123135.fb2
That, and eww. There’s probably something gross written inside. It would be almost as bad as getting sucked into her mother’s sex dream. Ick and yuck. Blurgh. Once you read something, you can’t erase it from your brain.
Janie puts the letters and the photographs back into the box. She picks up the loonie and wonders how long it’s been since her father visited Canada. Smiling, she sets the loonie back down next to the silver dollar and picks up the cross-country medal. She turns it over in her fingers, holding it close to her face and squinting so she can see all the little nooks and crevasses. “I’m a runner too,” she says softly. “Just a different kind. The road kind.” She holds the medal close and then she pins it on her backpack.
Next, Janie looks at the driver’s license. It was his first one, expired long ago. His photo is hilarious and his signature is a boyish version of the one that Janie has seen around the house.
And then Janie picks up the class ring. 1985 is engraved on one side, and LHS is on the other.
There’s a tiny engraving of a runner below the letters. The ring is gold with a ruby stone and it’s beautiful. Janie imagines it on Henry’s finger, and then she goes back to the photographs and spies it there, on his right hand. Janie slips it on her own finger. It’s way too big. But it fits her thumb. She takes it off and puts it back in the box.
Then picks it up again.
Puts it on her thumb.
Likes how it feels there.
11:10 p.m.
After going through everything but the letters once more, Janie finds the folded-up piece of paper with words printed on it. Opens it.
MORTON’S FORK
1889, in ref. to John Morton (c.1420-1500), archbishop of Canterbury, who levied forced loans under Henry VII by arguing the obviously rich could afford to pay and the obviously poor were obviously living frugally and thus had savings and could pay too.
Source: American Psychological Association (APA): morton\’s fork. (n.d.). Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved from Dictionary.com website: http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/morton\’s fork
Janie reads it again. Remembers the bookmark in the book, and the one online. Remembers what the note from Miss Stubin said, about Henry wanting Janie to consider Morton’s Fork.
“Yeah, I get it already, Henry. You had a choice. I know.” She has considered it—about a million times. She’s known it since before she even knew Henry existed. Poor Henry didn’t have Miss
Stubin’s green notebook. Didn’t even know the real choice. “I’m way ahead of you, man,” she says.
Janie knows which choice sounds like the better one to her. Or she wouldn’t be here.
She crumples up the paper and tosses it in the trash can.
She gives a last glance at the letters. And lets them be.
Turns out the light.
Tosses and turns, knowing that tomorrow, she’s got a lot of hard explaining to do.
6:11 a.m.
She dreams.
Henry stands on a giant rock in the middle of rapids at the top of waterfall.
His hair turns into a hive of hornets. They buzz around angrily.
If he falls in, the hornets might go away, but he’ll die falling down the waterfall.
If he stays on the rock, he’ll be stung to death.
Janie watches him. On one bank stands Death, his long black cloak unmoving in the breeze. On the other bank is old Martha Stubin in her wheelchair. Blind, gnarled.
Henry flattens himself on the rock and tries to wash the hornets out of his hair. That only makes them furious. They begin to sting him, and he cries out, slapping at them, futile to stop them.
Finally, he falls off the rock and soars over the waterfall. Plunging to his death.
Janie snaps awake and sits up with a gasp, disoriented.
Sits there, sinking back into the pillow, trying to get her heart rate back down to normal.
Thinking.
Hard.
Harder.
And then she pads over to the computer and waits in the cool dawn for it to boot up and connect to the Internet.
Looks up Morton’s Fork again. Why won’t Morton’s Fork just go away? Why do I keep running into this stupid concept? I know, already. Seriously. I. Get. It. I get it more than Henry ever got it.
She finds it. Paraphrases under her breath. “A totally suck-ass choice between two equally terrible outcomes. Okay, okay. Right? I KNOW this.”
She thinks about it more, in case she’s missing something.
Thinks about Henry.
Henry’s Morton’s Fork was obvious. He chose isolation over the torture and the unpredictable nature of being sucked into dreams. That was his choice. That’s what he knew.
Equally terrible.
Yes, Janie could argue that his options were equally terrible. It’s a crapshoot. He could have gone either way.
She thinks of Martha Stubin. About how, when she was young, her Morton’s Fork was exactly the same as Henry’s, and she’d chosen the other path. She didn’t know, at the time of her choice, what would happen to her. But then, she became blind and crippled.
Which adds a factor. And it makes Janie’s Morton’s Fork different.
Janie has the most information of all of them.
Still, this is not news. She’s had all this information since the green notebook.
Equally terrible.
The term niggles at Janie’s brain and she begins to pace around the little house, the wood floor cool and smooth on her bare feet.