about the mention of Vincent was that she had recently seen him in a dream.

  “Isn’t that odd, Frank?” she said, and handed him a rinsed bowl for the dishwasher. “Don’t you think that’s odd?”

  Frank agreed that it was weird; he affirmed that dreams are always weird. He told her he’d dreamed about his childhood dog the night before and he hadn’t remembered the dream until now. “Rover, his name was,” Frank said absently, knowing Maddie knew this. Maddie smiled. Frank liked having reason to mention that dog: he was pleased to have owned a dog named Rover.

  Then Maddie said that she hadn’t dreamed about Vincent in years. Maybe not in ten years, she said.

  But last week there was the morning that was colored throughout by Pittsburgh. Her mother called during breakfast and Maddie was caught off-guard by how suddenly vivid her hometown appeared, despite the fact they hadn’t been home since last summer. All morning she felt vaguely shrouded in that city, in the hilly streets of the town, hearing strains of old hymns from her childhood church. The sense of these things hung about her with a hazy insistence, as if she’d inadvertently walked through a web and now felt but couldn’t see a gossamer thread still clinging to her hair, now draped over her forehead, now falling across the lash of one eye.

  It wasn’t until early afternoon, heading to pick up Garrett from pre-school, that she recalled without knowing why the dream she’d had the night before. She had seen Vincent.

  In the way of dreams, Vincent had appeared but hadn’t been recognized as Vincent: she and everyone with her in the dream had known him as Charlie Reynolds, whom she had dated for a short time while a college freshman. In fact, the dream seemed to have taken place when she and Charlie were at school together at some sort of picnic, and he was wearing a ball cap with the brim tucked down to frame his face, the way that Charlie always wore it. Maddie was standing with friends in the shade when he came up to them. There was a definite sense of an intrusion by an outsider, yet everyone acknowledged him as Charlie, who was being friendly, the way he always was. He had nothing particular to say—nothing practical, as in real life, entreating them all to a game of ultimate Frisbee or asking what time they were expected back on campus—but nothing wildly impractical either—no bizarre, dreamlike non sequiturs like a comment about firemen or the taste of salt water. He was just present, smiling at Maddie from under the brim of his cap. And it was there, at that moment when he smiled at her, that Maddie and no one else saw that here was Vincent and not Charlie Reynolds at all.

  “Isn’t it strange,” she said to Frank, “that I could see it was Vincent, and no one else could?” They had finished in the kitchen, had turned off the downstairs lights. Frank was checking his email at the bedroom computer desk, and Maddie was flossing her teeth.

  “Dreams are weird,” Frank said again, and Maddie thought so, too.

  How was it, she silently wondered, that she should so vividly recall Vincent’s face? How does memory work that she should clearly remember the details: the curl of his lip, the shape of his nose, and the line of his jaw? And how was it Vincent then, Maddie wondered, and not Charlie that she had seen? Because in every way—demeanor and behavior and context—it made sense to have been Charlie. And yet she had awakened with that very strong sense of Vincent, of his having joined her and some college
friends there in the shade.

  Once she and Vincent had stayed up late watching Rocky movies at the Tedescos’ house, a marathon, Nicky had declared. They would watch all three of them in anticipation of the debut of Rocky IV, which would be coming out in only a few weeks. Maddie had said she had never seen a Rocky movie, not one—an innocent comment, a bald truth—but Nicky found this status untenable. Maddie countered that she didn’t care if she ever saw them—too much violence, she said—and Nicky and Vincent declared that her current state of ignorance could not be allowed to continue. No, Nicky said, this could not stand: Rocky was a cultural icon! Could Maddie even call herself an American? And he rented a VCR and the three videos for the occasion.

  All the others fell asleep after midnight, just after the third movie began, and Maddie was left to watch the hero duke it out with Mr. T. on her own. She was so enthralled with the boxer at this point that she was unaware of her solitude until the movie finished, when she turned to see Nicky and Amy fast asleep, nestled like spoons on the sofa, his hand resting over hers on the quiet swell of her pregnant stomach. And Vincent, wedged next to Maddie in the recliner, slept with his face turned toward her.

  She had sat for a moment and studied the geography of that face: the long, straight bridge of his nose and the curve of his dark eyelashes on the tender skin beneath his eyes. His mouth—the lower lip fuller than the upper one, his high cheekbones. He had a white scar, barely visible, that cut across the pores on his left cheek, from a tumor, he’d told her, that had appeared when he was seven years old. It was benign, and Vincent didn’t remember what reason, if any, the doctor had given for its sudden presence on his face. But they had removed it easily enough; he scarcely remembered the details, in fact.