you think?”
The girl shrugged, apparently bored. “I like the kitty. Can I
have it?”
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57
“Yeah. As long as you find your own Prince Charming, you
can have the kitty.”
The girl thought about it. “Okay. Would you help me look?”
“Yeah.”
“I want to dance with him, like Cinderella.”
“Yeah? Do you have a song you want to dance to?”
The little girl shook her head. “No, I just want to dance.”
Talker thought about it and pulled out his iPod. “Here,” he
said, putting the earbuds in the impossibly little ears. “This is the
best Prince Charming song I know.” And he set the music to
“Kingdom Come” by Coldplay.
She‟d listened intently while she colored, her head rocking
gently to the music. When she was done, she gave him back the
iPod politely.
“Thank you,” she said quietly. “Now I know there will be a
prince, because you gave me a song.”
And that had been Shelley.
The first thing she had drawn was a picture of Tate—the long
hair on one side and the shaved scalp on the other were easy to
recognize. Tate had brought it home and shown it to Brian, and
Brian had bought a magnetic frame and put it on the refrigerator,
and Tate had loved him all over again, because he would know
how much it meant.
So for two years he‟d known Shelley. Brian had given the kids
a display in his last two art shows, and Tate had loved him more for
it, if that was even possible. They had another display this time as
well, and Shelley had made a piece that looked like one of Talker‟s
half-gloves, because they fascinated her, and she spent time
designing something that would go over the lump of scar tissue on
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58
her thin upper arm, so she could wear a dress that would make
Prince Charming happy.
Talker told her that a real Prince Charming wouldn‟t care
about the scars.
Shelley told him that she‟d try to hide them anyway.
TATE tried not to let it hurt too bad. JoEllen was right—he’d known
the system, had lived the system, and knew that sometimes the
best people were not always in charge of a child’s welfare. Shelley
was with her parents now, and when she was with them, they
pulled her away from the foster care system entirely, like they could
somehow remove the fact that they’d screwed up and make it
disappear. He told himself he should be happy for her, because
most of the kids there dreamed that Mom and Dad would come
back and make it all up to them, but his eyes were blurry as he put
on his wetsuit and surf shoes and grabbed his board, and he barely
noticed the shock of the ocean as he ran in.
He swam out past the fury of the breakers and into the calm
and sat for a while, pinching his eyes closed and trying to get it the
hell together. His feet were starting to chill through the suit and the
shoes, and the motion of the board was starting to lull him
practically to sleep again when he saw Brian through his misery,
and his eyes cleared.
When he wasn’t working on clay, Brian still held his shoulder
like it might hurt a little. In the evenings, Tate would hear the tell-
tale clatter of the pills in the ibuprofen bottle and know that it had to
be aching pretty bad, but Brian never complained. He’d filled out
since Talker had first seen him, a beautiful, square-jawed, blue-
eyed piece of dreamboy, sitting alone on a track meet bus. His
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59
chest was broader, and his hips had stayed narrow because they
still ran and surfed nearly every day, but Tate could tell that when
he got older, Brian would have to work hard at not being stocky.
Tate sort of looked forward to that. Brian was always so solid; it
would be wonderful if he looked as solid in the flesh as he felt to
Tate in his heart.
But his hair was still a little long because he cut it short and
then let it grow until he couldn’t stand it anymore, and his eyes
were still
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