by L. J. Smith
“Did they find a kid?” Gillian interrupted.
“Huh? No, I don’t think so. Nobody was talking about anything like that last night. And I haven’t heard about any kid being missing, either.”
(Told you, dragonfly. Are you satisfied now?)
(Yes, I am. Sorry.)
“But it was still brave,” Amy said. “Your mom thinks so, too.”
“My mom’s up?”
“She went to the store. She said she’d be back in a few minutes.” Amy stepped back and looked at Gillian, scissors held in the air. “You know, I’m not sure I should be doing this….”
Before Gillian could summon up a reply, she heard the sound of the front door opening and the rustling of paper bags. Then her mother appeared, her cheeks red with cold. She had two grocery bags in her arms.
“Hi, girls,” she began, and broke off. She focused on Gillian’s hair. Her mouth fell open.
“Don’t drop the bags,” Gillian said. She tried to sound careless, but her stomach was clenched like a fist. Her neck felt stiff and unnatural as she held very still. “Do you like it?”
“I—I—” Gillian’s mother put the bags on the counter. “Amy… did you have to cut it all?”
“Amy didn’t do it. I did it last night. I just got tired of it long—” (And getting all wet and icy) “—and getting all wet and icy. So I cut it. So do you like it, or not?”
“I don’t know,” her mother said slowly. “You look so much older. Like a Parisian model.”
Gillian glowed.
“Well.” Her mother shook her head slightly. “Now that it’s done—here, let me shape it a little. Just touch up the ends.” She took the scissors from Amy.
(I’m going to be bald when this is finished!)
(No, you’re not, kid. She knows what she’s doing.)
And, strangely, there was something comforting about feeling her mother gently wield the scissors. About her mother’s scent, which was fresh like lavender soap, without any hint of the terrible alcohol smell. It reminded Gillian of the old days, when her mom taught at the junior college and was up every morning and never had uncombed hair or bloodshot eyes. Before the fights started, before her mom had to go to the hospital.
Her mother seemed to feel it, too. She gave Gillian’s shoulder a pat as she whisked a bit of cut hair away. “I got fresh bread. I’ll make cinnamon toast and hot chocolate.” Another pat, and then she spoke with careful calm. “Are you sure you’re all right? You must have been… pretty cold last night. We can call Dr. Kaczmarek if you want; it wouldn’t take a minute.”
“No, I’m fine. Really. But where’s Daddy? Did he already go to work?”
There was a pause, then her mother said, still calmly, “Your father left last night.”
“Dad left?” (Dad left?)
(It happened last night while you were asleep.)
(A lot seems to have happened last night while I was asleep.)
(The world’s kind of that way, dragonfly. It keeps on going even when you’re not paying attention.)
“Anyway, we’ll talk about it later,” her mother said. A final pat. “There, that’s perfect. You’re beautiful, even if you don’t look like my little girl anymore. You’d better bundle up, though; it’s pretty cold out this morning.”
“I’m already dressed.” The moment had come, and Gillian didn’t really care if she shocked her mother now or not. Her father had left again—and if that wasn’t unusual, it was still upsetting. The closeness with her mother had been spoiled, and she didn’t want cinnamon toast anymore.
Gillian stepped to the middle of the kitchen and shrugged off the pink bathrobe.
She was wearing black hipsters and a black camisole. Over it was a sheer black shirt, worn loose. She had on flat black boots and a black watch, and that was all she had on.
“Gillian.”
Amy and her mother were staring.
Gillian stood defiantly.
“But you never wear black,” her mother said weakly.
Gillian knew. It had taken a long time to cull these things from the forgotten hinterlands of her closet. The camisole was from Great-Grandma Elspeth, two Christmases ago, and had still had the price tag attached.
“Didn’t you sort of forget to put on a sweater on top?” Amy suggested.
(Stand your ground, kid. You look terrific.)
“No, I didn’t forget. I’m going to wear a coat outside, of course. How do I look?”
Amy swallowed. “Well—great. Extremely hot. But kind of scary.”
Gillian’s mother lifted her hands and dropped them. “I don’t really know you anymore.”
(Hooray!)
(Yup, kid. Perfect.)
Gillian was happy enough to give her mother a flying kiss. “Come on, Amy! We’d better get moving if we’re going to pick up Eugene.” She dragged the other girl behind her like the tail of a comet. Her mother followed, calling worriedly about breakfast.
“Give us something to take with us. Where’s that old black coat I never wore? The fancy one you got me for church. Never mind, I found it.”
In three minutes she and Amy were on the porch.
“Wait,” Gillian said. She fished through the black canvas bag she was carrying in place of a backpack and came up with a small compact and a tube of lipstick. “I almost forgot.”
She put on the lipstick. It was red, not orange-red or bluered, but red red, the color of holly berries or Christmas ribbon. That shiny, too. It made her lips look fuller, somehow, almost pouty. Gillian pursed her lips, considered her image, then kissed the compact mirror lightly and snapped it shut.
Amy was staring again. “Gillian… what is going on? What’s happened to you?”
“Come on, we’re going to be late.”
“The outfit just makes you look like you’re going out to burgle something, but that lipstick makes you look… bad. Like a girl with a reputation.”
“Good.”
“Gillian! You’re scaring me. There’s something—” She caught Gillian’s arm and peered into her eyes. “Something about you—around you—oh, I don’t know what I’m talking about! But it’s different and it’s dark and it’s not good.”
She was so genuinely shaken that for a moment Gillian was frightened herself. A quick stab of fear like the flick of a knife in her stomach. Amy was neurotic, sure, but she wasn’t the type to hallucinate. What if—
(Angel—)
A horn honked.
Startled, Gillian turned. Right at the edge of the driveway, behind Amy’s Geo, was a somewhat battered but still proud tan Mustang. A dark head was sticking out the window.
“Standing me up?” David Blackburn called.
“What—is—that?” Amy breathed.
Gillian waved to David—after a sharp nudge from Angel. “I think it’s called a car,” she said to Amy. “I forgot. He said he’d drive me to school. So—I guess I should go with him. See you!”
It only made sense to go with David; after all, he had asked first. Besides, Amy’s driving was life threatening; she sped like a maniac and wove all over the road because she couldn’t see without her glasses.
It should have been satisfying. After all, yesterday Amy had stood her up for a guy—and a guy like Eugene Elfred. But right this moment Gillian was too scared to be smug.
This was it. David was going to see her new self. And it was all happening too fast.
(Angel, what if I faint? What if I throw up? That’s going to make a great first impression, isn’t it?)
(Keep breathing, kid. Breathe. Breathe. Not that fast. Now smile.)
Gillian couldn’t quite manage a smile as she opened the car door. Suddenly she felt exposed. What if David thought she was cheap or even freakish? Like a little girl dressed up in her mom’s clothes?
And her hair—all at once she remembered how David had touched it yesterday. What if he hated it?
Trying to breathe, she slipped into the car. Her coat came open as she sat down. She could hardly ma
ke herself look toward the driver’s seat.
But when she did, her breath stopped completely. David was wearing a look that she’d never seen on any guy’s face before, at least not directed toward her. She’d seen it, occasionally, when guys were looking at other girls, girls at school like Steffi Lockhart or J.Z. Oberlin. A stricken gaze, a compulsive movement of the throat, an expression that almost made you sorry for them. An “I’m lying down and I don’t care if you walk on me, babe,” expression.
David was looking at her that way.
Immediately all her fear, including the little stab induced by Amy, was swept away. Her heart was still pounding and little waves of adrenaline were still going through her, but now what it felt like was excitement. Heady, buoyant anticipation. As if she had started on the roller coaster ride of her life.
David actually had to shake himself before he remembered to put the car in gear. And then he kept sneaking glances at her out of the side of his eye.
“You did something to your… and your…” He made a vague motion near his own head. Gillian’s gaze was caught by his hand, which was strong, brown, long-fingered, and handsome.
“Yeah, I cut my hair,” she said. She meant to sound careless and sophisticated, but it came out shaky, with a little laugh at the end. She tried again. “I figured I didn’t want to look too young.”
“Ouch.” He made a face. “That’s my fault, isn’t it? You overheard that stuff yesterday. What Tanya and I said.”
(Tell him you’ve been thinking of doing it for a while.)
“Yeah, but I’ve been thinking of doing it for a while now,” Gillian said. “It’s no big deal.”
David glanced at her as if to say he disagreed with that. But it wasn’t a disapproving glance. It was more like electrified awe… and a sort of discovery that seemed to grow every time he looked at her.
“And I never saw you at school?” he muttered. “I must’ve been blind.”
“Sorry?”
“No, nothing. I’m sorry.” He drove in silence for a while. Gillian forced herself to stare out the window and realized they were on Hillcrest Road. Strange how different the landscape looked today. Yesterday it had been lonely and desolate; this morning it seemed harmless, and the snow looked soft and comfortable, like old cushions.
“Listen,” David said abruptly. He broke off and shook his head. And then he did something that absolutely amazed Gillian. He pulled the car to the side of the road—or at least as far to the side as he could get it—they were still in the flow of traffic—and parked it.
“There’s something I have to say.”
Gillian’s heart now seemed to be beating everywhere, in her throat and her fingertips and her ears. She had a dreamlike sensation that her body wasn’t solid anymore, that she was just a floating mass of heartbeat. Her vision shimmered. She was… waiting.
But what David said was unexpected. “Do you remember the first time we met?”
“I—yes.” Of course she did. Four years ago; she’d been twelve and tiny for her age. She’d been lying on the ground beside her house, making snow angels. Kind of childish, sure, but in those days a stretch of new snow had affected her that way. And while she was lying on her back, arms out, making the imprint of the angel’s wings, a tree branch above her decided to shrug off its load of snow. Suddenly her face was covered in damp, closely packed coldness and she couldn’t breathe. She came up spluttering and gasping.
And found herself steadied. Something was holding her, wiping her face gently. The first thing she saw when she got her vision back was a brown hand and a lean brown wrist. Then a face came into focus: high strong bones and dark, mischievous eyes.
“I’m David Blackburn. I just moved in over there,” the boy said. He was wiping her face with his fingers. “You’d better be careful, snow princess. Next time I might not be around.”
Looking up at him, Gillian had felt her heart explode and leak out of her chest.
And she’d walked away on air, even though he’d patted her head after releasing her. She was in love.
“Well, back then, I sort of got the wrong impression,” David was saying. “I thought you were a lot younger and more—well, more fragile than you are.” There was a pause, and then he said wonderingly, not quite looking at her, “But, it’s like, there’s so much more to you. I started realizing that yesterday.”
Gillian understood. David didn’t have a reputation for being wild for nothing. He liked girls who were bold, dashing, out there. If he were a knight, he wouldn’t fall in love with the pampered princess back at the castle. He’d fall in love with a female knight, or maybe a robber, somebody who could share the Adventure with him, who’d be just as tough as he was.
Of course he had a strong protective streak. That was why he rescued maidens in distress. But he didn’t go for the maidens who needed rescuing.
“And now,” David was saying. “Now, I mean, you’re…” He held his hands up in a whoa motion. He wasn’t looking at her at all.
In a moment of perfect bliss, Gillian thought, I’m cool.
“You’re kind of incredible,” David said. “And I feel really stupid for not noticing that before.”
Gillian couldn’t breathe. There was something between her and David—a kind of quivering electricity. The air was so thick with it that she felt pressure all over her. She had never been so awake before, but at the same time she felt as if most of the world was insubstantial. Only she and David were real.
And the voice in her head seemed very far away. (Uh, dragonfly, we’ve got company. Incoming.)
Gillian couldn’t move. A car drove by, swerving to avoid the Mustang. Gillian couldn’t see well through the Mustang’s steamed-up windows, but she thought faces were looking at her.
David didn’t seem to notice the car at all. He was still staring at the gearshift, and when he spoke his voice was very quiet. “So I guess what I’m saying is, I’m sorry if anything I said hurt your feelings. And—I see you now.”
He raised his head. And Gillian suddenly realized he was going to kiss her.
CHAPTER 7
Gillian felt triumph, wild excitement—and something deeper. An emotion she couldn’t describe because there weren’t any ordinary words for it. David was looking at her, and it was almost as if she could see through his dark eyes. As if she could see inside him… see the way things looked to him…
What she felt was a little like discovery and a little like déjà vu and a little like waking up and suddenly realizing it’s Christmas. Or like being a kid lost in a strange place, cold and bewildered, and then suddenly hearing your mother’s voice. But it really wasn’t like any of those things; it was more. Unexpected welcome… strange recognition… the shock of belonging…
She couldn’t quite put it all together, because there was nothing like it in her experience. She’d never heard of anything like this. But she had the feeling that when David kissed her, she’d figure it all out and it would be the revelation of her life.
It was going to happen—now. He was moving closer to her, not fast, but as if slowly compelled by something he couldn’t control. Gillian had to look down, but she didn’t move back or turn her face away. He was close enough now that she could hear his breath and feel him. Her eyes shut of their own accord.
She waited to feel the touch of warmth on her lips….
And then something in her mind stirred. A tiny whisper, so far back that she could barely hear it, and she couldn’t tell where it came from.
Tanya.
The shock went through Gillian like ice on bare skin. Part of her tried to ignore it, but she was already pulling away, putting a hand up, turning to stare at the window.
Not out the window. It was too steamed up now to see anything outside. They were in their own cocoon of whiteness.
Gillian said, “I can’t. I mean, not like this. I mean—it isn’t fair, because you already—and you haven’t… I mean… Tanya.”
“I know.” David sounded as if
he’d been hit with ice on bare skin, or as if he’d come up from deep water and was looking around dazedly. “I mean, you’re right. I don’t know what I was… It just—it was like I forgot… Look, I’m sure that sounds stupid. You don’t believe me.”
“I do believe you.” At least he sounded as incoherent as she did. He wouldn’t think she was a total fool; her facade wasn’t broken.
“I’m not that kind of guy. I mean, it looks like I am, right here, it looks exactly like I am. But I’m not. I mean I never—I’m not like Bruce Faber. I don’t do that. I made a promise to Tanya and…”
Oh, God, Gillian thought. And then a sort of inward scream: (Help!)
(I was wondering when you’d remember me.)
(He made her a promise!)
(I’m sure he did. They’ve been going together a while.)
(But that’s terrible!)
(No, it’s admirable. What a guy. Now say you’ve got to get to school.)
(I can’t. I can’t think. How are we going to—)
(School first.)
Dully, Gillian said, “I guess we’d better get moving.”
“Yeah.” There was a pause, and then David put the car in gear.
They drove in silence, and Gillian sank deeper and deeper into depression. She’d thought it would be so easy—just show David her new self and everything would fall into place. But it wasn’t like that. He couldn’t just dump Tanya.
(Don’t worry about it, kid. I have a cunning plan.)
(But what?)
(I’ll tell you when it’s time.)
(Angel—are you mad at me? Because I forgot about you?)
(Of course not. I’m here to arrange things so you can forget me.)
(Then—because I forgot about Tanya for a while? I don’t want to do anything that’s wrong….)
(I’m not mad! Heads up. You’re there.)
Gillian couldn’t push away the feeling that he was mad, though. Or at least surprised. As if something unexpected had happened.
But she didn’t have time to dwell on it. She had to get out of David’s car and gather herself and face the high school.