See What I Have Done

See What I Have Done

by Sarah Schmidt
See What I Have Done

See What I Have Done

by Sarah Schmidt

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Overview

Lizzie Borden took an ax
And gave her mother forty whacks
When she saw what she had done,
She gave her father forty-one.


Or did she?


In this riveting debut novel, See What I Have Done, Sarah Schmidt recasts one of the most fascinating murder cases of all time into an intimate story of a volatile household and a family devoid of love.

On the morning of August 4, 1892, Lizzie Borden calls out to her maid: Someone’s killed Father. The brutal ax-murder of Andrew and Abby Borden in their home in Fall River, Massachusetts, leaves little evidence and many unanswered questions. While neighbors struggle to understand why anyone would want to harm the respected Bordens, those close to the family have a different tale to tell—of a father with an explosive temper; a spiteful stepmother; and two spinster sisters, with a bond even stronger than blood, desperate for their independence.

As the police search for clues, Emma comforts an increasingly distraught Lizzie whose memories of that morning flash in scattered fragments. Had she been in the barn or the pear arbor to escape the stifling heat of the house? When did she last speak to her stepmother? Were they really gone and would everything be better now? Shifting among the perspectives of the unreliable Lizzie, her older sister Emma, the housemaid Bridget, and the enigmatic stranger Benjamin, the events of that fateful day are slowly revealed through a high-wire feat of storytelling.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780802126597
Publisher: Grove/Atlantic, Inc.
Publication date: 08/01/2017
Pages: 324
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.10(h) x 1.20(d)

About the Author

About The Author
Sarah Schmidt works as a reading and literacy coordinator at a regional public library. See What I Have Done is her first novel. She lives in Melbourne, Australia.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

LIZZIE

August 4, 1892

He was still bleeding. I yelled, "Someone's killed Father." I breathed in kerosene air, licked the thickness from my teeth. The clock on the mantel ticked ticked. I looked at Father, the way hands clutched to thighs, the way the little gold ring on his pinkie finger sat like a sun. I gave him that ring for his birthday when I no longer wanted it. "Daddy," I had said, "I'm giving this to you because I love you." He had smiled and kissed my forehead.

A long time ago now.

I looked at Father. I touched his bleeding hand, how long does it take for a body to become cold? and leaned closer to his face, tried to make eye contact, waited to see if he might blink, might recognize me. I wiped my hand across my mouth, tasted blood. My heart beat nightmares, gallop, gallop, as I looked at Father again, watched blood river down his neck and disappear into suit cloth. The clock on the mantel ticked ticked. I walked out of the room, closed the door behind me and made my way to the back stairs, shouted once more to Bridget, "Quickly. Someone's killed Father." I wiped my hand across my mouth, licked my teeth.

Bridget came down, brought with her the smell of decayed meaty-meat. "Miss Lizzie, what ..."

"He's in the sitting room." I pointed through thick, wallpapered walls.

"Who is?" Bridget's face, prickly with confusion.

"I thought he looked hurt but I wasn't sure how badly until I got close," I said. Summer heat ran up my neck like a knife. My hands ached.

"Miss Lizzie, yer scarin' me."

"Father's in the sitting room." It was difficult to say anything else.

Bridget ran from the back stairs through the kitchen and I followed her. She ran to the sitting room door, put her hand on the door knob, turn it, turn it.

"His face has been cut." There was a part of me that wanted to push Bridget into the room, make her see what I had found.

She pulled her hand away from the knob and turned to me, owl eyes swooping over my face. A length of sweat trickled from her temple to collarbone. "What do ya mean?" she said.

Like a tiny looking glass inside my mind, I saw all of Father's blood, a meal, the leftovers from a wild dog's feast. The scraps of skin on his chest, his eye resting on his shoulder. His body the Book of Apocalypse. "Someone came in and cut him," I said.

Bridget was a-tremble. "What do ya mean, Miss Lizzie? How could someone cut his face?" Her voice soured, a tear. I didn't want her to cry, didn't want to have to comfort her.

"I'm not quite sure," I said. "They might have used an ax. Like taking down a tree."

Bridget began to cry and strange feelings popped across my bones. She faced the door and twisted her wrist, allowed the door to crack open an inch.

"Go get Dr. Bowen," I said. I looked past her, tried to see Father but couldn't.

Bridget turned to me, scratched her hand. "We should attend to yer father, Miss Lizzie ..."

"Go bring Dr. Bowen." I grabbed her hand, all rough and sticky, and walked her to the side door. "You'd best hurry, Bridget."

"Ya shouldn't be alone, Miss Lizzie."

"What if Mrs. Borden was to come home? Shouldn't I be here to tell her?" My teeth were cold against my teeth.

She looked into the sun. "Alright," she said. "I'll try ta be quick as I can."

Bridget ran out the side of the house, let the door hit her on the backside, a paddle, and she bobbed as she ran onto Second Street, her white house-bonnet a sail in the breeze. Bridget looked over her shoulder towards me, her face dumb with worry, and I shooed her along, my wrist a flick and crunch. She kept going, hip and shouldered an old woman, made her drop her walking cane, made her cry out, "What's the hurry, missy?" Bridget didn't respond, how naughty, disappeared from sight, and the woman picked up her cane, made it chink against stone, made a tacky-tacky sound.

I watched people pass by, liked the way their voices filled the air, made everything feel whole, and I felt my lips turn a smile as birds jumped over and under tree branches. For a moment I thought of capturing them, placing them in my pigeon aviary in the barn. How lucky they'd be with me to look after them. I thought of Father, my stomach growled hunger and I went to the pail of water by the well, let my hands sink into the cool sip sip. I brought my hands to mouth and began drinking, lapping with my tongue. It was soft, delicate. Everything slowed down. I saw a dead pigeon lying gray and still in the yard and my stomach murmured. I looked into the sun. I thought of Father, tried to remember the last words I said to him. I took a pear from the arbor, walked back inside.

On the kitchen counter were johnnycakes. I wormed my fingers into their middles until they became small pieces of flour-rocks. I threw a handful of johnnycakes against the wall, listened to them crash in stale waves. Next I went to the stove, pulled the pot of mutton broth close to me and took a deep breath.

There was nothing but my thoughts and Father. I walked towards the sitting room, sank my teeth into the pear, stopped at the door. The clock on the mantel ticked ticked. My legs began to shake and drum into the floor and I took a bite of my pear to make them still. Behind the sitting room door was the smell of tobacco pipe.

"Father," I said. "Is that you?"

I opened the door wider then wider, sank my teeth into pear. Father was there on the sofa. He hadn't moved. Pear skin crisped in my mouth and I caught the smell again. "You ought to stop with the tobacco, Father. It makes your skin smell old."

On the floor next to the sofa was Father's pipe. I hooked the pipe under my teeth, my tongue pressed against the small mouthpiece. I breathed in. Outside I heard Bridget call like a banshee, "Miss Lizzie! Miss Lizzie!" I placed the pipe back on the floor, my fingers grazing circles of blood, and as I walked out of the room and half closed the door I took a peek at Father.

I opened the side door. Bridget looked a-fire, flame red, and she told me, "Dr. Bowen's not home."

Her response made me want to spit at her. "Go find him. Get someone. Get going," I said.

Her head jarred backwards. "Miss Lizzie, shouldn't we get Mrs. Borden?" Her voice an echo in a cave, enough with questions.

I cracked my heel into the floorboards, made the house moan then howl. "I told you, she's not here."

Bridget's forehead creased. "Where is she? We need ta get her right now." Annoying, insistent.

"Don't tell me what to do, Bridget." I heard my voice fold around doors and corners. The house; brittle bone under foot. Everything sounded louder than it should, hurt the ear.

"I'm sorry, Miss Lizzie." Bridget rubbed her hand.

"Go find someone else. Father really needs help."

Bridget let out a breath and I watched her run down the street, past a group of young children playing hopscotch. I took another bite of the pear and started to move away from the door.

From across the side fence I heard a woman call my name, felt the drilling of it, "Lizzie. Lizzie. Lizzie," bore into my ear. I squinted at a figure walking towards me. I pressed my face into the screen door, pieced together the shapes of familiarity. "Mrs. Churchill?" I said.

"Are you alright, dear? I heard Bridget hollering up and down the street and then I saw you standing at the door looking so lost." Mrs. Churchill came closer to the house, pulled at her red blouse.

On the back step she asked again, "Dear, are you alright?" and my heart beat fast, fast, fast and I told her, "Mrs. Churchill, do come in. Someone's killed Father."

Her eyes and nose scrunched, mouth hollowed into an O. A loud bang sounded from the basement; my neck twitched.

"This doesn't make sense," she said, a small voice. I opened the door, let her in. "Lizzie, what's happened?" she asked.

"I don't know. I came in and I saw him all cut up. He's in there." I pointed to the sitting room.

Mrs. Churchill slowed into the kitchen, rubbed her fat, clean fingers over her red-queen cheeks, rubbed them over her gold cameo necklace, covered her chest with her hands. There in all its shine, her gold and diamond wedding ring, I'd like to keep that. Her chest heaved, soft, child-suckled breasts, I waited for her heart to burst through ribcage onto the kitchen floor.

"Is he alone?" She was a mouse.

"Yes. Very."

Mrs. Churchill took steps towards the sitting room door then stopped, looked at me. "Should I go in?"

"He's very hurt, Mrs. Churchill. But you could go in. If you wanted to."

She receded, came back by my side. I counted the times I had seen Father's body since I found it. My stomach growled.

"Where's your mother?" she asked.

I wrenched my head towards the ceiling, I hate that word, then closed my eyes. "She's gone to visit a sick relative."

"We really must get her, Lizzie." Mrs. Churchill tugged at my hand, tried to make me move.

My skin itched. I pulled away from her grip, scratched my palm. "I don't want to bother her right now."

"Lizzie, don't be ridiculous. This is an emergency." She scolded me like I was a child.

"You can see him, if you want."

She shook her head, baffled. "I don't think I can ..."

"I meant, if you saw him, you would see why it isn't a good idea to fetch Mrs. Borden."

Mrs. Churchill placed the back of her hand on my forehead. "You feel very hot, Lizzie. You're not thinking straight."

"I'm alright." My skin slid from underneath her hand.

Her eyes widened, threatened to outgrow the boundaries of bone, and I leaned towards Mrs. Churchill. She flinched. "Perhaps we should go outside, Lizzie ..."

I shook my head, absolute. "No. Father shouldn't be left alone."

Mrs. Churchill and I stood side by side, faced the sitting room door. I could hear her breathe, could hear saliva swish thick over her gums, could smell Castile soap and clove in her hair. The roof cracked, made the sitting room door feather open an inch and my toes wiggled a step then a step until I was a little closer to Father. "Mrs. Churchill," I said, "who do you think will wash his body when it comes time?"

She looked at me as if I spoke foreign words. "I'm ... not really sure."

"Perhaps my sister could do it." I turned to her, watched sadness tiptoe across her brow and gave her a smile, cheer up now, cheer up.

Her lips parted, a sea. "Let's not worry about that."

"Oh. Alright." I turned to face the sitting room door again.

We were quiet for a time. My palm itched. I thought of using my teeth to scratch, went to bring my hand to my mouth when Mrs. Churchill said, "When did it happen, Lizzie?"

I rushed my hand to my side. "I'm not sure. I was outside then I came in and he was hurt. Bridget was upstairs. Now he's dead." I tried to think but everything slowed. "Isn't that funny? I can't remember what I was doing. Does that ever happen to you, forgetting the simplest of things?"

"I suppose so, yes." Her words slurped out.

"He said he wasn't feeling well and wanted to be alone. So I kissed him, left him asleep on the sofa and went outside." The roof popped. "That's all I can remember."

Mrs. Churchill placed her hand on my shoulder, patted me, made me warm and tingle. "Don't push yourself, dear. This is all very ... unnatural."

"You're right."

Mrs. Churchill wiped her eyes, made them red with tears and rubbing. She looked strange. "This can't be happening," she said. She looked strange and I tried not to think of Father alone on the sofa.

My skin itched. I scratched. "I'm really thirsty, Mrs. Churchill," I said.

She stared at me, ruby-eyed, and went to the kitchen counter. She poured water from a jug and handed me a cup. The water looked cloud warm. I sipped. I thought of Father. The water was tar down my throat. I should have poured it onto the floor and asked Mrs. Churchill to clean it up, get me something fresh. I sipped again. "Thank you," I said. I smiled.

Mrs. Churchill came close to me, wrapped her arm around my shoulder and held tight. She leaned into me and began whispering but there was the smell of sour yogurt snaking out from somewhere inside her and it made me dizzy. I pushed her away.

"We need to get your mother, Lizzie."

There was noise coming from outside, coming closer to the side of the house, and Mrs. Churchill ran to the side door and opened it. Standing in front of me were Mrs. Churchill, Bridget and Dr. Bowen. "I found him, miss," Bridget said. She tried to slow her breathing, she sounds like an old dog. "I went as fast as I could."

Dr. Bowen pushed his silver, round-rimmed glasses up his narrow nose and said, "Where is he?"

I pointed to the sitting room.

Dr. Bowen, his wrinkled forehead. "Are you alright, Lizzie? Did anybody try to hurt you?" His voice smooth, honey-milked.

"Hurt me?"

"The person who hurt your father. They didn't try to hurt you too?"

"I've seen no one. No one is hurt but Father," I said. The floorboards stretched beneath my feet and for a moment I thought I would sink.

Dr. Bowen stood in front of me and reached for my wrist, big hands, and he breathed out and in, his air swiping my lips. I licked them. His fingers pressed into skin until they felt blood. "Your pulse is too fast, Lizzie. I'll remedy that as soon as I check your father."

I nodded. "Would you like me to come in with you?"

Dr. Bowen. "That's ... unnecessary."

"Oh," I said.

Dr. Bowen took off his jacket and handed it to Bridget. He headed for the sitting room, took his brown, weathered leather medical bag with him. I held my breath. He opened the door like a secret, pushed his body into the room. I heard him gasp, say, "Lord Jesus." The door was open just enough. Somewhere behind me Mrs. Churchill screamed and I snapped my head towards her. She screamed again, the way people do in nightmares, and her noise rattled through my body, made my muscles tighten and ache. "I didn't want to see him. I didn't want to see him," Mrs. Churchill screamed. Bridget howled, dropped Dr. Bowen's coat on the floor. The women held each other and sobbed.

I wanted them to stop. I didn't appreciate how they reacted to Father like that, they are shaming him. I went to Dr. Bowen, stood next to him at the edge of the sofa and tried to block sight of Father's body. Bridget called, "Miss Lizzie, don't go in there." The room was still and Dr. Bowen pushed me away. "Lizzie," he said, "you mustn't be in here."

"I just want ..."

"You cannot be in here anymore. Stop looking at your father." He pushed me from the room and shut the door. Mrs. Churchill screamed again and I covered my ears. I listened to my heart beat until everything felt numb.

After a time, Dr. Bowen came out of the room, all pale and sweat, and yelled, "Summon the police." He bit his lip, his jaw a tiny thunder. On his fingertips were little drops of blood confetti, and I tried to imagine the ways he had touched Father.

"It's their annual picnic," Mrs. Churchill whispered. "No one will be at the station." She rubbed her eyes, made them raw.

I wanted her to stop crying and so I smiled and said, "It's alright. They'll come eventually. Everything will be alright, won't it, Dr. Bowen?"

Dr. Bowen eyed me and I looked at his hands. I thought of Father.

I was four when I first met Mrs. Borden. She let me eat spoonfuls of sugar when Father wasn't watching. How my tongue sang! "Can you keep secrets, Lizzie?" Mrs. Borden asked.

I nodded my head. "I can keep the best secrets." I hadn't even told Emma that I loved our new mother.

She spooned sugar into my mouth, my cheeks tight with the sweet surge. "Let's keep our sugar meal between you and me."

I nodded and nodded until everything was dizzy. Later, when I was running through the house yelling, "Karoo! Karoo!" and climbed over the sitting room sofa, Father yelled, "Emma, did you let Lizzie into the sugar?" Emma came into the sitting room, head bowed. "No, Father. I swear it."

I ran by them and Father caught me by the arm, a pull at my socket. "Lizzie," he said while I giggled and hawed, "did you eat something you weren't meant to?"

"I ate fruit."

Father came right into my face, smelled like butter cake. "And nothing else?"

"And nothing else." I laughed.

Emma looked at me, tried to peer into my mouth.

"Are you lying?" Father asked.

"No, Daddy. I would never."

He had searched me over, searched dimpled cheeks for signs of disobedience. I smiled. He smiled. Off I went again, running and jumping and I passed Mrs. Borden in the kitchen and she winked at me.

When the police arrived a short time later they began taking photos of the dark-gray suit Father wore to work that morning, of his black leather boots still tied over ankles and feet. Flashbulbs broke every six seconds. The young police photographer said he would prefer not to photograph the old man's head. "Couldn't someone else do it? Please?" he said, wiped the back of his hand over his forehead, like oil was dripping from his head.

An older officer told him to go outside while they found a real man to finish the job. They didn't need a man. A daughter would suffice. I had lovingly looked after Father all morning and his face didn't scare me. I should have said, "How many photographs do you want? How close would you like me to get? Which angle will lead you to the murderer?"

Instead, Dr. Bowen gave me a shot of beautiful warm medicine underneath my skin that made me feel feathery and strange. They seated me in the dining room with Mrs. Churchill and Bridget and said, "You don't mind that we ask each of you some questions, do you?"

The little room was cloying and heavy with the odor of warm bodies and grass, of police mouths smelling of half-digested chicken and damp yeast. "Of course not," Mrs. Churchill said. "But I shall not discuss the state Mr. Borden was in." She started to cry, made a whirlwind sound. In my mind I drifted away to the upstairs of the house where everyone became an echo. I thought of Father.

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "See What I Have Done"
by .
Copyright © 2017 Sarah Schmidt.
Excerpted by permission of Grove Atlantic, Inc..
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Cover,
Title Page,
Copyright,
Dedication,
Epilogue,
Part I,
One: Lizzie,
Two: Emma,
Three: Bridget,
Four: Benjamin,
Part II,
Five: Lizzie,
Six: Bridget,
Seven: Emma,
Eight: Benjamin,
Nine: Lizzie,
Ten: Benjamin,
Eleven: Bridget,
Twelve: Benjamin,
Thirteen: Lizzie,
Fourteen: Bridget,
Part III,
Fifteen: Benjamin,
Sixteen: Emma,
Seventeen: Lizzie,
Fall River timeline,
Last will and testament excerpts,
Acknowledgments,

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