“Well, you know how there were Zen masters who used to slap their students or clout them over the head with their staffs, and then the students would enter a state of satori?” Ana nodded, fascinated by this new side of Sara. “It’s kind of like that.”
“You mean Jonas hits people?”
“No, no, no. Oh, well, I suppose he does, times, but not very often. Only when someone is being particularly blocked by their mind’s assumptions.”
This sounded like a lesson learned—painfully, perhaps, taught by the flat of Jonas’s hand? Ana thoughtfully dropped the last two plants into their holes and tamped the soil down, and as she went for a second flat, she made a mental note not to turn her back on Jonas if he approached her with a walking stick in his hand.
Sara helped her set out the last of the four flats of cabbages, and then they took two watering cans from the shed next to the greenhouse, filled them at the tap next to the house, and hauled them back and forth to water in the new roots. Apparently, English gardens did not have what Sara called hose-pipes, but relied on rain or muscle. At least, this one did.
They hauled water until Ana’s shoulders burned, Sara making three trips for Ana’s two, but finally she was satisfied, and the two of them stood looking at their handiwork, dozens of small, spindly green plants lying limply on the damp earth.
“They’ll pick up by tomorrow,” Sara predicted cheerfully. “And they’ll keep us in soup all winter.”
“Do you ever use vitamin B12 to keep them from transplant shock?”
“Never anything but clear water and the earth they’re put down in.”
“You don’t fertilize them?”
Sara turned to her, surprised. “Oh, no. This is an organic garden. The only things we use are Bacillus thuringiensis and sometimes a bit of oil spray when the white-fly gets too thick.”
It was Ana’s turn to be surprised. She would have sworn that Glen’s information included a high use of ammonium nitrate fertilizer in the British Change compound. Or was that the Boston group? Damnation.
Sara gathered up the flats and put them to soak for their next use. They then began to clear out the side of the greenhouse that had nurtured the numerous varieties of plants now growing outside, stripping the growing benches of plant stakes, shards of broken pot, empty seed packets, and all the rest of the debris. It was not the time of day Ana would have chosen to work inside a glass house under the blazing sun, but when she mentioned the possibility of doing the job the next day while the sun was still low, Sara looked at her without comprehension and said she had something else planned for the morning. Ana shrugged, and sweated, and finished the job without complaining.
Afterward, the water that gushed from the tap was deliciously cool and sweet. And then they weeded for a while—in the shady areas—until it was time to pull some lettuces and wash the grit from them. As Ana carried the rich armful into the kitchen, she reflected that her afternoon in the garden had borne some thought-provoking fruit.
Perhaps it was only that Ana had spent the afternoon with her hands in the earth and her ears soothed by Sara’s easy accents, but the kitchen staff seemed even more irritable than it had that morning, with pans slapped down smartly and very little of the usual boisterous conversation that kitchen work often gives rise to. Later in the dining hall, she found the same state. Unidentifiable currents and tensions ran through the room.
Not that people were openly irritable with each other; it might have been better if they were. Instead, they seemed grimly determined to remain calm. Residents presented one another with taut smiles, edged away when another person sat down too close, and listened politely with faraway gazes.
Even the children seemed either listless or fractious, with two separate incidents of tears before the meal was over.
Toward the end of the meal Marc Bennett presented himself at the door and waited for silence.
“I need you all to be sure you know where the torches are on each floor.” Ana was struck by a brief, bizarre image of flaming brands stuck into holders on the wallpapered hallways until her internal dictionary reminded her that “torch” was simply English for flashlight. “The local utilities today informed us that as we may not be working to code, they may cut off our power. It is simply further harassment, and if it does happen, I am sure we will all use it to drive us a step further along on our Work. I am merely telling you so there will not be any panic as there was the last time the power went out.”
He nodded and left, and behind him rose up a murmur of dismay and annoyance tempered by a surprising amount of philosophical acceptance. Another thing to remember, Ana thought: Have someone point out the caches of flashlights.
After she had cleared her dishes she looked around for Jason and Dulcie, and found them sitting with three or four other teenagers. Jason was deep in conversation; Dulcie looked bored and truculent. Ana went over and sat down beside her.
“Hola, Dulcinea. Did you enjoy your apple crumble? I helped make it.”
The child nodded, and Ana wondered if her former silence was returning, but then she elaborated grudgingly, “It would’ve been better with ice cream on top.”
“I know. Oh well. Hey, I have to go help with the dishes, but afterward I wonder if you’d like me to read you a story?”
Dulcie nodded, animation seeping back into her face.
“Great,” Ana said. “How about you come to the kitchen and save me from the dishwashing after you’ve had your bath and brushed your teeth? Is that okay, Jason?” she said, turning to face him. He looked up at her blankly, having obviously not heard a word she had said before his name.
“What?”
“Can you bring Dulcie down to the kitchen when she’s ready for bed and I’ll read her a couple of books?”
“Sure. No problem.” He went back to his conversation and Ana studied him for a moment. The hardness was leaving his face, dropping years as it went. The tough, sexy street kid she had met was now visible only in the edges of his face and the angle of his head. He had put on a little weight, true, but that was not the only reason that the harsh lines of his face had softened. Unlikely as it might be, here, yanked from his native land and set down among strangers, he had already made friends. Here he was free to be a different person.
Ana looked away before he could catch her staring at him, and smiled a bit sadly at Dulcie.
“See you in a bit, okay, Sancho? Bring me a couple of good books.”
Two books translated into four, and after Ana had suggested that Jason come back in twenty minutes or so, they settled down in a comfortable armchair that smelled of dogs in a small room off the kitchen, a space Ana thought might originally have been the butler’s domain. Dulcie was warm from her bath and tired from the long day and the time change and the turmoil, and she fell asleep in Ana’s arms halfway through a book she had found about a tribe of mice who lived in a church and earned their keep polishing the brass. Ana finished reading the book silently, then settled back in the chair and was nearly asleep herself when Jason returned for his sister.
“Hey,” she greeted him.
“She fell asleep, huh? Thought she might. Sorry.”
“Why be sorry? Sit down. So, what do you think of the place?”
“It’s okay.”
Ana grinned at him, and, slowly, he returned it. “I mean, it really is okay. That Bennett guy’s a—” He stopped and glanced around guiltily. “You know, he’s not real friendly, but some of the kids are pretty cool, and Jonas is great.”
“You’ve met Jonas?”
“Oh, yeah. I spent most of the afternoon with him.”
“Doing what?” She hoped she didn’t sound as startled as she felt.
“Oh, just talking.”
“Talking? About what?”
“Just stuff. My family, how I grew up, the neighborhoods I lived in, things like that.”
(Was that a twinge of jealousy she felt, that Jason should confide so freely in a stranger?)
“You know, it’s true,”
the boy went on with a note of discovery in his voice, “it does help sometimes to talk to people about things. Problems and stuff. It makes things clearer, you know?”
“I know,” she said, and bent her head to look at Dulcie and hide the twisted smile she could feel on her lips.
(Yes, no doubt about it; it was jealousy.)
“Have you noticed that our names are the same?” Jason asked suddenly. “Jason, Jonas—they’re just turned around.”
“Did Jonas point that out?”
“Yeah. He has a funny way of looking at things. Original, like. He’ll go all quiet for a while and then he’ll say something really off the wall. Sometimes I could sort of understand what he meant, but most of the time I really couldn’t. I mean, you know how you sort of laugh when someone tells a joke you don’t get? Well, I did that a couple of times and I think it kind of pissed him off, because the second time he just stood up and kind of waved his hand like he was brushing me off, and then he walked away.
“I was kind of worried, you know, in case I’d done something wrong, but I asked a couple of people and they said it was no big thing, Jonas was like that. It’s like his brain gets full and he has to go think about things for a while.”
“I see.”
Dulcie stirred then, and Jason took her limp body up in his arms and said good night. Ana responded automatically, but for once she was not thinking about them. She was too preoccupied with Jonas Seraph, the distant figure around whom this tense little community turned.
The dynamics of the community were not at all what she had been led to believe, although she had to admit that was because of her own assumptions and expectations, not due to any overt flaw in Glen’s information. She had expected Jonas to be dynamic and involved; instead, he was playing the role of the distracted alchemist buried in his thoughts and in his laboratory, and it appeared that Change had been given much of its shape not by Jonas or even by Steven Change, but by the now-departed Samantha Dooley. Samantha, vanished with her two friends into the women’s community in Toronto, where no doubt her intense interest in growing things, in transforming the earth to cabbages and winter soups, was being given free rein. The information on Change had all been there from the beginning, but like an iceberg, the reality changed beneath the surface.
Jonas was beginning to take shape in Ana’s mind, this shadowy person defined by the reactions of those around him. Jonas was wise, Jonas was aloof, Jonas occasionally struck those who were being, in his opinion, particularly slow in understanding, although his outbursts of violence were attributed not to any lack of control, but to the teaching methods of a superior being. Jonas did listen to Steven, and he had brought Jason and his sister and babysitter Ana all the way from Arizona just to look at the boy, but Jonas could not be bothered to explain his pronouncements to Jason, and had grown quickly impatient with the shy overtures of a fourteen-year-old boy. Ana speculated for a moment about Jason’s reactions if Jonas had tried to backhand him into a state of satori, and decided that Jason would almost certainly not have struck back. He was already as much in awe of Jonas as everyone else.
Ana had met any number of people who were as wrapped up in themselves as Jonas seemed to be. Some of them had been profoundly retarded; others were off-the-scale geniuses. Sociopaths were this way, and the severely neurotic, and madmen of various flavors, for that matter—as well as think-tank employees, high-ranking business executives, high-flying academics, half the archbishops she had met, and even, it is true, one or two genuinely holy people. The utter self-absorption of these individuals would have seemed brutal if there had been any awareness in it; as it was, it often seemed only otherworldly. Into which category, she wondered, did Jonas Seraph fit?
The big Victorian house was quiet now, the smaller children abed and group meditation absorbing the adults. Perhaps she might find some hot water in the pipes to soak away the aches.
Ana pried herself up from the soft chair, laid the story about the church mice on the seat, and took herself to bed.
At about the same time that Ana was brushing her teeth and splashing water on her bleary eyes, the diary pages she had mailed at the Phoenix airport landed on Glen’s desk. Glen happened to be there, having a tense phone conversation with his fiancée about a dinner party. When he saw the handwriting on the label, he told Lisa that he had to go, hung up on her, and ripped open the envelope.
White-faced, he skimmed the final entry and Ana’s guarded note to Uncle Abner. Then, more slowly, he read both again. Gone? Ana Wakefield suddenly up and vanished into England’s Change compound, out of his reach, his authority, his sight even. What the hell was she thinking of? What kind of an amateur game was she pulling? His phone rang and he reached out automatically to switch on the answering machine, then sat back in his chair and stared out the window at the uninspiring view for several minutes. When he moved again, he looked his age and more. He reached down to open a desk drawer and take out a fat file, worn and dog-eared with age. He leafed through it until he came across a photograph, which he removed and laid on his desk. From another, much newer file on the corner of his desk he took a second photo, a kindergarten portrait of “Dulcie” Delgado taken not long before she and her brother had come to Change. He laid it next to the older picture, which was a duplicate of the snapshot of Abby that Anne Waverly kept in the bottom drawer of her own desk.
The two girls could have been sisters.
He had seen the resemblance before, of course he had. Why, then, had he not stopped to consider the implications? Or had he, and then dismissed them? Anything that made Anne Waverly vulnerable was his responsibility, but the question was—the question that would be asked was—should he have seized on that potential weakness in his operative and immediately upgraded the level of surveillance on her? In other words, was his ass covered?
He had nearly lost her before, eight years ago in Utah. If she had died then, or if her presence in the Utah community had not been so obviously crucial in saving as many lives as it had, Glen’s job would have been quietly phased out. He might even have found himself removed from fieldwork. That success, tainted though it was, followed by the clean, almost elegant conclusion of the Cranmer investigation, had left Glen with firm ground beneath his feet, which he had laboriously reinforced during the intervening years until it was nearly as solid as rock.
If anything happened to Anne this time, he would again feel the mud squishing up around his toes. His job was safe—even his enemies would have to admit that if one of his operatives took it into her foolish head to go waltzing out of his sphere of influence and beyond his ability to protect her, it was regrettable, but it could not be construed as his fault.
Which did not mean that he should not move heaven and earth to drag the crazy woman back home. His job might be safe, but his position would not be, and if she failed, the voices behind his back would be poisonous. To say nothing of the reproachful voices inside his own head, telling him that he should somehow have known, and put a watch over the airports, even without the disturbing memorandum that had arrived that same afternoon.
Since his conversation with Ana in Sedona, he had become more and more uncomfortable with the dangling thread that was Samantha Dooley. He had finally sent Rayne up to Toronto again with orders to talk her way inside the women’s community where Dooley had taken shelter the previous October. To his great satisfaction, this time Rayne succeeded. His satisfaction was short-lived; Samantha Dooley was not there. She had never been there, and one of the two women who had left Change around the time she disappeared swore to Rayne that the Change founder had not come with them.
No one had seen Samantha Dooley since the middle of October.
Glen pulled forward the Rolodex file that had once been his father’s, flipping it open at the H section. There it was: Paul Harrison, National Crime Investigation Service, with two numbers.
He dialed the fifteen digits of the man’s private number and sat back, studying the photographs of the two curly-headed
girls he held in his free hand while he listened to the double ring of the English phone system.
“Paul? Glen McCarthy here. Sorry to disturb you at home, hope you weren’t in bed. Oh, just fine, and you? You heard right—her name’s Lisa. Of course she’s gorgeous, you know I have great taste. Oh, blond, of course. And how’re those two kids of yours? Great. Yeah, I’d like that—Lisa’s never been to England. But look, Paul, I’ve got a kind of situation here I need some help with. Like, yesterday.”
CHAPTER 27
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Change: I knew you’d like the boy. You don’t intend to send him back, then?
Seraph: Of course not He’s wasted there. And the woman. Ana. She’s…intriguing.
Change: I thought so. Almost too good to be true.
Seraph: You mean you suspect her?
Change: Suspect her of--Oh, I see. No, of course not. Since when would the police have that kind of imagination? No, I meant she seemed almost too perfect. A born adept, or someone who has spent her life preparing for the work without knowing it. She’s got a lot of depth to her.
Seraph: I look forward to plumbing it. I might wish she wasn’t so ugly.
Change: You think she’s ugly?
Seraph: Her hair looks like she’s undergone radiation treatment.
Change: I guess. But then you’ve always been a man for the hair. Remember those two women in Madras? [laughter] She has nice eyes, though, Ana does. How--[pause] How is the other thing coming along?
Seraph: The same. Nothing. Change: Is there anything I can do? Seraph: You believe you can succeed where I fail?
Change: Of course not, Jonas. I am only an apprentice, compared to you. We both know that. But if there’s any service I can perform as an apprentice, you only have to say. Seraph: I know, Steven. You’re a friend. But it’s my battle, my work, and I just need to return my mind and soul to a state of balance. Come next month, as you planned. Well talk then.
Change: Everything else going amoothly? The Social Serices-
A Darker Place Page 32