Mom grabs two plates from a cabinet. “Lesson plans for this week,” she says.
“Fractal geometry?”
“Just the basic concepts, like the Mandelbrot set, making a computer-generated image, talking about some practical applications. Do you think you can handle it?”
“Me?”
“Yes, you. My star student.” Mom hands me two forks, spoons, and napkins. “I know you prefer to bury your head in French, but like it or not, deep down you’re a math nerd, like me. I thought we’d start with some basic definitions—hyperbolic components, the main cardioid and period bulbs, self-similarity.”
Mom is my math teacher? I grin at her, thrilled.
“I wonder if fractal geometry and string theory are connected,” I say, excitedly tripping over my words. “You know, space appears to be smooth, but maybe with enormous magnification it’s rough—it’s fractal. Maybe that accounts for rifts in space-time.”
Mom closes the refrigerator door and sets the hot pepper flakes on the table. Then she gives me this look. This amazed, shocked, perplexed look.
“What?” I ask, feeling my face turn hot.
“I’ve never heard you talk like that, Ruby. How do you already know about fractals? How do you know about string theory?”
Idiot! The Ruby who normally resides here wouldn’t be talking about rifts in space-time! “I’ve been reading a little,” I say weakly. I’ve got to remember to fly under the radar. I already look like an impostor, and now I’m acting like one too.
Mom doesn’t seem convinced. “Reading a little?” She pours two sodas. “Sit down and eat.”
“Gladly.” I dig into the Caesar salad and serve myself a bowl of the wedding soup. The steam bathes my face, and I breathe in the tangy smell. “You have no idea how good this tastes,” I say with my mouth half-full.
I’ve got to remember to tell George about the shapes that a Mandelbrot set produces. Paisley swirls, antenna spires, lightning fingers. He’ll run straight for his sketch pad.
Mom says, “Funny you should mention string theory. I just read an article about it in Scientific American. It’s fascinating, but the math is so complex. They said that it may be beyond human comprehension.”
“Our best mathematicians are stumped.” I clear my throat. “I mean, can’t anyone figure it out? How hard can it be?” There. That sounded sufficiently ignorant.
Mom slides a huge piece of pizza onto my plate. “It’s a wild-goose chase,” she says. “People have been researching string theory for decades. Maybe they should admit they’re wrong, or that they’ve reached a dead end. Sometimes you just need to quit and move on.” The way she says it, with such a resigned sigh, makes me wonder if she’s talking about string theory or something personal. Like maybe her marriage.
She stares at me intently, and I get the feeling she’s testing me, baiting me. I can’t tell if she’s unnerved by my out-of-character behavior, or if she’s pleased that I’m talking about math. “Which books have you read?”
“Oh, well. Really, I just saw a show on the Discovery Channel, so that’s why it sounds like I know more than I actually do.” I shift in my seat and pay extra attention to my food.
“And your tattoo just happened to be the one to drop out of the vending machine?”
“Yeah. I have no idea what it means. Does it have something to do with string theory?” I force a “what are the chances?” laugh to come out of my mouth. “Like you said, I prefer to bury my head in French.”
Mom waves a hand dramatically in the air. “Voici mon secret. Il est très simple: on ne voit bien qu’avec le cœur. L’essentiel est invisible pour les yeux.”
“Huh?” I need a distraction, and as if on cue, I accidentally bump my shin against the metal leg of the kitchen table. A searing pain radiates from the wound and reaches into my stomach and chest, taking my breath away.
Mom jumps to her feet. “Are you okay? Go lie down on the couch. Are you supposed to keep that leg elevated?”
“Painkiller would be good,” I say, my face wrenched into a knot. “Can you go pick up my prescription?”
“Sure. Don’t worry about the food. I’ll put it away when I get back. Did you get enough to eat? Go lie down. You need to rest. Do you want the TV on? Of course not. You need peace and quiet.” Mom’s eyes are brimming with worry.
“I’m okay, Mom,” I say. “Calm down.”
Mom waits until I’m situated on the couch again. She drapes the blanket over me and puts her hand to my forehead. “You’re warm.”
“They checked my temperature at the hospital. It was normal.” The surge of pain has subsided, enough for me to unclench my fists.
“Back in a jiffy.” Mom swings her purse over her shoulder. She puts the cordless phone on the coffee table within my reach. “In case you need to call my cell.”
As Mom steps through the door, I call after her. “Wait!”
She turns, and I take in her mahogany hair, high cheekbones, and the chip in her front tooth. I want to memorize her.
“Be careful driving,” I say.
“Oh, sweetheart,” Mom says. And then she closes the door.
Chapter Ten
Mom’s apartment is hollow without her. Every sound I make echoes.
Someone—Aristotle? Galileo?—said that nature abhors a vacuum. Horror vacui: the fear of empty spaces. Yeah, I abhor Mom’s absence. I hate the emptiness. After being with her for just a couple hours, I can see how vacant and silent my life has been for the past eleven years.
In this universe, Ruby has never felt that void, and she’s a different person than I am because of it. But now I realize that this Ruby is also experiencing a loss, and she will be changed too. Her parents are divorced. She’s suffering in her own way.
What else can I do? Somewhere, in some parallel universe, all could be right—no car accident, no windshield wiper through Mom’s throat. Happy birthdays, happy anniversaries. A safe and smooth ride through space-time.
If that universe is out there, I’ve got to keep moving. I’ve got to find it. I mean, I’d be an idiot to just jump in and out of the tree until I reach Universe One, when my own personal utopia could be waiting for me.
I lace my sneakers and hobble to the kitchen, my shoes squeaking on the hardwood floor. My Caesar salad sits mostly untouched at the table. I finish it, slurp down the rest of my soup, then nuke my pizza in the microwave. If I take off right now, I’m not sure when my next meal might be. I need to eat while I can, so I’m stuffing myself.
My dish clinks as I rinse it and put it in the dishwasher. I gather my things into my backpack and go into Mom’s room to snoop. I take one of her sweaters, pressing it to my nose before stuffing it into my backpack. Her messy dresser is littered with receipts, snapshots of Patrick in a football uniform, an iPod, and some coins and a few dollars. I help myself to the cash. Really, she would want me to have it. Before I stuff the bills into my pocket, I give Abraham Lincoln a nod. It’s somehow comforting to see that he’s still the face on the fives.
Her nightstand holds a thick brown Bible, a few business cards, and some clothes catalogs. A small electronic device sits inside the drawer, and I realize it’s a GPS. An ancient one with hardly any features, but it could come in handy, for sure.
After using the bathroom, I grab a bottled water from the fridge and put my hand on the doorknob—ready to go. Although …
It would be nice to have my pain meds first. I look down at my leg and notice that my jeans are tight around my right shin. Swollen.
What’s the rush? It’s getting dark, my body is craving sleep, and I’m about to lock myself out of Mom’s comfortable, warm apartment.