Today, the old lady is going to talk. I just know it. I woke up knowing it. It could be desperation on my part, given how Scottie, my tabby cat, is as weak as I’ve seen her. But I don’t think so. I think Mrs. Anna Bayless really is going to give me enough information to find…whatever it is she has been trying to tell me I have to find, if I want to save Scottie.
I’m nervous as I reach for the buzzer at the main door. I shouldn’t be. After all, I’ve spent a lot of my life in old folks homes. The internationally recognized Sun Heritage Village community was probably my first babysitter. Exactly when it was that I started babysitting the old folks, instead of the other way around, is hard to say. It was a gradual thing that nobody really noticed.
I wait to announce myself. Not that they don’t know me, but the rules are the rules. It doesn’t matter who you are. Even Dad has to ring the buzzer and remind whoever is behind the desk that he’s the guy who own the place. He doesn’t have to mention that on last count he owned forty-five such places across the US, with another few in Mexico and Europe. Everyone who works here learns that on training day.
I look up into the security camera, feeling the red dot blink at me like a warning, or accusation even. Nobody knows what I’m up to today. No one could know. But you get paranoid when you are about to bend some pretty important rules.
What’s taking them so long?
I know they are just sitting there, watching me. I could stare back, and often do. Not today. I’ll just bore an imaginary hole into them, keeping my darting eyes to myself.
There are always two at the desk. It doesn’t matter which two, given the same type of women always apply for the job: Middle aged, slow and a bit lazy. The desk is a relatively easy job with decent pay and great benefits. Even so, turnover is high because, I mean, you have to admit the place is pretty depressing, especially over time.
Whoever is at the desk, I can just imagine the conversation going on as they watch me from their pseudo power-giving perch.
“It’s the big boss’ daughter again. Third time this week,” I imagine one saying.
“Yea,” the other will reply. “With money like they’ve got, why does she dress in torn black rags and an army jacket—in summer no less? And that hair! It looks like a packrat’s nest.”
“It’s some kind of style,” the first will attempt to explain. “It’s all the rage for teenagers. Hideous, but not cheap. They pay a lot to look that bad.”
“Crazy,” the other will say.
I can’t help it. I throw a big, fat, fake smile into the camera. Just let me in.
“Can I help you?” the speaker finally blasts, a little too loud. It makes me jump, then curse myself for letting my nerves show. I’ve got to keep it cool, like it’s a day no different than any other day.
“Julie Mayden. I’ve come to see Mrs. Bayless.”
I jump at the even louder buzz that lets me in. Unfortunately, I still have to go to the desk for a nametag and to have them record my volunteer hours. Some grant matches those hours with funding dollars, which creates more paperwork, which creates more rules, and on and on it goes. Stuff like that really makes you wonder why you want to grow up at all.
The unmistakable scent of a nursing home rushes at me the moment the sliding doors open. It’s a combination of bad cafeteria food, old people’s drool, pressed face powder and harsh cleaning supplies—because you just can’t have people getting sick and dying in here, now can you? I both hate the smell, for obvious reasons, and love it, because these places feel far more like home than any of the four gated mansions I’ve lived in during my short sixteen years.
I smile at the folks lining the hallway, out for their daily—sit. A few recognize me, but most don’t. This is the building for the worst off; those who can’t begin to care for themselves. I remind myself I could go to buildings where the people sitting in front of the checkers boards can actually play the game. But I’ve always been a bit of an extremist. Give me the hard cases, the lost causes.
Like Anna.
“This will be good for my community service hours,” I say to Jenny and Alice, the two women looking at me like I’ve come at an inconvenient time. Hardly—signing me in is one of the few things they will have to do before lunch gets underway. Then they will have the overwhelmingly strenuous task of getting on the loud speaker and announcing the menu to people who, quite frankly, even if they can understand, just don’t care.
“What did you do to have to complete community service?” Jenny asks, suddenly interested. Gossip is a rare commodity here, and highly prized. Even Alice lifts her eyes over her glasses to look directly into mine.
“Fifty hours a year are required to be in honor society,” I answer, deadpan, but smiling inside. I love to shock. That’s half of why I dress this way in the first place—just to put people off. I mean, I think I look great. But I’m well aware others don’t, and that suits me just fine. About the only person my attempts at shock value doesn’t work with is my father. He sees me as he has since I was probably three years old, when I came to live with him for the first time, as his beautiful fairy princess. “Just a little darker,” he jokes when I’m being really outrageous.
The two women’s faces deflate at my “honor society” remark. You can actually see the realization that I might be truly smart settle in on their faces. False smiles, dulled eyes. Not a morsel of decent gossip in that one, they seem to be saying as they say as they look at each other in disappointment.
Sorry ladies.
I am given my nametag, freshly spit out from the computer with a bad photo of me at about age twelve (when I still dressed according to what some would deem normal) and sent on my way. They know I know my way around. If only they knew what I was going to do with that knowledge in just a few minutes. Talk about an opportunity for gossip.
I keep my head down as I make my way through the halls. I know too many people, and today is not a day for polite chit-chat. Everything has been planned to a tight schedule. Not that I really know what I’m doing, I remind myself. It’s probably just one big crap shot, if I’m honest about it. Anyone else would say I’m delusional, or even more likely, just wishing on a lucky star.
I lift my head only when I’ve arrived at Room 214. I don’t care if it is a crap shoot. You do what you can, with what you have. Right? And if all I have is a hunched over old lady forever confined to a wheelchair to help me, then that’s what I’ll work with.
I knock on Miss Bayless’ fake wood door, but don’t wait for a reply. It’d be a long wait. She babbles mostly, at least until she knows it’s me. Even then, it takes a while for real words to form. The woods that line the property help, which is why we are going out today, just as soon as I can get her ready.
Yes, I say to myself, gathering my courage. I’m actually going to do it. I’m going to wheel her off the paved path that goes through that patch of trees and hope we don’t get stuck as we follow the trail deeper into the swampy forest. We’ll go as far as we can, and then I’ll hoist her from the chair to the earth and put the strange native-looking leather bag I found hidden in her suitcase around her neck. I’ll conveniently keep her out to near the very end of her eight-hour medicine cycle, and then see what happens.
Yea, it’s risky, and maybe wrong. But I have to. Scottie is my life.
I’m stuck.
Not where I should be, out in the woods with Anna. But right here on the second floor, hallway B, of the Sun Heritage Village’s Pine Crest building. Dr. Garcia, who happens to be making a house call, stopped me on my way out the door. Since she also happens to have been a nurse here years ago, which is how her daughter came to be one of my two best friends, I kind of have to talk to her.
My hands are in a sweaty grip around Anna’s wheelchair handles. There’s a sick feeling in my stomach, and an urge to turn around. Dr. Garcia could be a witness, now. I get a flash image of Anna’s normally absent family yanking me into a courtroom for doing something terrible to their feeble old grandmother, with Dr. Garcia reluctantly standing up to testify against me.
Let it go. Just let it go.
“I’m so glad you still come to help here, Julie,” Dr Garcia says.
I nod and check out the wall clock. 11:32. I don’t want to talk to her now, but I can’t show it. She’s the type to guess something is up and even more the type to actually mention it to my dad. Anna shifts in her chair, as if she knows what’s going on, and is as impatient as I am.
“I sure wish Maria would volunteer here. I don’t know what keeps her so busy.”
Dr. Garcia is fishing for information, but I’m not going to be the one to tell her what Maria is busy with. Even I hardly ever see her, now that she’s got a boyfriend.
“I haven’t seen Rod in ages, either,” she says, still fishing.
Rod is the third in our trio. Or, what used to be our trio, when all our parents worked here. Rod’s dad is still the head administrator, but Rod’s hardly going to come to work with his dad on school vacation days. At seventeen, with a new car, nobody sees Rod much. I’m happy to get a text once or twice a week, and only then because he needs something.
“Me neither,” I say, then quickly add, “Well, I should get Mrs. Bayless to Bingo. It starts in just a few minutes.”
Actually, there isn’t Bingo today. Even if there were, it would not start just before lunch. But Dr. Garcia wouldn’t think about that, and she’s busy enough to appreciate the excuse to get on with her work. As she nods and walks by with the standard “it’s so good to see you” line, I try to keep my deep sigh of relief to myself.
I check my watch. 11:35. I have only a few more minutes to get out the door and beyond the part of the path you can see from the building, if this is going to work. I need enough time for anyone looking to take Anna to the main lunchroom to see my backpack on her bed, and assume I’ve already got her. This alone took weeks to arrange, given I had to set the stage for confusion at lunchtime repeatedly before they finally got past the panic of a missing patient. Now they all just assume that if Anna is missing, it’s because I have her and we were probably in the guest cafeteria, or maybe all the way down the block talking to some of the more coherent old folks at the Oak Ridge condo grill. If they catch me with her too close to time, though, they’ll ask me where I’ll be taking her today, and we’ll be done for.
You’d never guess a hallway could be so long. Or a sidewalk. Or even a well-manicured strolling path that takes you through a few small patches of woods.
“Don’t worry Anna,” I say aloud, though she probably has no idea what I’m saying, “we’re getting there.”
The clouds overhead, which were perfectly puffy and cheerful when I walked in the door today, are starting to loom thick. The sky is getting darker by the minute. I hope it’s not a sign. Not that I’m sure I believe in signs. But if signs are real, this would not be a good one.
I ask myself for the thousandth time why I’m doing this at all. I quickly feel for the piece of paper and pen I brought in the hope I’ll need to write down some truly useful information.
“Anna,” I say, “I want you to listen to me. I have written down what you’ve said to me so far, and it is starting to make sense. So I’m going to remind you, while we walk. And I’m going to talk to you like you know what I’m saying. Like anyone else, because I have a feeling you might be able to know, even if you can’t speak that well. Okay?”
Anna grunts, but it could be a total coincidence.
“So you said ‘Sister help Scottie’ about a hundred times one day. And when I asked if you meant Scottie, my cat, you said ‘Sister magic heals.’ The next week you kept saying ‘Forest not the governments’ and then ‘Clemmons’ Pier.’ Then you got on to saying ‘Potter Street and Poplar Leaf Drive’ again and again. So I checked on google earth. There is an old Clemmons’ Pier not too far from my house. It’s at the edge of a small forest. And on the other side, at the far opposite corner, is where Potter Street curves around into Poplar Leaf Drive.”
Again Anna grunts.
“But Anna, there’s nearly two hundred acres between the pier and Potter Street. I drove by the other day, and it actually is marked as government land. All kinds of no trespassing signs on it. You can’t even get to the pier without walking a few miles through the woods or crossing hip deep in water.”
Anna huffs, then coughs.
“So I really don’t know what you’re trying to tell me. Does your sister live near there? Are you saying she could help my cat? Because Scottie is really sick now. We’ve been to the vets a lot of times, but they don’t find anything. She’s only eight years old, so you know it’s not old age.”
I guess I’m just talking to myself. Besides, we are here. I look around, though hardly anyone from the Village comes out this way. Some joggers, sometimes, but that’s about it. No one in sight right now. I look to the soft, mushy ground. We could get seriously stuck, especially if it rains. But for now, it’s holding. And Scottie is not.
We’re only three feet in before the tires squish heavy into the mud. I tighten Anna’s belt and push on. I want to get her where she can, if nothing else, forget where she lives for a little while. She loves the woods, and has spoken more clearly out here than any day in the Village. Especially if she’s wearing that strange leather necklace bag I found hidden in her suitcase. The one with the bear on it, and lots of dangling beads.
I also hope it helps that her meds are running out. We have till 1 PM, when the after-lunch rounds are given. Being at the tail end of the cycle could be very helpful, especially because I googled the prescription names, and the stuff they have her on could knock out a horse. It might not help, but it couldn’t hurt.
The wheels get stuck again. Anna’s no lightweight. I swear, she must have been nearly six feet tall when standing. She’s not fat, but even hunched over those extra inches add pounds.
“Ethel Mai,” Anna suddenly says softly.
“What?” I stop to ask. I go around front and kneel down to see her face. Her normally glassy eyes seem clearer than usual.
“Lilian Luta, Martha Jane, Mary Kelly, Suzanne Mary, Sarah Ashlee…”
“Who are they? Anna, can you hear me?”
“Margaret, Rachel, sixteen hundred and ninety.”
“What are you trying to say, Anna?” I plead. Her voice is strange, and an even stranger chill goes up my spine.
“My medicine bag,” she says, lifting her eyes to my own. “I need my medicine bag.”
“A full sentence!” Chills run over me now, all around and up and down. She’s talking in full sentences!
“You have my bag,” she says, and I realize what she means. Her leather bag. “Yes, yes Anna, I have it. I hope you don’t mind me calling you Anna.”
“You always do,” she replies.
“Woa! You answered me.” I quickly find her leather bag and put it around her neck. I put it on her, and she sits straighter than I’ve ever seen her. It makes me all the more curious what’s inside the bag. I’ve never looked, because it felt sort of strange, and like it’s not the kind of thing you open without permission.
“Further in,” she says, and even lifts her hand and a long, bony finger to point us forward. She has never, ever, ever, lifted her hand and pointed toward something.
“Whatever you want, Anna,” I say, and go back to pushing. It’s not so hard now. In fact, I feel like I could lift a car if I had to.
“Ethel Mai, eighteen hundred and ninety five,” she says.
“What’s that?” I ask.
“Quiet,” she says. “Lillian Luta, eighteen hundred and seventy six. Sarah June, eighteen hundred and fifty seven. Martha Jane, eighteen hundred and thirty eight. Mary Kelly, eighteen hundred and two. Suzanne Mary, seventeen hundred and seventy seven. Sarah Ashley, seventeen hundred and fifty two. Margaret Cole, seventeen hundred and twelve. Rachel, sixteen hundred and ninety.
Somewhere along her list of names and numbers, I realize what she’s doing. She listing people, and dates. Lillian Luta, 1876. Sarah June, 1857. She’s going backwards in time. Now we are at Rachel, 1690. She’s asked me to be quiet, so I just listen. But who are these women?
Her family, I suddenly realize. Though I don’t know how I could know that. I get more chills, the creepy kind.
“Yes,” Anna says.
“Yes what?” I dare ask.
“Yes, you understand. These are my ancestors. The women who begat me, and those who begat them. My mother, Ethel Mai, born in eighteen hundred and ninety five. My grandmother, Lillian Luta, born eighteen hundred and seventy six. Repeating their names aloud gives me strength.”
“Okay, this is freaky, Anna. I don’t mean about your ancestors names. I mean because I didn’t say that I thought they were your ancestors names.”
“But you knew.”
“Well, I figured it out, but I didn’t say that.”
“When understanding is present, it can be felt. I felt that you understood.”
Now I am completely freaked.
“This is good,” she insists. “Stop here and put me down on the earth.”
“So I suppose you knew I was going to do that, too?” I ask. Truth is, while it is freaky, it’s also kind of exciting.
“You said so, last Monday.”
“Wait! You can…you can hear me, I mean understand me, and know what day it is, even back there at the Village?”
“Everything,” she says, almost sadly, “I understand everything.”
I set her brakes, put out a blanket, untie her belt, and use everything I’ve learned about lifting an invalid from a wheelchair into a bed. This, of course, is not a bed. There’s a significant difference. But the same general rules must apply.
It doesn’t go well, and I nearly let her fall the last foot of the way. Maybe she understands everything, as she says, but she’s had no practice in actually using her limbs, and they are not magically strong. She doesn’t complain; so I stretch out her stiff legs (now I’m thinking it is good the ground is not too hard) and put my jacket under hear head to use as a pillow.
She looks to the ground at her left, and then her right, and starts to cry big, round, sudden tears.
“What?” I ask. “What’s wrong?”
She laughs. “Wrong? What could possibly be wrong?”
“But you’re crying.”
“I’ve missed the earth more than anything,” she says. “And seeing things up close. They took my glasses when I arrived, so the only things I can see are those that are right in front of me. There’s so much beauty I’ve missed. The moss and the leaves, and the soil! Everything is so vivid, so luminous, I think I might die of joy.”
“You can’t die of anything out here, Anna,” I insist. “You’re on my watch.”
“Yes, yes, we have to remember that, don’t we? Critical to the plan.”
“The plan?” I ask, hoping desperately that it has something to do with Scottie.
“Sit down with me,” she insists, reaching to pull me by the hand. “Come close so that I can see your beautiful young face. I’ll tell you all about it.”
“You have a boyfriend,” Anna says, more a statement than a question, and as if she doesn’t really like the idea. Or maybe she’s just frowning at the small slug she’s got on her finger, pulled up close to her eyes so she can really see it.
Either way, I’m not thrilled to have her bring up the one topic I’ve been brooding about forever. No, I don’t have a boyfriend. In fact, I’ve never had a boyfriend. There, the cold hard truth. Not even a date at the mall. I realize this makes me a bit of a freak at age 16. But really, the vast majority of guys at school are idiots, and those that are decent like girls that are… well, not me. Not that I’m going to confess all this to an old lady.
“Not really,” I reply.
“But I’ve seen that brown boy around you,” she argues, her thin eyebrows squeezed as she squints at the slug and then peels him off of her finger.
“You mean Rod?” I ask. It would make sense, since he is part African-American and part Latino. But when would she have seen him with me?
“If that is his name,” she affirms, marveling as she brings up another handful of dirt and moss. “I don’t get names clearly. It’s amazing how much life is outdoors, isn’t it? Just lovely. Thank you, dear Mayden, for bringing me here.”
I could correct her about Mayden being my last name, not my first, but I want to stay on topic. “But Rod and I haven’t been together at the Village forever, I mean, a few years, at least. And you’ve only been here for 18 months.”
Anna smiles and turns her face to mine. “I didn’t mean I have seen him with you. I mean I have seen him around you.” She waves her hand in the air, like she means something more esoteric than literal.
“Oh,” I say, feeling another wave of creepy wash over me. It’s weird enough she’s talking. Now she wants me to believe she sees things around people?
“He’s a friend, not a boyfriend,” I correct
“I see,” she says, as if that changes things. In fact, she seems pretty happy about it. But why would she care? I mean, she’s pretty old. Eighty-eight years old, according to her chart. She could be prejudiced I guess. But that doesn’t seem right. Anyway, it doesn’t matter. Scottie does.
“You said there was a plan?” I urge.
“Oh yes, very much so. Your friend Rod will be needed.”
“For what?”
“My dear your cat is ill, very ill,” she says, like it’s news to me.
News or not, I feel a thud land in my gut. It’s one thing to know it, and another to hear it spoken. Especially by someone who claims to ‘see’ things. “But the other day, you said your sister could help.”
“Oh indeed, Bea can help. She will, so long as I’m the one sending you. She’s my twin, and we were very close. You know the location already.”
“The woods by the pier? But that’s government land, despite what you said, and…”
Anna laughs outright. “It is not government land! That’s our trick, to get people to stay away. Even government people stay away, thinking it is all taken care of by someone else. Bea’s brilliant plan from years ago. I was so delighted you found it with my cryptic instructions. What is google earth, anyway?”
“Never mind…I mean, I’ll tell you later, but about Scottie. Is she a vet, or something?”
“Not exactly. But if anyone can help, she can. Be assured of that. So here is our little plan. You’ll go to the pier. Cross from the water. I know you could go through the woods, but she’ll find you right away, and I don’t want your encounter to happen too close to public roads. The water isn’t deep.”
“I don’t care about getting wet. So I should take Scottie with me?”
“No,” she says, sounding alarmed, “not at first. That is why you’ll need your friend. At first, he will need to keep Scottie. You’ll have to win over my sister. Once she understands, she’ll make it safe to have Scottie come near.”
“Safe? Why wouldn’t it be safe?” Suddenly that thud in my stomach is in my throat.
“Things are not what they seem, Mayden.”
No kidding.
“Um, it’s Julie, actually. Mayden is my last name.”
“No,” she says. I wait for her to explain, but she doesn’t. Again her attention wanders to a handful of leaves she’s brought up close to her face.
In the back of my mind, I’m already wondering how I’m going to get Rod to help on short notice. I mean, he owes me, but that may mean more to me than to him.
So how will I find your sister? Will she know I’m coming?”
“She’ll smell you,” Anna says matter-of-factly, like that’s as normal as everything else happening out here.
“Okay, this is getting a little too strange, even for me, and I like strange things. I mean, I can live with ‘things are not what they seem,’ and all that. And I don’t have to know how you can suddenly talk out here in the woods. But this is my cat, my very best friend in the world, and I have to know…”
“I’ve always been able to talk,” she interrupts. “At least on the days I don’t take the medicine they hand out. I’m aware enough to become fully aware when I need to. Like today. And smart enough to know not to give myself away.”
Ah! She’s bouncing around so many topics my head is starting to hurt. “Why would you do that—pretend you’re out of it, when you’re not?”
Anna sighs. “There are things going on you can’t imagine, and wouldn’t want to. If I told you what you would encounter at the water’s edge with my sister, you wouldn’t go. Already you’re thinking you might not. But you’re also thinking you have to, because what other option is there, for your Scottie?”
“How do you know that?” I plead to know. I like to think of not quite so easy to read. But she seems to see right through me.
“I’ve lived a life of magic,” she says, wistful, “and my time is nearing an end. But the magic will live on—must live on—and so we must both prepare and protect those who will come after us. I chose you because you have the markings of one the magic is fond of. The things you see at night? The voices you hear? That is the magic trying to reach you. You’ll go to see my sister today because you love your Scottie, and maybe because of me. But mostly you’ll go for reasons you don’t know. Reasons none of us know for sure. Reasons the magic has in mind.”
I don’t understand, even though somehow, I do. Not only does my pulse race so fast I can feel it surging in my veins, my heart starts to hurt. Like she’s talking about something really, really sad, only I don’t know what it is.
“To be honest,” she continues, “I don’t know if my sister will teach you. Probably not, since you are not in the family. But I promise you’ll feel more at home on that bit of land than you have ever felt anywhere. That may seem hard to believe, because I can see that you have made many long journeys in your short life. You have traveled this world, crossed the ocean many times, and you have not felt at home anywhere. But you will find a home, if my sister will let you onto the property. And for that, I must send my signature with you.”
I hardly know what to think, but already I’m fumbling for my pen and paper.
“No, Mayden,” she says, starting to struggle to sit up, “not that kind.”
I help her, bracing her from behind.
“I’m stable,” she says. “Now, come around and give me your hands.”
I move to kneel in front of her and put my hands up close, where she can see them well.
“Shhh!’ she says suddenly.
My heart surges yet again, beating what seems a thousand times a minute, as I hear a jogger coming near. We are far enough not to be seen, but we could still be heard. It’s an interminable minute as the jogger comes and goes.
Finally, Anna takes my hands in hers. She cups them, like I’m going to hold something, and brings them close to her face again. Slowly, she takes a deep breath, then blows into my hands.
I brace myself as it gets hot, nearly burning. Finally, I have to jerk back. A red color glows from within my hand, like a hot coal that has gotten a blast of oxygen.
“It’s alright,” she says, pulling my hands back and cupping them again. This time, she blows three short breaths. Each time, the fire in my hands glows bright. It’s so hot, I’m tempted to pull away again. Any hotter, and I would have to. But I can take it.
When she is done, she puts her forehead into my hands and immediately they cool to normal.
“I’ve put my scent into you,” she says, her words sounding like some kind of proclamation.
“What does that mean?”
“It means my sister will catch wind of you long before you see her. Be steady when she approaches, for she is not to be spooked. She won’t trust you at first, but hold out your hands. You must be still, and you must be unafraid. Once she has confirmed it is actually I who have sent you, she will help you.”
“Okay,” I say. I mean, what else is there to say?
“Now, you’ll need to return me to my room before you get into trouble.”
Again I feel that heavy sadness sit on my chest.
“I am sure you can understand that there can be no mention of this,” she says as I get things set in the right direction. “I’ve trusted you with sacred information. The magic will keep us both safe so long as we keep silent. I’ve chosen you because it is in your nature to be silent. I only speak this now to be sure we understand each other.”
“I understand. I can’t tell Rod. That’s fine. But does it mean I can’t talk to you, I mean really talk, back at the Village?”
“Absolutely not. Lives are at stake if you break this facade.”
I want to ask a thousand questions, a million questions, but I’m not really sure I want to know too much. Like she said, I might not go, and I know I have to. I help her back into her chair, this time a bit more gracefully, and shove her wheels through the mud. It kills me to think she’ll go back in there, pretending to be some old invalid, without her glasses, or anyone to really talk to. It kills me even more to think how long she’s been living like that. I’d go insane.
It starts to sprinkle and thunder rolls in the distance. There will be hell to pay if she comes in wet. I push as fast as I can, wondering about the magic. I can live with this being all mysterious, and not understanding all the things she has said. Still, there’s one thing I really want to know. Maybe it’s selfish, but maybe I’ll never have the chance to ask again.
“Anna?” I say, just before we reach the main path.
“Yes?”
“With your magical abilities, um, do you ever see the future?”
She nods. “It happens.”
“You said you saw Rod around me, but he’s not my boyfriend. So…Do you think…? Do you see…?”
“Love?” she asks. “For you?”
“Yea, I mean, even a really strong ‘like’ would be awesome. I mean…someday.”
“Right around the corner,” she says, “if I have anything to do with it, which I intend to. Now, we must shush.”
People probably think I don’t think much, because I don’t talk much. But they would be wrong. So very, very wrong. I think about everything, from every angle, over and over again until it’s like I’ve eaten three meals at once and would practically want to barf my brains out—if I could only get myself to move. I feel like that now, waiting for Rod, watching the rain through the screened in breezeway that attaches the main house to the six-car garage, wondering if the water will be too high to get across to the land Anna says her sister lives on.
Anna. That’s the big mind jam. Ever since leaving her in what now feels like an abysmally lifeless nursing home room, with her playing out her hidden identity (dulled eyes, slumped back, and mumbling nonsense like a pro), I’ve been Rubik’s-cubing my brain to try to make sense of each and every aspect of what she said, including what she didn’t say.
What could she have meant, I wonder for the billionth time, that if anyone could help Scottie, it was her sister? How, if she’s not a vet? She talked about magic, but does she really expect me to believe in that? I mean, hocus pocus is all well and good, and I’m al for learning it. With Scottie’s life is at stake. Don’t I need a little more than that? And anyway, how could the magic keep us safe? From what?
She said I have the markings of “one the magic is fond of” and she knew about the things I’ve been seeing at night, and the voices. Am I really going today because of “reasons the magic has in mind?” What could that mean?
And what does it mean her sister, Bea, will smell me coming? Why did Anna blow her scent into my hands—I mean, seriously? I look at my hands, still confused, still wondering if they really did turn red hot. I mean, I think they did.
More scary, what is too dangerous to take Scottie across the water when I go? And why would Bea care that I’m ‘not in the family?’ Is this some magical mafia? Does chanting out her ancestors names and birth years really give her power?
And how did she know about Rod? Or was it just a good guess? And her seeing me with a boyfriend, a real one, just another guess? Why would she want to have a say in the matter? Why should she care? Even so, that one gets my heart racing. A magical boyfriend, or even just a boyfriend that came by way of magic? That could be so very, very cool.
Best not think of that one right now.
Maybe the biggest why of all—why is she there, pretending to be sick, when she’s not? How does she stand it, how has she been able to stand it for more than a year? It must be important. Really, really important. I mean, for that, it must be life or death important. Right?
“Hey,” Rod says, out of nowhere, making me jump a mile.
“Where did you come from?” I ask, frowning, embarrassed, and spooked. I don’t normally think in terms of life or death.
He turns and points to his car just outside the garage, which I did not notice him drive up in even though we have a nearly half mile long driveway.
“Alabama,” he jokes, supposedly with an Alabama accent.
I give him a smirk. He’s not from Alabama. He was born right here in Annapolis, Maryland, same as me.
“What’s this about?” he asks. “Is it really a Code Lilly?”
Lilly was the code word we used back at the nursing home when we needed each other to do something truly important, usually a cover up, without asking questions. Named after Lilly, the woman who made us crazy with rules that were not important. We watched out for each other, like the time I stole my dad’s ID to get into his private office to see if he really was talking to a private school in Switzerland about my junior high school career, which his second wife threatened me with just before Dad booted her out the door. I didn’t want to ask him, but with the kinds of wives he chooses, I didn’t totally put it past him. It wouldn’t have been a big deal if someone hadn’t….
“Yo, Julie,” he insists, loudly, “what’s the Lilly?”
“Sorry,” I say. “Like I said, it’s a Lilly. Can’t tell you.”
“What’s wrong with Scottie?” he asks, poking a finger through the travel cage. It’s not good if someone can see the problem even through the mesh. Not that I don’t know it’s not good. I just don’t know how to face it not being good, so I keep pretending it can’t be that bad, even though it is. And then someone like Anna, and now Rod, remind me.
“She’s sick. That’s part of it. I need you to take care of her while I do something…and then I’ll come get her.”
“What? This is cat duty?” he protests.
“Hey—how long has it been since I’ve called a Lilly?” I ask, leaning in to him with attitude. “And how many times have you called me with a Lilly in the past six months alone?”
“Okay, okay, you’re right. That’s fair.”
“It’s more than fair.”
“Okay,” he agrees, this time more emphatically. “So where are we going?”
“Just drive, I’ll direct,” I say, covering Scottie’s cage with a towel.
“It’s going to be okay,” I whisper to her, even though I don’t know that. I just know it has to be, somehow. And if it does turn out all right, it will be a miracle—using magic or not. I’ll owe Anna everything.
Rod’s car is spotless, and I can tell the idea of a cat, even a caged one, riding in it is making him nervous. Too bad.
I point the way and he tells me all about his life. I don’t really listen. Nothing much I don’t already know, probably about a girl, and if you just substitute Linda with Lydia or Linnea or Lori. Probably that she’s wonderful, hot, totally into him. He’s cool, interested but not too much. Keeping it real, which is to say being the player. The kind of guy I would never go for, nor would ever go for me.
But friendship is like that, I think as he rattles on, and the rain begins to truly hammer down. If you get in when you’re young, you hang with all the crap that comes later, and just hope they outgrow it. After all, Rod outgrew putting his dirty socks in my face to make me mad. Which is very good, though I liked the part about the socks that made me think I had something close to a real brother.
It makes me wonder about Anna and Bea. Eighty-eight-year-old sisters. Twins, Anna said. They must have seen each other through a lot. And now, knowing they will probably die before too long—at least with what Anna said—and being okay with that? How could you be okay with that? What would it be like if one died before the other, which is most likely…
“So I was thinking,’ Rod says after making a sharp turn and putting his hand on my thigh, which he has never once done before, “maybe, you and I ought to go out sometime.”
His words jar me to the conversation, enough to also make my jaw drop and my tongue practically hang out of my mouth. There’s no way I heard that right. “What?”
“I was just thinking, we know each other. We like each other. You’re hot, I’m hot.”
I totally have to work to not laugh. First, I am not hot. Second, he is not hot. Well, he is, but not my kind of hot. Third, us, together? Suddenly, I can’t help it. I bust a gut. “You…” I can’t even finish the sentence.
“What?” he says, pulling away his hand. “I like you. You like me. And you know you want a boyfriend.”
“I…I…I can’t even begin to say why that would be so not workable.”
“Why?”
“Because you don’t date girls because you like them. You date them to say you’re dating them. And dating me would be nothing to tell anyone. Already your friends don’t get why you hang with me sometimes.”
He looks at me like I’ve insulted him. But he knows how whacked this idea is. He has to.
“Don’t give me that look,” I say. “I’ve got a Lilly and you are messing with my brain.”
“My mom and dad are getting a divorce,” he blurts out.
Suddenly, I feel like I’m pinned to the back of the seat. Like the air bag just smacked me back and I don’t really know what hit me. I look at Rod, really look, while he looks ahead, both his hands in a tight grip on the wheel. He’s not kidding. But his dad, his mom? I know them. They know me. They love me.
“They can’t do that,” I say with what little wind is left in me.
“Yea, I know. But they say they are.” You can see this is killing him. Really, really killing him.
“They love each other,” I insist. “It’s not like my dad. You expect him to get married to bimbos and get divorced a few years later. Your parents are different. You’re a family.”
“I guess not anymore,” he says, soft but angry.
I don’t blame him. But I also don’t know what to say. I just want this pain in my chest to stop squeezing the life out of me. I just saw his dad yesterday, and now it’s like, it’s been going on all this time, it must have, because things like this don’t happen overnight, and I didn’t even know. I stare at Rod, who keeps staring at the road. It hits me he’s messed up, right now, like I’ve been even when it was just bimbos pulling the rug out from under me. But I know how to get through it. You learn.
“Look, you don’t want to date me. You just don’t want to be alone… or, I don’t know, something. But I’ll be here for you. Really, I will. This is it, turn here.”
“The pier?” he says, pulling into the small dirt parking lot.
I look out at the end of the pier, going straight out into the bay water, but also branching off with a side pier that reaches toward the land beyond and to the right. Then I look at the ten feet span of water I’ll have to cross. With the rain, I’m going to get wet either way. It makes me wonder if Bea will come out in the rain, and if she doesn’t, how far in I’m willing to go to look for her. Suddenly, it’s spooky. Hansel and Gretel spooky.
I’m torn between talking, actually being there for Rod like I just said, and doing what I have to do for Scottie.
Rod seems to get it, because he unlocks the doors for me. “Go ahead.”
“Okay, we’ll talk more later.”
“Sure,” he says, almost like he regrets saying anything. My brain wants to scramble, but it can’t. Not now.
“So I have to cross the water, and go into the woods. I’ll be back for Scottie as soon as…as soon as I can.”
“Why don’t you just go in from the other side?”
I can’t exactly say it’s because an old lady might catch my scent too close to the road, and that would be dangerous. But I can’t think of anything else to say.
“Code Lilly,” I remind him, still feeling that sinking, pinned back feeling, and all the worry about Scottie, too. Rod will make it through, that much I know for sure. But Scottie…
I look to the land, and see something. Just a flash of something dark that catches my eye. Through the trees, just a few feet into the woods. Someone is already watching me. They are low to the ground, hiding, I think. Or maybe it’s some wild animal… Could I possibly describe the chill going over my body?
“Any guidelines here,” Rod asks, “like ‘if I don’t come out in five minutes’ kind of thing?”
“No,” I reply flatly. “I’ll just be back for Scottie as soon as I can.”
I get out of the car, putting my jacket over my head. It is both to protect me from the rain and protect the jacket from the steadily flowing stream. I follow the pier out, feeling the water beneath me giving just a hint of sway to my footing, then take the offshoot to the end. I look down, feeling nothing but doom. No way to really know how deep it is, given the rain and mud. But I can swim, if I have to. If I had a handful of leaves, I’d toss them to see how fast the current is going. But really, how fast can it be?
I take off my shoes and start to make my way down the few steps at the side of the pier ladder, grateful I don’t have to jump, and comforted that people use this as a platform to swim from—which means it’s not like I’m going where no one has ever gone before.
The water is cold and no more clear up close. My jeans get heavy quick as I sink down. I feel for the bottom, and when I find it, I’m in up to my chest. Guess the tide is high. But the current isn’t bad. Nothing I can’t brace. No, really, this is fine.
It’s not long at all before the worries of the water disappear. In their place, all the worries of what will or won’t be found on land begin to come into far greater clarity. I put out my hands as best I can, to let Anna’s “scent” ride the rain-dampened breeze.
Maybe it’s total crap. But maybe it’s not.





Love your story!!!!!!!
Am loving it! Only had time to read Chapters 1-4 but I am a copyeditor and noticed a few errors. “Crapshot” instead of “crapshoot” once; is it Mrs. Bayless or Miss Bayless, you use both; word missing in sentence about “think (I’m) kind of hard to read (or something like that); letter “l” missing in Ch.4 “Al for learning”; chanting of ancestors’ names (insert apostrophe); life-or-death important (insert hyphens); “making me jump a mile” (delete “a mile”?); “Alabama,” he jokes. Add “with a banjo on my knee”? I like how she transfers her “signature” (scent) to her. Something very catlike is going on, especially how she tells her that her sister will “smell” her coming, and to be very cautious. Just like when you approach a strange cat, you have to let the cat come to you and smell you first before trying to touch him/her. Anyway, I am looking forward to reading more when I have more time. Gotta get going with my own life today!! Keep on writing!
Thank you Marji! Those edits help…I never edit on that side of the brain until the story is out, but it sure is helpful when others catch things! SO big thanks on that one. Glad you are enjoying and THANKS for posting!
Oh! So intriguing, so mysterious, so inviting! I’m SO glad you found me so that I could find you and find this… “I chose you because you have the markings of one the magic is fond of. The things you see at night? The voices you hear? That is the magic trying to reach you.” — yes, got to love that! It is, of course, the truth. I love the line: “I didn’t mean I have seen him with you. I mean I have seen him around you.” I am always looking for clues in life — the constant patterns that remind us of the Truth. You have given me bountiful clues today! My sincere thanks, and I will be following this wonderful story. The offering to the Muse is working!
I really love this! I love the suspense, magic, and all of the emotions. Mayden’s character is very realistic. Her reactions to everything that’s going on are very well done. I know if that was happening to me I’d have quite a similar reaction.
It’s all so exciting! I’m constantly eager to know what’s going to happen next, and how the characters are going to evolve.
Very cool!
Up late tonight reading and look forward to read the next chapters soon. Gosh I love that Scottie in this story is held in such high regard. Kewl! I enjoy the character interactions and the inner processing with Julie; yet most importantly appreciate the dialogue between Julie and Anna, as I can personally relate with intuitive perception and communications very much. Also can relate well with these specific characters and storyline. The reciting or singing of ancestor names is indeed powerful and I appreciate that its woven into the story…for here in New Zealand the Maori will often introduce their Whakapapa (wha pronounced fa)family/lineage as a way of being fully present and spiritually connected within themselves and with their ancestors.
Gees its getting spooky with the water walking bit. I’m starting to really get into the emotional/sensory experience and the mystery. Magic is really important in life! Heart magic, and I feel it underlying this story. Thank you for sharing these chapters here with us and providing us the opportunity to give feedback.
Cheers….Alana
So glad you are enjoying, Alana, from half way around the world! Also very glad the emotional/sensory experience is coming through. Neat to know about the Whakapapa! It’s all the same, only different, the world over. Thanks so much for commenting! Hugs! Robin
Hello Robin.
) Just started reading this..very intriguing. Embarrassed to say that I ‘read and correct’ all the time. Bad habit. Looks like you enjoy the ‘oops’ that people catch tho, so will share what I’ve found.
In Chapter 2, paragraph of: ““Woa! You answered me.”
The first word most likely would be “Whoa!”
Paragraph: ““Yes, you understand. These are my ancestors. The women who begat me, and those who begatthem. ”
The last word…break it apart to “begat them” .
Am finding a few more..but stopping with those above. (grin) Also, love reading stories back to front and upside down..really helps in finding errors, too, (hee hee) so if you ever need help doing that..would be honored with helping. (grin)
Sue
Thanks Sue! Especially now that we are in second draft mode, every edit helps! We didn’t worry about it first draft as an example to other writers… let that go first draft. But now, edit away! Glad to have you along for the read… Robin
(hee hee) Ok then. Chapter 3: ““How do you know that?” I plead to know. I like to think of not quite so easy to read. But she seems to see right through me.”
Wondering if the part where Mayden says, “I like to think of not quite so easy to read.” should have another word in there, maybe “I like to think of not *being* quite so easy to read.” ?
Chapter 4: “What could she have meant, I wonder for the billionth time, that if anyone could help Scottie, it was her sister? How, if she’s not a vet? She talked about magic, but does she really expect me to believe in that? I mean, hocus pocus is all well and good, and I’m al for learning it. With Scottie’s life is at stake. Don’t I need a little more than that? And anyway, how could the magic keep us safe? From what?”
“….hocus pocus is all well and good, and I’m al for learning ….” (add an ‘l’ to ‘al’)
“…With Scottie’s life is at stake….” (delete “is” or maybe change the first word to “When”)
Chapter 4: ““What’s wrong with Scottie?” he asks, poking a finger through the travel cage. It’s not good if someone can see the problem even through the mesh. Not that I don’t know it’s not good. I just don’t know how to face it not being good, so I keep pretending it can’t be that bad, even though it is. And then someone like Anna, and now Rod, remind me.”
Last sentence…add an ’s’ to ‘remind’.
:~)
And did you like it? Love and thanks and hugs!
(lol) “And did you like it?” (rofl) Are you kidding? You are kidding, right? (hee hee) This story hits home…big time! ;~)
sorry i am mentioning this, because it is so small but you are missing the letter “s” in chapter 1 paragraph three where it says “Even Dad has to ring the buzzer and remind whoever is behind the desk that he’s the guy who own the place.”