There was another world inside her town, or so
she had been told. Rory’s bedroom walls were covered in drawings of it,
sketches of what she thought it might look like, what might actually be there.
But she didn’t know for sure, and she never would, because Rory was not like
the many others. She didn’t have the gift of seeing it. You either
could or you couldn’t, and she couldn’t. But she wanted to. She
desperately wanted to see it, so much so that the paint was worn away on her
window frame from all the hours she had spent pressed against it, straining her
eyes for a glimpse. Just a glimmer. That was all she wanted. That was all she
needed, because if she could see it, then she could leave this town, leave this
whole world and join another one. An undoubtedly better one.
Staring at empty air was what
she was doing now, sketch pad in hand, pen between her teeth as her eyes gazed
into the gathering darkness, seeing nothing. She looked down at the paper
in front of her, admiring the dazzling landscape she had drawn, smiling a
little as she realized that the proportions were exactly as she had imagined
them. She could see the colors now, the
color of the trees, the spectrum of sunset colors… She looked up and spied her
colored pencils on her desk. They were
just out of reach, and she groaned as she stood and plodded to her desk to grab
them.
On the way, she happened to
glance at the alarm clock on her bedside table and cursed under her breath. She
had lost track of time and was going to be late. Again. Damn Friday nights in
the fall. And damn her easily persuadable, people pleasing personality. She
immediately tossed her sketchbook and pencil onto her bedspread and grabbed her
backpack, fumbling around in her hoodie pockets to make sure she had her house
keys before she rushed out of her room and down the hall.
Friday nights meant football
games, and unable to be part of the special club of people who could see the
other world – and who spent Friday nights learning magic and manners and
whatever else you needed to survive there – she had signed up for band.
She played the trombone, not because of her passion for the instrument,
but because her dad had once played, and there was a leftover in storage in
their basement. As she made her way toward the front door, she glanced
into the living room where her mother was playing the role of drunk unemployed
couch potato, and said, “I’ll be back by morning. Tomorrow night at the
latest.” She waited for some response, some question, anything at all, but all
she heard were the sounds of Law and Order SVU.
“Or maybe never,” she muttered
to herself as she let herself out.
She got six texts in the next
three minutes that only made her feel even surlier. “Where are you?” “Can’t you
ever be here on time?” “Starting without you.” Etc. She didn’t bother
responding to any of them. Instead she put her phone on silent and walked
staring into space – the space where the other world supposedly was – and
wondered if anyone was watching her walk down her street toward the high
school, toward the lights and the sounds that were growing ever louder.
Someone probably was. Creepy, she thought, though the idea gave her a
weird kind of thrill in her and dredged up a lot of longing that sent a deep
ache through her whole chest.
She had only been five when the
tear had opened, but she would always remember the chaos that had followed.
People from all over the world had descended upon Riverwood, a small town
without much more than a Walmart to boast about until then. The “Rift
between the Worlds” had become its number one tourist attraction, changing her
town into a sideshow, with shops for the occult around every corner, guided
tours, B&B’s that specialized in entertaining the especially weird
traveler, and a not so secret government agency dedicated to monitoring it all.
Most of the people running things were as blind to the other world as she
was, but that hadn’t stopped any of them from capitalizing on it.
She smelled popcorn from a whole
block away, and the delicious scent made her stomach rumble. A wave of
déjà vu washed over her as years of similar memories piled on top of the new
ones her mind had already begun to create. The cool fall air, the smell
of concession stand food, and the sounds of the announcer shouting a
play-by-play through the PA system around the football field knocked around in
her mind, familiar and distant and beautiful. As discontent as she often
was, she still loved these little things. She wasn’t what anyone might
call a football fan, but she loved the enthusiasm and atmosphere of a high
school football game. That was at least sixty percent of the reason she
had agreed to play in the pep band – which she was now late for. She sped
up her pace, feeling the mounting guilt as she glanced at the ever-increasing
text notifications on her phone – she hadn’t bothered letting them know she was
on the way. They knew she was; they just wanted to torment her.
The Booster Club moms were
chatting happily with each other at the gate, though their cheerful expressions
shifted to uneasy distaste as they spied her.
Rory had never earned their disapproval, but poverty was its own
reputation in a town like this, and every one of these women at some stage or
another had deemed her a bad seed. The looks stung, but she kept her face
as passive as possible as she flashed her band pass and hurried through the
gate. Without paying much attention to where she was going, she made her
way toward the part of the bleachers reserved for the pep band, waving to her
friends with a quick almost indifferent tilt of one hand.
Ashley, band geek and D & D
nerd extraordinaire, waved back enthusiastically while also indicating that she
had grabbed Rory’s trombone, something Rory had not only expected but counted
on. With an apologetic grimace toward their band teacher Mr. Ellis, she
took a seat in the back row beside another of her friends, Nick, a football
drop-out turned wannabe delinquent, who was trying to sneak a cigarette between
songs. She reached out as she sat down and grabbed the cancer stick out
of his hands, tossing it to the ground and crushing it beneath her shoe.
“Trying to kill yourself again?”
she muttered as she began to put her instrument together. Nick just
glared at her.
“At least I know what time to
show up, which was, by the way, almost an hour ago,” he said with such a sharp
tone of irritation that she actually looked at him with surprise.
“What’s your problem?” she
asked, annoyed by his sudden wheedling behavior. It wasn’t like he was
the poster boy for enthusiastic participation in school events. His frown
deepened but he didn’t answer right away. He simply huffed and rubbed a smudge
off the bell of his trombone. She saw him clench his jaw then let the tension
release, a strange thing to see if you are actually watching for the record,
“Him.” He nodded his head toward the
front of the stands where Rory glimpsed wavy blond hair broad smile, and loud,
jubilant laughter.
“Ah,” she said sighing
heavily. This blonde Adonis had managed
to ensnare the attention of most of the girls in school, including Ashley. She was batting star-struck eyelashes at him,
and he was grinning back, his smile as oily as his shiny hair. Rory wanted to puke.
“At least you’re still sane,” Nick
said watching Ashley with disgust. Rory
sighed again and shrugged.
“Insanity has nothing to do with
it,” she said. “That,” she said, indicating Ashley, “is all hormones.” She snorted at the look Nick gave her, but he
also looked so downtrodden that she made a sad face and murmured, “Aw, buddy.
You should just ask her out. Do it
before that dude does it or you’re screwed.”
This was probably the sixth time
she had said these words to him in the past three days, ever since “that dude”
had appeared her history class with a note saying he was an exchange student.
From over there. Her teacher, happy for
an opportunity to take a nap at his desk, asked “that dude” to introduce
himself and, “Maybe we could do a little Q&A, yeah? Sound okay, kids?” He had then promptly plopped into his chair
and gone to sleep. The blonde began
speaking, his voice vibrating with the trace of an accent, though Rory noted
that his English was immaculate.
“My full name is Muhr A’Thar. My
name may sound unfamiliar to you, because I was named in Ilyranian
tradition. Everyone just calls me
Arthur.” It was here that he first used that strategic smile that had
endangered the hearts of every girl in Rory’s class, including Ashley. Rory had caught her own cheeks heating
uncomfortably when their eyes briefly met, and she hurriedly pulled out a
notebook and began drawing, though she had still listened closely, even if she
had pretended not to for Nick’s sake, because this world, this existence had
been her fascination.
Ten years earlier, what came to be known as the
Ilyra Act had been signed. The President
had flown into the little airport outside town in Airforce One, and the town
was swarming with Secret Service for an entire week while he met with an
Ilyranian ambassador at the new Hilton Garden Inn. The President couldn’t see Ilyra, but he
liked their deep pockets and fascination with all things Earth, so trade
agreements were signed, ambassadors exchanged, and a year later travel visas
were being issued. Those first exchange
students had been treated like young princes or princesses, partly because they
actually had been something like that in their own world, and Riverwood had
scrambled to accommodate them, building a new district on the border of the
rift meant specifically for these students and other immigrants. The houses were spectacular, home to the rich
and famous of both worlds. Ironically,
only a few blocks away, the least affluent members of Riverwood lived and gazed
up at a shining world of impossibility.
That was what this guy was, Rory thought,
impossible. He was almost too good to be
true, but when she glanced back at her friend, Ashley was dreamy-eyed and
almost drooling. She had to bite her lip
to keep from rolling her eyes.
She felt a similar disgust now as he started a
raucous chant with other avid football fans along the front of the bleachers, a
chant that suddenly halted when he ran over and grabbed another guy around the
neck and dragged him over, yelling loudly.
She watched through narrowed eyes as he began introducing his friend
around. Rory couldn’t see details of
this new addition to the in-crowd up front, but it didn’t matter. She wasn’t really that interested.
“Oh wonderful,” Nick muttered, smoke drifting out
of his nostrils as he tried to sneakily smoke his cigarette. Rory grabbed the nearly burned down butt and
crushed it under her foot.
“You want a fine on top of everything else?” she
hissed, glaring at him. A moment later
she lifted her trombone to her lips and began playing, trying to focus her
whole attention on the song. Nick was
failing to participate next to her, still glaring at her, though his face
looked more miserable than angry.
Boys were stupid, Rory thought, thinking of all
of Nick’s moody behavior and Arthur’s condescension. Most of the boys in her class were more
concerned with nailing the girls they considered hot and had nothing but
disdain for her. She didn’t want them to
like her, not really, but she longed for someone to exist that kind of
understood her or wanted to. Nick and
Ashley were great friends, but they had grown up and changed. There was nothing
much left in common between them except their childhood experiences, and more
than once Rory had wondered if they even liked her these days. She had always been a little too obsessed
with the other world. Nick had talked to
her about his multiple times, telling her it was unhealthy. Since when was he such an expert on what was
unhealthy behavior?
As soon as they were allowed to
leave, Rory packed up her trombone and dropped it off in the band room before
meeting Nick in the parking lot. She
watched Nick and Ashley argue as she approached his car, the confrontation
ending with Ashley storming away toward a different group of people. Her stomach clenched like she had been socked
in the gut. A moment later, Ashely
glanced up and saw her. She stopped for
a moment, mouth dropping open as if she meant to say something, but in another
moment, she turned and hurried away, Arthur calling her name.
Rory watched Ashley leave, her
eyes stinging suddenly, and she turned furious eyes on Nick, though she wasn’t
sure if she was angry with him or with Ashley.
“I thought we had plans
tonight,” she said quietly. Her voice
was harsh and low, and Nick subtly winced.
“Ashley invited us to a party,”
Nick said, his voice equally low. He
glanced back at Ashely, and Rory followed his gaze, noticing that Ashley was
determinedly not looking at them, though something about the way she was curled
away from them indicated that she knew they were watching her. Rory felt goosebumps ripple over her skin as
she noticed that Arthur, speaking with Ashley, was actually staring at
her. She shivered and climbed into
Nick’s car.
“Maybe we should go,” she said quietly
as Nick climbed in beside her. “I don’t really trust that guy.” Nick knew who she meant, and she knew he
agreed, but he groaned.
“She’s going to do what she
wants,” he said.
“That doesn’t mean we have to
watch her dive off the deep end. Come on,”
she said, sighing, “It’s only one party.”
She glanced at him for a moment, wrinkling her nose as he lit up a
cigarette.
“There’ll be booze, at least,”
she continued, and he grunted.
“Fine.” They sat in silence for several minutes,
waiting for Ashely’s new friends to get into their own cars and start zipping
out of the parking lot. Ashley, with
Arthur in tow, appeared at Rory’s window.
“You guys coming then?” she
asked, sounding hopeful and smiling carefully.
Rory nodded.
“Good. I’ll text you the address.”
“We’ll just follow you,” Nick
growled from the driver’s side. Ashley’s
smile faded slightly, but she nodded.
“Cool. Okay. I’ll text you the
address just in case,” she said quietly to Rory, who flashed a quick grin
knowingly.
And just as she had suspected,
Nick wanted to stop for junk food. She
mapped the address and dictated directions to him as he chomped down French
fries.
“Shit, we’re going to Bridgeway,”
he muttered, bits of potato flying out of his mouth. This had been obvious to Rory, who doubted
Ashley would have been conned into going to a party anywhere other than the fancy,
rich Ilyranian neighborhood. She just
sighed and stared out the window. Rain
had begun to splatter the ground, dripping coldly down the windows. The dim
orange light from the streetlamps refracted and blurred. She let the radio and the rain bury the
feelings that nagged at her chest.
She glanced down at her clothes
as they drove through the gates, the guard glancing at them but nodding. Arthur must have told them we were coming,
she thought. The guard looked her up and
down as they drove past, and she felt her cheeks heat. Looking down at her own clothes, she
winced. Turning, she dug around in
Nick’s backseat, emerging with a mildly worn t-shirt with a cool band name
plastered across the front. She sniffed
it cautiously, noted the aroma of cigarettes and his cologne, but it wasn’t
bad. Not as bad as the baggy black shirt
she had dug out of her laundry basket.
There was nothing she could do about her jeans now. She quickly tore off her t-shirt, Nick doing
a double take as she was momentarily half naked.
“What the hell, Rory?
Seriously?” His cheeks had turned pink when he’d glimpsed her navy-blue bra and
pale skin. But she was only topless for
a moment before dragging his shirt over her head and running her fingers
through her hair. She glanced at her
reflection and then looked to Nick for approval, but his face was still pink,
and he refused to meet her eye.
“Why do you even care what you
look like?” He asked. She sighed. She’d explained this every time she had tried
a new “style” at school. It wasn’t about attracting male attention. It was about having an identity. She assumed, and she thought rightly, that
people judged other people by what they wore. And the way she seemed was much more important to her
than being considered attractive. The
reflection she saw said “don’t care” about as well as she could manage without
actually trying.
“At
least you don’t wear buckets of make-up. Otherwise we’d probably never make it
inside,” he muttered, parking along the street and shutting off the
engine. She laughed a little, and
immediately made herself forget about her clothes and her hair and her
poverty. She had to be convincing about
the not caring, she told herself, glancing at her reflection once more but
ignoring the drawn insecurity written all over her face.
Rory
closed the door and circled the car, meeting Nick at his door where he stood
awkwardly, arms crossed over his chest in obvious discomfort.
“Don’t
get too drunk or we’ll be stranded,” she told him, though she only lived about
a mile from here and could walk if she had to.
“Oh,
I’m getting trashed,” he said, handing her his keys, “Just stop me if I try to
start a fight.” Awesome, she thought.
Her favorite pastime: babysitting depressed Nick.
She
could hear music blasting from speakers inside the house, and she heard shrieks
and laughter coming from behind the house.
She glimpsed a lit pool and sighed with minute longing. As they approached the front steps, she saw
people staring at them. She doubted they knew her name, but they definitely had
opinions about her presence. Nick didn’t
seem to notice, making a beeline for Ashley, who Rory noticed was hovering in
the foyer, Arthur an arms-length away but completely ignoring her. As soon as she saw them coming, she broke
away from him and hurried over.
“I
thought you weren’t coming,” she said, laughing a little with relief. Rory shrugged.
“Nick
couldn’t resist the call of free booze,” she said nodding her head toward their
friend who had already spied the keg and a table littered with liquor bottles
and plastic cups. Ashley bit her lip,
watching him with a frown. She glanced
at Rory before bursting, “I’m sorry, Ror.
He’s so…it’s impossible to say no to him.” Rory assumed “him” meant
Arthur. She watched him laughing with a
group of people that looked too rich to be from her school.
“Who
are all of these people?” she asked, looking around uncomfortably.
“It’s a
St. Charles party,” Ashley said with a bit of a groan. Rory looked around sharply and almost bolted
for the door.
“Thanks
for the warning,” she hissed, and Ashley shrugged.
“I
didn’t know he knew anyone there,” she said apologetically. Rory just shook her head. Well, she thought, that would explain why
these stupid kids were staring at me. Ten years apparently wasn’t long enough
to lose a bad reputation. Rory wished
she looked a little angrier and a little scarier now that she knew who’s
company she kept, but it was too late now.
“Come
on,” Ashley said, laughing a little, “That was what…fourth grade? No way they’d
remember you.”
Rory
doubted it, having already seen the looks being shot her direction.
“How
many kids you do you know that managed to fake their way into St. C’s?” Rory
asked in a harsh whisper. Ashley opened
her mouth but no words came out. Instead, a high-pitched sneer crossed the
room, “Well if it isn’t the little scam artist?” Rory felt her whole body go cold. She turned
slowly to face the owner of the voice, a girl with strawberry blond corkscrew
curls and a face full of freckles. Once
short and round and venomous, Whitney Rogers was now as tall and thin as a
model wearing a cute dress that probably cost more than Nick’s car. She had a diamond bracelet on her wrist and
glittering diamond earrings. Everything about her was perfect except the sneer
on her face that twisted her mouth into an ugly line on her face. The room seemed to grow silent and still
instantly. She heard Ashley suck in a
breath next to her, and before she had realized it, her hands were in fists at
her side, ready to fight.
“Who
invited this trash?” Whitney went on, looking Rory up and down. She felt herself beginning to shrink under
that gaze. Her words were stuck in her throat, just like always.
“She’s
not trash!” Ashley said, quickly, her face pale as the tension seemed to
escalate. Whitney looked at her long and hard, her expression softening.
“Oh, is
she your friend?” Ashley looked at Rory helplessly and said
quietly, “Yes. Please leave her alone.”
Rory felt the words bite into her.
She didn’t need anyone defending her, but since her own words wouldn’t
come, she couldn’t do anything.
“Whit,
hon, I invited her. She’s Ashley’s best
friend. Come on. Jackson got the hot tub working,” Arthur
said, appearing out of nowhere. He put a
hand on Whitney’s elbow and began to lead her away. Whitney glanced back at them before turning
to Arthur, no doubt telling him the whole story, Rory thought, and she felt her
body slowly slacken and become rubbery and cold.
She
didn’t speak to Ashley or Nick, instead heading immediately for the giant
bottle of vodka on the table. She poured
a glass full and disappeared with it, leaving the bright, silent room and her
friends behind.
Rory
hated alcohol. Even as she gulped down
the liquor, she hated it. But she loved
the fake courage, the words that suddenly seemed too easy to say, the feelings
that rushed up and overwhelmed her. What
was she doing here? This wasn’t her
life. She stared at the cup, more than
half empty and pushed it away, her stomach churning. She wasn’t like her mother, who couldn’t have
stopped at half a glass. She couldn’t
have stopped at half a bottle. Her
mother didn’t stop until the money was gone.
Rory would never be her. She
threw the cup into the grass and wrapped her arms around her knees.
Of
course this was a St. Charles party, she thought. It made perfect sense. Most of the kids from Ilyra went there. Ever since the rift had opened, St. Charles
had been quickly converted to a prep school for kids that could see Ilyra. They
taught them the language, the arts, the history, even the magic. It was
expensive, but any kid with the ability to see Ilyra could apply.
It had
been her mom’s idea. She had applied for Rory after her teacher had told her
mother that her drawings were “eerily accurate depictions” of the grand city on
the other side of the rift. Rory had
insisted that she had made them up. She wished
she could see it, but she had never pretended she actually could. St. Charles’s admittance board had replied
enthusiastically to her mother’s application, calling Rory a prodigy and a
“gift”. She’d been offered a full
scholarship and a stipend – which her mother had immediately spent on herself –
and attended classes for two months before the school finally realized that
Rory was not as “gifted” as they had originally thought. They humiliated her in an assembly, sued her
mother for the stipend money she had spent, and sent her packing immediately.
Rory
had almost managed to forget about this.
It had been years after all, but she had intentionally avoided any
chance of seeing those kids from St. Charles’s again, mostly managing. Except
tonight.
“You
alright?” Someone was hovering in the shadows behind her, and when he spoke,
Rory jumped. She glanced back and saw
Arthur emerge from the darkness to sit down beside her. He was holding a glass of beer for her, but
she shook her head and buried her face in her knees again.
“You’re
a legend,” he said, his voice sounding a little awed, but Rory snorted
derisively.
“I bet
I am. The trash that infiltrated St. Charles.” She snorted again and felt her
eyes stinging. She should never drink.
“Trash
is their word. I think it’s badass,” he said, sipping the beer and glancing at
her.
“Are
you sure you should be talking to me?” she said glaring at him. He laughed quietly.
“I
don’t care. I came here to learn, not to be sidetracked by high school
games. Besides, like I said, I think its
badass. Not the stuff your mom did,
but…” He sighed, looking out at the
night sky before looking at her.
“I saw
the stuff you drew that got you admitted,” he said. She swallowed and stared at him.
“How?
Didn’t they burn it?” She asked, her tone sarcastic. He shook his head.
“A
private collector bought it, actually.
My grandmother,” he said with a grin.
Rory felt like the ground had dropped out from beneath her.
“No
fucking way,” she said frowning and glaring at him, watching for deception.
“I’m
serious. She’s on their board of
trustees. She actually asked me to keep
an eye out for you,” he said, glancing at her again. Rory’s mouth dropped open, and she could
barely believe what she was hearing, but he was being serious.
She got
to her feet in a second and was back away from him, arms crossed over her
chest. He looked confused and stood up
slowly.
“What
do you want from me?” she asked, her voice shaking slightly. She couldn’t explain why, but she felt like
she was being tricked into something.
“Nothing. She just wanted me to find you, see if you
were still making art,” he said shrugging.
She studied him carefully. He
looked relaxed and comfortable in his khaki shorts and burgundy polo, his hands
casually stuffed in his pockets, hair rumpled a little, face hesitantly smiling
at her. He looked as genuine as he had
ever seen him, but she couldn’t…
“There
you are,” Nick said, emerging from the house, looking a little worried. “I’ve
been looking all over for you.” He saw
Arthur and stopped dead. Rory hurried
over to him before he the look of betrayal could do more than flash across his
features.
“Let’s
get out of here,” she said quickly, grabbing his arm and leading him back
toward the door. She didn’t look back at
Arthur until she was sure Nick wouldn’t see her. He was standing where she had left him,
watching her carefully but she didn’t see any malice on his face, only
disappointment. Before she could change
her mind, she followed Nick into the house.
He led
her through the rooms, where groups of people would quietly stop talking and
stare at them until they had passed into another room to experience this all
over again. The walk to the front door
felt like miles, but she knew it had only been minutes. The cool fall air slammed into her as soon as
she stepped outside, and she shivered as she felt the rain in the air. Tears she had been holding back, anger and
regret adding to their urgency, burst from her eyes and rolled down her cheeks,
growing chilly as the night air swept over her.
Nick glanced at her and sighed, putting an arm around her shoulder and
squeezing her a little.
“What
do you want to do now?” he asked. She
glanced at him, wondering for a moment if he meant existentially, because that
was how she was feeling right then, but she knew he just meant that it was only
nine o’clock on a Friday night. Then he
stopped short, almost knocking her to the ground. His arm slid away, and he was staring straight
ahead at a shadowy figure leaning against his car. Rory felt a little bereft as his body heat
dispersed, but she felt relieved at the same time, especially when he left her
where she was and rushed to Ashley’s side.
The
rain started coming down hard a moment later, but Rory barely noticed as she
watched Nick make his move. She didn’t
hear what he said or how Ashley answered.
She only knew that she didn’t have a part in this moment. She saw him reach up and brush her hair out
of her face, his fingers shaking visibly, and Ashley laughed uncomfortably.
Nick bowed his head, and Rory imagined he was apologizing or he might have been
begging, but a moment later, Ashely had her arms around his neck. That was when Rory turned and began trudging
down the road toward home.
She
sent Nick a text a few minutes later, just in case he realized she was walking,
and told him it was fine. She needed to walk off her buzz as it was. But the
rain was cold, and she was shivering hard after a few blocks. She tried to focus on getting home, but her
mind kept drifting back to what Arthur had said, that her art had been
purchased. She imagined it hanging on
someone’s wall, tried to imagine the room, tried imagining his grandmother
staring at her art speculating about things like deeper meanings or her use of colors. But it was too impossible. That wasn’t her life. No one ever said those things about her art,
she thought, but then she reminded herself that no one had seen her art since
then. She kept it hidden in her room
away from all prying eyes. Nick and
Ashley never came to her house, and her mother was rarely coherent if she was
even home. There was no risk of anyone
discovering the piles and piles of drawings and paintings hidden under the
floorboards in her bedroom and behind posters on her walls.
Only
two more blocks, she thought, turning a corner that marked the edge of Bridgway
and Riverwood. The brand-new townhouses
towered over the battered hundred year old houses that had made up the center
of town. The old trees creaked as wind
rattled through them, and she shivered again, wishing she had just waited out
Nick’s and Ashley’s romantic moment so she could have gotten a ride home. As
she was rounding the last block, a car sped past her and splashed gutter water
in an arch over her head. She stopped
dead in her tracks, spluttering as water sluiced off of her, and glared feebly
at the tail lights, which had begun reversing back toward her. Slightly panicked now, she stepped off the
sidewalk and into the grass of someone’s front yard, watching the car
carefully. A moment later, she saw
Arthur’s blond head sticking out of the driver’s side window grinning at her.
“What
the hell,” she muttered.
“Get
in,” he said, and she rolled her eyes.
“I’m
fine,” she yelled back, her voice barely carrying over the sound of his
engine. His grin broadened.
“Just
get in,” he insisted. She groaned and
threw up her hands. She jogged over to
his car and climbed in, frowning darkly as he grinned at her. He tossed her a hoodie.
“What
is this?” she asked, pulling it on.
“I felt
bad,” he said, shifting his car into gear and speeding back onto the street.
“I
seriously live a block from here,” she said uncomfortably.
“It’s
fine,” he said, smiling brightly at her, “It’s better than nothing, right?”
“Sure,
I guess.” She watched him suspiciously.
Guys like this did not chase her down and drive her home. It had already occurred to her that he had
shifted his attention from Ashley to her much too quickly for this to be a
normal kind of relationship, but she wasn’t sure how to ask him what his
intentions were, but when he pulled up in front of her house and started to get
out, she pulled him back inside his car and crossed her arms.
“What
the hell is going on here?” She asked sharply.
His grin faltered.
“What
do you mean?”
“I mean
that an hour ago you were all into Ashley, and now you’re here, at my house,
which I never invited you to see. And
you keep smiling at me like that. This
isn’t normal. What do you want from me, dude?”
She saw his stricken look, but it didn’t phase her.
“Don’t
even try to lie to me,” she said, glaring more fiercely and tightening her
arms. He gazed back at her for a long
time before sighing and leaning back against his chair.
“I know
how this looks to you,” he said, his tone darker than she had expected, “And
since my charm obviously doesn’t work on you…” He flashed her an irritated look
before continuing, “I’m following orders.
Satisfied?”
“Um,
not really,” she said wishing she was the kind of person that could punch other
people. When he didn’t answer, she threw her hands up again and said, “And your
charm? Are you serious? Any girl in
her right mind wouldn’t trust a guy that acts like that. All you’ve done so far is act super creepy.”
“Stop!”
he said putting up a hand. “Has anyone ever told you how annoying you
are?” She rolled her eyes.
“My
grandmother is a collector. I told you. She wants more of your art, but Ashley
said you don’t do art anymore, not since that situation at St. Charles’s.”
“Ashley
told you about that?”
“No,
Whitney told me about that about 45 minutes ago. I put the pieces together,
talked to Ashley, and then followed you home.”
“See?
Super creepy.”
“I told
you. I’m following orders.” Rory shook
her head.
“Why
didn’t you just ask me yourself?” she asked, as though this path should have
been obvious. He laughed derisively and
shook his head with disbelief.
“Since
the second I walked into your class, you’ve done nothing but sneer at me. Don’t even pretend you don’t do that. You’ve been acting like you’re too good to
talk to me. You would’ve bitten my head
off if I’d tried to ask you anything about this. Admit it.”
Rory
was a little stunned by his observational skills, though she immediately felt
like a jerk. Which was probably part of
his plan, she thought, but it had worked.
Now she felt bad. And she knew
she was going to do it. She was going to
show him. She couldn’t explain why this
felt like the end of something, and she didn’t like it. What choice did she have though? She felt
like she had been cornered.
“Okay,”
she whispered, barely able to breathe, her heart tearing inside her chest. He
grinned broadly, and she saw relief flash through his eyes – which in the
moment seemed odd, but she immediately forgot this. He opened his car door and began to climb out
until she grabbed his arm.
“Wait.
First, you have to promise that you won’t tell anyone about…” My mom, she
thought, my house. How shitty my life
is? But she couldn’t finish. He nodded.
“I
promise. Trust me. I won’t tell anyone.” She shook her
head. She swallowed hard and said, “If
you say a word about…about my life, I’ll…I’ll burn it all. I really will.” She didn’t actually think she
could, and really how much worse could everyone’s opinions be if he told them?
But in the moment, glancing at her building, imagining her mother passed out on
the couch, the garbage piling up… She shuddered and shook her head.
“This
is a bad idea,” she said, shaking her head again. But Arthur grabbed her arm
and when she looked at him, his expression was as serious as she had ever seen
anyone’s.
“I
won’t tell anyone anything.
Seriously. I promise. Okay?” His voice
was a little strained, and though everything in her was terrified to expose the
truth of her world, she swallowed hard and got out of the car.
He followed
her, ignoring the rain and watching her carefully as she fumbled around in her
pockets for her keys. She was still
freezing, and her fingers felt numb as she shoved the key into the lock and
opened the door.
She
could hear the television, still playing reruns, louder than absolutely
necessary. She glanced into the living
room and noticed that her mom had grabbed a blanket since she had been home
earlier, so her tattered and risqué nightgown was covered. A cigarette was still burning in the ashtray. Without thinking about Arthur – in fact, actively not thinking about him – Rory
rushed into the room and put the cigarette out.
She knocked over several empty bottles in the process, and the resulting
clatter could have woken the dead, though her mother – dead drunk – didn’t
stir. The noise still made Rory
wince. She quickly picked up the bottles
that had scattered across the floor and dumped them into a garbage can in the
kitchen. Arthur followed her in, his
face calculating and curious but not cruel as he looked around each room. He walked over to the fridge and opened the
door, which Rory would have thought was rude if she hadn’t been so
self-conscious of its emptiness.
“My
room is upstairs,” she said, unable to look him in the eye. She didn’t wait for him to follow her,
knowing he would, and began climbing up the rickety stairs. They creaked under her footsteps, but she
barely heard this anymore. She had lived
here for so long the sound was almost comforting.
Her
bedroom door was partially open, an unusual oversight on her part, but she was
pretty sure her mother hadn’t climbed the stairs in five years. When she swung the door open for Arthur to
enter, she held her breath.
Her
room was sparse, her furniture pilfered from dumpsters and thrift stores – a
desk against the window, a bookshelf of bricks and two by fours. The bed was a mattress on the floor with
blankets that had been threadbare years before, and were now little more than
rags.
Arthur
took a step toward the desk and flipped on the lamp. When he straightened, she saw him searching,
eyes scanning the walls, the desk, everywhere.
“Just a
second,” she said, and she pulled down two strategically hung posters on one
wall, putting them on her bed and waiting for him to say something. Almost like he was in a trance, he crossed
the room and stood gazing up at the mural before him.
She had
painted them this summer, the three pieces he was now studying. The focal point on the left was a magnificent
tree with crimson leaves shot through with threads of silver, and visible in
the distance was a shimmering cityscape, with skyscrapers that seemed to
glitter as they reached into the clouds.
The sky was a gradient of oranges, reds and blues that still made her
chest ache when she looked at it. Deep shadows existed there too, a darkness
she couldn’t understand but that had seemed vital to the image. In the dim light of the room, she glanced up
at Arthur’s face and saw that his eyes were shining. He reached up as though he wanted to touch the
painting, his hand shaking slightly, but he let his hand fall to his side and
stepped back, breaking the spell that had held him for a moment.
“Show
me more,” he whispered. She bit her lip
and got on her knees and peeled back a floor board. She pulled out a makeshift portfolio that she
had pieced together from large pieces of cardboard and duct tape and put it on
the floor near his feet. He dropped to
his knees and, without asking, pulled away the top piece and sucked in his
breath sharply.
The
piece he had found was dark, black and blood red and silver. She had intended
to hide this, but he had been too quick for her. She had painted it last winter, during the
holiday break when she had been cold and alone and feeling more depressed than
usual. A bloody hand grasped a silver
orb that glowed silvery and white. Even
now it looked alive. She hadn’t known
what it was, but the image still gave her an eerie feeling when she looked at
it. Arthur quickly flipped it over,
though he was also incredibly gentle. She watched as he seemed to sink into
each painting and drawing, his mouth open but no words escaping. When he reached the end, he couldn’t look at
her.
“These…”
he began, his voice breathy and rough, a note of anguish that she couldn’t understand
rippling out of his words, “These are beautiful.” He choked on the word, and
Rory watched him with fascination. This
arrogant boy had been completely flattened by her art. She gazed back at her wall, and something
about his awe seemed to have rubbed off on her.
The colors seemed more vivid and emotional now than they ever had
before, like he had brought her art into a living, breathing existence.
She
waited for him to say more, but he just sat on her floor staring at
nothing. After a few moments of mutual
silence, he pulled out his phone and began typing furiously.
“No,
wait, what are you doing?” He didn’t answer. He just kept typing for another
moment before looking up at her.
“Rory,
these are incredible. You…you have no
idea how incredible. My grandmother
needs to know,” he said, shaking his head as if disbelieving. Rory felt her body tense, but she reasoned
with herself. This had been the point,
she reminded herself. This had been his
whole reason for seeing her art. She had
shown it to him voluntarily, hadn’t she?
“You
think she’ll want them?” He laughed and
looked at her like she was an idiot.
“Yeah,
I do. And not just her.” He watched her carefully for a long time,
glancing at his phone intermittently.
After a few minutes of awkwardness, she got to her feet and ducked into
her closet. Her clothes were still wet,
though they had begun to dry and smelled terrible. Stripping them off, she dug around for
something clean and pulled on another t-shirt she had stolen from Nick months
before but that he had never noticed was missing – she had washed it since then
– and her other pair of jeans, only worn twice since the last time she’d done
laundry. She brushed her hair and pulled
it back with a hair tie before pulling on a blue hoodie and rejoining him. Instead of sprawling on the floor like he
was, she crawled onto her bed and lay with her head on her crossed arms. He was waiting for his grandmother to text
him, she figured, and for some reason the world had stopped spinning. She was waiting too, unable to imagine what
her life might look like now that she had shared this secret with him. The last person she would have ever considered…
“Can I
take a picture of the one on the wall?” He asked a moment later. She swallowed hard and nodded.
As soon
as he had sent this picture, his phone began vibrating insistently. He looked relieved and answered it quickly.
“Yes, I
found her,” he said, looking up at Rory quickly. He listened, still watching her, but his
expression changed and grew tense before he said, “I’ll…I’ll ask.”
“She
wants to talk to you,” he said, holding out the phone. Rory swallowed and blinked at him, but she took
the phone and held it to her ear.
“Hello?”
“Rory
Markham. We finally speak,” a voice said.
It was clearly an old woman, her voice gravely with age, and her words
rolled with a strong accent. Rory
glanced at Arthur before saying, “Nice to…talk to you.”
“I know
this must seem very sudden to you, but I am a great admirer of yours. I would like to show your art in my gallery
as soon as possible. You would be
compensated, of course.”
Rory
had never thought much about making money from her art. She had dreamed of it but not seriously. Her paintings and drawings had always been so
personal, so private that she hadn’t allowed herself to imagine a time when she
would be willing to part with them.
“Of
course you would be brought here as a guest during the exhibition,” the woman
continued. Rory’s heart leapt and then
immediately sunk. She pulled the phone
away from her ear, feeling all her triumph slowly fading.
“Ma’am,
I’m…I’m incredibly grateful,” she began, “and I would love to come to Ilyra,
but…I can’t see it. I’ve never been able to see it.” She watched Arthur’s face as she said this,
tears pricking her own. But he didn’t even react, and after a moment, she heard
the old woman chuckle.
“My
dear, that can be sorted out easily enough.
Don’t worry about that.” Rory
wasn’t reassured, but she glanced at Arthur who didn’t seem phased at all by
her inability to see the city on the other side of the rift. Her hands shook violently and she bit her
lip.
“Are
you sure about this?” she burst. She
felt as though she was part of something too big to understand, that there was
more going on here, but she had no idea what it could be. How could she turn down an opportunity like
this? But at the same time, how could she trust these people? Her stomach burned with anxiety. “All you’ve ever seen is one drawing I did
when I was eight and a picture of one of my paintings.”
“I am
more than sure. I suppose you wouldn’t
know this, but your art could be very valuable here. Your style is very different from anything
that artists have been making in Ilyra.”
Rory closed her eyes and took a long steadying breath. What if they were
scamming her somehow? She could lose
everything. Be real, she thought almost laughing at her own thoughts, what do
you even have to lose?
And it
was this realization that made up her mind.
She had nothing to lose. She had no one and nothing. She had Nick and Ashley, sure, but she was
pretty sure they were somewhere making out – she was happy for them of course,
but it wasn’t as though they were really worried about her right then. Otherwise Arthur wouldn’t be here. Nick would’ve flattened him before he would
have been able to say two words to her.
“Okay.
I’ll do it,” she said, shaking her head at her own recklessness. Still, she
remembered, I have nothing to lose. Nothing at all. Nowhere to go but up…right?
“Fantastic,”
the woman said, her tone obviously ecstatic.
Arthur was grinning at Rory from across the room, a genuine grin that
she actually kind of liked, if she was being totally honest. The woman asked to speak to Arthur again, and
Rory handed the phone back with shaking hands.
Arthur
spoke quickly in another language before hanging up and grinning at her. She saw his body tensing, like he was
stopping himself from mauling her.
“What
happens next?” She has letting out a
deep breath that she felt she’d been holding for hours. Arthur’s grin slowly widened.
I started reading this a few days ago and finally got enough time to finish it today. As always, excellent. Will you finish it? I could do without some of language, it seems a bit unnecessary particularly in this genre, but that's my opinion.
ReplyDeleteGood stuff :) I remember when you outlined this a few years ago, but I couldn't remember the details. Great start!
ReplyDelete