Authors: Gillian Anderson
Caitlin stood blindly in the hall on one foot. She listened to the sound of Jacob's feet retreating and paper towels ripping off the roll. He was talking to himself, muttering something about cat puke. He chuckled. The smell of coffee wafted toward her from the kitchen. She didn't think Jacob knew how to make coffee. Then she felt him wiping off her foot with the paper towels.
“Is it safe for me to stand yet?”
“One second, I'm getting the floor.”
She could hear him rubbing the puke into the carpet.
“Okay. You can walk now.”
Propelled again by her son, Caitlin put one foot in front of the other until she could tell by the blast of sunlight through her eyelids that they had reached the living room. Jacob positioned himself in front of her and said, “Open!”
Caitlin opened her eyes and saw, standing before her, her mother leaning over the dining room table with the coffeepot. A homemade chocolate Bundt cake was waving four candles at her, and crepe paper twirled from the chairs to the ceiling light to make a green and yellow tepee.
“Surprise!” they chorused. Jacob was so excited he started jumping, then stood on a chair near the cake, still yelling, “Surprise! Gotcha!”
“Hey, Jake,” his grandmother piped over him as she poured fresh coffee into two mugs. “Derriere in the chair.”
“I don't understand French!” he answered back.
“You understand Irish?” she demanded with a touch of brogue, pointing at the wooden seat.
He stopped hopping around and obediently went to where the no-nonsense finger was pointing.
“Were you surprised, Mommy?” he asked in a tone that was both giddy and sheepish.
“Well, I'm surprised I'm forty,” she said, hugging her mother around the shoulders. “What the heck time did you leave home?”
“As soon as the bread rose,” Nancy replied, patting Caitlin's hands. “Your father would have been here too but we had a no-show at the bakery so he had to fill in.”
“I'll call him later,” Caitlin said, sitting in the seat of honor. Quickly she glanced around for Arfa. The tabby cat was snoozing in sphinx position on an arm of the couch, obviously no worse for wear.
“Mommy, Mommy, Mommy,” Jacob chanted, bopping up and down in his seat. “Make your wish!”
“All right,” she said, though it was Nancy's stern gaze that quieted him.
Caitlin looked at the candles, thinking about being forty, about Jacob's having recently turned tenâ
About Atash setting himself on fire, the flames leaping over his clothes . . .
My god
, she thought, and quickly blew out the candles.
She vaguely noticed that Jacob was still leaning forward with expectation. An instant later the candles relit themselves. Jacob shrieked with laughter but Caitlin heard only screaming. She saw the man who burst into flame in the courtyard in Galderkhaan when she'd shared Atash's vision. Shaking, she blew out the candles again and of course the trick flames came back, now with all the souls of Galderkhaan burning and screaming and dying. Caitlin tried to keep it together, covering her nose and mouth with one hand, but she was visibly shaking. Jacob, unaware, was laughing and clapping.
Nancy O'Hara, who noticed everything, said to Jacob, “Now you get to put them out, the way I showed you.”
Gleefully, he dipped his fingers in a small dish of water hidden under a napkin. He pinched each candle out with a
ssst
, the smoke wafting upward in tendrils.
Nancy occupied Jacob with helping her pull out the candles and
then cut the cake into slices while keeping an eye on her daughter. Caitlin was breathing slowly, purposefully, through her nose, with her hands clasped in front of her face. She closed her eyes, checked her hands to see if they had stopped trembling, and took a few more shallow breaths.
Gradually, Caitlin normalized, nodded thanks to her mother, and sank a fork into a proffered slice of cake. With Jacob safely occupied by his own slice, Nancy murmured to Caitlin, “You're not done with that previous case?”
Caitlin didn't answer, and that was answer enough.
“But you're not going to be traveling anytime soon.” It was pointedly a statement from Nancy, not a question.
“IâI don't know,” Caitlin said quietly. “I never know.”
“Don't do something dangerous and make me play the mother card with you, Caitlin. Grandparenting is enough.”
“Mom, you didn't want me going to Thailand after the tsunami. What if I had listened to you? I wouldn't have met Jacob's dad, and you wouldn't be a grandmother.”
“I was worried about your safety. You knew it was a dangerous situation and went anyway. And after your recent experiences, I am still concerned.”
Caitlin sighed wearily. “Mom, you run a bakeryâ”
“Meaning what, exactly?” the older woman asked. “That I shouldn't have an opinion about how my daughter conducts her life?”
“No, I meant that our worlds are different.”
“Caitlin, I meet more people every day than you do in a weekâ”
“I know. And you should be proud, Mom.
I
am, of you and Dad. I just mean thatâ”
“You think you know what's best for you, I know. I've heard it before,” Nancy continued. “But here's my take. You're world renowned. You've âmade it.' What I'm saying, with a mother's pride, is, why can't you stop fighting so hard and enjoy that?”
“Enjoy? Mom, that's a word I apply to stepping in cat vomit because
it makes my son laugh. Beyond that? I need to understand things, not just fix them. Sometimes that means going where the challenges are. Knowledge is worth the risk for me. Sometimes, like a week ago, things end without being tidied up or understood. Am I satisfied? A bit, sometimes. But I get no real peace or enjoyment. Don't take this the wrong way, but I can't run my practice like a bakery.”
Nancy raised one eyebrow, took another bite of cake, and for a second everyone just chewed. Then she said to Jacob, “Don't forget the other surprise, kid.”
“Oh, I almost did!” he exclaimed, crumbs flying from his overstuffed mouth.
Jacob leaped toward the silverware drawer and pulled out a tiny gift with an enormous pink bow and more tape than wrapping paper. As Caitlin struggled to open itâenjoying the moment, and proving it to her mother with a genuine smileâJacob stood next to her with his hand on her shoulder, jiggling up and down. At last she got it open and found a key chain with a thin brass circle. There was a maze etched into the brass.
“It's a labyrinth,” Jacob said, saying the word like he owned it. He pulled it from her hands and brought it close to her eyes. “It's medieval, Grandpa said. There's only one path.” His pointer finger traced around the whorls of the maze. “See? You can't get lost. Whichever way you go, it gets you to the middle!”
She flashed back to the design she had seen in Galderkhaan, the swirls and crescents that left the center isolated, mysterious. She gave him a big hug and kiss and sent him to her bag to get her keys. She let him work on putting the keys on the new ring while she quietly apologized to her mother.
“Look, I didn't mean to come down so hard on you,” Caitlin began.
Nancy hushed her. “I'm going to give you some advice from your grandmother, a miner's daughter. She once warned me that if you go too deep into something, you can lose your way or get buried. I resented
the metaphor. Life wasn't a coal mine. But you know something? She was right. A person should haveâa person
needs
âa full and diverse life. So,” she continued, “when I hear your father say that he can't even start a conversation with you about your choice to go to Iran, it occurs to me that you need a piece of advice: if no one can even tell you no, if you can't even consider it, you're in a very dangerous place.”
Caitlin thought a long time before answering, twisting ribbons of chocolate icing onto her fork. Finally, she said, “What did Great-Grandpa do each morning when the coal cart came to him, big and dark and very, very insistent?”
Nancy smiled. “He got in. Butâand this is important, dearânot blindly and not alone. That's why he became a labor organizer, and maybe you've got his rebellious blood.” Nancy's smile warmed. “How about a compromise?” she said. “Find yourself someone who you will trust now and then. Someone who can tell you the truth if you need to hear it, in a way you can take it.”
“I've got this one.” Caitlin thumbed at Jacob, grinning.
He held up the key chain, jangling the keys like bells and pursing his lips as if he were blowing a trumpet.
“I'm serious,” Nancy said as she cleared the plates.
“I know,” Caitlin replied, “and thank you. I will consider it. I promise.” Then she immersed herself in another hug from Jacob and a comment about his wizardly key-chain ways.
It was soon time for Jacob to get ready for school and Nancy announced she would take him today; her birthday present to Caitlin was time for a long, hot bubble bath. They hugged warmly as they said good-bye.
And then Caitlin was alone in the apartment. She sat down again at the dining table, gazing at the cat and thinking about her mother. People didn't have to be the same. They didn't have to agree with each other. But they didn't have to judge each other either, simply support each other's choices.
Arfa twitched, stretched, and jumped down from the couch. He ambled to the table, rubbed his muzzle across her ankles, then sat back on his haunches with his eyes mostly closed, purring. Caitlin regarded him and realized that the tips of his whiskers were moving. Although it was hard to see, she was sure that all the fur on his face was blowing backward as if he were facing into a breeze.
She looked toward the window, which was shut against the fall chill. There was no breeze, no vent, no fanânothing. Then Arfa stood up, walked around behind her, arched his back, and rubbed his side against empty space, as if it were someone's leg.
In the still, airless room Caitlin felt a sudden cooling in the small of her back, as if icy breath had been blown down her spine and pooled there. Simultaneously the cat turned to her, hissed silently, and hurried away.
Caitlin didn't blame her.
Something was here.
Something that didn't belong.
A
t noon, the C train was mostly empty. Caitlin shared her car with only a few transit workers at the far end and a young Hispanic couple somehow cuddling around their backpacks.
Smelling of bubblegumâthe only flavor of bath bubbles she could find in the apartmentâCaitlin headed toward the Brooklyn International School, which offered eighth to twelfth grade for English-language learners. A large number of students were not just immigrants but refugees, many of them suffering from a wide range of traumas. Caitlin usually visited the school one afternoon a week to conduct individual therapy sessions but with all her recent trips, she hadn't been able to find any free afternoons. Earlier in the week she'd received an e-mail asking her to please come on an off day. One student in particular was proving especially difficult to reach.
Caitlin leaned her head back on the glass window of the train and stared at ads for a ministorage chain. Ordinarily, she'd have been rereading the e-mail from the school and thinking about the student, but she couldn't keep her mind off of Arfa and the presence they had both felt in the room. Most of the time his behavior could be passed off as random feline weirdness but the inexplicably rippling fur
gnawed at her. The experience had blindsided her and filled her with a thought that stubbornly refused to go away:
Did I bring something back with me from Galderkhaan? Or, like an animal, has something sniffed me out?
Or was it neither of the above? Reason argued against those. But reason had too many enemies now.
Reality was suddenly very, very difficult to know and impossible to quantify. Souls from an ancient civilization had been stretching through time, trying to bond with souls in the modern day to complete a ritual. Caitlin had interceded, used a self-induced trance to place herself between then and now, breaking the connection. But it wasn't like an electric circuit where the lines were cut and the energy died. This was different. It had been like walking through a graveyard where the ghosts were visible, aggressive, and unhappy. Not even the great universities had literature to help her understand that. Caitlin was sure; she had checked.
Caitlin sat up straight and forced herself to focus on the present, on what she knew was real. She dug deep into her pocket for her phone and scrolled through e-mails until she found the one from the school. The boy in trouble was an eighth grader, originally a child soldier in the Central African Republic. Deserting one night, Odilon had managed to walk a hundred miles to the capital from his rebel camp without being picked up by any other militia. At Bangui, he hid in a hospital for a week until he passed out from hunger. Doctors Without Borders got him out of the country and now, through a generous line of supporters, he was living in a hastily converted meeting space in the basement of a synagogue in Brooklyn. He had seemed responsive during the summer school that guided the refugees through assimilation into American life. Now, in late October, he was beginning to isolate and was refusing to speak in class or out of it. The school's counselors suspected he was experiencing flashbacks but they couldn't confirm.
Caitlin looked up from her phone. A couple of college students
had joined the car, both wired into music. She glimpsed several boisterous younger kids in an adjacent car, clearly skipping school. The rocking of the two cars made her aware of the reflections playing off the windows. Images collided with each other as the cars shifted or turned along gentle curves, layering the faces of passengers one upon the other. Her eyes traced the windows and their metal frames, the silvery poles and overhead handlebars, the yellow and orange plastic seats. The passengers and their reflections seemed to dance around the fixed structures as though they were figures around a maypole in some primitive ritual, complete with the transparent souls of the departed. She thought about the dead of Galderkhaan, the Priests trying to bond their souls together and ascend to a higher spiritual plane through the rite of
cazh
. The poles in the cars were like the columns of the Technologists, planted in earth, extending to the sky, connecting them both.