The Damned: A Novel
By Andrew Pyper
4.5/5
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About this ebook
“The Damned underlines Pyper’s growing reputation as one of the most talented successors to the inimitable Stephen King.” —Daily Mail (UK)
Most people who have a near-death experience come back alone...but not Danny Orchard.
After he survived a fire that claimed the life of his evil twin sister, Ashleigh, Danny wrote a bestselling memoir about going to heaven and back. But despite the resulting fame and fortune, he’s never been able to enjoy his second chance at life: Ash won’t let him.
She’s haunted Danny for twenty years and now, just when he’s met the love of his life and has a chance at real happiness, she wants more than ever to punish him for being alive—so she sets her sights on Danny’s new wife and stepson. To save them from her wrath, he’ll have to meet his sister where she now resides—and hope that this time he can keep her there forever.
Andrew Pyper
Andrew Pyper was born in Stratford, Ontario in 1968. He is the author of three novels, including international bestseller ‘Lost Girls’ (selected as a New York Times Notable Book of the Year), which is currently in development by John Malkovich for a feature film adaptation. The film rights to ‘The Killing Circle’ have been sold to the award-winning producers of ‘The Last King of Scotland’. Andrew Pyper lives in Toronto.
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Reviews for The Damned
31 ratings12 reviews
What our readers think
Readers find this title to be a captivating and well-written book. It combines elements of horror, crime, and dark narrative, keeping readers engaged. The vivid descriptions and beautiful prose make it a pleasure to read. Some readers found it truly terrifying, while others appreciated the soft horror without excessive gore. Overall, this book is highly recommended for fans of the author and those looking for a gripping and atmospheric read.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Pretty good novel with lots of creepy scenes. The writing did not really flow for me though and I was hoping the "Underworld" scenes were a little more scary and thought provoking. Some of it was a little cheesy imo. Still glad I read it.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I only have one thing to say-Please, sir, I want some more.(Loved)
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I read The Demonologist a few weeks ago, and now just finished this, my fourth book by this author. Another really wonderful story with vivid descriptions and prose so beautiful it borders on poetry. Sometimes I have to stop and reread sentences because they're so well it together. I'm a big fan of this author, and definitely think you should give him a try...just keep an eye on the shadow at the foot of your bed.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Ok, so I'm only about 100 pages into this book, but I have to note a little error. In a sort of dream/near death experience scene, the main character is in the Detroit of 1989. However, he mentions passing Comerica Park (where the Detroit Tigers play). Comerica Park actually did not exist in 1989. Tigers Stadium was in use until 1999. Comerica Park wasn't opened until either late 1999 or early 2000. Just thought I'd make a note of that. But, since it does take place in a dream-ish sequence, I suppose I can let it slide.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5As a long-time fan of Pyper, I was excited to pick up and read this novel. It was my first time reading one of his works since his gravitation to horror. Overall, I really enjoyed the story and the not-quite-hero, average Joe protagonist, as is common in Pyper's stories. I will say, the third part of the novel, where our hero is wandering on the other side, did seem to drag on a bit too long. I found myself trying to skim through the descriptions of derelict Detroit trying to get back to where the plot picked up again. I think I prefer his mystery writing, but perhaps reading "The demonologist" will sway me.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5There is a lot of bad horror out there, poorly written and plotted with no respect for the genre. Some of it written by big name writers in the field. Thank God (or in this case perhaps someone else in a warmer climate) for The Damned and Andrew Pyper to remind us what bumps in the night does not only stay comfortably under your bed but will reach out and pull you down and chew your face off! "...Danny, do you know what this is?' He pulled something out of his pocket and held it in front of my eyes. 'A watch,' I said, squinting. 'Mom's watch. The on Granddad gave her.' 'That's right. Know how you got it?' 'What do you mean?' 'After the fire. When the doctors--when they saved you. They opened up your hand and you were holding it.' He looked like he might cry. I couldn't tell if it was because he was angry, or grief-stricken, or impatient to know what he wanted to know. More than anything it looked like he was afraid. 'You gave it to me,' I said. 'Going up in the elevator.' 'Elevator?' 'In the Ren Center. When I was--' 'No, no--' '--wherever I was when I was gone.' 'No. I couldn't have.' 'But you did.' He pulled the watch away as though it were a gift he'd suddenly reconsidered giving. And then the tears fell. A reddening, unshaved face of frightened tears. 'I couldn't have given it to you, Danny. I couldn't,' he said. 'Because your mother was buried wearing it..."Danny Orchard had a near death experience and wrote a bestselling book about it. But what he didn't write about is sometimes when you come back from death, you don't come back alone. Danny's twin sister Ashleigh died in the fire that almost took Danny's life and as selfish and vindictive as she was when she was alive, she has become something far worse in death. Everyone loved Ash when she was alive. Always the popular girl, the one everyone wanted to be around while Danny just sort of melted into the shadows. But Danny knew the real Ash and knew she was cruel and deadly. He also knew she would never let him go. Then Danny fell in love and his new wife and stepson Eddie brought him a happiness that he had never felt before. A happiness that Ash wasn't ready to let him have."...Who was that?' he said. 'Sorry?' He glanced up the stairs to make sure nobody was standing there. 'I can tell you don't want to talk about it. Like every time I've been about to open my mouth your face is all Don't do it. But I don't think I can do that anymore.' 'Okay. Okay. So what are we talking about here?' 'The witch,' Eddie said..."Danny understands what Ash wants him to do and he is willing to don anything to protect those he loves. But Ash be satisfied with him alone, or will she make those he loves pay for bringing him happiness.The Damned is a creepfest. The kind of horror that doesn't just hack off your arm but crawls under the skin where you can see the tracks and bumps of it moving before you take the axe and cut it off yourself. At the heart of this horror novel is the relationship between Danny and Ash and how her anger and bitterness destroyed any chance at love and family he might have ever had. From his new wife, to his stepson, to their own mother and father. The relationship between brother and sister is incestuous in an emotional state, though not physical, it is that of a dominant and submissive. Ash ever in control and Danny bowing to whatever she wants or needs until he finally has something to fight for.Pyper strikes the right cord of creepy to dark to taboo to just turn the freaking lights on because I don't want to see what steps out of the shadows already.This is horror, old fashioned slam bam thank you mam horror. Maybe I'll call you tomorrow and maybe I won't. This is the horror that has been missing in this genre and with hope and prayer, to whoever is listening, bring it back.A real good read!!
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Good good good good good good good good good good
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Interesting as definitely one of those that keeps u reading. Worth a read for a soft horror fan without too much gore but a murder /crime rolled into one dark narrative.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This book was truly terrifying! I couldn't sleep after finishing it. I have been a nervous wreck! Seriously horrifying and extremely well written! I loved this book!
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Everything up until Part 3 is decent. Then it turns into uninteresting nonsense.Side note: I think I'm going to immediately stop reading books as soon as the author decides to make a character fat and then cannot help but to continuously remind us how fat they are. When every line they say has to come with a incredibly detailed of just HOW INTENSELY FAT they are. When they can't even sit in a goddamn chair without the mention that "her girth spilled over the handrests." Or that she moves slightly in her seat but it has to be described as "Michelle shifts in her seat, or tries to."WE GET IT. YOU HATE FAT PEOPLE. THEY DISGUST YOU.Then stop writing about them.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Twins, Ashleigh and Danny Orchard were born dead. Their mother, not willing to accept the news, held her twins and prayed fervently. Unfortunately the wrong deity heard her pleas and when the twins miraculously begin breathing mom knew right away something was not quite right about Ashleigh. On their 16th birthday Ashleigh and Danny died again, this time – Ashleigh stayed dead (sort of) and Danny went on to write a book about his after-life experience, which was rather pleasant, all things considered.
Danny explains, “When you’re dead, you know that’s what you are. You always hear about the other ones, the souls who need help “crossing over”, the confused loved ones in those paranormal TV shows who ghost around at the foot of the bed, needing to be told it’s time to go. But in my experience there’s no mistaking it with being alive, because where I went after the fire was something better than being alive. Heaven, you’d have to call it. A slightly altered replay of the happiest day of my life.”
His book produced a following of “Afterlifers” but it wasn’t until Danny met Violet Grieg that he understood not everyone shared his pleasant “after life” experience and sometimes, when you come back you do not come back alone. That’s how Ash ended up on the couch beside him watching television and, that’s why he couldn’t lead a normal life. When Danny finally meets Willa, the love of his life, and her son Eddie, who immediately takes a special spot in Danny’s heart, he’s worried. He knows that Ash is jealous of his being alive and now she might do anything to ruin (end?) his life.
There have been a plethora of “non-fiction” books written about near-death experiences. I recall hearing somewhere, although I am not sure I agree, that as humans we are the only animals aware of our eventual departure from life so of course people are curious about what happens “after”. I speculate that as long as there have been human beings capable of thinking there have also been tales of ghosts and hauntings. In “The Damned” Mr. Pyper brings the two together in a very frightening way.
I love a good scary book and this one had several chill-worthy scenes. I was speaking to my daughter about “The Damned” (she also loves scary books for which I will not take the credit – blame, I mean blame) when I was about 2/3 of the way through this book and mentioned to her that “unless it goes south in the last part this could be one of the best ghost stories I’ve read”. Well, unfortunately, it did. I hate making negative comments about authors I enjoy but in this case the last ¼ of the book just went a little to far into “fantasy” realm for my taste.
Is it a good, scary read? Absolutely.
Would I recommend it? Yes – with the suggestion that you also pick up Mr. Pyper’s “Lost Girls” and/or “The Guardians” for more, and different, examples of what an excellent writer he truly is. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Danny Orchard wrote a bestselling memoir about his near-death experience in a fire that claimed the life of his twin sister, Ashleigh, but despite the resulting fame and fortune he’s never been able to enjoy his second chance at life. Ash won’t let him.
In life, Danny’s charming and magnetic twin had been a budding psychopath who privately terrorized her family—and death hasn’t changed her wicked ways. Ash has haunted Danny for twenty years and now, just when he’s met the love of his life and has a chance at real happiness, she wants more than ever to punish him for being alive—so she sets her sights on Danny’s new wife and stepson.
Danny knows what Ash really wants is him, and he’s prepared to sacrifice himself in order to save the ones he loves. The question is: will he make it back this time?
Book preview
The Damned - Andrew Pyper
PART 1
The After
1
My name is Danny Orchard. It might ring a bell. I wrote a book a while back, a memoir of my near-death experience. A surprise, top-of-the-list bestseller from the moment it first appeared. Twenty-seven languages and fourteen years later, I still catch people reading it on the subway. I never introduce myself to tell them the story’s mine.
It’s made me an authority of a sort. A death expert. One of those third-tier celebrities who is invited to give after-dinner speeches at dentists’ conventions and service club fundraisers, a public figure who comes cheaper than a Super Bowl quarterback and has a more interesting story than a retired senator. Everyone remembers that spot I did on 60 Minutes when I showed my mother’s Omega watch—the book’s evidence that heaven is real—and Morley Safer’s eyes seemed to well up.
My book can make one other claim, namely its inspiring the formation of the Afterlifers, a community for those who’ve traveled to the other side and returned. You’d never guess how many of us there are out there. The last time I checked there were a dozen chapters across North America and a handful in Europe and Asia, too, each group meeting on a monthly basis to discuss the effect of NDEs on members’ lives, marriages, beliefs, work. They get together in the usual cheap, disheartening venues: church basements, HoJo conference rooms, linoleumed community centers. It’s like AA, except with booze.
I used to get asked all the time to be a guest at one of their gatherings in Miami or Toronto or Amsterdam or L.A., and sometimes I’d accept if they paid my way, but mostly I claimed to be too busy working on something new.
A lie. The fact is, I’d had more than my fill of tearful recollections of angels taking the form of beloved first-grade teachers or the feelings of joy someone had in seeing their dearly departed, haloed and at peace, telling them not to be afraid.
Because it’s not always like that.
Sometimes, you should be afraid.
Still, it was a habit I couldn’t shake, like putting on a tie and going to church on Sunday, and for years I attended the monthly meetings of the local Boston chapter. I sat at the back and almost never spoke to the group, a priestly figure the other Afterlifers tended not to bother once they’d had their dog-eared copy of my book signed.
So why do you come?
the chapter’s leader, Lyle Kirk, once asked me as he tossed a twenty onto the bar for the beers we often found ourselves drinking after a meeting. Why show up if you’ve got nothing to say?
I surprised myself by telling him the truth.
Because you’re the only friends I have,
I said.
Followed by a thought I didn’t say.
And you’re not even really friends.
Lyle was a good guy, though, a Revere contractor who specialized in eaves troughs, manageably alcoholic, his nose a burst kernel of popcorn in the center of his face. His heaven was a bit unusual. An eternity spent rolling around on the grass, a diapered infant being tickled by the family dog as it licked spilled applesauce off his belly.
To each his own,
he’d said with a shrug at the end of his presentation.
One night, four months ago, I sat in the corner of the banquet room of a Cambodian restaurant on Beacon Street. Maybe a dozen or so Afterlifers in the chairs in front of a lectern with crackly speakers built into its base, the mic unnecessarily on, so that every voice was turned to ground sand. And what did the voices talk about? Heaven stuff, for the most part. Repeating their tales of a glimpsed Forever. The sailboat trip with Mom. The hand-holding walk on the beach with a dead husband. The football game where the Hail Mary pass is caught every time. When Lyle asked if I’d like to speak I declined as usual, saying I was just there to offer support. But these people didn’t need support. They needed to get on with their lives before life was taken away from them and that walk on the beach was all they were left with.
Lyle was about to close the meeting when an arm went up.
An elderly woman smelling of clothes left too long in airless closets, sitting directly in front of me. She asked if there was time to tell her story. Lyle told her there was always time for someone who knows what you know, sweetheart.
It took her a while to make her way to the front. Not just the coaxing of an arthritic hip slowing her down but some deeper reluctance. When she turned we saw it wasn’t shyness. It was everything she could do to make the crossing from her fold-out chair to stand before us because she was quite plainly terrified.
My name is Violet Grieg. My experience is a bit different from yours,
she said.
Her skin lost all its color in the time it took to speak these two sentences, the circles of rouge on her cheeks standing out like welts.
Our father,
she started after a full minute, then paused again. I thought she was about to recite the Lord’s Prayer. I even lowered my eyes to join her in it. When he was alive, our father was what everyone called ‘a good man.’ He had that kind of face, that kind of laugh. A family doctor up in Skowhegan where we grew up—delivered babies, doled out the pills. ‘Your father’s a good man,’ they’d say. But what in the good goddamn did they know?
She shouted this last part. A furious blast into the mic that turned into a shriek of feedback.
How can you tell a good man from bad if you don’t live with him, if you don’t have to trust him?
she went on when the noise had retreated. "A good man. It was an act! ‘I’ll just go upstairs to say goodnight to the girls,’ he’d say. Our mother never stopped him. It was just my sister and I who . . . knew what he really was."
She made what I thought was a move to return to her seat, but it was only a step back to shake her head. A dizzy spell, or sudden chill. When she spoke again her voice had lowered to an unsettling growl.
"I tried to kill myself a year ago. But suicide—that’s a sin. That’s what the good book says. It’s a law."
One of the Afterlifers got up and left, gesturing at his watch as if he had somewhere else to be.
I was dead and gone,
Violet Grieg went on, her eyes fixed over our heads at the room’s back door, as if expecting someone to enter. Taken to a place where the most terrible things I’d known happened over and over. It would’ve been like that forever except this world decided it wasn’t through with me yet. I came back. And now I see him all the time. Hear him, too. Coming up the stairs to wherever I try to hide. Wherever I go, he follows.
Her forehead shone with sweat. The skin over the knuckles gripped to the lectern’s sides so thin I expected it to tear open, easy as tissue paper.
I’ll stick a chair under the doorknob, lay pillows against the crack under the door so I don’t have to see the shadow of his shoes. I’m like a kid again. Lying in bed. Trying not to move, not to breathe. Watching him walking back and forth like he’s looking for a key to open the door. Sometimes he does.
Lyle glanced back at the rest of the room with a seasick grin of apology. One of the fluorescent lights near the front started flickering. A strobe that lent Violet Grieg’s face the waxy stiffness of an antique doll.
‘Only a ghost,’ my sister said, but I told her no, it isn’t that. It’s different. It’s more,
she said, her hands shaking the lectern so badly the woman sitting directly in front of her slid her chair back a foot.
Then the shaking stopped. Her eyes fixed on something at the door behind me. Something I didn’t see when I turned to look.
When I died and came back I brought my father with me,
she whispered. "Unlike you people, when I passed, I went the other way. I went down. And that man . . . that filthy sonofabitch put his arms around my neck and hitched a ride all the way up!"
That’s when she fell.
Even though I was the farthest away, I was the first to reach her. Throwing some chairs aside, jumping over others.
By the time I knelt next to her and slipped a hand under her head she was already coming around. When her eyes rolled back into focus I could see how all the rage had drained out of her, leaving her trembling and boneless.
You’re going to be okay, Violet,
I told her. Just a little fall, that’s all. You’re going to be fine.
She looked up at me and I knew that she’d come here as a last hope, and that hope was now gone.
I felt I knew something else, too.
It was her father she’d seen at the back of the room.
After the paramedics came and she held my hand all the way on the gurney ride into the ambulance, Lyle and I headed down the street to O’Leary’s, where he ordered a round of Jameson shots.
Thanks for coming tonight,
he said as we clinked glasses, the whiskey dribbling over our fingertips. Sorry about that one at the end, though. Jesus.
Not her fault.
" ’Course not. Just, those ones—I think of them as Underworlders more than Afterlifers, y’know? They tend to bring the mood down a few notches."
Demons will do that.
Holy shit, Danny. You believed her?
I’m speaking figuratively.
Yeah? Well, she sure as hell wasn’t.
Lyle raised an index finger to the bartender to signal more of the same.
What about you? You’re the expert,
he went on. "You’re the guy. What do you know about that stuff?"
Nothing, really. But I’ve thought about it more than a few times. Who hasn’t?
I suppose,
Lyle said, not liking where this was going all of a sudden.
Just follow me for a second here. Most people’s NDEs are positive experiences, right? Or maybe mysterious. A little troubling at worst. ‘Go toward the light!’ versus ‘Don’t go toward the light!’ At the end of the day, what difference does it make?
The light’s going to take us eventually.
That’s right. For most of us, the good light is waiting. But there are those—not many, but some, like Violet there tonight—who don’t have a lovely little visit over there.
Because they go to the Other Place.
You tell me. How do they describe it?
It’s different for every one of them. Each of us has to find our own place.
Except in those cases, the places are bad.
The worst,
he said. "The moment when shit went south on them and they started on a different path. From being harmed to doing harm."
Have you noticed any other pattern about them?
Let me think.
He put a thumb to his chin, but it slipped off and he returned his hand to the top of the bar. Almost always something to do with where they grew up. The place they were scared of most. The hallways of their school, their uncle’s basement, a night swim with their mom where the mom didn’t make it back. Most of the time, they can’t even talk about it.
And I’m guessing there’s not a lot of them coming to the meetings.
"If they do come, they stop after one or two times. I can pretty much guarantee you we won’t be seeing Violet Grieg next month."
Why?
This time, Lyle bent to take a sip from his glass without picking it up.
People like that, what they’ve seen—it’s too much,
he said, giving his head a shake as the whiskey burned its way down. "And they can see they don’t fit in with the rest of the group. I mean, we try to include them. But there’s only so much including we can do. We’re all ‘Heaven is great and wonderful and waiting for all of us! Oh, sorry, except for . . . you. You’re just fucked.’ It’s not real uplifting, y’know?"
I pretended to take an interest in the Celtics game that was winding down on the TV.
Why’re you asking about all this?
Lyle put to me after a time. You know someone you think might have gone where Violet went?
No, it’s nothing like that,
I lie. Just keeping some things in mind for my next book.
Lyle Kirk is a semiemployed drunk and one rung down from a full-blown crackpot, but he isn’t stupid.
Can’t wait to read it,
he said.
2
My sister and I both died on our sixteenth birthdays.
We were fraternal twins, though you wouldn’t necessarily know it from a first glance. Ash had the posture of a dancer and a confidence readable in every gesture, as if all her actions were part of a subtle but commanding performance, a summoning to gather round and watch. I, on the other hand, tried to hide behind hair grown long over my eyes, a boy who sought the nearest corner upon entering a room and let his sister take the center of the floor. If you’d met the two of us back then you would have said life had given its clear vote to one over the other. And yet when death came for us it chose her over me, holding her in its grasp and tossing me back to a world I barely recognized without my sister in it.
Before the day we turned sixteen we lived the whole of our lives in the same house. The nicest house on one of Royal Oak’s nicest streets, though in both cases only marginally so. The Royal (as we called it, Be Loyal to the Royal!
the slogan of local businesses) was pleasant but consistent in its modesty, having none of the monster renos or brand-name designer shops of Grosse Pointe or the newer suburbs miles farther from the city of Detroit. Most families we grew up with were in the middle of the middle class, professionals on their way up or down, a smattering of tradesmen who’d borrowed all they could to move north of 8 Mile. By comparison to most of our neighbors, we were exceptional. Not because of money, but because of Ash. The girl everyone said could be a model, an actress, a President of the United States one day.
Ashleigh Orchard was Royal royalty.
Ashleigh on straight-A report cards and graduation Honors Lists and the Detroit Free Press Metro section review of a stunning turn
by the star of Dondero High’s production of South Pacific. But in the real, living world, she was only ever Ash.
Beautiful Ash. Though it is the sort of beauty that comes with an asterisk.
Beautiful in the way our own father once called uglybeautiful,
her features so excessively lovely taken on their own that, in their assembly, she suggested the alien, the genetically modified—too-blue eyes set too far apart, limbs and fingers too extraterrestrially long.
By looking at our family—at her—you would almost certainly mistake us for lucky. But inside the walls of our house on Farnum Avenue there was a secret. My father, mother, and I were aware that a monster lived with us, however photogenic, however scholarship-guaranteed. And because she was only a girl, because she was one of us by name, because we feared her, there was nothing we could do about it.
So we tried to manage, in our ways. Dad retreated into work, leaving earlier in the mornings, returning later and later at night. He was an in-house liability man
at General Motors with an office in the middle tower of the Renaissance Center, where the company leased space from the hotel that occupied the other floors. His windows on the forty-second floor overlooked the Detroit River, so high up he could look across to Canada and the flat tobacco fields beyond. In the year before Ash died, he spent a couple nights a week sleeping on the sofa there. Hiding.
Our mother was a self-described homemaker, but in reality she was an earplugged sleep-inner, a noontime sherry drinker, a Chardonnay zombie by the time we came in the door from school. Sometimes I’d find her passed out in a flower bed with gardener’s gloves still on, keeping their grip on pruning shears and trickling hose. Once, I discovered her in the tub, the water cold. She was still alive, though barely so. Her naked body surprisingly heavy as I attempted the impossible: heaving her out while trying not to touch her at the same time. We both ended up in a pile on the bathmat.
Thank you, Danny,
she said when she could find the words, using the walls for balance as she tried to bring some dignity to the walk back to her room. "That was gentlemanly of you."
She died there, in that same bathroom, two years before Ash did. A domestic accident,
which is what they call falling asleep drunk and drowning in the tub, so that you don’t have to use a different word for it. Dad found her after coming home late from work, his wife’s eyes looking through him from six inches under the surface.
It wasn’t the usual suburban strain of depression that plagued her, but a terror she did what she could to quiet. A knowledge of what lies on the other side, waiting for us to call out to it, open a door for it to pass through.
And guilt, too, I think. The regret of being the one to bring Ash into the world.
WHAT SORT OF THINGS DID Ash do? Why was she a girl whose own mother might wish was never born?
Let me tell you a story. A short, terrible little story.
In the winter when Ash and I were twelve, there was a day of sun that followed a cold snap, a melting of snow that left slicked streets and dripping eaves. The very next morning, the cold returned. Sidewalks and driveways turned to ice rinks. And hanging from every roof, icicles as long and sharp as spears.
Monster teeth,
Ash said when she saw them.
When we got home from school that day, the icicles were still there, though the forecast called for higher temperatures later in the week.
We need to save one,
Ash said. "They’re too pretty to just die."
She made me get a stepladder. When I returned, she directed me to the icicle she’d chosen, and that I had to climb to the ladder’s top to pull away.
"Be careful!" Ash said, a real concern for the ice that I’d never heard her genuinely express for another human being before.
When I handed it over to her she cradled it like a baby as she carried it to the garage and hid it under a bag of pork chops at the bottom of the freezer chest.
Months passed. At some point in the spring we both watched a TV show, a police procedural where the killer used ice bullets to shoot his victim through the skull. Only a trace of water was found in the pool of blood left on the floor, puzzling the detectives. Ice! Completely undetectable!
the prosecutor declared during the trial.
That night Ash repeated the line, like a song lyric, on her way up to bed.
From the day I pulled it down for her she never mentioned the icicle, and neither did I. There wasn’t one of those days when I didn’t think about it, though. Imagining the electrocuting pain of it driven into the back of my neck as I slept. Waiting to open my eyes in the night and find her standing over me, the icicle held in both hands like a stake, her face set in the blank mask she wore when she wasn’t acting and was her perfectly hollow self.
Summer came. Long, unstructured days of waiting for something to happen.
And then it did.
I went out into the yard to look for something in the garage and found the dog instead. We’d only gotten him a few weeks earlier, a yellow Lab stray Dad brought home from Animal Services. Another gesture at normalcy.
Ash was listening to the Sex Pistols a lot at the time. She named it Sid.
The day was hot and the flies were already buzzing around Sid’s body as if looking for a way in. It was the blood that had drawn them. Red and glossy, still wet. All coming from its eye socket. The eye itself missing.
The dog appeared to be smiling. As if it had been trained to Lie Down and Be Dead and was waiting for the command to rise.
A puddle of pinkened water spread out around its head. I knelt down and touched it.
Still cold.
And at this touch, a thought. Spoken not in my voice, but Ash’s.
This will never stop, it said.
THEY TRIED SENDING HER AWAY.
Not that they sold it to Ash that way. They called it an opportunity.
We couldn’t really afford the prep school tuition and boarding fees at Cranbrook, but Dad said it was worth it no matter the cost. He told her it was a chance for her to change course.
This was when we were thirteen.
I remember driving with her and Dad up to Bloomfield Hills to drop her off. Me sitting in the front passenger seat, Ash in the back. She didn’t resist, didn’t argue. There were no tears from her or any one of us. She just looked out the window as our suburb greened into a fancier, more distant suburb, a trace of a smile at the corners of her mouth. As if it were all her idea.
After she was shown her room she closed the door on us both without a word. I could feel Dad fighting the urge to turn his solemn walk into a run to the car.
Dad took me to his office. A drive down Woodward Avenue and into Detroit all the way to the Ren Center. He said he wanted to get some things from his desk, but it was really an unacknowledged celebration. Just the two of us, trying out jokes on each other, Dad telling stories I’d never heard before about when he was young. The city crumbling and beautiful all around us.
I’m not sure anyone really thought it would work. But for the three months Ash was out of the house and up the road in Bloomfield Hills something like peace visited our house. A quiet, anyway. The recuperative stillness of a veterans’ rehab ward, the three of us wounded but on the mend, shuffling around, feeling a little stronger every day. I cut my hair so that anyone could see my eyes. Mom even dialed back on the drinking. Tried out a recipe for Beef Wellington she found in a never-touched Julia Child cookbook. It remains the most delicious meal of my life.
Sometimes I thought of Ash and was reminded that my sister had never done me any direct harm. Threats, manipulations, frights, yes. But with me, she never carried all the way through in the way she did with others. I was the only one she spared, the one she kept close even if she didn’t know how to love, and in recalling this my happiness was momentarily grounded by shame. Yet soon the horizon of a life without her would come into view again and I wished only to see more of it.
And then I came home after school to find my father standing in the kitchen, red-faced, silently reading a letter torn from a Cranbrook envelope, and I knew Ash was home, that we would never try to ship her off again, that we would be punished for the attempt we’d made.
She’d been expelled. That’s all my father would say about it, though the letter contained more information than that. A naming of specific, unspeakable crimes. I could tell by the way his face changed as he read it. His features not just falling but going slack, a deadening.
When he was finished he folded the letter up into a rectangle the size of a business card. Left the house with it clenched in his fist.
Ash’s door was open when I went upstairs. A rare invitation to look inside and find her sitting on the edge of her bed, calmly writing in her journal.
When she sensed me standing there she looked up. Pouted. Blinked her eyes, the lids darkened by makeup the color of a bruise.
Miss me?
she said.
3
After the failed Cranbrook experiment, our family carried on as it had before, or tried to, which is to say we lived in even sharper anticipation of the Truly Bad Thing we knew was coming.
Over the months that Ash and I moved deeper into teenagerhood our distinctions became more exaggerated. My friendlessness graduated into a kind of sustained performance art, a survival stunt like the swami we watched fold himself into a plastic box on TV and remain for days, silent and unmoving. As for Ash, her