Solomon stepped to the door, ready to meet any other members of my family who might be present, but I blocked his way. What would he do if he saw Jeremia and Eva sleeping in my dorm room?
“She's not really my sister.”
“No? That's hard to believe. Look at her almond-shaped eyes, her widow's peak, her pointed nose. If you're not sisters, then you must be related in some other way. She's simply lovely, just like you.”
That's when the room swirled around me, the light in the hall seemed to grow sharper and my ears rang. Why had I not seen it before? I remembered Belen's snarl, my brothers' shared gasps, the woman by the creek hinting that another had been born with deformities. I had a sisterâa real flesh-and-blood relation whom I was responsible for. I clutched her closer to me and breathed her in. Solomon placed his heavy hand on my shoulder.
“Your life is becoming quite full. You must hear my fabulous news. Guess who was at the concert.”
I shrugged and kissed the top of my sister's head.
“Ruy Climaco of the City Philharmonic, and guess who he wants to play with the symphony. Whisper Gane. You, my dear. He requested that you play the song from the recital and the orchestra will accompany you. Isn't that simply marvelous?”
Solomon jumped back and did a dance step in the middle of the hallway. His large stomach stretched and bounced against the fabric of his tweed coat. And that was when Ranita woke up. She opened her eyes, widened her mouth into a yawn and then gazed at me. My sister. She could listen to me play with an entire orchestra. I would do this. I would do this for her.
“Monday we practice with the orchestra. Your sister is welcome to join us. I will let the Resident Assistant know that you have visitors staying with you for a time.”
“Do you think I can do it?” I asked.
“You?” he said. He wrapped his arms around both Ranita and me, squeezed us against his ample stomach and rubbed his chin on the top of Ranita's head. “You can do anything.”
I awoke in the morning with the weight of eyes on me, and when I opened mine, I saw Jeremia watching me. Eva was still curled against his chest, her cheek on her hand. I wondered if he saw changes in me like the ones I saw in him.
Ranita's washcloth diaper had leakedâa warm rush, then a sticky residueâand my black sweater stuck to my skin. I repositioned Ranita on the towels, lifting her gently, not wanting to let go, and stood. After weeks of sleeping in a bed, the floor left stiffness in my limbs that reminded me of the jail.
Jeremia watched as I opened the closet door, pulled out the old discarded T-shirt with the big mouse on it and slipped into the bathroom. His eyes were more curious and watchful than I remembered.
The shirt was clean, laundered and dry, but I had not worn it since before Christmas, when I'd purchased my new clothes. Now, when I pulled it down over my chest, it was stretched tight, and I tugged at it so it would cover my stomach. I didn't remember it being so form-fitting.
I peered at myself in the bathroom mirror. My hair, long and black, hung straight down my back. I pulled it away from my face, pretending to secure it behind my head. The split lips became more pronounced, so I dropped my hair back around my face and over my shoulders.
He stepped into the bathroom behind me. I could feel the heat radiating from his body, and I breathed in the richness of his smell. When his hands slipped around my waist and his chin settled on the top of my head, I closed my eyes and leaned against him. He placed his lips against my neck with the lightest of touches, the lift of a dragonfly, and yet my heart pounded in response. His hands tightened around my waist, and I felt his chest muscles move against my back. Closer, I thought, I want you closer. And then I felt Eva's hand against my leg, and Jeremia pulled away.
I showed Eva the shower. She experimented with the hot and cold taps, shrieking in surprise when water spurted over her extended hand, a shockingly warm rain, and then quickly took off her clothes and stepped inside. I handed Eva the soap and a washcloth. She scrubbed her body, dirt streaking in rivulets down her arms, and then I washed her hair.
I felt Jeremia's presence behind me, the smell that made me think of the forest and cool places beneath the trees. He had found the card I'd left beside the bathroom sink.
“What is this?” He tried to hand the card back to me.
I shut the door to the shower and turned to look in the mirror. Our eyes met, but he never once looked at my misshapen lips or crooked teeth. Maybe he didn't see them anymore but saw only me.
“It's called a cleft palate,” I said. “This doctor says she can fix them. Ranita's for sure because she's still a baby.”
Jeremia's eyebrows drew together. “Nathanael would have told us,” he said.
“Nathanael didn't know everything.”
I tensed my shoulders, wondering if Jeremia would turn angry and dark. I thought of his arms around my waist, his chest against my back, and I thought of whirling, happy Jeremia at the fire. That Jeremia was not here now.
“Why would this doctor help her?” Jeremia dropped the card back beside the sink.
“Because someone fixed hers.”
“Can she give me a new arm?” he said.
“No, but I think you might be able to buy a mechanical one.”
His eyes widened, and his shoulders pulled back. I thought for a minute that he might smile or laugh. Instead, I heard Eva begin to sing, adding her sweet voice to the water falling over her head, and even though Jeremia didn't smile, I did.
They slept the whole day, ate a tray of cafeteria food as if they'd never had such a wonderful meal and then slept again. While they slept, I studied in the library and practiced in the practice rooms. I was learning music from the masters now, and even though I didn't read the notes well yet, I could hear a song once and repeat it almost perfectly. I practiced songs by Cavali, Albéniz, Sanz, and I began to learn different approaches, different ways to express the voice inside. I loved my hours of practice and continued them even though my family was now with me. My other classes were still a challenge, but my instructors were pleased and surprised at the improvements I was making, given my lack of formal education.
Jeremia, Eva and Ranita slept fifteen hours a day, took showers and looked out my window with its view of the campusâat the walking paths between stone buildings and the carefully placed trees that had been pruned and trimmed to look like perfect representations of themselves rather than natural forms. When they began to get restless and impatient, I knew it was time. I would take them to see the doctor on Saturday. I didn't know if she would be there, and part of me hoped that she wouldn't, but I could not put off the meeting any longer.
Dr. Ruiz's office was not far from the school. Eva skipped and sang, dancing like a firefly on the sidewalk in her orange coat, her wrists sticking out of the sleeves like chicken legs. She touched the fences we passed, gaped at the large warm houses and pointed, shrieking, when she saw a woman walking a dog. Jeremia shuffled beside me, his eyes down, his hand dug deeply into his pants pocket. He stepped around the people we passed on the sidewalk, not glancing up. It had taken a week of cajoling to convince him that a meeting with Dr. Ruiz wasn't a commitment.
I wondered what we looked like to those who passed us. The woman with the dog smiled at Eva when she saw her skipping, then held a hand to her mouth when Eva twirled on the sidewalk, her hands splayed above her head, the webbing between the fingers pink and thin. Now that I walked with my family, I had no need for the veil. I kept my head up and looked into the faces of those we passed.
Dr. Ruiz's office was not what I had imagined. I had thought it would be a bustling place with formidable glass doors, like Randall and Burns, but it was just a house of two stories with wide steps leading to the porch and a door painted deep green. I straightened my shoulders and marched up the steps, pretending that my heart and Ranita's were not beating in unison. I had to show my family that I was not afraid, that I knew what I was doing, but my hands shook and my mouth felt dry when we stood on the porch.
Eva pushed the button by the door. Then she stood, arm raised, finger pointed, eager to push the button again. Jeremia waited on the sidewalk below. We listened to footsteps moving inside the house. Both Eva and I took a step back when the door opened.
Dr. Ruiz looked different from the last time I'd seen her. She wore a lime-green shirt and pants that encased her doughy body like a cocoon, and when she saw us, she clapped her hands together and laughed. Her cheeks pushed up into soft bulges, and Eva clapped her hands in response, giggling at this caterpillar of a woman.
“Wonderful that you're here,” she said. “Come in, come in.”
She stepped aside and Eva followed without hesitating, her head turning as she consumed the artwork on the walls, the wood floors, the sculptures placed in the corners of the first room. The rugs and curtains of the house were a deep burgundy with bright bits of yellow, as though they had been made from the petals of black-eyed Susans.
Jeremia, still standing on the sidewalk, watched Eva enter the house. His fist bulged in the pocket of his grimy jeans, and his shoulders hunched. He looked down the street, tensed, and I wondered if he would run, if this would be the last I would see of him. I watched, ready to chase after him if need be. Instead, a shiver ran through him, and then he stepped forward onto the stairs and entered the house.
“Bilateral cleft palates. Two of you. And the little one with syndactyly and the older with a missing appendage. Simply remarkable. Such an increase in deformities these days.”
We followed Dr. Ruiz down a short hallway with two closed doors on the right and large open rooms on our left. I wanted to stand still, touch with my eyes all the beauty in the rooms, but Jeremia marched forward, looking neither left nor right, following the woman down the hallway as though headed to his execution. It was so different now. Before, I'd just worried about my own reception and had kept my face covered, but now that we were all here together, I needed to know how Jeremia was feeling and how Eva responded to the people around her. I had no time for my own emotions.
Jeremia stopped abruptly at the end of the hall. I looked into the corner between the hallway and the kitchen. There was a statue, long and thin, with smooth, separated pieces running from the top to the bottom. It was a sculpture of water, of shadow, of sunshine beams stretching through tree branches.
Dr. Ruiz looked at us from the kitchen, wondering why we'd stopped, and saw us studying the statue in the hallway. She came to stand beside us.
“Oh, I love that piece, but I'm afraid it fell after I bought it at the marketplace.”
She leaned forward, turned the piece around and showed us the back. The sculpture was dented and gouged.
“If I keep it in the corner, no one can tell it's damaged,” Dr. Ruiz said.
Jeremia dug into the pocket of his jeans. He pulled out a miniature sculpture very similar to the one in the corner.
Dr. Ruiz gasped. “You did these?” She flipped the miniature sculpture around in her hand. “This is exquisite.” She looked up, her chubby cheeks sagging. “You are a talented young man. How did you learn to do this?”
“We had a lot of spare time. You can get pretty good with practice.”
“But look at the way the wood moves like water. I've always felt that somehow the water was frozen into the wood.”
Jeremia ran his finger down one of the flowing pieces of the statue. “I've gotten better. This is crude.”
“Crude? I think this is a beautiful sculpture. Is your work that much better now?” She looked again at the piece in her hand. She examined it from all sides, almost smelling it. “Yes, this one is better. You're right. This one is alive.” She looked up at Jeremia, her face serious. “Would you make me a new sculpture? One just like this? I'll find the wood.”
I held my breath as I watched Jeremia. He ran his hand over the large sculpture in the corner, his long narrow fingers flowing with the movement of the wood.
“Yes, I'll make you a new one.”
“Like this one,” said Dr. Ruiz, giving the sculpture back to Jeremia.
“Somewhat similar,” he said.
She clapped her hands again, grinned and giggled. “Marvelous. Simply marvelous.” She skipped into the kitchen.
Dr. Ruiz bustled about, pulling mugs from the cupboard and filling them with cocoa powder and milk. She set the mugs in a microwave. All the while she chatted about her plants in the window, about the mess on the table, about how thrilled she was that we'd come.
She ushered us into chairs around the circular kitchen table. When a fat orange cat strolled into the room, Eva wrapped her arms around the animal, and the two of them curled up on the kitchen floor, the feline purring a deep rumbling murmur and Eva cooing softly to it and stroking its head. Dr. Ruiz clapped her hands and laughed again. Her lime-green clothing lit up the green of her eyes but made her pale skin look almost yellow.