She needed the pliers to ease it out. He didn’t growl as she cleaned and dressed the wound. She used extra butterflies and checked on him every few minutes to make sure he wasn’t digging at it. He didn’t like the cage, so she’d put down a blanket in a corner and given him a few toys. He lay with a stuffed Tigger between his crossed paws, licking the head as if it were a pup.
“I don’t know why anyone would do that to you,” she said, stroking him. “You’re a good boy.”
“Call them again,” her father said.
She had the number right, they just weren’t home. She had their address. Tomorrow she’d swing by and see if they’d put up posters. She wondered how long it had been.
In the middle of the night she woke to her father calling for her and the dog barking. Edgar must have nosed the door open, because he was in the middle of her father’s room, his front legs braced, his fangs bared. It was like the two of them were arguing.
“Go!” Boupha shouted, clapping, and Edgar slunk away.
“Keep him away from me!” her father screamed, wild-eyed. “He tried to bite me!”
“I’ll close your door. That way you’ll be safe.”
“Don’t leave me alone!”
“I’m right here, Pa,” she said, patting his arm. “I’m not going anywhere.”
In the morning he was calmer, but he wanted the dog gone. Now, today.
Edgar’s bleeding had stopped, the blood crusted darkly around the butterflies. The way the game worked, the longer you held on to them, the greater your reward, but her father made that impossible. She called the Friedmans, and when no one answered, she clipped Edgar to his leash and took him to Brookline.
The address on his tag belonged to a leafy side street. It was the kind of neighborhood she could never afford, with neat lawns and hedges and gardens. As she slowed, searching for the number, Edgar sat up in the backseat as if he knew where they were going.
The Friedmans’ was a white frame house with baskets of geraniums hanging from the porch. Behind her, Edgar huffed and scratched at the window.
“Let me stop the car first.”
When she opened the door, he shot across the yard and up the steps, trailing his leash, a burst of energy that made her think he was feeling better. He waited, facing the doorknob, as if she had the key.
She took the leash in hand and rang the bell, then stepped back, standing straight, her chin held high. Americans liked you to look them in the eye so they knew you were telling the truth. In this case Boupha was, but out of habit she prepared the details of her story, like an actor about to take the stage. As proof, she would show the Friedmans the Band-Aid on her palm. She wouldn’t ask for a reward, would turn it down at first. Only when they insisted would she accept it, thanking them in turn for their generosity, and everyone would be happy.
After standing there a minute, Boupha pressed the doorbell again and heard it chime inside-
“They’re probably all out looking for you,” she said, scratching Edgar’s head.
She was about to knock when a voice called, “Can I help you?”
It came from the porch next door, from an older lady with puffy white hair and red lipstick. She wore a flowered apron over a powder-blue sweat suit. In one gloved hand, drawn like a weapon, she held a spade.
“I’m looking for the Friedmans,” Boupha said.
“I’m sorry, the Friedmans aren’t here. They’re both gone.”
“I think I found their dog.”
“Is that Edgar?” the woman said, craning as if she couldn’t see him. “I thought the police took him.”
Just the mention of them made Boupha want to excuse herself.
“Wait right there.” The woman tottered down the stairs and across the yard. “Oh God, it
Boupha went right into her story. When she described finding the blade, the woman covered her mouth with both hands.
“Oh dear, you don’t know, do you? You didn’t hear what happened to them?”
“No.”
“I thought everyone knew. It was all over the TV. There were reporters tromping all over my yard. I refused to talk to them. I told them they could go dig up their dirt somewhere else. It was a tragedy, that’s all. God forgives everything, I have to believe that. The people I feel sorry for are the children.”
“What happened?”
She really didn’t want to talk about it. The woman would just give Boupha the basics-she could get them from the paper anyway.
Last Wednesday, in the middle of the night, Mr. Friedman, who was having serious health problems, took a kitchen knife and stabbed Mrs. Friedman-who was having even more serious health problems-many times. Then Mr. Friedman stabbed himself, once, in the neck (the woman gestured with the spade). He survived, she died, which the woman guessed was better than the other way around, but it was still horrible. They were both such nice people. Mrs. Friedman had been president of the Hadassah.
“I’m sorry,” Boupha said.
“It’s no mystery. He couldn’t take care of her anymore, that was all. He was afraid.”
“You said there are children.” She petted Edgar as if to show how good he was.