by Alex Flinn
“Yes.” Will gave me a questioning look.
“I told her to go. Now can we change the subject to something more cheerful? That Les Miserables sure was a funny book.”
“But, Adrian, it was going so well. I thought—”
“She wanted to leave. I loved her too much to make her stay. She says she’ll come back in the spring.”
Will looked like he wanted to say something else, but finally, he held up the book. “So, what did you think of Inspector Javert?”
“I think he’d be great as a character in a Broadway musical,” I said, laughing even though I didn’t feel like laughing. I checked the clock. Lindy’s taxi would be there any minute. Her bus left in about an hour. If this had been a movie, one of those chick-flick romantic comedies, there’d be some dramatic scene where I ran to the bus station and begged her to stay, and Lindy, finally realizing how she felt about me, would kiss me. I’d be transformed. We’d live happily ever after.
In real life, Will asked me what I thought of Victor Hugo’s political views in Les Miserables, and I answered him, though I don’t remember what I said. But I knew the minute (9:42) the cab pulled into the driveway to pick her up. I sensed her arrival at the bus station (10:27) and knew the time (11:05) when her bus left the station. I didn’t watch these things in the mirror. I just knew. There was no movie ending. There was only an ending.
I didn’t go back to the city that winter. Instead, I stayed in the country, taking long walks every day, where only the other beasts, the wild ones, could see me. I began to memorize the flight pattern of each winter bird, the hiding place of each squirrel and rabbit, and I thought I might do this every winter. It was great to be outside. I wondered if this was how the Abominable Snowman got his start. I’d never believed in stuff like that before. Now I was sure it was for real.
I admit I used the mirror to spy on Lindy. Without the roses there, it became what the roses had been—my life, my obsession.
In my defense, I only allowed myself to watch her an hour a day. By doing this, I learned that she had found her father, that they’d moved to an even shabbier apartment in an even worse neighborhood in Brownsville, that she was going to a rough-looking school. I knew this was my fault, that she was stuck in that school because she’d lost her scholarship to Tuttle because of me yanking her out of school to be with me. I watched her walk to school, past gutted buildings covered in graffiti, past wrecked cars and hopeless children. I watched her in the halls at school, narrow, crowded halls with boarded-up lockers and posters on the walls that said things like YOU CAN SUCCEED! I thought how she must have hated me.
March—I stopped watching her during daylight hours. But watching her in the evening was worse, because there was nothing to say she missed me or thought of me at all. She studied her books, just like she had before I knew her.
Finally, I started watching her just at night, when she slept. Every night at midnight, I looked at her. At that hour, I could fantasize that she was dreaming of me. I dreamed of her all the time. By April, when she hadn’t come back, I knew it was over.
The snow lay in patches on the ground, and the lake ice was melting. It floated like icebergs, waking the frogs underneath. The melting mountains became waterfalls, and that meant tubing and rafting and tourist season.
“Have you given any thought to going home?” Will said one day at dinner. It was a Saturday. I’d stopped walking outside and had spent the day staring out the window, ducking as cars—probably full of antiquers—drove by on our rural route.
“What home?” I said. “Home is where your family is. I don’t have a home. Or maybe I am home.” I looked at Magda, who sat across from me. In the past months, she’d pretty much stopped being a servant. “I’m sorry,” I told her. “I know you never see your family. You must think I’m an ungrateful—”
“I do not think that,” she interrupted. “I have seen such a change in you these past two years.”
I stiffened at “two years.” It hadn’t been, not quite, but it was close. My time was nearly over. It might as well be all over because there was no chance anymore.
“Before, you were a cruel boy, a boy who lived to make people sad. Now you are kind and thoughtful.”
“Yeah, kind and thoughtful.” I shrugged. “Lot of good that does me.”
“If there was any justice, this horrible spell would be broken, and you would not have to do this impossible thing.”
“It wasn’t impossible.” I played with my soup spoon. I’d gotten good at eating with claws. “I just wasn’t good enough.”
I turned to Will. “In answer to your question, I was thinking of staying here. In either place, I’m stuck inside, a prisoner. But going back to the city would only remind me of what I’ve lost.”
“But, Adrian—”
“She’s never going to visit me, Will. I know it.” I’d never told him about the mirror, so I couldn’t explain now that I was watching her, that I saw no sign that she missed me. “I can’t go back and wait and wait for her if she isn’t going to come.”
That night, when I picked up the mirror for my nightly ritual of watching Lindy sleep, I got Kendra instead.
“So when will you be returning to the city?”
“Why is everyone asking that? I like it here. There’s nothing for me in the city.”
“There’s Lindy.”
“Like I said, there’s nothing for me in the city.”
“You still have a month.”
“It’s impossible. It’s over. I failed. I will always be a beast.”
“Did you love her, Adrian?”
It was the first time she’d called me Adrian, and I stared into her weird green eyes. “Did you change your hair, sort of a layered thing? It’s a good look for you.”
She laughed. “The old Kyle Kingsbury would never have noticed my hair.”
“The old Kyle Kingsbury would have noticed—he’d have ragged on it. But I’m not the old Kyle Kingsbury. I’m not Kyle Kingsbury at all.”
She nodded. “I know. And that’s why I’m sad that you’re saddled with Kyle Kingsbury’s curse.” It was almost exactly what Magda had said. “Which brings me back to my question—the one you so cleverly evaded. Did you love her?”
“Why should I tell you?”
“Because you have no one else to tell. Your heart is breaking, and you have no one to confide in.”
“So I should pour my heart out to…you? You ruined my life. Now you want my soul? Fine. I loved her. I love her. She was the only person in my life who really talked to me, who knew me without the looks, without my famous father, and still cared about me—even though I was a beast. But she didn’t love me.” I wasn’t looking at the mirror. I couldn’t because even though my tone was sarcastic, my words were the truth. “Without her, I have no hope, no life. I will live in misery and die alone.”
“Adrian…”
“I’m not finished.”
“I think you are.”
“You’re right. I’m finished. If I was at least normal, I might have had a shot with her. I’m not talking about the way I used to look, but it’s asking a lot to expect a girl to be interested in someone who isn’t even human. It’s sick.”
“You’re human, Adrian. You have a month. Don’t you want to go back, just for that one month? Do you have so little faith in her?”
I hesitated. “I’d rather stay here. I’m not a freak here.”
“A month. What do you have to lose, Adrian?”
I thought about that. I had already given up, had accepted that I was going to stay a beast forever. To go back to having hope, even for a month, would be so hard. But without hope, I’d have nothing, nothing to look forward to but being a beast, trapped in a house for the rest of my life, to sitting in my Dad-financed brownstone, putting crap on my roses to make them grow better, working my way through every book in the New York Public Library, and waiting to die.
“A month,” I agreed.
7
I
went back to New York. The guy who’d supposedly been taking care of my roses was a major screwup. Half the plants were dead while the others needed pruning bad and only had single blooms. “A different beast would eat this guy,” I told Will.
But I didn’t really mind. The roses were mine to tend and no one else’s. The disastrous result only showed that they needed me. It was nice to be needed. I wondered how it would be to get a pet, maybe a cat because they didn’t need to be walked.
Of course, maybe I’d end up like one of those crazy old people with, like, sixty cats. And one day, the neighbors would complain about the smell, and it would turn out I’d died and the cats had eaten me.
Still, it might be nice to have a cat. As long as it didn’t dig in my roses.
For now, I decided to dismantle the greenhouse. I wanted to spend my winters up north, and return each spring to sit in my walled-in garden, in the sunlight.
I was beginning to plan for a lifetime of being a beast.
And yet, every night, I took out my mirror and watched Lindy sleep. I wondered if she dreamed, dreamed of me as I dreamed of her.
I guess Will wondered too because one day he said, “Have you heard from Lindy since you’ve been back?”
It was May fourth, less than two days from the day, a month since my return to the city. I was in the garden with Will. We’d just finished reading Jane Eyre. I hadn’t told him that I’d read it months before, after that day on the fifth floor with Lindy. I thought of that day all the time, even though the green dress I had hidden under my pillow had long since lost her scent. It had been a perfect day, a day when I’d thought maybe it was possible for her to love me.
“I never would have thought I’d like a book called Jane Eyre,” I told Will, changing the subject. “Especially since it’s about a plucky British governess.”
“Sometimes we surprise ourselves. What was it you liked about the book?”
“Well, I’ll tell you what I didn’t like about it—Jane was too good. She loved Rochester, and she had nothing in the world, no family, no friends, no money. I think she should have stuck with Rochester.”
“But he had an insane wife hidden in the attic.”
“No one knew about it. And he was her true love. If you’re in love like that, nothing should stand in your way.”
“Sometimes you have to take care of things first. I had no idea you were such a romantic, Adrian.”
“Not that I have any reason to be.”
Will flipped his copy of Jane Eyre over in his lap, waiting.
“The answer is no,” I said. “No, I haven’t heard from Lindy.”
“I’m sorry, Adrian.”
“But that gets me to what I did like about the book,” I said, walking to where I’d planted my miniature roses. The “Little Linda” was reviving nicely. “I liked that when Rochester and Jane were separated, he went to the window and called her name: ‘Jane! Jane! Jane!’ And she heard him, and even answered. That’s what true love should be like—the person should be part of your soul and you should know what they’re feeling all the time.”
I plucked one rose from the bush and held it to my cheek. I wanted to see Lindy in the mirror even if it meant excusing myself from this conversation with Will, even if she didn’t love me, didn’t miss me at all. But it was no use, wallowing in missing her. I looked at Will. “So what will we read next? Something about war, I hope? Or maybe Moby-Dick.”
“I am sorry, Adrian.”
“Yeah. I am too.”
The next night. May fifth. Ten thirty. Less than two hours left. In these two years, I had lost all my friends, a girl I’d thought loved me, and my father. But I’d found true friends in Will and Magda. I’d found a hobby. And I’d found true love, I knew, even if she didn’t love me back.
And yet my face, my horrible face, stayed exactly the same. It wasn’t fair. It wasn’t fair.
There was a full moon out, like the night months ago when I’d told Lindy to leave. But this was the city, and there were no stars over stars. I went to the window and opened it, meaning to howl at the moon as I had that night. But this time what came out was her name.
“Lindy!”
I waited, but there was no answer.
I checked my watch. Almost eleven. And even though I knew there was no hope, I couldn’t keep from going to my mirror, early just this once. I held it up. “I want to see Lindy.”
Almost before it could show her to me, a shriek pierced the air.
It was her voice. I would have known it even if a hundred years had passed. I’d thought I would never hear it again. So close—I ran to the window to look for her.
Then I realized the voice came from the mirror.
I picked it up again and held it close to my eyes. It was dark, all dark, so I could barely make out anything, the neighborhood or the girl who screamed what I now realized was my name.
“Help me! Oh, please help me, Adrian!”
But as my eyes grew used to the dark mirror, I could make out shapes, buildings. I’d seen the neighborhood by day. Was she walking those streets at night? She was. But as my eyes focused more, I saw she wasn’t alone. A shadowy figure walked with her. He held her arm and forced her up a flight of stairs into a boarded-up brick building.
I was running now, not even thinking, into the street. No cabs in sight, and I knew none would pick me up. So I dashed toward the subway station I’d watched so often, but hadn’t entered in over a year, still holding the mirror. The street was bright with the full moon and the streetlights, and though it was late, I pushed through a crowd of people heading in the opposite direction on the sidewalk.
“What was that?” someone cried, and all looked after me, but I was just a shadow in the distance by then. I was running, running so fast after that one voice, the one person in the world who called my name so I could hear it.
I hadn’t bothered to put on my coat, so I wore only jeans and a T-shirt, nothing to cover myself. I ran down the street, a beast to the world. Maybe they would think it was a costume. There were things just as strange in the city. But I was running, and someone screamed, someone pointed. I kept going, and finally, I disappeared into the ground.
That should have been the end of it. The rush hour was long over, and the subways usually weren’t crowded late on summer nights. I jumped the turnstile. I was in luck—the train was there. The train was there. It should have been empty, but there were some Mets fans on the way home from a game.
I crashed through the doors, and there were swarms of people, mobs of them, sitting on every available seating surface, parents with kids on laps, people clinging to metal straps, holding on to seat backs. I thought maybe I could hide in the crowd. I tried to blend with everyone else.
Then I heard a scream.
“A monster!”
It was a little boy, his face paralyzed with fear.
“Try to sleep, honey.” His mother patted him on the back.
“But, Mommy, no! It’s a monster.”
“Oh, don’t be silly, dear. There’s no such thing as—”
She looked up. Her eyes met mine.
And then a dozen, a hundred eyes were on me.
“It must be a mask,” the mother said.
From behind me, someone grabbed my face, my head. They were pulling on me. No choice. I had to let my claws out. I turned on them.
And then the screaming started.
“Beast!”
“It’s a monster!”
“Beast in the subway!”
“Call the Transit Authority!”
“Call the police!”
And soon, it all mushed together into screaming, the screaming I’d spent two years hiding to avoid. Bodies were swarming, all around me, swarming to get me, to get away from me. I held them off with my claws and my teeth. Cell phones opening. Would I be arrested? Taken to jail or the zoo?
That couldn’t happen. I had to find Lindy.
Lindy.
Lindy needed me. Around me, the scre
ams continued. I felt fists beating on my back. I stared at the mirror, tried to memorize the building, the street where she was, to see the address. I worked toward the door. More screaming, and bodies pushing against me, hot in the May night.
“Don’t eat me!”
“Are the police coming?”
“Couldn’t get a line. Too many calls from one place.”
“Don’t let him out!” a man’s voice screamed.
“Are you kidding? Someone push him out before he eats someone!”
“Yeah. Push him onto the track.”
I stood, paralyzed with fear, amid that roiling crowd. It couldn’t end like this. I couldn’t die so close to seeing her, to saving her. She’d called me. I’d heard it, crazy as it was. I had to find her. Once that happened, I could live or die. It wouldn’t matter.
I knew what I had to do.
When the train shuddered to a stop, I lunged for the exit. A man tried to jump in my way. I searched for a weapon and found the only one I had. The mirror. I raised it high, then sent it smashing down on his head. I heard the glass shatter. Or perhaps it was his skull cracking. Or both.
The glass shattered all over the car, and there were people running in all directions, more screaming, screaming so loud that it was impossible to remember the silence that had been my life for so many months. I let the mirror fall to the floor, knowing that with it, every chance was gone but this one, every chance to see Lindy again.
The crowd was renewed, swarming around me, and I lunged through them, letting out a mighty roar that scattered them. And then I was down on all fours, in the position that made me fastest, fiercest, running for the exit.
“Push him on the track!” someone yelled again.
“Yes! Push the monster onto the track.”
Bodies, pressing, pushing against mine, the heat and smell of them. The doors closed, and the train pulled away, and they were pushing me, pushing me. I knew that once the train was gone, they’d succeed in pushing me onto the tracks, maybe hold me at bay until the police came. Or the next train.
That would all be all right if not for Lindy.