She stopped beneath the weather overhang, feeling the night’s heat and rawness. A storm was brewing in the sky, the kind that brought violence and change. She waited to see if anyone would pursue and try to bring her back, but no one did. She stepped out into the open and looked up at the stars, already blurring as the clouds coalesced. The wind would be vicious up there, slapping back and forth as it built toward release. Only the strongest of Tufa could ride it.
“You really have to tell me how you manage to heal so quickly,” a voice said.
She turned. Craig Chess leaned against one of the brick pillars supporting the overhang. In the dim light he looked mysterious, like a detective in an old movie.
“What are you doing lurking out here?” she asked.
“I didn’t want to intrude. It looked like a Tufa-only thing.”
Through the glass doors, she saw the others still singing. “It is,” she agreed. “Where’s Aiden?”
He nodded toward his car, parked at the curb. “He cried himself to sleep on the way. I’ll bring him in when he wakes up. He was pretty upset, and there was a little bit of a scene. He wanted to take his squirrel gun and go shoot Dwayne Gitterman.”
She felt a jolt through her heart. “Yeah, well, he may have to take a number. Dad’s spitting nails, too.”
“I imagine. And how are you?”
“Set.”
“Set?”
“In what I need to do.” She looked at him closely. “Like you. You always know what to do, in every situation. You know what people need you to be. I just figured that out for myself tonight.”
Their eyes met. Then their hands touched, fingers threading together. She had no sense of moving closer, but then they were face-to-face, him looking down at her.
“You take this minister thing seriously, don’t you?” she said quietly.
“I do.”
“So you’d never sleep with me just to see what it was like? Just to see if we got along that way, before we made any more serious plans?”
He shook his head. “I knew the rules when I took the job.”
“What about kissing?”
Suddenly his mouth was on hers, his other hand tangled in her black hair and holding her close to him. She rose on her tiptoes to reach him. She could not recall a kiss that sent shivers through her like this since her very first one, at age ten.
When the kiss broke she stayed on her toes, her lips brushing his. “That’s been coming for a while,” she whispered.
“I think so,” he agreed.
“You think your God brought us together?”
“He’s everyone’s God. And yes.”
She patted his broad chest. “I have to go. I have to do something, but…”
He recalled the haint’s words: Be strong. Be honest. Be fearless. He looked deep into her dark eyes and said, “Do what you have to, Bronwyn. I’ll take care of things here. I’ll be here when you finish.”
She held his gaze for a long time. He heard a faint, tuneless humming in his ears. At last she said, “I believe you will.”
“I will,” he said. “But I need to ask you something first.”
“What?”
“What are you? What are the Tufa?”
She kissed him again. The trees planted along the edge of the parking lot began to sigh in the wind. “Go to the Library.”
“Beg pardon?”
“Go to the library over in Cricket. Ask to see the painting.”
“What painting?”
“They’ll know.” She stepped away. “And don’t look for me. When I’m done, I’ll find you.”
“Done?” he repeated. “I don’t understand.”
“That’s okay. Look behind you.”
He did, and saw nothing. When he turned back, she had vanished.
31
Don Swayback stared up at the stars. He could never recall doing that before, although he must’ve stargazed as a child. Yet now the vista above him seemed the most beautiful, amazing thing ever, and he wondered how he’d lived this long without noticing it.
The sky had been clear when he started, but now clouds began to edge in from the southwest. Wind made the tops of the trees wave in growing animation. And it was that wind that held his attention, that seemed to be whispering, humming, singing something he just couldn’t quite catch.
He glanced back at his house. Susie was home but asleep, after more vigorous lovemaking that caused her to wonder aloud, “You’re not stockpiling a certain little blue pill, are you?” He was exhausted, too, but ever since meeting the little girl earlier that day, he knew he’d end up outside looking up at the stars. He’d intended to tell Susie about it at dinner, but the altercation at the Waffle House made it slip his mind, and she was peacefully snoring by the time he remembered.
He’d met the girl when he drove through Needsville again. He’d taken to doing it at least once a day, spending his entire lunch hour in the car listening to CDs of the Carter Family and other bluegrass pioneers. The first few times he told himself it was to build up familiarity with the area for his eventual interview with Bronwyn Hyatt, but it had become its own reward, a kind of rolling meditation on the nature of his own nature.
This time, as he drove slowly down the main street, he recalled suddenly Susie asking him to pick up postage stamps. He parked outside the new brick post office building, and as he climbed the steps to the porch a voice said, “Hello.”
He turned. An old man sat in the far rocking chair, but he hadn’t spoken. Instead it had been the young girl in the chair beside him. She wore green cotton shorts, a sleeveless jersey, and flip-flops. Her black hair was in two braids. She held an old-fashioned bottled Coke with a bendy straw poking from the top.
“Hi,” Don said.
“You were at the barn dance the other night, weren’t you?”
Don smiled. “Yeah, I was. Were you there?”
She shook her head. “I just heard about it.”
“You heard about me?”
She patted the arm of the third rocking chair. “Sit down.”
The girl had an odd demeanor, nothing like a normal child, and he was a little disconcerted. The old man in the chair on her other side just looked at him, saying nothing. His eyes were narrow, squinting slits.
Don settled into the rocker and said, “Did you want to ask me something, Miss—?”
She shook her head. “My name is Mandalay. And I want to tell you something.” The seriousness in her words was belied by the way she slurped the last of the Coke through the straw.
“Okay,” he said. “What?”
She burped lightly, then said, “You’ve come awake inside, and it’s probably messing with you a little bit. You’ve been knowing things you didn’t think you were supposed to know, singing songs you’d never heard before. Am I right?”
Don stared and nodded.
She spoke as if discussing Barbies with another child. “You’ll have a choice pretty soon. Your Grandma Benji wasn’t one of my people, but we all loved her anyway. You can go either way. With me, or with Rockhouse here, who’s head of her people.” She nodded at the old man, who said nothing. “You don’t have to choose right now. But you will have to choose pretty soon.”
He couldn’t stop gazing into her eyes. They weren’t those of a child.
“He done chose,” Rockhouse finally said. “He went to your barn dance, not our hootenanny.”
“A man can’t choose if he don’t know both sides,” Mandalay snapped, and the old man fell silent. To Don she said, “You have to pick which one of us you want to join.”
“Like the Seelie or the Unseelie?”
She shrugged. “Call it what you want.”
“What do you call it?” Don asked.