pipe smoke, and dusty carpets. Home.
I leave the door open and the lights off as I inch my way through the narrow shelves, emerging into a small, book-lined cavern. A maze of more bookshelf corridors leads off it in all directions. The boxes I packed last night are piled in a corner, next to the desk. Behind it looms Greyâs giant armchair.
I crawl into it, throbbing, and try to shut out the too-loud, off-kilter tick of the grandfather clock that Grey refused to have fixed. I examine the desk, squinting through the gloom for the first aid kit. The top drawer is overflowing with scraps of paperâit reminds me of the wildflowers in the ditch. Fishing through the receipts and order forms, I find chocolate bars, essential oil, a tin of tobacco, a brown glass bottle. I rattle it. One of Greyâs hippie remedies. He swore by ginkgo biloba, Saint Johnâs wort, evening primrose. I swallow two pills dry, forcing them down around the lump in my throat.
Everything hurts. My leg is gravel-scraped and gross. Iâll have scabs for days. When I was a kid and fell over, my grandfather would be there to give me a Band-Aid and kiss it better.
I rest my head against the velvet chair, breathing in its Grey scent, falling apart over and over. Papaâs kept the bookshop exactly as it wasâdusty and disorganized, a shrine to Greyâs admin policy. (âIâm a keeper of books, not a bookkeeper!â) His ginormous chair, Iâm tiny inside it, the desk where he sometimes wrote his diaries, and that stupid broken clock, its tick-tick ⦠tickticktick ⦠-tock. Tears blob my eyes so I canât see, and the mottled velvet blurs until it looks like the untuned TV, the monochrome fuzz I saw outside, right before I crashed. Tick â¦
Tock.
Tick-tick.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
âMake it look good, okay?â I say. Weâre in the apple tree, which is all full of slimy wet leaves, and my bum is cold, but Grey says you have to feel the earth underneath you. âThey canât know it was us.â
Itâs Nedâs tenth birthday party and he uninvited me and Thomas. Grey says we are invited and that Ned is on thin ice, but I think we should steal his cake anyway. Thomas came up with the plan to do face paint like bandits.
âObviously,â says Thomas, rolling his eyes. âOkay, Iâm going to give you a mustache as well.â
âYes,â I agree. Itâs always yes when it comes to us, and I close my eyes. The paint tickles as he starts drawing. âRemember the signal: when Grey shouts âTrouble times twoâ¦ââ
âThatâs when we run,â Thomas finishes. âG, open your eyes.â
When I do, Thomas is laughing and holding up a permanent markerâ
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
ââwhat happened? Gottie? Gottie, open your eyes.â
Papaâs voice breaks through the darkness. My eyelids are thick and heavy, rusted over. I must have fallen asleep. Iâve been dreaming of Thomas and me in the tree, but not the right day, not the day he left â¦
When I open my eyes, the images fade away. I blink. Papa is in front of me.
âFell asleep. Oh. And off mâbike,â I tell him, mumbling into the chairâs velvet wing, twisting a bit to the side to show him.
He makes a sucking-in-air sound, out of proportion to a scraped leg. Papa hates the sight of blood, winces when me or Ned gets a paper cut. How did he deal, when Mum died, if there was blood? Did he disappear down wormholes looking for her?
I canât keep hold of the thought, of any of my thoughts; they scatter like autumn leaves.
â Ist your bike outside?â Papaâs asking. My bike is pink with a basket and cereal box clackers on the spokes, so I donât know whose elseâs he thinks it might be.
I force myself to sit up, wincing in anticipation of cotton balls and hydrogen peroxide sting. The sense memory of
S. Ravynheart, S.A. Archer
Stephen G. Michaud, Roy Hazelwood