The Wrinkle in Time Quintet

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The Wrinkle in Time Quintet Page 85

by Madeleine L'engle

Polly wondered what Anaral would think of the rest of the house, of the bedroom, the kitchen. All the things that Polly took for granted, hot running water, toilets, refrigerators, microwave, food processor—would they seem like miracles to Anaral, or would she think them magic, perhaps evil magic? “Anaral, I’m very glad to see you, even in the middle of the night. But—why have you come?”

  “To see if I could,” Anaral said simply. “Everybody else was asleep, so I could practice the gift all alone. I came and I called you. To know you. To know why you can come to my circle of time. To know if you have been sent to us by the Presence.”

  “The Presence?”

  “The One who is more than the Mother, or the goddess. Starmaker, wind-breather, earth-grower, sun-riser, rain-giver. The One who cares for all. Karralys says that it happens only once or twice in a pattern where the lines touch so that circles of time come together with the threshold open in both directions. When this happens, there is a reason.”

  “Have you asked the bishop?”

  “Bishop, too, says there is a reason. But he does not know what. Do you?”

  Polly shook her head. “Haven’t the foggiest.”

  “The—”

  “I don’t know the reason, Anaral. But I like you. I’m glad you’re here. I would like to get to know you better.”

  “Friends?”

  “Yes. I’d like to be friends.”

  “It is lonely for druids, sometimes. Friends care for each other.”

  “Yes.”

  “Protect each other?”

  “Friends do everything they can to protect each other.”

  “But it is not always possible.” Anaral shook her head. “In a terrible storm, or when lightning starts fire, or when other tribes attack.”

  “Friends try,” Polly said firmly. “Friends care.” She felt deeply drawn to Anaral. Was it possible to develop a real friendship with a girl from three thousand years ago? “I would like to be your friend, Anaral.”

  “That is good. I am your friend.” Anaral stood up. “Bishop calls me Annie.”

  “Yes. Annie.”

  “I willed for you to wake up, to come here, to water in a box. And you came. Thank you.”

  “The quilt fell off my bed. I was cold.” Quilt. Bed. It would make no sense to Anaral.

  “You came, Polly. Now I go.” Anaral went to one of the north windows. “See? Now I know how to open it.” She jumped lightly down and ran off into the night.

  Polly looked after her until she disappeared into the woods. Then she closed the window. She stayed by the pool for several more minutes, but nothing happened. The water was quiet. She sat in one of the poolside chairs, wondering, until she grew drowsy and her eyelids drooped. She was warm now. Even her toes. Had Anaral been part of a dream? She went upstairs. Perhaps she would understand more in the morning.

  She woke later than usual, dressed, and went downstairs. Her grandfather was sitting at the table drinking coffee and doing his puzzle. Polly poured herself half a cup of coffee, filled it with milk, and put it in the microwave. For the moment she had forgotten her bad dream, forgotten going down to the pool to warm up, forgotten Anaral’s visit. “This does make café au lait much easier. I hate washing out a milky saucepan.”

  “Polly.” Her grandfather looked up from the paper. “Tell me what you know about time.”

  She sat down. “I don’t know that much.”

  “Tell me what you know.”

  “Well, there’s the—uh—the space/time continuum, of course.”

  “And that means?”

  “Well, that time isn’t a separate thing, apart from space. They make a thing together, and that’s space/time. But I know that there isn’t any time at all if there isn’t mass in motion.”

  Her grandfather nodded. “Right. And Einstein’s famous equation?”

  “Well, mass and energy are equivalent, so any energy an object uses would add to its mass, and that would make it harder to increase its speed.”

  “And as it approached the speed of light?”

  “Its mass would be so enormous that it couldn’t ever get to the speed of light.”

  “So in terms of space travel?”

  “You can’t separate space travel from time travel.”

  “Good girl. So?”

  “I don’t know, Granddad. How did I go back three thousand years?” Suddenly she remembered Anaral’s visit the night before, but this was not the moment to talk about it.

  The pantry door opened and her grandmother came in.

  Her grandfather said, “That’s the billion-dollar question, isn’t it?”

  “And I seem to have broken Einstein’s equation. I mean, didn’t I get there faster than the speed of light? I mean, I was here, and then I was there.”

  “Department of utter confusion,” her grandfather said.

  Mrs. Murry sliced bread and put it in the toaster. “One theory I find rather comforting is that time exists so that everything doesn’t happen all at once.”

  “What a picture!” Polly had ignored the microwave timer’s ping. Now she opened the door, took out her cup, and sat at her place. Hadron got up from his scrap of rug at the fireplace, greeted her by twining about her legs, purring, then returned to the warmth.

  Mrs. Murry took the bread from the toaster and put it on a plate in front of Polly. “Eat.”

  “Thanks. Granddad’s bread makes wonderful toast.”

  Her grandmother continued, “Your grandfather and I have lived with contradictions all our lives. His interests have been with the general theory of relativity, which is concerned with gravity and the macrocosm. Whereas I have spent my life with the microcosm, the world of particle physics and quantum mechanics. As of now these theories appear to be inconsistent with each other.”

  “If we could find a quantum theory of gravity,” Mr. Murry said, “we might, we just might resolve the problem.”

  Polly asked, “Would that explain the space/time continuum?”

  “That’s the hope,” Mrs. Murry said, and turned to answer the phone.

  And now Polly remembered her dream. Zachary. She hoped it would be Zachary on the phone.

  But her grandmother said, “Good morning, Nason…Yes, we’re all here in one place and one time…That’s dear of you, but why don’t you two come here? You know you and Louise like to swim…Nase, I like to cook…No, don’t bring anything. See you this evening.”

  She turned to her husband and Polly. “As you gathered, that was Nason. Louise has filled him with chagrin and remorse, as a result of which she hasn’t been able to talk him out of feeling that he can protect Polly from the past if he’s here with her, which is certainly logic no-how contrariwise. They’re coming over for dinner.”

  Mr. Murry smiled. “That was at least partly his motivation in calling.”

  His wife smiled back. “Cooking has never been Louise’s thing. She’s a perfectly adequate cook, but it’s not foremost on her mind.”

  “And Nase has rather gourmet tastes,” he added.

  “And you’re a terrific cook,” Polly said.

  Her grandmother flushed. “Oh, dear, it does look as though I was fishing for a compliment.”

  “A well-earned one,” her husband said.

  “I enjoy cooking. It’s therapy for me. Louise’s therapy is her rose garden. You may note, Polly, that we don’t have any roses.”

  “Accept it graciously, my love,” her husband said. “You’re a good cook.”

  “Thanks, dearest.” She sat down, elbows on table, chin in hands. “Polly, there is the matter of your parents.”

  Polly looked at her questioningly.

  “Your grandfather believes that you are right, that it would not be safe to take you out of the tesseract, to send you back to Benne Seed. And if I didn’t take his fear seriously, you’d be with your parents right now.”

  “How far can I go?” Polly asked. “How far away from the time threshold?”

  Her grandfather folded his pape
r. “I’m not sure. About ten or so miles, I’m guessing. Maybe more. Maybe as far as Anaral and her people ranged. But not up in a plane. Not across the country.”

  “Well, I really am in the tesseract.” And she told them about Anaral’s visit.

  Her grandparents gave each other troubled looks.

  “Don’t tell Mother and Daddy,” Polly urged. “Not yet. We don’t know enough. It sounds too impossible.”

  Her grandfather said, “If I know your father, he’d come and get you and there’d be no reasoning with him. And that could be fatal.”

  “I hate secrets,” her grandmother said. “But I agree it would be best to keep silent for a few days.”

  “Till after Halloween,” her grandfather said.

  “Tomorrow,” her grandmother added.

  “Samhain,” Polly said.

  “We’ll tell them everything on Sunday when they call,” her grandmother said.

  Both grandparents looked at Polly, and then at each other, unhappily.

  The morning passed without incident. Polly spent an hour with her grandmother in the lab, till her toes grew too cold. Then she went to her room, to sit at her desk and write out responses to some of the questions her grandmother had asked her. She found it unusually difficult to concentrate. At last she shut her notebook and went downstairs. It was time for a brisk walk before lunch.

  She had promised not to walk across the field to the woods and the star-watching rock, so she walked along the dirt road the house faced. Originally it had been one of the early post roads, but with the changing of demographics it was now only a lane. The garage led to a paved road, with farms above, a few dwellings below. The lane wandered along, past pastures, groves, bushes. It was a pleasant place to walk, and Polly ambled along, picking an assortment of flowering autumn weeds.

  When she got home, Dr. Louise had called to say that she had an emergency and would not be able to get away for dinner. Could they come the next day? Nase very much wanted to be with Polly on Thursday.

  Thursday came, crisp and beautiful. The autumn days were perfect, blue and gold, with more and more leaves falling. Polly worked with her grandfather in the morning, studying some advanced mathematics. Around eleven he took off for town to get his chainsaw sharpened, and her grandmother as usual was in the lab.

  She walked to the end of the lane and back. A little over a mile. Then she crossed the field to the stone wall. She would go no farther than that. Surely just to the stone wall should be all right.

  Louise the Larger was there, basking in the sun. Polly was used to all kinds of odd marine animals, and her father had once had a tank of eels for some experimental purpose, but she knew little about snakes. Polly looked at Louise, lying placidly in a puddle of golden light, but did not feel enough at ease to sit down on the wall beside her.

  As though aware of her hesitancy, Louise raised her head slightly, and Polly thought the snake nodded at her kindly before sliding down into the wall and out of sight. Or was she anthropomorphizing, reading human behavior into the snake?

  Snake in Ogam was nasske. It was on the bishop’s vocabulary list. So that meant that the people who used that language knew about snakes. She continued to stare at the wall, but when there was no sign of Louise after a few minutes, Polly sat down. The stones felt warm and comforting. This was as far as she could go without breaking her promise. The breeze ruffled the leaves remaining on the trees which leaned over the wall, making shifting patterns of light and shadow. The day was gold and amber and russet and copper and bronze, with occasional flashes of flame.

  A rustling sound made her turn around and there, on the other side of the wall, stood the tow-headed young man, holding his spear. He beckoned to her.

  “I can’t come. I’m sorry, I promised,” she explained, and realized that he could not understand her.

  He smiled at her. Pointed to himself. “Tav.” She returned his smile.

  “Polly,” she replied, pointing to herself.

  He repeated after her, “Poll-ee.” Then he looked up, pointed at the sun, then pointed at her hair, and clapped his hands joyfully.

  “I’m just an old carrot top.” She blushed, because he was obviously admiring her hair.

  Again he indicated the sun, and then her hair, saying, “Ha lou, Poll-ee.”

  She visualized a page of Bishop Colubra’s notebook. Ha lou was a form of greeting. Easy enough to remember. The bishop’s notebook had contained various greetings used throughout the years: hallo, hello, hail, howdy, hi. The negative, na, was also simple. No in English, non in French, nicht in German, nyet in Russian. The n sound seemed universal, she thought, except in Greek, where the neh sound meant yes.

  Tav beamed, and burst into a stream of incomprehensible words.

  She smiled, shaking her head. “Na.” She did not have the vocabulary to say “I don’t understand.”

  Carefully, tenderly, he placed his great spear on the ground. Then he sat beside her on the wall. Pointed to the sun. “Sonno.” Then, with utmost delicacy, his fingertips touched her hair, withdrew. “Rhuadd.” He held out his hand, spoke a word, and touched his eyes. Spoke again, and touched his nose. He was teaching her words of Ogam. Some of the words, such as sun and red, she recognized from Bishop Colubra’s vocabulary list. Others were new to her. Polly was a quick study, and Tav laughed in delight. After they had worked—or played—together for half an hour, he looked at her and spoke slowly, carefully. “You, sonno. Tav”—he touched his pale hair—“mona. You come tonight.”

  She shook her head.

  “It is big festival. Samhain. Music. Big music. Much joy.”

  She could understand him fairly well, but she could not yet put enough words together to explain to him that she had promised not to cross the wall, not to go to the star-watching rock. And did Tav understand that they were separated not only by the stone wall but by three thousand years?

  Suddenly he leaped to his feet. Louise had come out of her hiding place. Tav reached for his spear.

  “No!” Polly screamed. “Don’t hurt her! She’s harmless!”

  If Tav did not understand her words, he could not miss her intent. She thrust herself between the snake and the young man.

  He put down the spear, careful not to bruise the feathers. “I would only protect you,” he told her, in sign and body language as much as in words. “Snake has much power. Mana power, good power, but sometimes hurting power.”

  Fumblingly, Polly tried to explain that Louise was a harmless black snake, and a special one, a family friend.

  Tav let her know that Louise’s friendship was good. “You are gift. The Mother’s gift. You will come? Tonight?”

  “I cannot. I—” What was the word for promise? Or for grandparents? Mother was something like modr. “Mother says no.” That was the best she could do.

  He laughed. “Mother sent you! You will come!” He bent toward her again and delicately touched her hair with the tips of his fingers. It was like a kiss. Then he picked up his spear and walked along the path in the direction of the star-watching rock.

  Polly went back to the house. His touch had been gentle, pleasing. He had actually compared her red hair to the sun. Her fear of him had vanished. But she also felt confused. Why had he been ready to kill Louise? Did he really think the snake was about to strike? What had he meant by good power and hurting power? His intent had certainly not been to kill for killing’s sake, but only to protect her.

  At lunch she told her grandparents about Tav. They listened, made little comment. It was evident that they were deeply concerned. “I won’t cross the field to the stone wall again,” she promised. “But he was nice, really he was.”

  “Three thousand years ago?” her grandfather asked wryly.

  Her grandparents did not scold her for going to the stone wall. They were all unusually silent as they ate lunch.

  Chapter Five

  Promptly at two, Zachary drove up in his red sports car. It struck Polly again how sheerly felicitous
he was to behold, like Hamlet, she thought, Hamlet in modern dress. Black jeans and a pale blue cashmere turtleneck, his black jacket over his arm. Dark hair framing a pale face. Tav had likened Polly to the sun, and himself to the moon. Although Zachary’s hair was a dark asTav’s was fair, he was far more a moon creature than a sun creature.

  He greeted her grandparents deferentially, pausing to sit and tell the Murrys a little about his work in the law office in Hartford. “Long hours at a desk,” he said. “I feel as though I’ve come out from under a stone. But I’m lucky to have got an internship, and I’m learning a lot.”

  Again he was making a good impression, she thought.

  “I’ve done some research on this Ogam stuff,” he said. “As a language, it isn’t that difficult, is it? It really does look as though this land was visited three thousand years ago, long before anyone thought. Primitive people weren’t nearly as primitive as we’d like to think, and they did an incredible amount of traveling to all kinds of places. And druids, for instance, were not ignorant savages who did nothing but slit the throats of sacrificial victims. They could navigate by the stars, and as a matter of fact, their knowledge of astronomy was astounding.”

  “Bishop Colubra would agree with that,” Polly said.

  Her grandparents were polite, but not enthusiastic.

  Zachary said, “I’d really like to talk with the bishop. My boss, whom I’ve been pumping, is erudite and dull.”

  Mr. Murry smiled. “Let’s keep Polly in the twentieth century.” But his smile was strained.

  Zachary said, “Fine with me. Is there someplace around here we can go?”

  As far as she knew, the village consisted of post office, store, church, filling station, and a farm-equipment place.

  Her grandfather suggested quickly that they go to the country club, that he’d already called ahead to arrange a guest pass. Polly knew that her grandfather occasionally played golf when he needed to talk to a colleague without fear of being overheard. “It’s a lovely drive,” he told Zachary, “especially right now when the colors are still bright. But there’s not much going on at the club this time of year if you’re not a golfer.”

 

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