He told the story in earnest detail to the two policemen when they arrived and took his statement, careful to stress that the real hero was sitting out in the back seat of his station wagon.
“Baby’d be dead if it wasn’t for you,” the more vocal of the two policemen said. He was a tall, broad-shouldered man, the type who seemed to rely more on brawn than intellect to guide him through this life. Normally Nathan would have been intimidated and repelled by such a man, law officer or not. So it raised a strange and conflicted set of emotions when the policeman spoke to him as a hero.
“And Sadie,” Nathan said. “My dog. She’s a curly-coated retriever. She’s a remarkable animal.”
“Right. Look. We know you’ve got stuff to do, but we need you to show us the exact crime scene.”
“No inconvenience,” Nathan said. “I was on my way back there now, to retrieve my shotgun.”
They began walking toward the hospital parking lot together.
“I want to adopt that boy,” Nathan said. Not so much to bare his soul, but in hopes of being steered in the right direction. He felt an unfamiliar sense of haste, as if something could slip away from him if he didn’t hurry and pin it down.
“We couldn’t tell you nothing about that,” the policeman replied.
Nathan wisely resisted the impulse to correct his grammar.
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He would never have found the spot the first time without the help of his dog, as stated. That much was a given. Now he realized he likely could not find it again without her. Not for the sake of his shotgun, and not for the purposes of the law.
Initially he left her in the car, worried that she might in some way disturb the crime scene. Or that the policemen would somehow think she might.
It never occurred to him that he could not walk, in a direct line, back to the scene of such a momentous discovery.
For twenty minutes or so he walked around in a circle, noting that every tree looked very much like every other. He should have been paying better attention, he told himself. Perhaps even to say he berated himself would not have been stating it too strongly. He prided himself on the careful situational awareness of a hunter. But his routine had been destroyed earlier that morning, and everything had been changed. By the time he had realized the importance of noting and memorizing his surroundings, he had been shocked into a state of being unable to do so.
And he was inordinately embarrassed about that, now.
And, in addition to feeling humiliated by the two officers who watched him fumble about lost, he also registered that his grandfather had given him that shotgun as a gift, and that it was irreplaceable.
“I’m sorry,” he said. “I was so stunned to make the discovery. I guess I didn’t properly note my surroundings.”
“Just take a deep breath and keep looking,” the larger, more vocal officer said.
“Maybe if I could get Sadie out of the car? She might go right to the spot.”
“Fine, get her,” he said. As if Nathan should have done so sooner.
She went right to the spot.
It took Nathan and the two officers a moment to catch up with her. And during that moment, Nathan worried terribly that she might disturb the crime scene. She might begin digging again. Although, he told himself, she had been digging at the crime scene already. But still he braced himself, needing her to behave perfectly in front of the police.
She didn’t dig, or in any other way affect the pile of leaves. She just stood with her nose twitching, as if the earth under her feet might harbor an inexhaustible supply of abandoned newborns. And that another might be just about to surface.
Nathan caught up to her, and held her by the collar.
“Good girl,” he said, and picked up his priceless shotgun.
He stood looking around, memorizing his location. Searching for clues that would distinguish this tree from all other trees. That would allow him to find this place again. A bit like locking the barn door after the horse has been stolen, his brain told him. Something his grandfather had used to say.
He watched the officers marking off the area with crime-scene tape. And wondered, in a vague sort of way, why. It was a pile of leaves. What would it tell them? How would it help them find the person who had committed this terrible act? So far as Nathan could see, it had nothing to say.
“Where do you suppose she got a tiny knit cap the size of a newborn’s head?” Nathan asked. Probably just to feel somehow connected to the moment again. “After all, the baby was just a few hours old. I can’t imagine that left much time for shopping.”
“I imagine she knitted it,” the quieter of the two officers said. “Can’t say for a fact, but it makes more sense.”
Another silent moment.
“If they find her, they won’t give her custody of the child again. Will they?”
The bigger, more vocal officer seemed to be studiously ignoring him.
“I think she’s made the point that she doesn’t want it,” the quiet one said.
“If she changed her mind, I mean.”
“Well, she can change her mind all she wants. But she’ll be in prison. For a very long time.”
Nathan felt heartened to hear that news.
“Maybe call the department of social services,” the more vocal cop said, correctly sensing where Nathan was headed with this. “Now, if you don’t mind, Mr. McCann, we’ll take it from here.”
Nathan made his way back to the car, slowly this time. Still holding Sadie’s collar. And feeling a measure short of heroic.
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“I want to adopt that boy,” Nathan said to his wife, Flora, over a late brunch. They sat at the kitchen table, Nathan smearing jam on his English muffin. He preferred butter, but was having to watch his waist.
“Don’t be absurd,” Flora said. She sat with a cigarette high in the crook of her first two fingers, reading the paper. She had the gravelly voice of a drinking woman, which she was not.
Nathan sipped his coffee; it was hot and strong. He felt a pang of loss remembering there would be no roast duck for supper. “Why is it absurd?”
“Neither one of us is very fond of kids. We made up our mind against them. Besides, we’re hardly kids ourselves.”
“No, you made up your mind against them. You decided for both of us.”
Flora looked up from her paper for the first time. Peered at him through the smoke. “I thought you said it was more than you wanted to take on in life.”
“This is different. This was meant to be.”
She took a puff of her cigarette, set it down on the ashtray, and regarded him briefly. “Nathan,” she began. Nathan thought he heard a note of derision. Condescension, even. “I’ve known you twenty-nine years, and you have never before said that anything was ‘meant to be’.”
“Maybe in twenty-nine years nothing else came into that category.”
Still the harshness of her scrutiny. “Why?”
“Why what?”
“Why what do you think? Why would you suddenly want to adopt the child of a perfect stranger? It makes no sense.”
He opened his mouth to answer, then stopped himself. You simply didn’t say, to the person who has shared her life with you, that her company was not enough to fulfill you. The truth though it may be. It was unnecessarily hurtful, and not intended to serve the common good.
He took a different tack.
“I’ve just had this feeling. Since I found him. I can’t describe it. But it’s an emotion—”
She cut him off rudely. “An emotion? That’s unlike you.”
“My point, exactly,” Nathan said. “And now that I have it, I don’t want it to go away. I just don’t feel willing to give it up again. To go back to the way things felt before.”
He stopped there, feeling he skated dangerously close to the judgment he had earlier decided against voicing.
A difficult pause.
Then Flora shook her head. “Anyway, the kid probably has somebody. A mother. They could find the mother.”
“If they find her,” Nathan said evenly, “they will put her in jail.”
“And then it could turn out he has some other kin that would take him.”
“Maybe,” Nathan said. “We’ll see. It just seems to me that when an infant is alone in the woods, slowly dying … then that child has … for all intents and purposes … no one.”
“I guess we’ll see,” Flora said.
“Yes. I guess we’ll see.”
Nothing more was said about it for the remainder of the day, though Nathan was sure he could feel its presence at each moment, and he wondered if Flora could, too. He glanced over at her often, but saw no signs of her being similarly haunted.
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