The first time I met Adina Milford I thought all witches were old and all ghosts were dead people. I was wrong on both accounts. Adina appeared in homeroom halfway through eighth grade. A velvety snow had fallen that morning, making the town look as gentle as a postcard. Bundled children stuck their tongues out and hurled snowballs at each other on the way to school. They crammed their boots and coats inside slim lockers before the first bell. Adina hovered in the classroom doorway. She was squatty and wore her hair in a long braid swung over her right shoulder. Hal noticed her first.
“DayDay, is that your Mom?” Hal asked me. Cody sneered and high-fived Hal who never let me forget my old stutter. When I told Hal to shove it, Mrs. Watkins overheard.
“Darren Ross, would you like detention?”
“No, ma’am,” I answered.
She’d already made up her mind. That afternoon I spent forty minutes organizing cabinets until Watkins released me. Hal and Cody were waiting in the lot behind the school. Cody knew a house where we could admire a young woman who undressed without drawing her shades. Darkness fell early, and I was a lonesome latchkey kid.
In the dimming twilight, the streets were booby-trapped with black ice and snow drifts. Cody rode in front. He popped wheelies and flew over mounds of dirty snow, one arm in the air. Hal followed close behind, his fingers barely tickling the handlebars of his ten-speed. I stayed in the center of the road. Hal kept me around because he needed a pecking order with someone else at the bottom. I stayed because I needed a pack. My dad had bailed on us for the third time since July. Mom said it was just “a break,” but “a break” got longer each time he left. Mom worked as a secretary and picked up a second job at an auto-parts store. Lately, she came home to cook and cry and fall asleep to Barney Miller reruns.
We stopped in front of a Queen Anne with thick icicles dangling from the eaves like stalactites. Cody motioned to us to duck down behind a row of boxwoods. We held our breath, anxious for a shapely silhouette to appear in one of the bedrooms.
A set of footsteps soon quickened their pace and slowed behind us. We turned and saw a bundled figure standing on a sidewalk, a single braid pulled over her right shoulder.
“What?” Hal demanded.
Cody gestured for her to scram.
Adina didn’t move. She eyeballed us like we were grubs in daylight. I crawled out from behind the boxwoods first and hopped on my bike. Not long after I heard the angry hiss of Hal’s ten-speed. I didn’t wait for Cody. When I got home, my mom was asleep on the couch, still wearing the green vest from the auto-parts store.
The next week, Cody and Hal hatched a plan to get Adina “set straight.” After she thwarted our peeping tom adventure, they followed her and spotted her reading in a busted treehouse behind the old Cooper place. Hal had taken stock of the hideaway: books, dried flowers, and a woolen blanket. Cody held out a palmful of matches. They wanted to pile up her treasures, make a bonfire, then take a leak on the flames. I was the lookout.
The road to vengeance was pockmarked with gravel and salt. Cody rode in front, smacking his bare-knuckled hands together each time he cursed Adina and her eyeballs and her old-fashioned ugliness. Hal hooted with laughter and hurried to keep up. I kept my distance. I had chosen between fighting two different kinds of shame: the burning bug-shame of Adina’s knowing gaze or the shame of a lonely coward who wouldn’t ride into danger with his friends. Fighting shame with other people was easier than fighting shame alone. But the closer we got to Adina’s treehouse, the more the bloated knot in my stomach writhed and swelled.
The Cooper property was a wooded patch of thistle and knotweed, which surrounded a blackened and hollow colonial. The house burned before I was born, but there were no buyers, so it stuck around, a jagged scar on the edge of town. Cody and Hal ditched their bikes behind a snowbank. I watched their shapes bound through the underbrush and set the brown stalks to twitching. The twilight sky was cloudless as the sun slipped behind the horizon. I leaned my bike beside theirs and followed the laughter through the bare trees.
Fat plumes of wet smoke quickly belched out every side of the treehouse. I clutched my stomach and crept closer, certain I could hear a crack of footsteps behind me. Adina? Nobody answered. My eyes burned with soot; above me the splash of urine signaled that Hal and Cody had finished and would soon descend the rickety stairs. I blinked to keep focus, waved my hands in front of me, and felt my fingertips brush against a thick braid. Adina? Cody called after her right before he scrambled down the tree so fast, he dead-dropped fifteen feet to unforgiving ground. Hal chased her next, but I soon lost sight of them both. The driver said Hal rode straight into traffic, his fingers barely touching his handlebars. Adina Milford vanished into cinders, rumor, and memory.
Hal and Cody have been gone for so long that some days I wonder if they were even real. But whenever I get behind the wheel of my car to leave this town for good, I feel a long braid brush against my neck, and the car heads home. Every wrong turn, shortcut, and straight shot leads me back here like a curse. I see the sun is shining today, and the road is flat and wide; lord knows I want to take it anywhere but here. But I was the lookout, so Adina Milford makes me wait and wait and wait.
Martha (“Marty”) Keller‘s work has appeared in Flash Frog, Fictive Dream, Fractured Lit, Milk Candy Review, Lost Balloon, Cagibi Literary Journal, Midway Journal, Bridge Eight Literary Magazine, Brilliant Flash Fiction and elsewhere. Her stories have been nominated for the Pushcart, Best of the Net, and Best Small Fictions anthologies. Over the years, she’s worked in strip malls, skyscrapers, and high school classrooms.
