thing I couldnât bring myself to put away was the sadness of missing Grace. That I kept. I deserved that. Iâd earned it.
And then I just lay out there on the stump.
I had work in the morning, so I should have been sleeping, but I knew what would happen: Every time I closed my eyes, my legs would ache like Iâd been running and my eyelids would twitch like they should be open and Iâd remember that I needed to add names to the contacts in my cell phones and Iâd think that really, one day, I should fold that load of laundry that Iâd run a week ago.
Also, Iâd think about how I really needed to talk to Cole.
The stump was wide enough in diameter that my legs only jutted over the side a foot or so; the tree â actually two of them grown together â must have been enormous when it had stood. It had black scars on it where Paul and Ulrik had used it as a base to set off fireworks. I used to count the age rings when I was younger. It had lived longer than any of us.
Overhead, the stars were wheeling and infinite, a complicated mobile made by giants. They pulled me amongst them, into space and memories. Lying on my back reminded me of being attacked by the wolves, long ago, when Iâd been someone else. One moment I was alone, my morning and my life stretched out in front of me like frames in a film, each second only slightly different from the last. A miracle of seamless, unnoticed metamorphosis. And in the next moment, there were wolves.
I sighed. Overhead, satellites and planes moved effortlesslybetween the stars; a bank of clouds gestating lightning moved slowly in from the northwest. My mind flitted restlessly between the present â the ancient tree stump pressing sharply against my shoulder blades â and the past â my backpack crushed beneath me as the wolves pushed my body into a bank of snow left by the plow. My mother had armored me in a blue winter coat with white stripes on the arms and mittens too fluffy for finger movement.
In my memory, I couldnât hear myself. I only saw my mouth moving and the stick limbs of my seven-year-old self beating at the wolvesâ muzzles. I watched myself as if from outside my body, a blue and white coat trapped beneath a black wolf. Under its splayed paws, the garment looked insubstantial and empty, as if I had already vanished and left the trappings of my human life behind.
âCheck this out, Ringo.â
My eyes flew open. It took me a moment to register Cole next to me, sitting cross-legged on the stump. He was a dark black shape against a sky made gray in comparison, holding my guitar like its frame was spiked.
He played a D major chord, badly, with lots of buzzing, and sang in his low, gritty voice, âI fell for her in summerâ â an awkward chord change and a melodramatic tip to his words â âmy lovely summer girl.â
My ears burned as I recognized my own lyrics.
âI found your CD.â Cole stared at the guitar neck for a very long time before he put his fingers down on another chord. Heâd placed every finger wrong on the fret, however, so the sound was more percussive than melodic. He let out an amiable grunt of dismay, then looked at me. âWhen I was going through your car.â
I just shook my head.
âFrom blubber she is made, my lovely blubber girl,â Cole added, with another buzzing D chord. He said, in a congenial voice, âI think Imight have ended up a lot like you, Ringo, if Iâd been fed iced lattes from my motherâs tits and had werewolves reading me Victorian poetry for bedtime stories.â He caught my expression. âOh, donât get your panties in a twist.â
âTheyâre untwisted,â I replied. âHave you been drinking?â
âI believe,â he said, âthat Iâve drunk everything in the house. So, no.â
âWhy were you in my car?â
âBecause you werenât,â Cole said.