“She knows about Caleb. And the investigation” was all Eamon said.
Esther’s arms were still crossed. “All right. What happened?”
I stared at them both, so exhausted that I could hardly muster the energy to speak. I’d been forced to trust them, to put my life in their hands, but it was clear now they’d been looking out only for themselves.
“You should have told me about this.”
“We were trying to keep you out of it,” Esther answered. “It’s complicated enough as is.”
“You can’t keep me out of it. The less I know, the more dangerous it is for all of us. What would have happened if I’d said something wrong in there?”
Esther and Eamon met eyes in a silent exchange. They didn’t argue with that.
“Let’s start with Caleb,” I said.
Esther glanced at the road around the corner of the barn. “He’s Nathaniel and Susanna’s son. He was born two years after you.”
I waited.
“After she left you, she wasn’t . . . well. I think she thought having another baby would help or somehow undo what she’d done. But she never got over it.”
“I don’t understand. You keep acting like Susanna was devastated to lose me. If that’s true, then why’d she do it? Why did she leave me?”
She looked past me, to Eamon. “This is how it all started last time. This very conversation. She doesn’t need to know everything.”
“I need to know more than what I know right now,” I snapped.
She unbuttoned the collar of her shirt, opening it to the cool air. I could see her mind turning with the words before she finally started speaking. “She didn’t leave you, June. She didn’t have a choice.”
I could feel the warmth bleeding from my skin suddenly, the air around me like hard, jagged ice. Esther’s eyes were on the ground between us, her silver-streaked hair unraveling from its bun.
“I told you, there was something about Nathaniel that wasn’t right. His mind was twisted. From the beginning, he knew that Susanna was different somehow, that she was something unnatural. But he couldn’t resist her.” She paused. “He thought she was touched by demons, or some other ridiculous thing his father preached about on Sundays. I think, in a way, he both loved and hated her at the same time. He thought she had some kind of hold over him and that God was testing his faith somehow. But he couldn’t give her up, so he decided he wanted to save her, to fix things so that he could have her and still have his own salvation. She was baptized in the church, and not long after, they found out she was pregnant.”
Beside me, Eamon was silent. He knew what came next.
“Nathaniel came to see me. He was desperate. Scared. He didn’t want his father to find out that he and Susanna had been together.” Esther paused. “He offered me two hundred dollars to poison Susanna in order to kill the child growing inside of her.”
“He wanted you to kill her?”
“Not her,” she said. “You.”
My stomach turned on itself, the photograph of Nathaniel resurfacing in my mind.
“A witch to do the devil’s work,” she muttered. “But the only devil in this town was Nathaniel Rutherford. He figured I wouldn’t want Susanna to have a baby any more than he did. So, he asked me to intervene before people could find out that the minister’s son had gotten a girl pregnant. And not just any girl. A Farrow.”
I stared at her, speechless.
“I didn’t tell Susanna what he’d asked me to do, but I convinced her to go back to her own time, telling her that she wasn’t safe with him. I could see when I said it that she knew it was true. For all of Susanna’s faults, she wasn’t blind. She’d already seen that darkness in him. I don’t know if it was because she had you to think about or if she’d already been considering it, but she went through the door the next time it appeared.”
That was when Susanna showed up in Jasper, I thought. After she’d been missing for months, she’d come home pregnant with a baby no one could explain.
“It wasn’t long before she came back through that door, and I’ll never understand why she did it. I think in her mind, she thought that she could fix him, the way he thought he could fix her. And that was it. She’d made her choice, and there was no going back.”
“She’d crossed three times,” I murmured. The first time, when she’d come here and met Nathaniel; the second, when she returned to Gran pregnant. The third crossing was her last, when she came back here and had me.
Esther nodded. “There was no hiding that she was pregnant, and Nathaniel’s father wasn’t kind or forgiving about it. They didn’t approve of her—him or the town—but they couldn’t turn her away. Not when the whole of Jasper was watching. After a few sermons about the prodigal son and forgiveness, they gave in. Nathaniel married her right away, and a few weeks later, his father died of a heart attack right there in the church. Nathaniel was convinced it was God’s punishment for what he’d done, falling in love with a cursed soul and giving in to temptation. He truly believed she’d brought it upon them.”
“Did he know? About the door?” I asked.
“No. She had enough sense not to tell him, but like I said, he knew she was different. He could sense it, and it played right into all those Bible stories he knew. I think in his own twisted way, he loved her. But he was also terrified of her, and he was consumed with guilt over his father.”
A car passed on the road, making her go quiet. When it was out of sight, she started again.
“When you were born, Nathaniel just couldn’t let it go. He was so fixated on the idea that he’d brought a tainted child into the world, that you had been conceived in sin. Susanna finally seemed to accept it then. She was afraid of him. Afraid of what he might do to you. I hadn’t seen her in months because he’d forbidden her to have any connection with us, saying that she was a part of his family now. So, when she showed up that night, I was shocked. Nathaniel was in Charlotte meeting with the Presbyterian Regional Assembly, and she’d waited until he would be gone.” She finally looked at me. “She asked me to help her.”
“How?” I whispered.
“The door would no longer open for Susanna, so she asked me to take you to the other side. When Nathaniel got back from Charlotte, she told him you were dead. That you died in your sleep and we’d buried you. I wasn’t sure he would believe her, but he did. At least, he wanted to, thinking God had finally acted to make things right. She was pregnant with Caleb not too long after.”
I pressed a hand to my mouth, trying to understand it.
“Caleb was born, but Susanna was just getting sicker. Her mind had already begun to unravel, and it was made worse by her grief over losing you. Another baby couldn’t fix that. Caleb was just a little bigger than Annie when she died. He was there when Susanna jumped from the falls.”
If what Esther said was true, then Susanna thought she was saving me. And then she killed herself because of it.
I paced to the corner of the barn and back, willing myself not to completely come apart. This was all too much. Too fast. I’d wanted answers, but not like this.