It just isn’t possible. Auntie Mina can’t be willing to listen to him, to consider going back to him. But somehow, it’s happening.
From Shiri Langford’s journal, July 31st
My father. My father. I can’t believe that we share genetics, that my mother somehow found him and married him and somewhere along the line I came along, that an entire X chromosome came from him and permeates my body. It makes me want to tear at my skin, rip my DNA apart.
When I was a kid he could do no wrong. He was different then, when Randall Jr. still lived at home, when we were like a regular family and I was too little to do anything that would really piss him off. When I was his princess.
But then … it all changed. I don’t know why.
Earlier today, THAT happened and it was like I was buried under a pile of bricks. I couldn’t breathe. I was lucky to be in my room, sitting at my old childhood desk that seems so small to me now, when I broke into a cold sweat and it was like swirling darkness inside my head when I heard him.
I don’t know how much more of this I can take.
twenty
I creep closer, peer through the doorway into the kitchen.
“Talking to him on the phone is one thing, but getting together with him, alone?” My mother’s face is pale, and her voice trembles. “Do you think—”
“Really, it’s okay,” Auntie Mina protests.
“It’s not an option, Mina.” My dad’s voice is low and grim.
“Oh, for heaven’s sake, it’s not as though I’m moving back in with him. All we did was agree to talk things out,” she says. “Maybe I can convince him to start going to therapy.”
“Do you really think that’s going to help? Is it worth it, Mina?” Dad looks helplessly at his sister.
“We’ve been together for twenty-six years,” she points out, her voice strained. “I can’t pretend none of that ever happened.”
You can’t pretend he never hurt you, either. I feel like saying it. I almost do, but I clench my hands into fists and dig my nails into my palms to stay quiet. Auntie Mina looks over at me momentarily, a frown crossing her face.
“Sunny, I’m so sorry. You of all people shouldn’t worry about me. Everything’s going to be fine with Uncle Randall. He’s still your uncle, and he loves you. We just have to talk it out.”
There’s that word again: fine. I clench my jaw and don’t respond. How can someone so sensitive to everyone else’s needs handle living with someone like that? Uncle Randall’s always been like this, and there’s no way he’s going to change.
I think of that whirling, horrible darkness, that feeling of something rotting from the inside. That feeling I was afraid wasn’t just in him, but also in me. But this time, instead of being scared, I’m gripped with the uncontrollable need to know, to be certain, what Uncle Randall wants. If I could find out, maybe I could convince her.
My parents are both crowding around the kitchen table, trying to talk sense into Auntie Mina. I refuse to stand here feeling helpless.
I sidestep out of the kitchen, quietly grab my keys, and sneak out the front door. They’ll hear me starting the car and driving off, but hopefully they’ll be occupied with Auntie Mina for the next few minutes. All I need is a few minutes.
I start to drive. Speeding a little, I make it across town in record time. The houses start to get bigger, the gardens fancy and landscaped, and I’m in the neighborhood where Shiri lives. Used to live. Where Uncle Randall is right now.
I drive past the house; then, nervously, I pull around the corner, about a block away. It’s dark outside, and when I turn off the headlights, the yellow glow of the streetlights is the only illumination.
Getting as comfortable as I can in the driver’s seat, I close my eyes and regulate my breathing, just like I did yesterday with Cody. It takes me a while to calm down enough to start the visualizations. Gradually, though, I can feel my heart rate slow from its angry gallop.
I start to relax into that increasingly familiar feeling of unreality. It makes me think of stepping off a cliff and having to believe that I can walk on air.
My thoughts want to tumble in freefall, but I strain to keep my attention focused. In my mind’s eye, I envision one particular place. I’m floating along the street toward that huge, echoing house, the house I used to think was a palace. I pass through the concrete columns on either side of the porch that Shiri and I used to draw on with colored chalk. In through the door. I can picture it clearly, and then I feel the thoughts I’m looking for. His thoughts.
—have to find someone to replace her at work—
how can I?—I don’t need this, can’t believe she’d—she knows how it is—
—how could she do this to me—
—not my fault not me not me NOT ME—
There’s a smell, too, a tang like something toxic melting, like plastic on fire or burning rubber or acrid metal. Not a physical smell; I guess it’s like those people who say they can taste colors or see sounds—but it feels real nonetheless. I’m choking on it; on the feelings of anger and blame and loss like bile rising in my throat. I can’t take it anymore. And then I’m hurtling through space, my head spinning as I sit with my face in my hands, leaning against the steering wheel.
Shreds of emotion drift through me like wafting smoke, making me tense up again, and then they’re gone. My palms throb where I was digging my nails into them, and my eyes sting.
I don’t know why I thought this could help. It’s just a burden of useless knowledge, of feelings that threaten to overwhelm me. To bury me.
And, I realize with growing despair, it’s not like anybody in my family would believe me anyway.
The next morning I wake up early, feeling like I’ve been sleeping under a ton of bricks. My limbs are sore and achy, and my head feels fuzzy. I gingerly climb out of bed, testing my legs, and decide to go for a run before showering for school.
The midwinter air is chilly and the sky is full of low gray clouds. As I slowly warm up, lengthening my stride, I wonder if it’s not just lack of exercise that made me so tired this morning. I wonder if it was the underhearing.
The more I think about it, the more I’m sure of it. Especially now—now that I can actually make it happen—it seems to take something out of me.
It makes sense. When I swim extra hard, I get tired. When I study too late, I get headaches. And when I underhear too intensely, when I pour everything I have into trying to use this power … I suffer for it. It happened to Shiri, too; I saw it in one of her journal entries. But I don’t think she made the connection.
I quicken my stride, breathing hard. The cool air blows past me, whipping stray strands of hair into my face. Not for the first time, not even for the fiftieth time, I wonder why this happened to me. Why it happened to Shiri. Auntie Mina’s never shown any signs of being a mind reader. And my dad doesn’t seem like he’s got any special talents.
I think about Auntie Mina again. If she’s even just a little more sensitive to people’s feelings, maybe something happened with Shiri, some … mutation that made it more powerful somehow? And if that’s true, how did it happen to me? I think about Shiri’s note. Maybe one day you’ll figure it out. I never could. How could she know about me? Was she just guessing? What if she gave it to me, like an infection?
I’m running flat-out through the neighborhood, and I force myself to slow down. I don’t need to hurt myself by running too hard. But when I get to school, my mind is still spinning with theories. Maybe it’s something that only affects the women in the family. Maybe it was something in the water when Shiri and I were growing up. Antonia would probably say it was a blessing from the Goddess. At this point, it’s no weirder a theory than anything else.