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Don't I Know You?
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Don’t I Know You?
Karen Shepard
For Steven
Contents
I
August 1976
One
It was just a Tuesday. Steven’s key worked like it…
Two
There are things to do when someone dies. He was…
Three
Detective McGuire called and wanted to talk to him. Phil…
Four
Juan came with him. They used the fire escape and…
Five
McGuire said they were free to go through the apartment.
II
December 1977
Six
Lily Chin didn’t like Christmas shopping. It embarrassed her to…
Seven
She stood in her mother’s sewing room on a small…
Eight
The next night, Lily and Nikolai took the Town Car…
Nine
On her way to meet him, she walked by Gina…
III
September 1988
Ten
Louise Carpanetti had cancer. Her young doctor had told her…
Eleven
Louise had no idea where the New York County Supreme…
Twelve
She’d lost seven pounds in the last week. She weighed…
Thirteen
The frightened waitress had called the ambulance. The paramedics had…
IV
Memorial Day 1972
Fourteen
The weather was cooperating. The picnic blankets and lawn chairs…
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Praise
Other Books by Karen Shepard
Copyright
About the Publisher
I
August 1976
one
It was just a Tuesday. Steven’s key worked like it always had.
His mother was lying between the living room and the front hall. He saw her feet first. They were bare, and at first he thought she was doing her yoga.
She was on her side. Her bottom leg was straight. Her top one was bent. One arm was stretched above her. Her head was resting on it. Her other arm was bent across her middle. Her hand was in a fist.
Her dress was up around her waist. Her panties were ripped. He could see her blue birthmark below her belly button. There were scratches on her thighs. There was a lot of blood.
The green rug from the hall was bunched underneath her hip and bloody. The phone was on its side next to her. It was bloody.
The windows were open. Down there on the corner of 102nd and West End, Ramon and Jimmy were sitting on their overturned crates drinking beer, smoking, trying to stay cool. He could hear them. The fans were on. She smelled wrong. The TV was on. The sound was off.
He stood there. He’d been up high on a catwalk for the spring musical. It felt like that now.
His body was shaking as if he were freezing, but sweat beaded under his bangs and between his shoulder blades.
Kitty came from somewhere down the hall and circled his legs. He tried to pet her, but couldn’t stop the trembling.
Manuel’s voice came up through the windows. “Not in a minute,” he was saying. “Now. Before now. Yesterday.”
He walked by her, closing his eyes, to the TV. A nature show. He turned it off and watched the screen until the dot in the center disappeared. The shaking was going away. He was still cold. They’d had this TV for a hundred years. When Starsky and Hutch walked toward him they looked like people in a dream. Yesterday, he’d been after her about getting a better one.
Hot air blew around him from outside. He felt like the guy on Wild Kingdom getting licked by cheetah cubs.
He sat cross-legged across the room from her for a minute. Kitty leaned against his knee, making her small engine sounds deep in her throat.
He couldn’t tell where she’d been stabbed. He was sleepy.
He’d spent the day in the park, climbing rocks and breaking sticks with Juan. They’d eaten peanut-butter-and-honey sandwiches and shared a Yoo-hoo. There’d been a dead pigeon in the sandbox. “Don’t touch it,” Juan had said. “You’ll get rabbis.”
His mother was Greek; sometimes she got words wrong.
They’d poked at it with a stick, and then they’d washed their hands anyway, proud of their good thinking. He had used the water fountain. Juan had used the puddle around the sprinklers.
He wasn’t thinking the things he was supposed to be thinking. He’d only been home for a few minutes. He asked himself what he was feeling. None of this was happening.
Outside, it was getting darker. Inside too. He was crying.
Her black hair was still in its ponytail. It was spread out like she was jumping. She was making a face that he didn’t like to look at. He thought about touching her, but didn’t.
Down the hall, a quiet thud and two creaks.
His feet and hands tingled. Get out, he thought. He stood; his knees cracked, and he headed toward the front door. The sound of something heavy being lifted and put down again. He was still crying. He started down the hall. He couldn’t believe he was doing it.
There was blood. Streaky patches of it. And then it stopped. His foot hit something that rolled. Glass beads. He recognized them from the necklace she liked to wear.
Her bedroom door was open a little. Shadows moved behind it.
He ran the last few feet. His head felt like he’d been holding his breath too long. “Hey,” he called. “Hey.”
One leg was disappearing out the window onto the fire escape. Jeans. A white sock. Adidas sneaker. White with green stripes.
The room was a mess, but there was no blood.
“Hey,” he said again. “You,” he called, hating himself for being stupid and twelve and sounding like a girl.
He stuck his head out as far as he could. His mother didn’t like him to. He saw someone running. A man in a white T-shirt. It was too dark to see anything else. He couldn’t even tell what color hair the guy had.
The bed looked like someone had made it and then run back and forth across it. Everything else looked the same.
He felt like he was looking at things through a ViewMaster. His stomach was cramping. His head felt cut in half.
He went and stood in her closet. When he was little, he would sneak in there in the middle of the night. He would sit on the floor on top of her shoes and handbags and dirty clothes. He was supposed to be able to spend the whole night in his own room. His doctor had told her that. If she had to, he’d told her, she could always put a latch on the outside of the boy’s bedroom door. “What’s the worst that could happen?” he’d said. “He’ll fall asleep crying by the door.”
She never did. So he’d fall asleep in her closet, and she’d find him in the morning. One night he opened the door and there was a sleeping bag and pillow. The sleeping bag was unzipped partway and turned down. After that, he didn’t go in there anymore.
The closet smelled like dust and blankets and sweaters and her. Sometimes when she’d had a long day, she’d stay in the shower, standing under the hot water for way longer than it took to get clean. She said that on days like those it was just the best place to be. Under the water, by herself.
The doorbell rang. Kitty meowed. Sometimes she thought she was a dog. It was what his mom liked about her.
The clock on her dresser said 8:48. It was almost dark out. The doorbell rang again. He was supposed to have watched the nature shows with her that night. They usually did, but he’d been having fun with Juan.
He stood there, breathing the way he did at the top of the skateboard ramp in the park. If it was late enough in the day for the sun to be behind you, you were flying and you were inv
isible. Get ready, he thought on days like that. Get ready to disappear.
He almost expected to hear her answer the door. Not really, but it wouldn’t have totally surprised him.
The bell rang a few more times, and then he heard a key in the lock. He sat under his mother’s clothes. She liked batik and hats with wide, sagging brims. The Puerto Rican guys on the block said she had style. But the moms at his school wore better clothes, had better hair, did their makeup differently. She didn’t look like the moms at school. She looked like those mothers from the ABC After School Specials. A little worn out. Someone who never got a break.
He pulled some shoes around him like a moat. It helped a little, being in here. Until he was six, and kids at school started teasing him, she used to paint his nails.
Someone made an animal sound. Someone called his name. Phil, the boyfriend. He thought he’d answered, but Phil wasn’t acting like he’d heard anything. He was calling it louder as he got closer, in a voice that didn’t sound like his. Phil found him on the floor of her closet, holding her sun hat in his lap. Like a baby. Like someone who didn’t know anything about anything.
He crawled in there with him. His skin was blotchy. “Hey there,” he said. He sounded like he was working to keep his voice from doing things. And then he didn’t say anything else. He was trying to keep his body still. His eyes were moving all over the place. He was red, like he was embarrassed.
He didn’t have anything against Phil.
Two years ago, Phil had been his fifth-grade teacher. Steven had spent the year forgetting homework, losing lunch boxes, messing up on tests. At the spring parent conference, Phil had looked across the Formica table at Steven’s mother and had done nothing but talk about what an addition to the class Steven was. He had artistic gifts. A real theatrical streak. Beyond-his-years perceptive abilities. He was funny, but always in appropriate ways. Nothing about that disengaged aloofness grown-ups often tried to talk him out of. Nothing about the stuff Steven had been caught writing in the boys’ bathroom. Nothing about picking at the skin around his thumbnails or pulling his eyebrows out. That’s when Steven knew, and his mother knew he knew. Under the table, she’d reached over and squeezed his knee.
A few months ago, she’d asked what he’d think about her and Phil getting married, them moving to a new place.
“Like a new apartment?” he’d said, kind of excited about the possibilities. He’d seen where some of the other kids at school lived, the ones who weren’t scholarship kids. Neighborhoods without transistor radios in open windows, old ladies with headscarves behind them. No abandoned buildings with murals of the Puerto Rican flag.
“Well, yes,” she’d said in that careful way that made him know she was worried. “But also a new place place. Like a new town.”
“Town?” he’d said. He liked City. He didn’t think he was really Town material.
“Don’t worry about it,” she’d said. “Nothing’s gonna happen for a while.” She hadn’t talked about it since then, and he hadn’t wanted to remind her, though a few weeks after they’d talked, the three of them had gone hiking. They’d taken the train to Cold Spring Harbor, walked from the train station to a state park, consulted Phil’s map, and made their way up a steep trail a couple of miles long to a rocky outcropping at the top of a small mountain. Steven had been in charge of pointing out trail markers, quick yellow brushstrokes, arm height on the sides of trees. They’d come across a mound of sticks and logs that looked like a home for giant beavers, and his mother had let him climb it. At the top of the mountain, they’d sat on the warm rocks and eaten hard-boiled eggs and boiled potatoes with salt, Phil’s Famous Granola, and apricots. A pair of hang gliders had appeared and drifted in front of them, close enough to see their smiles. Steven had waved, and one of them had said, “Later,” before sweeping out of range.
“I guess we’d better call the police,” Phil said quietly. It sounded like there was something big in his throat. Steven tried to imagine what looking at a dead girlfriend would feel like.
He felt like cooled lava. If he opened his mouth things would crack apart.
“Do you want to stay in here?” Phil asked.
Steven nodded.
He stood. “You gonna be okay?” he asked.
Steven didn’t know whether he meant in the closet or something bigger. He shrugged.
Phil said he’d be right in the bedroom, and he left the closet door open.
While he was on the phone, Steven crawled out quietly. He stayed on all fours all the way down the hall. He avoided the glass beads. He avoided the blood. Kitty thought it was a game. She batted at his face. He hissed.
Phil had turned on the front hall light. Now Steven turned it off. The streetlights made everything look orange.
He imagined her as modeling clay. As the wet sand at Jones Beach the day they’d made handprints at the edge of the ocean.
What he was doing now was like that, only slower.
The guys in uniforms arrived first. Policemen and ambulance guys. One of the officers had Phil take him around the apartment. Phil kept saying, “I told you. There’s nothing missing.” Another guy had Steven do the same thing. The policeman turned on all the lights as they walked around.
The ambulance guys bent over her for a while. They had lots of equipment that they didn’t use. Steven watched them from the couch. One looked up at another and said, “DOA.” The other asked where the 124 man was. They didn’t seem all that interested in him. One of them threw fresh coffee grounds into a small frying pan and turned on the stove. The smell filled the room. There was a tall guy everyone called Dutch.
Phil finished with the policeman and came and sat next to Steven on the couch. He put his hand on Steven’s leg and rocked it back and forth. He reached up and turned off the lamp at the end of the couch.
Steven checked his watch. It was almost midnight, and the apartment still felt like the inside of the Laundromat. It smelled like coffee and his mother. It was hard to keep his eyes open.
More guys arrived. The Photo and Fingerprint Unit. The photo deputy took photos of her. Straight down and sideways. Another guy circled each one of the glass beads with chalk. Someone else put paper bags over her hands. Steven didn’t ask what for.
Two detectives arrived. McGuire and Adams. A uniform guy said, “No weapon,” then nodded in Steven’s direction. “There’s the boy.”
They offered their condolences. Adams looked a little better dressed. He said he was from Homicide; McGuire was from the local squad. McGuire caught Steven’s eye and rolled his eyes a little. Steven didn’t know what he meant.
“First things first,” McGuire said. “Let’s get these uniforms outta here. They’re like visiting relatives; all they do is stomp around messing up the place.”
Phil and Steven sat there.
Detective Adams asked if there was a neighbor’s apartment they could set up shop in. They needed to secure the scene. The Medical Examiner was on his way.
Phil looked at Steven. Steven tried to imagine ringing the Gonzalezes’ doorbell, or the Rifkins’.
“There’s Manuel,” Phil said. “He’s the super. He’s got an apartment on the first floor.”
Detective McGuire nodded. He seemed to be making a little sketch of the area in his notebook.
The Medical Examiner arrived. He was a big man with an unlit cigar in his mouth. He bent over the body. Detective Adams knelt next to him and put on rubber gloves. They talked in low voices for a few minutes. Steven heard, “…haphazard and fastidious.”
A guy working on fingerprints complained about how dirty everything was. He wasn’t going to get anything here, he said.
Detective Adams found something under her fist. He held it up for Steven. It was a silver bracelet with an infinity sign on it. “Was this hers?” he asked.
Steven nodded. She had a lot of bracelets.
Detective Adams handed it up to a uniform guy, then stood slowly, his hands pushing on his knees. Steven watched
them.
The Medical Examiner cut a piece of her hair. He took off the paper bags, trimmed her fingernails, and put everything into small envelopes. He glanced at Steven, then said something to Adams. “Get it later,” Adams said, also looking at Steven. Steven didn’t care what they were talking about.
The Medical Examiner knelt on one knee and put a manila tag on the body’s big toe.
When they lifted her into the bag, her hair moved like it always had. Some of it got caught in the zipper. The guy had to yank at it a couple of times. The plastic made a heavy sound, like clapping underwater. When he saw Steven watching him, the guy blushed and shrugged.
They put her on the stretcher and started wheeling her out. Steven stood and followed them to the entryway. Phil followed. Steven curled his toes inside his sneakers until they hurt.
Manuel was in the hallway. He gave a wave. Steven wanted to wave back, but his hands wouldn’t work.
“That’s Manuel,” Phil said to Detective Adams.
Detective Adams went to talk with Manuel. Steven watched. He watched the elevator arrive. He watched the ambulance guys push her in.
“Where do they take her?” he asked anyone who was listening.
“To the city morgue,” Detective McGuire said. “At Bellevue.”
Juan lived near there. They’d biked by it the other day.
Detective Adams gestured to Detective McGuire.
McGuire put his hand on Steven’s shoulder. “Can you do me a favor?” he asked.
Steven shrugged.
“Do you have a couple of photos of your mom? Snapshots. Anything.”
“On the corkboard in the kitchen,” he said. “What for?” he added.
McGuire headed into the kitchen. “For the files and for interviewing people in the neighborhood,” he said.