Another Faust (21 page)

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Authors: Daniel Nayeri

BOOK: Another Faust
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At midnight — the witching hour — the wind howled in fear, the shutters of the houses slapped hysterically at their hinges, and the village lay in bed asleep. A murder of crows cast shadows by the fattened moon like dark angels in the village square. Dogs and fathers snored on their pillows — even the baker rolled over unaware, and the grave digger nodded standing up with his chin resting on the butt of his shovel. Earlier, the mothers had huddled their children around them like nervous hens, intent on standing guard with garlic and wolf’s bane around their necks, boules and baubles, chanting the old protective words to keep them safe, to protect them from the aftermath of the night’s events — but they’d fallen asleep.

Outside, black riders now flew about. The tattered cloth flapped across their bare rheumatic skin, unchilled by the air. Only the little boy in the house up the hill was awake to see them, circling through the clouds outside his window, calling to the crows in their banshee voices. The boy knew he wouldn’t be able to wake his mother or father, the handmaid, or even his cat — they were all asleep as if dead. He clutched his blanket and watched as one figure flew in smaller and smaller circles toward him.

She sat on a branch, her blond hair brilliant and strictly governed into a bun. She looked exactly as she had looked that afternoon, when she had been burned on a stake, her bun perfectly intact, her face calm. He had thought she was gone, that she would not answer now. But she had heard. She knew what he wanted so desperately that his heart burned with longing for it. Now that she had come, he wanted to run and close the curtains. He watched her watching him and wished for his mother. But she lay asleep. The whole village lay asleep well past the midnight when the little boy in the house up the hill disappeared.

With the semester well under way, Belle spent her spare hours bathing and visiting coffee shops, clubs, restaurants — wherever Marlowe kids hung out — and creating more and more followers. She had avoided Thomas and Lucy, who were together more and more these days. Belle wanted him to hear about her from his friends, to hear them gushing and being in love with her. She wanted him to wonder why they acted that way — what Belle had that Lucy didn’t. Then she would — accidentally — run into him one day. Thank God for Connor. Well, thank
Madame Vileroy
for Connor. Because once again, Vileroy had been right: the more Belle planted suspicion and jealousy among Connor and his two chirping little birds, Charlotte and Maggie, the more all of them loved her.

One day, Belle spotted Thomas and Connor hanging out in the Marlowe dining hall after school. With Lucy still in line for a veggie wrap and a smoothie, it was the perfect time to bump into him.

“Hi, Connor.” She waved, winked, and walked right past them. Connor choked on his chocolate smoothie.

“Hey, you mind waiting here a minute?” he said to Thomas. “I’ll be just a sec.”

“You’re going to talk to
her
? How well do you know each other?”

“Not as well as I’d like. . . .”

“She seemed weird at that play,” said Thomas.

“She’s a total Hottie Hotterson.”

“Why are you talking like that?”

“Like what?” said Connor. He seemed confused, distracted.

“Like some tool on MTV.”

“Gotta roll, hombre. Lady needs a refill.”

“See? What is
that
?”

“What’s what?” asked Connor with an innocent look.

“I didn’t realize you’d moved to the . . . hood, or wherever it is they talk like that.”

“West Side . . . bro.”

“West Side?” Thomas raised both eyebrows. “Like Lincoln Center? Where they have the New York City Ballet?”

“Westchester, bi-atch!”

Thomas just shook his head and sat there while Connor bounced over to Belle, who was sitting alone at one of the round tables near the window. He watched as Connor sat down next to Belle, tried to put his arm around her, and smelled her neck as if she were made of peppermint cream.
What’s his deal?
Thomas watched as Connor grabbed Belle’s hand and invited her back to their table. He swallowed the last bite of his sandwich.
She is gorgeous, though,
he admitted to himself. As Belle glided up to his table, Thomas wondered why he had been so judgmental before — about the smell.
It could be a foreign thing, or some feminine mystery.
Connor was reintroducing them, but Thomas couldn’t hear anything. Something strange was happening to him. He felt relaxed and anxious at the same time. He could smell something new in the air, something indescribable but intoxicating, something that made him uncomfortably happy. He thought he heard Belle say something like “We’ve met.” He just nodded. It was a nice smell. But somehow, on the inside, it felt the same as the way Belle had made him feel before: intoxicated, drugged. He heard Connor saying his name a couple of times, and then he snapped out of it. “Oh, sorry, Belle. I was just thinking of something else. Are you all settled in?”

Normally, Belle would have thought that was the lamest question ever. But for some reason, she began to scour her brain for the perfect answer. Out of the corner of her eye, she spotted Lucy, who had just come out of the smoothie line and was glaring in their direction. Fortunately, a teacher pulled her away. To Belle, Thomas was more than just a prize now. She really liked him. And she had to stand there long enough. So she started to describe everything she loved and hated about New York, comparing it to Rome and Paris, while Thomas and Connor listened, not missing a word while missing the whole story.

“Well, I should run,” said Belle after half an hour of talking about nothing. She looked over at Thomas to see what he would say.

“Why?” the boys said in unison. Belle laughed.

“You could stay a little longer,” said Thomas. “I mean, I think Connor has plans, but I was just gonna hang out here.”

“I don’t have plans,” said Connor.

“Sure you do. Your dad’s in town.”

“I’ll catch him later.”

“Oh, Connor. It’s so mean of you to blow off your own dad,” said Belle with a disappointed look. It was all she could do not to push Connor out the door herself.

“Fine.” Connor slumped in his chair, before finally getting up to leave.

Belle and Thomas talked for hours, long after the dining hall staff had gone home and the kitchen had been closed. Every time Belle pretended to leave, Thomas grabbed her hand (making all of the blood rush from her brain) or stole her keys or made up some reason why she couldn’t go. When she asked about Lucy, he evaded, not wanting to ruin the moment. It hurt being near her, but he couldn’t get enough. It was like eating peanut brittle after your teeth have cracked, like licking spray paint because the colors are so beautiful. Thomas was falling under her spell, and Belle could hardly believe her luck. Finally, though, Belle grabbed her purse and headed out the door, leaving Thomas with her number and a migraine.

Belle came home to find Madame Vileroy sitting in the dark center space, doing something with needles.

“Since when do you knit?”

Madame Vileroy smiled. “You’ve been gone for a while.”

“I saw Thomas. Everything is going perfectly,” Belle sang.

“Not really.”

“What do you mean?”

“I mean, you’re not playing the game right, Belle. If you spend four hours talking to someone, then where’s the mystery? Men like mystery . . . and suspense . . . and games.”

“No, they don’t.”

“Yes, they do. They think they don’t, but they do. They always go for the fickle brats — the ones that play games. And you’re acting like a stupid girl with a crush.”

“Maybe I
am
a stupid girl with a crush! Besides, Thomas already likes me.”

“For now . . .”

“You think he’ll stop?” Belle asked desperately.

“Not if you do what I say.”

Belle waited. The ball of yarn by Vileroy’s side rolled around itself like an endless boulder.

“You should ignore him for a few days. Let Lucy have him. Let him get a little bored. Then let him hear the rumors about her. Maybe give Connor some hope.”

“I thought you said hope will boil me alive.”

“Yes,” she said, bemused, pleased, looking down at her material. The yarn twisted its last few yards and ended in a fuchsia ball, like a withered stomach.

Belle’s phone vibrated in her purse. “I’m getting a text. Good night.” Belle hurried down the hallway to her bathroom and took out the first bottle that would put her to sleep.

The next day, Victoria visited Ms. LeMieux in her office. The Marlowe administrative offices were large and sunny, and there were several students sitting in the waiting area. A plump woman of about fifty greeted Victoria and directed her to have a seat while Ms. LeMieux finished with her last appointment. Victoria sat next to a pretty blonde in a cheerleader outfit.

“Hi. I’m Maggie,” the blonde said, extending her hand.

“Victoria Faust,” Victoria said without looking at her.

“Oh, you’re Belle’s sister! Belle is just the nicest girl. I’m so happy I met her. I think we’re going to be friends forever. . . .”

Her speech grew quicker as she spoke about Belle. She talked like someone on speed or the way you’d imagine a dog with rabies would talk. Victoria thought she saw her eyes grow glassy. Somewhere to the left, someone dropped a stapler. Maggie’s head whipped around like a paranoid criminal.

The chubby secretary lumbered toward Victoria. “She’s ready to see you now.”

As Victoria got up, she saw an angry mother storm out of Ms. LeMieux’s office.

“Honestly, I don’t see what the problem is. My son is far more qualified than the ones you recommended for Yale last year. It was one small indiscretion.”

“Good-bye, Mrs. Marcus,” Ms. LeMieux said impatiently. “Ah, Victoria. Come on in.”

Victoria adjusted her glasses and got up from her seat. She had made sure that she wore her biggest pair today, even though she hated the way they looked and felt. Ms. LeMieux led Victoria into her office and closed the door.

Just as the door was closing, Victoria saw Lucy enter the waiting area. She caught Lucy’s gaze and waved mockingly with the tips of her fingers. When the counselor turned to refill her coffee, Victoria reached over and reopened the door, leaving it just barely ajar. Lucy sat outside the office, craning to hear. Victoria knew she would listen. She could
hear
her listening. Lucy scooted her chair toward the door just in time to overhear Victoria buttering up Ms. LeMieux with suspiciously familiar ploys.

“How did your first day go?” asked Ms. LeMieux. “Do you like your new classes?”

“I’m enjoying the challenge. I have seven advanced classes, you know.” Victoria beamed, expecting Ms. LeMieux to be pleased.

Outside, Lucy was chewing on her lip.
Seven advanced classes? How’s that possible?

“Yes, well, I’ve been meaning to speak to you about that,” said Ms. LeMieux. “It seems that a few parents think it’s a bit unfair that one student has been allowed to take all five-point classes, while everyone else is required to take at least two four-point classes.”

“Was it Mrs. Spencer? Did you tell her about my special needs?”

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