by Gina Linko
“But you can’t hug us,” Mia-Joy said, plopping down in the chair across from us.
“This is part of it,” Rennick said, sinking into the chair next to me, our victory celebration amazingly short-lived. “But you think there’s another part.”
I nodded. My body ached, exhausted. And suddenly, I couldn’t think anymore. It’s like the pathways in my brain were worn and short-circuited, all used up. “I’m just so tired,” I said.
“You need to get some rest,” Rennick said. “Sleep.”
He and Mia-Joy started to pack everything up. But before he left, he said, “Promise me, no more today.”
“Okay.”
“I mean it, Corrine. If you ever, ever trusted me, like I knew anything, you promise me that.”
I knew for whatever reason this meant something to him. “I promise,” I said. He watched me carefully for a long moment and then finished putting away the fish, the crawdads.
My nerve endings felt frayed and raw, my head fuzzy and heavy.
“Corrine, we should be celebrating. You gotta give this thing up,” Mia-Joy said. I nodded.
But Rennick interrupted. “You’re doing great.” And I managed to stick out my tongue at Mia-Joy, who only stuck hers back at me.
Part of me wanted to yell after Rennick, Stay with me! Don’t leave me here without … what? You.
Then they were gone, along with my newly alive menagerie. For a second, I kind of wished that they had left the evidence. I wanted it near me, so I would know it was real. I had healed.
Mom came in the door just as I was trudging up the stairs, my legs heavy with exhaustion. “Corrine! I just ran into Rennick and Mia-Joy outside!” she yelped. “You did it!”
She ran to me and hugged me. I bristled, but she didn’t relinquish her hold on me. And after a few seconds, I kind of collapsed into her. I don’t really remember getting to my room. But Mom must have gotten me there, where I fell onto my bed.
* * *
I woke up much, much later, from a deep and dreamless sleep. My room was pitch-dark, with only a slight sliver of a moon visible out my window. But there it was again, the plink-plunk of the pebbles.
I lay there for a long time, listening to his persistence.
Then I got up and snuck outside.
He was different at night, alone in the dark. I felt different too.
We seemed like truer versions of ourselves here. In the dark. It was easier to put away all the pretenses without the sunlight glaring off our intimate truths.
“You came,” he said, standing up from Sophie’s bench. I took a step toward him, shoved my hands into the pockets of my robe. I could barely make out the features of his face, but I knew he was smiling. It was in his voice.
“Hi,” I said like a moron.
“Hi, you,” he said. We stood there for a long moment. He took a step toward me, and then another. I tipped my face up to him. We were close, so close, and I didn’t back away.
“What is it?” I said, breathless.
“I have to tell you what I know. I have to tell you about Dell. How he died. What I think happened, Corrine.”
“He died?” I asked, taking a seat on the garden bench. He paced a little bit.
“The whole thing is a little foggy, like memories can be when you’re little, you know. I was only eight. Cale was twelve or thirteen.”
“Your brother?”
He nodded. “Dell was his friend. They hung out all the time, started getting into trouble. Anyway, I’m not making sense.” He stopped. Ran his hand through his hair. “There’s a lot to the story. But the gist is that looking back, I think Dell had the touch.”
“His aura was like mine?”
“In a way,” Rennick said. “I think maybe when I was about eight, he saved me.”
“You’re kidding.”
Rennick shook his head. “We were fishing, Dell, Cale, and me. I went out too far at the end of the wharf. Fell in. Couldn’t swim back then. I had a huge fear of the water. Used to have all these drowning nightmares. Anyway, we were fishing on Algiers Point, and the current swept me along down the shore. By the time Cale got me out, I mean, I don’t know. I can’t remember it. Not well. But I think I was gone. I was outside myself. Hovering. I think I was dead.”
“Jesus, Rennick.”
“I watched him save me. He put both his hands on my chest, and something racked through his body. And then it was like I got sucked back into myself. Came back, sputtering water.”
“Why didn’t you tell me this?”
But Rennick ignored me now. He was remembering. “Dell was a normal kid. He was always around. He and Cale still hung around a little in high school. Dell knew what he was by then, I bet. There was a car crash, some kid trying to outrun a train out in the Marigny one night. Two kids got killed. But Dell was at the party where they were headed. Anyway, I’m not sure, but I’ve heard kids tell it, and I think … I think he saved the girl. April, her name was. And he died.”
“How did he die?”
“I think he used himself up.”
I processed this. “That’s why you were scared today.”
“I’m still scared. That you could give away your spark. Use it up. Whatever it is.” And I thought about those frog legs. Electricity made them move, mimicked life. But what was it that Dell—or I—could also give them? Life?
When you put it that way, the enormity of it squashed me. The pressure that would come with it. The sheer vastness of responsibility. This thing was ginormous. Why me?
Rennick sat down next to me, our legs touching, and I looked into his eyes. There was fear there. What else?
“Rennick …”
I watched him searching me with his eyes. I recognized something in him. Something I knew too well, from the mirror. He was telling me about Dell. But … Things fit into place then, and I got it. I understood. I realized what was at the heart of all this for Rennick.
Guilt. Overwhelming and inescapable.
Cale’s anger. Blame.
“Oh my God, Rennick.” I swallowed hard. “She died saving you. You were stillborn. And your mother used herself up to save you?” He hung his head. “This is why you’re scared. Oh, Rennick, I’m so sorry.” I reached for him but then caught myself.
Rennick stood up, turned away. Then he gave a nearly imperceptible, defeated nod. “Corrine, I—”
“Rennick, you are not responsible for what happened to your mother. Oh, Ren.” I stood and moved toward him. I wanted so much to comfort him, to hold him in my arms. But I couldn’t. Yet.
“She painted porcelain.”
“Your mother?”
“She painted porcelain dishes, teacups, plates. She was an artist.” I didn’t know what to say to this, so I just let him talk. “She had blond hair like Cale. Dad says she was the worst cook this side of the Mississippi.” He laughed.
“I’m so sorry.”
“It’s not your fault.”
“Or yours,” I said. He turned back to me, nodded.
“I know that. Usually. Sometimes.”
I understood this.
He closed the distance between us. I tipped my face up to his. In the moonlight, his eyes shone, glittered. “I want to kiss you,” he whispered, leaning in toward me, his lips an inch from my ear. “I know you aren’t ready. But I just wanted you to know.” His voice was music, the notes playing down the skin of my neck. I closed my eyes and leaned in, let his breath play over me.
“A lot has changed,” I said finally, opening my eyes. “The bugs, the crayfish. I—”
“Between us,” he said, and he was looking at me so intently. My eyes had adjusted, and I could see that worry line in his brow. I could see the want in his eyes. “I can keep from touching you,” he said. “And I will. Still,” he said, swallowing, “I just needed you to know that I don’t want to stop myself.” I watched the silhouette of his Adam’s apple in the moonlight, transfixed. “You can’t hurt me, Corrine.” He tipped my head back up to him, and
I let him, met his eyes. “You didn’t kill Sophie.” I looked away, took a step back. “Don’t do that,” he said. “Don’t leave.”
“I was there,” I answered. “I know what happened.”
“But you tried to help Seth. You must believe it on some level.”
I nodded. “It’s …” I couldn’t really explain it. “It’s hard to give it up.”
He leaned closer again, and I let him. Again. His breath was on my neck, and then his hand was on the small of my back. He pulled me to him, and I let him. I melted into him, my body against his.
The warmth, the comfort of being held. My throat closed against the emotion of it.
“Corrine,” he breathed into my hair. “Corrine, please don’t push me away.”
“Rennick,” I began to protest, but I inhaled against his T-shirt, and then I just sighed, let myself relax into him. I let him hold me, his chin resting on top of my head, my hands still balled in my pockets. I listened to the rhythm of his heartbeat. Da dum. Da dum. And I thought it would be perfectly okay if I never moved again.
“Corrine,” he whispered, his words shivering down my neck, his hands tracing the knobs of my spine. “Corrine, touch me.” His voice was low, soothing. “Believe this is okay.”
“I can’t,” I said, and after a long moment I pulled away. He was right. I was on the precipice. I was. But I wasn’t ready.
“Why?” he asked. And he looked hurt. “You saw what you did today. You know—”
“I’m scared,” I said. And this was the simplest way I could explain it. His eyes were not mad, not angry. But there were other things there. Longing. Frustration. Worry.
I turned and ran back up the porch. Things had changed but not changed. Things were better but not better.
In my room, in the dark hours of the morning, I needed to move forward somehow. I pulled my violin from the dusty hiding spot under my bed. Mia-Joy was right. She had to be. It was tied to my emotions. And this was me, accepting this, coming to terms with what I could do. This was the pendulum of my belief swinging, slowly now, nearly still. Nearly decided. But if I was going to accept it, I had to own it. And part of that was being able to summon it, bring it into being. Otherwise, what was the point?
My mind flashed to Professor Smith. She had faced Katrina and come out the other side of it to wear red high heels. I thought of Bryant. And Rennick. There were others out there with secrets and fears. Just like me. So instead of pushing it back under my bed, I took out my violin.
The scroll was plain yet elegant, so familiar in my hand. The weight, the proportion. I couldn’t wait to hear its voice.
I tightened the bow, the smell of rosin sweet with familiarity. I put the violin under my chin delicately, with deference. When I struck the first note, C-sharp, I was shocked at the clarity and the fullness of it. It had been too long. I closed my eyes and played like I had never stopped. Like I had always meant to.
I played Mozart’s Requiem. But I didn’t play the notes. I didn’t think of the notes. I played the feelings.
I began slowly, softly. Pianissimo. The beginning of this piece was thoughtful, uncertain. I brought my bow down gently, long, full strokes.
And then the piece picked up. Forte. No longer did it feel like a question was being posed. No longer was the piece unsure of itself. It became forceful. Certain. Challenging. Scary. Crescendo.
My bow worked hard, quickly, my fingers finding the correct positions on the strings. I was not thinking now. I was beyond thinking. Above it. I played in a fugue. This piece was coming from somewhere else. Deeper inside me.
And then it began to burn, the churning, within the heart of me. I had brought it to life. I had summoned it. I just had to know how to get myself to that plane, to that thin place, where the veil between what’s real and what seems impossible is so very thin.
The violin had showed me the way.
When I had finished and opened my eyes, tasting sweat on my upper lip, I saw her. Sweet and little and solid and here. My Sophie standing in my room.
Her goggles were pushed up on her head, her curls spiraling out of control. She watched me for a long beat, and then she opened her mouth, let out that lonely whistle through the gap in her front teeth.
“Sophie?” I said, blinking, feeling my insides twist and loosen. I didn’t know what to do.
She took one step toward me and said, “It was just a storm.” And her little face was so grave.
I set my violin on my bed, still watching her, and she smiled. Tears began to cloud my vision, so I wiped them quickly on the sleeve of my T-shirt, but when I opened my eyes she was gone. I blinked, rubbed my eyes. Nothing.
I looked under my bed like a moron. I looked in my closet, behind my door, in the hallway. She wasn’t anywhere. Had she been?
The Chicago version of myself tried to blame exhaustion. But the New Orleans part of me knew better.
I looked everywhere again, all through the upstairs. But she wasn’t there. I curled up on my bed and hugged myself. It made me miss her more than ever, to see her. Her ghost? My projected, exhausted memory? But there was also something about this Sophie, something in her peaceful little smile. I couldn’t really put my finger on it, but it felt like a kind word right in your loneliest hour, or a helping hand when you needed it most.
I chose to take this literally. And I planned out what I would do in the morning. Because Seth Krane needed me. A thousand Seth Kranes were probably out there. And if I could save just some of their parents from experiencing what my parents had, well then, I guess I could accept this gift. The touch.
I stretched out on my bed and let my mind wander. To Sophie. That lonely little whistle. To Seth, the aged empathy in his young, beaten face.
And that’s when I thought of it. My heart knows him. Sophie. Of course she was the one who had said that. I had been so tired of that smelly kid Mitchy Rogers from down the street. He stuttered so badly I could hardly understand him. He had a perpetual Kool-Aid mustache. And in many ways, he and Sophie drove me nuts, with their potion making and magic shows. But, God, did he and Sophie have fun together. When I asked her why she liked that annoying Mitchy Rogers so much, that’s what she had said. “My heart knows him.”
Rennick. My heart knew him.
Mom left the next morning to register me for classes and buy my books for senior year. It took a little schmoozing, but she gave in. I told her I didn’t want to have to face the possible reporters, answer questions, stuff like that.
I was glad she was doing this errand for me, but what I really wanted was to be alone and have the house to myself.
I almost had qualms about it, because she probably wouldn’t technically approve of my plans, at least the part about me doing them alone. In fact, she’d probably freak. But I knew what I had to do to make peace with this situation, and I didn’t want anyone—Mom or Dad or even Rennick—to try to micromanage it. I had one more experiment, one more test that just had to be done. Logic or no logic.
I took out my old bike from the garden shed and circled around the back alley to avoid the lone news van that wouldn’t give up and leave my street. I rode over to Garden District Pets, which was way too close to Mom’s church for my liking, but it was the only pet store anywhere near me. So I just tried to keep a low profile and get the supplies I needed.
I bungee-tied the cooler to the back of my bike and pedaled home, feeling all sorts of scientific.
At home, I got myself set up in the kitchen. I took out the first fish, using Mom’s slotted spoon. This made me laugh a little bit. Was there room in the scientific method for slotted spoons? I knew I wasn’t trying to publish an article in Scientific American or get myself into MIT. I wasn’t being very scientific, but that was okay. Because this was for me. For my conscience.
The fish was a dingy white with orange spots.
I laid him on the dish towel, and I thought about things, terrible things—about Sophie dying in my arms, the vacant look in Mom’s eyes for so many week
s after, the sound of the handfuls of dirt being thrown onto Sophie’s casket. Sophie in the earth. Sophie gone. I thought of my guilt, the excruciating hollow core inside me when I thought of my dear little sister. I thought of all these horrible things, and my face crumpled, but I didn’t let myself cry. I watched that fish intently, and I held myself close, arms wrapped around myself, waiting. I watched that damn fish. But what I really saw was myself on those first few nights after Sophie’s death, nearly catatonic with what had occurred on the beach. I was back in the hospital, confused, grief-stricken, crazy with guilt. I waited until the fish’s mouth quit trying, just until then.
I tried to channel the awfulness in me, the despair. I thought of all the inexplicable, horrible, life-altering moments that we have to bear. All the things that human hearts have to carry, and we just wonder, why? Why? Why can’t love be enough?
My senses heightened. The drip-drop of the kitchen faucet, the striations in the fish’s scales, the feel of the wood grain underneath my hands as I gripped the table’s edge. All of it crystal clear. I decided it was time to summon it, but the heat was already there. Blossoming. An inferno inside me. Stronger than ever before. I closed my eyes, focused on my purpose, and when I opened them the kitchen was blue. I grabbed for the tiny little fish—not quite dead but almost, from what I could tell—and I held it in my palms, pressed it there, feeling the surge blow through my limbs. And I thought: Kill him. Take his life.
“Prove it!” I yelled.
He wiggled. I opened my palms, and there he was, that mouth moving again, fins flailing anew. Like he was back, had gotten a breath. Back to life.
I dropped him back into the saucepan full of water. Grabbed another with the slotted spoon. Completely alive this time. I focused my energy. “Take the life out of it,” I said to the empty walls of my kitchen.
Nothing happened. I waited. The churning was there, the flowing, pulsating power of the touch was in me, through me, around me.
“Die, you stupid shit!” I screamed.
I threw him back into the water, disappointed. So disappointed. I had finally gotten the nerve to try this, to prove it to myself. And nothing! I tried again and again, more fish. And nothing. I could not kill.