Allison Titus

The Arsonist's Song Has Nothing to Do With Fire


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the year—and forgetting things. Like the tumor was a cloud that had settled its fog over half his brain instead of just a thumbtack behind his left eye, which is how they’d said it, a thumbtack. Ronny shut the door, dialed the deadbolt back into place.

      “Ron,” his father said from the stove, “there you are.”

      “Hey,” Ronny said, and sat down at the kitchen table.

      He had to calm down, cut it out, but who knew how far it would spread before someone stopped it—or no one stopped it—it was nearing winter, the trees were dying and the leaves were already dead, piles of dead leaves everywhere, everything could catch. He gripped the seat of his chair, the place where a long nail was wedged in at the wrong angle, and pressed his finger hard onto the point, held it there; the stab of pain calmed him a little, gave him something to focus on: the possibility of tetanus.

      From the kitchen table he could see into the dining room, which they didn’t use anymore. There were piles of things stacked across the table. Papers, books, clothes to be donated to Goodwill; junk mail, real mail, a bag of apples gone soft. They didn’t gather there for meals now that it was just Ronny and his father. Not that they ever had. But the mathematical reality was that two people didn’t gather. Three gather. Nine gather, twenty-five. But ever since Pete was gone, and his mother and Ronny moved out, that room was done for. Now Ronny was back, and they were down to two again, and two, basically, meet and divide. Nothing to keep them from the smallness of themselves. That was the thing Ronny didn’t get—year after year the people around him continued to separate themselves out of the lives they were connected to. Like cells dividing, separating, multiplying. Like mitosis. That whole dining room could be a stain, an evolutionary cycle to be smeared on a slide and studied under better light. Fuck. Ronny had expected it to be emptied out by now, at least, but his father hadn’t touched it. The meantime hadn’t changed anything. It was depressing.

      “Have you thought more about the job, Ron?” His father was talking to him from behind the refrigerator door, moving jars.

      “Think it might be good for you, good opportunity, get you back in the swing of things.”

      Sure. Ronny had thought about it. But the job was a fucking joke. It was janitorial—some lab needed housekeeping. A job that had been open probably for months and lingered, unfilled. It was embarrassing, honestly, but he couldn’t exactly go back to the Jungle, of course, no way. His boss had called a couple times when he didn’t show up for two shifts in a row, but hadn’t phoned since, which basically meant the coast was clear, but where did that leave him: not anywhere. Something had to give.

      His eye caught Pete’s sweatshirt draped over a dining room chair. Its light blue matched the blue strobes of the wallpaper flowers. He tried not to let certain facts register. He concentrated on the fact of the sweatshirt’s blueness, the objective color of it rather than the powdery blue of skin that turns to pallor.

      Obviously one of the stacks on the table was mail. Probably all Pete’s mail was still arriving. It had been, what, a little over a year and a half, and he wouldn’t put it past his father to just keep bringing it in. The magazine subscription, for example, month after month it would come. It takes a lot of energy to stop the momentum of an already-paid-for lifetime subscription of Road Cycling addressed to your dead son.

      “Soup?” His father asked, placing the newspaper down on the counter. Clam chowder.

      “Thanks,” he said, distracted.

      It was too late to go back. It was out of his control. It wasn’t his.

      Steam plumed from the bowl like breath through cold air and Ronny, who didn’t eat meat, didn’t even eat fish, found that he was starving.

      Vivian Merritt Foster was working at the candle factory the night she disappeared, ladling paraffin wax into pillar molds on the late shift. At precisely eleven minutes past the hour, witnesses reported a visitor approaching the east entrance. Cameras recorded a figure exiting the facility twenty minutes later, unaccompanied, just a flash there and gone against the background of asphalt and chainlink. According to the manager on duty, Vivian had gone on break just before midnight, twenty-five minutes before the unknown visitor appeared on camera. When the night crew left, the sky was pitch black and Vivian was still gone. A cool, persistent breeze stirred the leaves on their branches, silkened the skin of the workers’ short-sleeved arms as they spilled out across the parking lot. As they patted down pockets and handbags, looking for their keys.

      Vivian ran water in the bathroom sink. The mirror above the sink was old, bent her reflection in some places and flattened it in others. She looked half normal and half far away regardless of where she stood. The breeze cleaved through the cracked window and rattled the glass against its frame, the rush of cold mixing with the dry radiator heat. Six names in the morning paper and three matched her initials exactly, VMF + VMF + VMF, which meant nine. She buttoned her sweater up to the neck, a flutter in the mirror that caught her attention. That working of button into buttonhole; the steadiness and precision of it. Her hands in the mirror looked like her mother’s, the long fingers, wide knuckles, the pale wrist against shirt cuff. Whatever it is that contains illness, or makes illness unable to be contained anymore, and makes the tremors start—you could see it in the hands first, in the way they faltered or grasped, because hands give the body away. They become dumb, stutter, slow. What if it was hereditary? She was terrified that it might be hereditary. If she could solve the cause of it, maybe she could bilk the onset, because her mother hadn’t always been crazy. After her carnival childhood, she’d left her parents, left the road, got emancipated, and went to high school. She graduated, moved to Berlin. Her visa expired; she returned to the states. She gave birth to Vivian and Seth when she was twenty-five, a single mother.

      And Vivian remembered ordinary years. Regular stories, regular days at the park, regular Band-Aids, regular birthday cakes. Vague years of ordinary dinners, ordinary arguments, ordinary jobs. She was a secretary, a maid, a grocery store cake decorator; sometimes she kept two jobs at once, sometimes three.

      Everything had been average and everything had been unremarkable, for all those days. Vivian and Seth had spent their childhood in a series of putty-colored apartments with interchangeable floor plans. The drab walls held gummy stains, indeterminate smudges like eraser scuff. They stayed in the apartment on Three Pines Terrace the longest. Three Pines Terrace with the thin walls and the single deadbolt latch, where the mail got delivered to a central community mailroom, which was the basement of the rental office. One time when she went to the mailroom, she was maybe twelve, Vivian had barged in on the maintenance officer having sex with the woman who always stood in front of the corner market, the one where you could play lotto and use food stamps to get beer. There was an old, slouch-cushioned armchair pushed up to the wall. Ratty carpet barely covered the concrete floor.

      Three Pines Terrace was an arrangement of stucco buildings in block formation with a courtyard at the center and unwieldy shrubs growing ragged around the perimeter. Besides Three Pines there wasn’t much for a couple miles, just slack marshes punctuated by a bait shop and a Cash 4 Cars lot.

      About a mile before the car lot, there was an abandoned house. Cracks at the eaves left pools of rainwater after storms; windows, busted, ushered in cold wind; the staircase creaked loudly, the stairs dipped noticeably at trespassing weight. It was kind of grand, hulked up from the plot of overgrown ivy and snake-thick roots, and one day, when Vivian’s mother said, “Pack your bags, we’re going on vacation,” that was where she meant. They were so young—maybe five or six—that the three-and-a-half miles from Three Pines must have felt suitably far from home, and the days they spent camping in the enormous, shadowy living room were perfectly removed from the rest of their lives. They took a tent and camping stove and canned food, and their mother was as close to joyful as they’d seen her, not scared of anything, not paranoid. She made soup and told them about Vesta, goddess of fire, and sea ghosts called Ashrays; flashlights on the tent made flames and waves.

      Then they left. Crept back through the tangled yard, tripping over