Authors: Bailey Cunningham
“Oh. Hello, Shelby.”
She blinked. “Hi, Dr. Laclos. Iâwas just leaving.”
“It's nice to see you.” He walked over to the bed. “I've smuggled you in a mocha. There's also a macaroon in my pocket.”
She smiled. “That's the greatest thing I've heard all day.”
Shelby waved to them both, unsure of what else to do. Then she awkwardly played herself out, as she imagined Margaret Cavendish would have done. All she lacked were the ribbons.
She'd never seen the two of them together. Perhaps they were just friends. All she could think of was the fact that they taught in different fields, as if that must render them eternally separate. Plus, she'd never seen either of them outside the university. It was always jarring to encounter a professor in the wild. Laclos had been wearing a T-shirt. For some reason, she'd assumed that he wore blazers at home. Now she suddenly imagined him in pajamas, and the thought made her uneasy.
As she was leaving the hospital, Shelby glanced at her phone. Two messages: one from Carl, the other from Andrew. She didn't want to read either of them. Carl was full of questions, and Andrew would only remind her of the work that she wasn't doing. She got into the truck and squeezed her way out of the tight spot. It involved a lot of second-guessing while traffic streamed past her, a blur of metallic paint, half-heard radios, motions frosted under glass. Eventually she worked her way free, like a loose tooth. She turned on
A Tribe Called Red
and merged onto Dewdney. Before she knew it, she was driving home.
Her mother's house always looked sun-touched and welcoming. It was the opposite of her own apartment, which resembled a postapocalyptic library. Shelby parked and rang the bell. When nobody answered, she let herself in with the spare key. As soon as she closed the door, Shelby could feel herself reverting back to early adolescence. She draped her jacket over the chair, then peeled off her shoes and socks. The kitchen was spotless and still smelled of fresh baking. She grabbed a piece of bannock from the plate on the counter. Her grandmother had also made Saskatoon berry jam. When she was done, she rewrapped the plate and washed the knife. It was still obvious that she'd struck like a natural disaster, but she could at least minimize the damage by cleaning up. She rummaged through the kitchen cupboards. The variety of their food astounded her. When she pulled out a box of cereal, there was another, identical one behind it, like a store shelf. For a moment, she wondered if the cupboard was infinite.
Shelby returned to the living room. Her own eyes looked back at her from various portraits. A toddler with chubby Michelin Man arms; a teenager with tragic bangs, frozen in her Northern Reflections sweater; a university student, looking slightly dazed with her diploma. The wall proved her existence. It should have been comforting. There was also a picture of her mother sitting at a picnic table. Her hair was long, and she squinted at the camera, half smiling as the light haloed around her. In the background you could see Wascana Lake, so bright that it resembled a curtain of sparks. Her mother's expression was difficult to translate. Was she the one who'd turned the lake molten? Anything seemed possible. She was young and wild with possibilities, her bare leg a paintbrush swirl in the corner. Beside her was a thin man wearing a striped shirt and cowboy boots. He stared at the curve of her ankle. Part of him had been cropped out of the photo.
She took down the photo and placed it on the coffee table. If she concentrated, she could almost hear what they were thinking. There was a woven blanket on the couch, and she wrapped it around her. The stillness grew, until everything was sharp and hazy at the same time. Her life seemed to move in the shadows along the wall. She heard the scrape of the blinds in the upstairs hallway, and some animal twittering on the other side of the window. Then sleep crept in on paws of smoke, and she was in the photo, watching all of her mother's secrets unfold. The tall grass covered her. The sun turned green, and she went back to the beginning of it all.
When she opened her eyes, the shadows had changed. Her grandmother sat across from her, knitting. Shelby could almost feel the crosshatch patterns of the couch on her cheek. She rubbed her face and tried to sit up gracefully.
“How long was I out for,
nohkô
?”
“Not too long.” She didn't look up from her needles. “You were dreaming deep, though. I could feel it. Something was watching you.”
Shelby felt herself grow cold. “What kind of something?”
“Not sure.”
Click. Click.
“Something big.”
“Big and friendlyâlike the BFG?”
She shrugged. “Just big. It had no boundariesâlike smoke. Wasn't good or evil. Just very interested in you.”
“The last thing I need is an immaterial stalker.”
“Ghosts don't mean you any harm. You've got to share with them.”
“Share what?”
“Everything.”
“Did you take a cryptic pill this morning?”
“Don't sass me, Shelby Mae.”
“Sorry,
nohkô
.” She reached for the picture on the table. Her grandmother saw her looking at it but didn't say anything. “What was he like?”
“Who?”
“The man in the cowboy boots.”
She set down her needlework. “What has your mother told you about him?”
“You're being evasive.”
Her grandmother stared to say something. Then her expression went oddly distant. She seemed to be considering some old equation, never properly balanced. She was silent for a moment. Shelby ran her thumb along the grooves in the picture frame.
“He had his moments,” her grandmother said finally.
“That's it?”
“He also had a temper. But so did your mother.”
“How did they meet?”
“I forget.”
“No, you don't.”
“Fine. They met at a bowling alley.”
“Seriously?”
“Your mother had a part-time job there. He was with some friends. Ball in the gutter, every time, but that didn't seem to matter.”
“I can't imagine her spraying rented shoes.”
“She had to pay for college. Sometimes she even worked with me at the cannery, but I didn't want her there. I'd rather she deal with stinky feet than lose a hand.”
Shelby set the picture down. “Were they in love?”
“You'd have to ask her.”
“She won't tell me anything.”
“Maybe you're just asking the wrong questions.”
“Don't I have the right to know?”
Her grandmother looked at her. The light played along her braid, iron-gray but still soft. She remembered touching it when she was little, trying to work the silvery hairs loose. They reminded her of a paintbrush.
“When he drove you home from the hospital,” she said, “his hands were shaking. I remember that.”
Shelby thought of saying something else, but her grandmother's look told her that it wasn't the right time. Instead, she rose and kissed her lightly on the cheek.
“I'm going to go. Love you.”
“Wait.” She rose stiffly. “I'll pack you something for the road.”
The Tupperware container slid across the seat while she drove. She'd have to hide it from Carl. He could stress-eat like a garburator. She'd slipped the photo out of its frame while her grandmother was wrapping the bannock. Her mother probably wouldn't notice. She never dusted that part of the mantel.
She met Carl at the Green Spot Café. He was demolishing a steamed bun. Ingrid and Sam were sitting on either side of him, watching the carnage with polite fascination. She hadn't expected to see all of them. Carl must have sent out a hysterical mass text.
“Finally.” He looked up from his plate. “Dodge my calls much?”
“I fell asleep at my mother's house. You know how comfortable her couch is.”
“I completely understand that,” Sam said. “My mom's house always smells like vanilla. I'm out like a light as soon as I sit down.”
Shelby turned to Ingrid. “How's your car?”
She sighed. “It was a write-off. I had to invent a pretty creative story, involving a coyote and some loose gravel. Paul chewed me out for an hour, but he was more than happy to lease a new red hatchback. I may have bribed him with extra trunk space for his hockey equipment.”
“He's probably just glad that you're okay.”
“He doubts my ability to drive around the corner and insists on picking up Neil from day care. He keeps referring to my âfugue state,' like I had some kind of dissociative event. Other than that, things are more or less normal.”
“My truck is far from normal,” Sam added. “It needs a new paint job, and I had a hard time explaining to the mechanic why there was fur stuck to the headlights.”
“I thought you were going with the deer story,” Carl said.
“The fur is crazy long. It looks like I hit Snuffleupagus. All I could do was distract him by talking about Darian Durant's completion percentage.”
“Well,” Carl said, “he does have a truck named after him, so that's a connection.”
Shelby looked around the café. People were chatting over bowls of hot and sour soup or tapping away at laptops. Their screens glowed with promise. Nobody realized that Ingrid's car had been totaled by something out of a Greco-Roman nightmare.
She grabbed Carl's steamed bun and took a bite out of it.
He stared at her. “You know, they have them behind the counter.”
“I'm sorry. I'm having a really weird day.”
“You do have a bit of a caged-animal look.”
“Iâ” She stared at the wreckage on his plate. The smear of hot sauce reminded her of blood on asphalt. “May have found something out. But I don't know what it means, or even if I'm completely right about it.”
“Oh God,” Sam said. “Did I really hit Snuffleupagus?”
“No. You hit my supervisor.”
She blanched. “What?”
“It was Trish Marsden. I just visited her in the hospital, and she looks likeâwell, like she was in a car accident. Dr. Laclos was there too, for some weird reason.”
“Wait a minute.” Ingrid looked at Shelby. “You're saying that the silenus wasn't just humanâshe was a prof?”
“So it would seem.”
“Holy shit,” Carl murmured. “I really need to get my revisions in on time.”
“Maybe they're all professors,” Sam said. “That would explain so much.”
“Soâ” Carl gave her a long look. “Exactly how long have you been sitting on this information? Or didn't you think it was relevant.”
“I only figured it out yesterday. Our DA mentioned that she was in the hospital, and as soon as I saw herâI knew. She's healing fast. Too fast for aâ” Shelby looked around the café again, though it was clear that nobody was paying attention. “I mean, a human couldn't possibly recover that quickly.”
“I hit an award-winning scholar with my car,” Ingrid murmured.
“You're not the only one,” Sam said. “I've still got scholar fur on my bumper.”
Carl shook his head. “Don't say
scholar fur
.”
Shelby didn't want to think about what they'd done. Ingrid was the only one who'd hesitated. She'd suspected all along that the silenoi might be human, but after Carl was nearly harpooned in the backseat, their ethics had narrowed considerably. It was all screaming darkness, and glass in their hair, and the silent hunter closing the space between them. They'd had no choice. Like the silenus, they'd acted on instinct. It was herâ
“âor us,” Shelby said, mostly to herself.
Carl looked at her. “What?”
“I don't know. I shouldn't even be forming words right now.”
“We can't think about last night. We need to focus on that note. If it's correct, then there's going to be a homicidal fur pile at the Arx of Violets, and we need to be there.”
“Fur pile.” Shelby giggled.
“Hey.” Carl waved at her. “Keep your head in the game. We need you.”
“It's not a game!” The people at the nearest table glanced at her. Shelby lowered her voice. “That was our mistakeâthinking that it was just a game.
Oh, look at me, I'm a magical hero, la la, I think I'll hunt for some treasure.
But then people started dying. The park took control. I meanâGodâhave we even asked ourselves how the magic works? How it's possible? We don't care. We just believe in it, like gravity, or finals. Because we're so desperate to escape who we really are.”
“Whoa, whoa. Rein it in, Susan Lucci. You're spiraling.”
Shelby put her head in her hands. “I feel like I don't know how to be a person.”
She felt a pressure on her wrist. She thought it was Carl, but when she looked up, it was Ingrid, touching her lightly. She could feel the cool metal of her ring.
“Let's just agree that we're all works in progress,” Ingrid said. “I nearly burned down my house last week because I forgot to put water in the electric kettle. I was trying to get Neil to use the toilet, and he just kept screaming, âI'm a herbivore!' But he wouldn't let me take his pants off. I didn't even smell the smoke until it was drifting down the hallway. There were no batteries in the smoke alarm. We all could have died in our sleepâbecause I'd swapped out the batteries and stuck them in the karaoke machine.”
Carl's eyes brightened. “You've had a karaoke machine this whole time?”
“It's Paul's.”
“This changes everything.”
Ingrid turned back to Shelby. “The point is that we're all just hanging on. You have to let yourself off the hook. Just a little bit.”
Shelby sighed. “This does feel like an epic spiral.”
“We need an epic distraction, then,” Carl said. “I say we go to the club.”
“Right,” Sam replied. “The silenoi can't get us if we're clubbing.”