Flannery (15 page)

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Authors: Lisa Moore

BOOK: Flannery
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20

After Kyle Keating and I watch the last unbroken egg trundle as fast as it can toward the curb, totter with indecision at the edge and finally topple into the gutter, its yellow yolk slithering free of its broken shell, there is an awkward moment.

We're just sort of standing there, facing each other but looking down at the sidewalk.

So, yeah, says Kyle.

Yeah, I say. I know.

Kyle's hands are dug down deep in the pockets of his jeans. I can see his knuckles pressing against the tight denim. He's rocking back and forth on the balls of his feet. I'm still holding the torn and empty paper bag.

Even though I've talked my head off the whole way home about Mercy Hanrahan and the love potion and the glassblower I've got an appointment with about bottles for the potion, and Amber and Gary, I suddenly can't think of a single thing to say.

Neither can Kyle.

But then he gets a text and says he has to head off to work. He's a lifeguard. I tell him I'll talk to Mr. Follett about maybe getting a new set of eggs and starting the project over (anything to avoid writing the essay about teen pregnancy).

Thanks for walking me home, Kyle, I say.

You're welcome, Flannery, he says. And then Kyle is jogging up Long's Hill, and I burst into the house slinging my knapsack off my shoulder onto the pile of boots, yelling for Miranda.

I've got to go to this glassblower's studio. So can we drive?

There isn't much gas.

We don't have to go very far.

Can't someone else take you?

Miranda, you'll enjoy this.

It sounds like shopping.

It's not shopping, and I need the truck so I can bring back the bottles. Plus, do you want me to fail Entrepreneurship?

How are you paying for this?

The guy said I can pay after the fair, out of my profits.

Awfully optimistic, this guy.

Believes in the love potion, it seems.

He said that?

He implied it.

When Miranda and I finally pull up in the truck there's a squat cinderblock building with a blinking red sign in the window that says
Glass Studio
. The door has a wrought-iron ring for knocking.

We knock, but there's no answer, so I pull the door open.

The heat hits us in the face. We can hear the furnace breathing fire like Tyrone's dragon.

Inside, a man is lifting something from the huge furnace with what looks like a giant pair of tweezers. He's wearing denim overalls and a plaid shirt with the sleeves rolled up and a trucker's cap that says
Kingsbridge Auto.
He has wireless octagonal glasses that sink into his apple-red cheeks, and he appears to have no teeth but lots of fine white nose hair. He's got to be at least eighty-five.

Look! says Miranda.

The man is holding up a tiny, delicate glass bottle. It's shaped like a bottle but it appears to be liquid fire. It is pulsing like it is a heart, and the heart is flushing with blood that is not blood but white boiling light with a yellow halo.

The man dips the little vessel into a vat and there's a hiss and a cloud of smoke and he lifts the glass heart out of the vat and it's a perfect bottle for a love potion.

He sees us watching and comes to meet us with one hand out for shaking and the other still holding his treasure in the tweezers.

I broke one of the hundred packing them up and had to make a new one, the man says. I'm Fred MacLachlan, pleased to meet you. Now, which one of you is the mother?

Oh, stop, says Miranda.

Two ravishing beauties, he says. What a pleasure.

I introduce myself and Miranda and within seconds they're deep in conversation — about the new parking garage on Water Street, and the graffiti, and how the construction is blocking traffic. And Fred tells Miranda about his upcoming move to Europe.

You should come along, he says.

Oh, I have my kids, she says.

Well, I guess they'll grow up sometime, he says. This comment annoys me, naturally.

We don't want to hold you up, I say to him. After all, you have to get ready for your trip. You're leaving soon, right? Leaving the province? Going to some place where they understand glass?

Huh? he says. He's having a hard time taking his eyes off Miranda.

Oh yes, he says. But wait. Let me see what I have for this beautiful lady. A memento.

He's gone to the back of the warehouse and we hear something that sounds like a shelf of glass tipping over and smashing.

He's laying it on a little thick, isn't he? I whisper.

Oh, I don't know, says Miranda.

He comes back holding a little glass figurine out before him. He puts it in Miranda's open palm.

It's a polar bear, Miranda says. Oh, my! Flannery, look! She is clearly moved by his gesture.

A little glass polar bear, Flannery! Like my ice sculptures.

Global warming, the guy says. I read about your project in
Canadian Art
.

You read that? Miranda says.

Of course I did. Two-page spread, how could I miss it. Very nice picture of you, too, on the beach with the bonfire.

You're too kind, Miranda says. So. But. You're leaving, though?

We actually have to get going too, Miranda, I say. Got to pick up my brother, I tell the guy. That's Miranda's other child? She has two, actually. And he's very young. He's not going to be grown up any time soon. I look at the guy to make sure this is sinking in.

Well, what a pleasure, Miranda says.

Me too, the guy says. It's an honor. An artist of your caliber. It really is an honor. You're doing such good work. Keep it up. And good luck with your love potion, Florence.

Flannery, I say.

Indeed, he says. Good luck.

21

There's a Halloween party at Brittany Bishop's tonight but I don't want to go. I don't want to run into Tyrone after he's stood me up
again
. He probably thinks he's too cool to go to a party at Brittany Bishop's anyway. Everybody says her parents are going to be home.

Amber has the big swim meet to decide if she gets to go to the Nationals this weekend, so she won't be going to the party. Besides, she's hardly talking to me.

But everyone else has been planning their costumes for weeks. Brittany Bishop's parents always rent a chocolate fountain for her parties. And halfway through the night a pizza guy delivers a gazillion pizzas.

Elaine Power is going as a monarch butterfly, of course. Andrew Sullivan is going as a soap bubble. His costume is apparently made of chicken wire and twenty-seven boxes' worth of Saran Wrap. Ella Sloan is going as a block of Swiss cheese.

Even Felix has a party. A little girl in his karate class is having everybody over. Felix is a devil. His face is covered in red makeup and he has a plastic pitchfork and a red satin costume with a tail, and horns on the top of his head. He also has a glue-on goatee of black synthetic fur and fake nails, long and curling.

I'll be staying home all alone, dressed as myself. Leggings, Morrissey T-shirt. Same old, same old.

But right now I have to finish the prototype of our unit because it has to be submitted to Mr. Payne on Monday or Tyrone and I lose fifteen percent. I'm in my bedroom with all my notes and one hundred beautiful glass bottles.

Tyrone hasn't done one single thing for this project. I hate him.

Love, definitely
not
.

Then there's a knock on my bedroom door.

What are you putting in this potion? says Miranda. She sits down in the middle of all the clothes on my bedroom floor and the stuff I've gathered for the project. I've been online and I'm determined to make the potions totally eco-friendly.

I already know that people will reuse the perfume bottles because they're so beautiful. But I want the potions to be non-toxic too. Artificial food-coloring is actually pretty nasty. It can cause disease.

You need to boil some fruits and vegetables, Miranda says when I tell her all this. Beets for red, carrots for orange, spinach for green and blueberries for blue, she says, because I've also told her my idea for four different kinds of love.

I happen to have some blueberries left over from last summer in the freezer.

Soon we're down in the kitchen chopping carrots and beets, boiling spinach, squashing blueberries and straining everything through four separate pieces of an old cheesecloth blouse of Miranda's. She says it had a hole under the arm. When we're done, we pour the four different kinds of colored water into four different bottles. We seal them with the frosted stoppers that came with each bottle. The potions have some sediment floating around in there, but that just makes them look more authentic.

They don't taste very good, I say, when Miranda holds out a teaspoon of green potion for me to try.

But a customer only needs one sip for it to work, Miranda says.

Tyrone is supposed to be here, I tell Miranda. I slump down into a kitchen chair. It's already late and I still have to label the prototypes. Miranda can see I'm upset, even though I'm trying really hard to sound unfazed and blasé and generally like I couldn't care less about Tyrone.

I believe people are the best people they can be, Flannery. I believe everybody is trying to be good. But it's harder for some people. Tyrone has had a hard time. They're going through some heavy stuff over there.

So are we, I say. I don't even have a biology book. And we're going to have to go to the food bank again. Do you know what that feels like? I mean, they're asking everybody in school to donate to the food drive. And I can't donate anything. I'm the one they're donating to, for gosh sakes. It's humiliating.

Miranda closes her eyes for a second. When she opens them, she says quietly, Flan, oh boy. Okay. Look . . .

But then she doesn't say anything for a minute. I wait quietly, looking into her eyes, until she takes a big breath and starts again.

Tyrone's stepdad, Marty? she says. Is physically abusive, Flannery. He's hit Tyrone's mom. He's blackened her eyes. Once he broke one of her ribs. Marty is a terrible drunk. I'm trying to talk to her, get her out of there. But it's not easy. There are shelters, but she's not ready to leave yet. She's afraid he'll come after them.

She lets out another big breath. This is confidential, okay, Flannery? But you have to understand. Things aren't very easy for Tyrone. He's not even at home half the time. Maybe his grades aren't the most important thing in his life right now.

It's not
grades
I'm worried about, Miranda, I say. I really care about him. My voice goes all funny.

Oh — oh, I know that, baby. I
know
.

But it hurts. Like, why doesn't he care about me? What's wrong with me? Why not love me?

I love you, kid.

I know.

I love my babies a lot. She hugs me and it feels good. Well, it feels better.

I'm about to start my period, I say. Maybe that's why I'm so emotional. I mean, that's part of it. And then I shed a few tears.

Me too, Miranda says. We're synced. But we have lots of reasons to feel emotional. Life isn't fair. There's nothing wrong with emotion, Flan. That's how we know we're alive. It's good.

It doesn't feel very good, I say.

Now, what's the plan for the love potion labels? Miranda asks, straightening herself up.

Labels? I say. It's just colored water, Miranda. It's only a gag.

Sure it is, she says.

Okay, I say. I go and get my notes and show her what I have written down so far, what I am calling the
Four Elixirs of Love
.

1) Blue: fast-acting befuddling crush-inducer, effects last two to four hours.

2) Red: eternal love, effects include marriage and anniversaries up to ten years.

3) Orange: good for securing a prom date.

4) Green: for provoking an unending stream of compliments from the one you love.

Miranda jumps up and I hear her rummaging around in her studio and then she comes back with these huge sheets of thick, bumpy, beige-ish paper.

Look, Flannery! Left over from my paper-making phase, she beams.

I don't say this, but the paper sort of looks like the paper towels in our washrooms at school.

But then Miranda gets the idea to attach some kind of written spell to the neck of each bottle.

Just a phrase or two, she says. For promotional purposes. Like a label, but more mysterious.

I had already thought maybe a gold cord with little gold tassels for the price tag, I tell her. They have them at Fabricville.

Gold tassels are all wrong, she says. You need twine.

She jumps up again and bangs around in the laundry room cupboard this time and while she's doing that I cut out a tag for the blue potion and I write:

This love potion has a short and bittersweet bite,

One little sip and it's love at first sight.

It's complete foolishness but it sounds good. And that's what marketing is all about, right?

Miranda comes back with a ball of twine. It's brown and bristly with rough little hairy bits sticking off.

But the gold tassels, I say.

We want to conjure up medieval times. Those gold tassels would scream kitsch, she says.

I think they'd be classy.

Picture, Miranda says, a castle on a craggy moor, nothing for miles but jagged rock and tufts of dead grass shrouded in fog. Ancient fog. Fog that has been creeping across the earth for centuries. Bleak, sopping, sorry-looking fog.

Fog with cat feet, I say.

Panther feet, she says. Fog that steals and swallows and sucks and — 

Yeah, I got it. Fog. What's that got to do with tassels or twine?

Medieval, Flan. More medieval, more magical. Picture fairies flitting in the shadows or riding the backs of butterflies, she says. Leprechauns dancing jigs; fireflies glowing in the dusk. Never mind tassels. Twine is more “of the common folk.”

Okay, I say. The twine.

Picture in the distance, a castle, all towers and . . . what do you call them?

Moats?

Not moats.

Ramparts?

Yes, ramparts. And drawbridges.

Yeah, okay, the twine.

And in the shadow of the tower window, which is just basically a hole in the wall because they didn't have glass windows, a young lass, forlorn. Is she going to be impressed by gold tassels?

I'm guessing no?

Think of what she's going through, Miranda says.

Is she in love?

Yes, but thoroughly unrequited love. Picture the face on her.

She's annoyed.

She's forlorn, Flannery. There's a difference.

Forlorn.

Like, heartbroken because she's in love with a guy who doesn't return her affection.

Is he maybe in her Entrepreneurship class?

Oh, he's in a different class from her altogether.

She's got it bad.

And not only that, it's medieval times, she has to eat her food with her hands because they don't have utensils yet. Half the time she has chicken grease smeared all over her chin.

Which has got to be a drawback if you're trying to get a guy's attention.

They can't text, or Instagram, there's no Tumblr or Google glasses or email thank God and I won't even go into the plumbing situation. Also the castle could use a space heater. Place is like a fridge. Talk about visits from the field worker. Costs a fortune to heat that place. So, you can see, these tassels you mentioned are all wrong. And she's sixteen, so she's already suffering a midlife crisis, they died so early back then.

Wouldn't the silky gold tassels cheer everybody up a bit?

Sending the wrong message, Flan.

The twine is sending a message?

Absolutely. It's authentic.

Gotcha. The twine is better than the tassels. And we don't have to go to the mall. The twine is right here.

Exactly, says Miranda, looking at her watch. It's nearly midnight. The spirits are roaming. I'd say it's the perfect time for our spell.

I've already written the first one, Miranda. See — 

No, Flannery, we need to
say
the thing. An incantation. So the potion works, you know?

She's smiling slyly, daring me.

All right, whatever, I say.

After all, it's just a gag, right?

So let's have the eternal love one, she says. I set out the bottle of red potion and she clears her throat with a little
ahem
.

We call upon all the goddesses of love in the universe and beyond . . .

She looks at me expectantly. I roll my eyes.

One sip of this potion
, Miranda continues,
and you'll grow eternally fond
 
.
 
.
 
.
 
of the first person you see.
Better than fond.
After one little sip, you'll play your part.

And I chime in with the ending:
The first person you see will steal your heart.

What about the green potion? I say. My pen is ready, hovering over the bumpy paper.

One sip of this green potion
,
says Miranda,
and your true love will turn into a poet. You'll be ravished with compliments before you know it.
I write it down on the bumpy paper and attach the little note to the neck of the bottle. I try to make my writing look all medieval-like, pointy and jagged.

And the orange potion? she says.

Easy-peasy, I say.

One sip of this and any Dick, Mary, or Tom

Will instantly ask you to go to the prom.

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