by Nicky Singer
“But you just stood there.” I ram it home. “You let him say all of it and you just stood there.”
I start walking again now, turning my back on her and walking, walking.
She runs after me again, but I shake her off.
“I didn’t know I had to say anything. Anyway, you were saying stuff,” Zoe remarks to my back. “And what does it matter? They’re born now. They’re okay.”
It matters because she promised, because I trusted her. And I need to go on trusting her. Because of the flask. “Who says they’re okay?” I say.
“What?”
“The babies—who says they’re okay?”
“You did!” says Zoe. “You said it!”
“I said they were beautiful. I didn’t say they were okay.”
“Well—are they okay?”
I say nothing.
“Well, are they?”
“I’m not telling you,” I say. “I’m not telling you anything ever again.”
18
I don’t say a single thing over dinner. And if Gran notices, she doesn’t mention it. She probably thinks it’s to do with the babies. And she’s right. Everything’s to do with the babies these days.
Except the flask.
I delay going up to bed, partly because I’m no good at sleeping when I’m angry, and partly because I expect to see little bits of sticky tape on the floor. I mean, something that can blow a cork from a bottle can burst through sticky tape, right?
Wrong.
There is no sticky tape on the floor. The desk is still closed, the drawer inside still shut. I reach my hand in and feel the cold, rounded form of the flask.
“I’m back,” I say, sliding my fingers up the throat of the bottle, just to check the sticky tape is really still in place.
It is.
So I draw the flask out into the light. It is blue. Really blue—like a summer sky. Like happiness. Whatever I expected, it wasn’t this.
I just stand and stare, trying to work out whether it is the glass or the thing inside that is blue. But I can’t separate the two. Nor can I understand why—despite Zoe and Paddy and the park and the mumbo jumbo—just holding it makes me fizz with joy, as though I am holding a tiny, perfect other universe.
“You’re extraordinary,” I say. “You know that?”
No reply.
But then what would a universe reply? And I remember Si showing me pictures taken by the Hubble Telescope, pillars of dust 57 trillion miles high and some nebula thing called the Eye of God because that’s what it looked like, some astonishingly beautiful giant eye. And Si was busy explaining about gas and cusp knots and interstellar collisions, and I was just thinking it was all too much and too beautiful to look at even in a newspaper. And here is something even more extraordinary in the palm of my hand.
I don’t want to put the flask back in the dark drawer; I want to keep it close by me. So I take it to my bed and lay it on my pillow as I undress. I don’t know how long the blue will last, the blue and the bright happiness inside me. And it’s not just the thing about Zoe (why couldn’t it have been my mom talking to Paddy’s mom?), it’s also the first time, I realize, I’ve felt really happy since we knew about the babies. The babies have shadowed everything for months, the worry of them. Would they be born alive, and if so, would they be able to survive? And now this glowing blue seems to have the power to push the gloom away. Or maybe it’s just that I’ve seen the babies. Seen them alive with their bright little bird faces.
I get into bed, thinking sleep will come with the sweetest of dreams.
19
But sleep doesn’t come.
Not quickly.
Not at all.
My mind will not be quiet; it refuses to listen to my happy heart. The flask is tucked beneath my pillow, but my thoughts still toss about the park (of course my mom didn’t talk to Paddy’s mom—why would she?). Eventually, my restless anxiety pokes its way under my brothers’ sheet at the hospital.
Richie and Clem.
I’m glad the babies have names; it makes them seem less vulnerable somehow, as though they really are here to stay, have personalities of their own, a right to exist. Richie seems a slightly bigger name to me than Clem, just as Richie himself, I realize as I picture them again in my mind, is the bigger twin. Not by much, of course, but if one twin could be said to be clinging to the other, then it is Clem who is clinging to Richie. Clem who, if there is to be trouble, is the weaker one.
Thirty-four percent of conjoined twins don’t make it through the first twenty-four hours.
Clem’s a strange name, a strange word. It sounds to me like clam. Clem the closed-up clam, clinging.
I turn over.
And over.
I feel bad characterizing Clem like this, as though naming him as weaker makes him weaker still. They are both strong, I tell myself.
Strong enough to get through this dangerous night. Their first on earth.
I put my hand under my pillow, reaching for the flask, as if blue were something you could feel or touch.
Then my thoughts return to Zoe: Em would never betray a secret and I haven’t once seen her talking to Paddy. It’s Zoe who’s always talking to Paddy. Though I can’t check, can’t be sure, because Em’s away on vacation for pretty much the whole Easter break. But it must have been Zoe, confiding in Paddy. Making the join of the twins the butt of Paddy’s Outstanding Sense of Humor, which he clearly gets from his nana and her eight legs and . . . And my thoughts find the twins, sleeping together, breathing together, the little sheet rising and falling around them. And as they breathe, the flask seems to breathe, too, inhaling and exhaling beneath my hand. A tiny rib cage. And then things begin to get muddled and I hear a moan of the sort people make when they’re dreaming and they want to wake up and they can’t. And I don’t know if I am really awake, or just dreaming that I am awake, but I do hear the moan get louder, becoming more of a wail, and suddenly I’m sitting bolt upright in bed, my heart pounding.
It makes me gasp, how fast my heart is pounding. It’s deeply dark, the middle of the night. So I must have slept after all, slept for a long while. I try to calm myself, try to remember the blue, the overwhelming happiness. But all I hear is the wail, only it isn’t a wail anymore, it’s a howl. Something dark and inhuman is howling from beneath my pillow.
I stumble and fling myself out of that bed. Fear makes many shapes, but this thing has only one shape, the shape of the flask. The same thing that splashed light on my windowsill and held a universe of brilliant blue is now pulsing black wolf howls into my night, into my head.
Stop, stop, stop! I want to shout, to scream, but the words are stuck in my throat.
There is nothing for it but to reach through the dark, reach under the pillow. I am afraid the flask will be soft under my hand, like a heart, but it is hard and cold, holding its glass shape. I want to smash it. If I smash it, the noise will stop. It will have to stop.
I pick up the flask, intending to fling it against the wall, but that’s when the howl goes higher and also softer, not so much wolf as wolf cub, and there is suddenly something so terrible and so sad about the noise that I just pull the flask to my chest and hold it there. Then I rock with it, like you’d rock with a baby who was crying and you had nothing to give but the warmth of your own flesh.
Which is when Gran comes into the room.
“Jess?” she says. “Jess, can’t you sleep either?”
“No,” I cry. “No!”
The spill of light from the hall turns my bedroom bright and ordinary.
“I thought I heard you,” Gran says.
“Heard me?”
“Walking about.”
“Water,” I say. “I need some water.”
“You look half-frozen,” she replies. “I’ll get the water. Come on, now, get back to bed. It’s after two o’clock.”
Gratefully, I get back into bed. Under the covers, I look at the flask. It is not a heart, not a rib cage; it isn’t pul
sing. There is nothing black about it, but nothing blue either. It is calm and hard and glassy, colorless.
As Gran returns with the water, I slip the flask back beneath the pillow.
“He told you they could die on their first night, didn’t he?” Gran says.
“Who?” I say, as though I don’t quite understand her. Though of course I do.
“Si. He told you the babies could die, didn’t he?”
I shrug.
“He has no business saying things like that.” She sits down hard on the edge of the bed. “No business at all.”
“He only mentioned the statistics . . .” I begin.
“Statistics,” says Gran, “are bosh.”
And I know this. I’ve heard it all my life.
Statistics are bosh.
Statistics are bosh.
Gran says it like a mantra, her own little song.
This is something else Si has told me about. Something he’s explained. Si explains everything; Gran explains nothing. You just have to guess what Gran means; you have to look around her corners. “Your grandmother,” said Si, “has never trusted statistics since your father died of something people don’t normally die of. Hiatal hernia. A million-to-one chance, that’s what the doctors told her. So now she doesn’t believe in the numbers game.”
I should never have mentioned statistics.
“Anyway,” Gran continues, “you saw your brothers. Saw them with your own eyes. They’re going to be fine. Do you hear me?”
I hear her.
“So you’re not to worry. Right?”
She comes to tuck me in like I’m some baby myself. As she fusses about me, I realize that I will always be her baby in a way that my brothers will not. Si is the twins’ father, but not mine. So Gran has no blood relationship with the twins. Gran and the babies—they aren’t joined at all.
In the last chink of light, before Gran shuts my door, I check the flask. In its whorls, its worlds, there are a couple of bright seed fish swimming.
After that, I sleep.
20
The following morning, the phone rings at 7:36. Nobody calls our house that early.
I arrive in the kitchen to hear Gran say, “Yes, of course I’ll tell her, Si.”
She puts down the phone. I wait for her to give me the news.
“Morning, Jess,” she says. “Breakfast’s up.” From the oven she takes a steaming plate of bacon and eggs. The smell of it makes me want to retch.
“What did he say?” I ask. “What’s happened?”
“Your mom’s fine,” says Gran.
“And the babies?”
“They’re fine, too.” But there is something too bright and too quick about the way she says it.
I look at her. “What?”
“What what?” she repeats.
“What did Si say? What did he want you to tell me?”
Gran wipes her hands on her apron. “Your stepfather,” she says, “wanted you to know that your mother and your brothers are fine.”
I stare at her and I keep on staring. I want the truth.
“Clem . . .” Gran says finally, lips pressed tight.
“Yes?”
“He took a little dip in the night . . . but he’s absolutely fine now.”
A little dip.
I can’t imagine Si using these words. Si would use precise medical terms.
“What kind of ‘dip’?”
“Oh, I don’t know, Jessica. Nobody said it would be smooth sailing. The important thing is that he’s okay now.”
“And when exactly?” I ask.
“When what?” says Gran.
“When did Clem take this dip?”
“Does it matter?”
I think of that great sobbing howl.
“Yes. It does matter.”
“Look, Jess, I know things have been difficult in this house over the last few months. And I know you didn’t sleep very well last night. So I’m going to ignore your tone of voice. But you have to trust me and Si and the doctors. And you have to eat your breakfast.”
I sit down. I try my bacon, toy with my eggs. In the right-hand pocket of my jeans I can feel the weight of the flask. Calm this morning, colorless. But opalescent on the day the twins were born, its cork bursting from its throat, and then black and howling the night that Clem took a dip.
“Do you ever think,” I ask Gran, “that things are more . . .” I want to use the word joined, the word that’s been stuck in my head for weeks, but I choose to say connected. “Do you think things are more connected than they might appear?”
Gran is eating toast. “I’m not sure I understand you, Jess.”
“That there are more things on earth than can be explained by—well, science?”
“Are we talking God?” asks Gran.
“No!” Actually, I think we’re talking Si; I’m talking about whether there is more in the universe than can be explained by my stepfather.
“Ghosts?” she hazards.
Ghosts. That makes a patter in my heart. When did the flask come into my life? After Aunt Edie died. And where did it come from? Aunt Edie’s desk. Ghosts are spirits without bodies. Like the thing in the flask. And they arrive after people die. . . .
“Jessica?”
“No, no!” I don’t want a ghost. A ghost is scary.
Scarier than the howls?
Besides—a ghost doesn’t make any sense. Not the ghost of Aunt Edie. I’d know that ghost, surely. And it—she—would know me. We’d chat, wouldn’t we? Hi, Jess, it’s me, Aunt Edie, just came to see how you were getting on with your piano playing. And in any case, ghosts don’t exist, do they? Pug and his Mrs. Nerg wouldn’t have anything to do with ghosts. Si wouldn’t have anything to do with ghosts. But is a ghost any more extraordinary than a disembodied something connected to the twins?
My mind is going round in circles. I blame Zoe. If Zoe and I were on speaking terms I wouldn’t be having to share all this with Gran.
“What do you mean, then?” Gran asks.
“I was just thinking . . . last night—I couldn’t sleep, you couldn’t sleep, and Clem—he wasn’t well. Maybe we somehow . . . sensed that?”
“Nice idea,” says Gran. “But a bit far-fetched. It’s just worry, I’m afraid. Keeps people awake all the time.” She gets up to reboil the kettle. “And knowing too much. Sometimes the less you know, the better.”
I say nothing. I don’t like the dig at Si. He told you the babies could die, didn’t he? Sometimes the less you know the better. I’m allowed to have a dig at him, but she isn’t. Why is that?
“You’ve always been a sensitive child, Jessica,” Gran continues. “Sometimes that’s a good thing.” She pauses. “And sometimes it’s a curse.”
“A curse?”
“You imagine things that simply aren’t there.”
“Last night,” I say, suddenly angry, “there was a howl, a terrible, terrible sobbing howl. Didn’t you hear it?”
“Jess, love, it was a difficult night. You were tossing and turning. I know—I peeked in on you. I think you must have been dreaming.”
Dreaming?
I never actually saw the flask go black, did I? I never saw it pulse. When I did look at it, when light finally spilled into the room, it was just glassy, colorless, ordinary.
Though it had been blue. Fizz-heart, sky-happy blue. I definitely saw that.
And I saw
the cork on the floor
and
the light that didn’t travel in straight lines
and
the opalescence
and
the breathing and the flying
and
the little seed fish swimming
and . . .
“And that’s before we get to your overactive imagination,” Gran says. “Don’t forget—you are the girl who invented Spike.”
21
We don’t go to the hospital. Mom says the twins have to have tests.
“Plenty o
f cleaning to do at my house,” says Gran.
She means Aunt Edie’s house.
“That’ll take our minds off things.”
Her mind, maybe.
In the car on the way over, I don’t answer my phone when it rings. Gran doesn’t like me answering the phone when we’re in the middle of a conversation (though, as it happens, we’re not in the middle of a conversation) because she says it’s rude. But that’s not the reason I don’t take my calls. I don’t take them because they are all from Zoe. By the time we arrive I have four missed calls and a text: sry. SRY cll me. xx.
Besides, I need to think about Spike. Spike is small and blond and he never brushes his hair, so it’s always wild and knotted. He comes with me everywhere, or at least he used to. He arrived when I grew out of ScatCat, sometimes smiling and full of jokes, sometimes irritating and demanding. He’d hide when I wanted to speak to him or shout right at the moment I tried to ride my bike without training wheels. He’d knock my juice over. But at night he was always calm, and came to bed with me, lay his head on the pillow beside mine. Only he never slept. He spent the whole night watching over me.
I’m here, Jess, right here.
Wacu. To be awake.
I’ll never leave you.
To watch over.
I love you, Jess.
As Gran pulls up in her driveway, I realize I haven’t been in her house since the day of the funeral. And I haven’t been in the house next door—Aunt Edie’s house—since Aunt Edie was there to open the door to me.
On Gran’s porch is a blue-and-white china umbrella stand that used to be on Aunt Edie’s porch. It makes my stomach lurch.
I love you, Jess.
“You’ll never guess what I found,” says Gran, leading me straight past the umbrella stand that is in the wrong place and into the dining room. “Look.”
On the dining room table is a stack of Aunt Edie’s photo albums, the sort that have real old-fashioned photos in them, ones on glossy paper, not the flimsy pixelated ones you print off the computer.
She points at a picture of me at about four, pushing an empty swing. Beneath the photo, there is a scrap of paper on which is written, in Aunt Edie’s loopy handwriting, Jess and Spike.