FOURTEEN
(IS SEDUCTIVE)
“There’s one thing I don’t understand,” I said to my mother, when we were back on the highway again. The sun was low in the sky now, melting toward the horizon like a scoop of orange sherbet, and I flipped the shade down to protect my eyes. “What made you realize you were wrong about me? I mean, I’ve done some pretty crazy-seeming things, and Dr. Minta still thinks . . .”
She glanced at me, surprised. “You mean he didn’t tell you?”
“Who didn’t tell me what?”
“Dr. Faraday. When he called yesterday, I assumed he’d talked it over with you first. He was the one who told us about your . . . what’s it called again?”
“Synesthesia?”
“Yes. He told us that you were tremendously sensitive, even for a . . . for someone with your condition. He explained why you’d been so upset when you came home that day after school, and—and afterward, and why you reacted so violently to the fire alarm. He seemed to have an answer for everything, and it was such a relief . . . I was sorry to see him go.”
“See him? You mean—he came to the house?”
She nodded distractedly, her eyes fixed on the road. “Last night. He spent more than an hour sitting in our living room, talking with us. It was such a relief to meet someone who knew so much about what had happened, and thought so highly of you. It’s too bad he’s going back to South Africa.”
My breath caught in my throat. “He is? Did he say when?”
“A few days, I think. I suppose that now he’s done with his study, he’s anxious to get back home.”
I clenched the damp tissue in my hand. If she was right, then I had even less time to carry out my plan than I’d thought.
“Yeah,” I said. “I’m looking forward to getting home, too.”
. . .
“Ali!”
Chris exploded out the door of the basement and hurled himself at me so enthusiastically he nearly knocked me over. Mom made an incoherent noise of protest, but I only laughed and hugged my little brother back. “Hey there, Puck.”
He dug his elbow into my ribs. I stepped on his toe. Proper sibling relations reestablished, we broke off and he flopped onto the couch. “So how’s the loony bin?”
“Chris!” exclaimed my mother.
“Honestly? It sucks,” I said. “And the food’s no good either. You’d better not have been messing up my room while I was gone.”
He just grinned.
The stairs creaked, shooting gray arrows across my vision, as my father stepped into view. He greeted me with a hesitant smile, but didn’t move until I took his bony hands in both of mine, and stretched up on tiptoe to kiss his cheek.
“It’s okay, Dad,” I whispered. “Everything’s going to be okay.”
And for the moment, I almost believed it.
. . .
“I told Mel you were coming home this weekend,” said Chris, reaching across the table to spear another slice of roast beef. “She said you should call her.”
Considering that she hadn’t come to see me in over six weeks, I was surprised she had the nerve. “Has she been asking about me a lot?” I asked.
“Right after you left she did, yeah. Not so much lately. Hey, does anybody want more potatoes?”
“Go wild,” I said, handing him the bowl.
“If you’d like to ask Melissa to come over,” said my mother, “I don’t think Dr. Minta would mind.”
I nudged a carrot around with my fork. “Okay. Maybe I’ll call later.”
But it wasn’t Mel I was planning to call.
Dessert was chocolate silk pie, my favorite, but I was too full of roast beef and nervous anticipation to enjoy it. And when the dishes were cleared away, we stayed around the table only a few minutes before the usual gravitational forces pulled my family apart—my father to his study, my mother to the kitchen, and my brother to play street hockey with his friends outside. It was hard not to feel a little wistful about that, but it would have been awkward if they’d all hung around trying to make conversation for my sake. Besides, I’d have plenty of time to spend with them tomorrow.
It felt unreal to be back in this house, after I’d dreamed of coming home so long. As I climbed the stairs to my bedroom, part of me was convinced that any second now I’d wake up and find myself back at Pine Hills, a victim of some drug-induced delusion. But I opened the door and there it was, just as I remembered it—the desk beneath the window, the bookshelf crammed with paperbacks and sheet music, the single bed neatly covered with the same quilt I’d been hiding under when the police came in.
I sat down on the bed and opened the drawer of my night table. My neglected cell phone gazed up at me blank-faced, so I plugged it in and lay back to wait. Soothed by walls the smoky purple of evening, I felt the restless energy that had been driving me all day begin at last to subside. Within minutes I was asleep.
. . .
If it hadn’t been for my phone beeping to tell me it was charged, I might have slept all night. But that shocking pink ribbon unfurling across my dreams was enough to jolt me awake, and I scrambled upright to find the room dark and my clock reading 11: 21
P.M
.
There was no calm left in me now. I paced from the bed to the closet and back again, chewing fretfully at my pinky nail. What if it was already too late to call? What if I got no answer—or worse, some tapioca-bland voice telling me the number was out of service?
But there were worse things than disappointment, and I’d lived through several of them already. I had to try.
I closed my eyes, reaching back into memory for the number I’d seen on the business card. It had started with purple and black, then shaded into brown . . . I pressed the keys one by one, translating the colors back into numbers. Then I raised the phone to my ear and forced myself to keep it there.
“Hello?” The voice on the other end sounded preoccupied. I heard the hum of some machine working in the background, a wobbly green noise that tasted vaguely familiar—but then it died away, leaving only the electric silence.
“Faraday, it’s me,” I said.
A sharp intake of breath. A long pause. And then, in a tone so warm I thought my spine would melt, “Alison. Where are you?”
You better not do anything stupid
, said Micheline’s warning voice in my mind, but I ignored it. “I’m at home. We need to talk.”
“Yes, of course. As soon as I’ve finished here—”
“I mean now.”
He hesitated. “Well, we could, but wouldn’t you rather have this conversation in person?”
I backed up to the edge of the mattress and sat down, clutching the phone with both hands. “What?”
“I was going to say, give me a few minutes to finish what I’m doing, and then I’ll come over. Will you still be awake in half an hour?”
He wanted to come. To my house. Tonight. Hysteria surged inside me, and I choked off a laugh.
“Oh, yes,” I said. “I’ll be here.”
. . .
As I squirmed out my bedroom window onto the roof, it struck me that this was the most deliberately crazy thing I’d ever done in my life. Yes, I wanted answers, and I was afraid this might be my only chance to get them. But I also wanted to get out of Pine Hills, and if my mother found me missing from my bedroom and called the police, it might be weeks before Dr. Minta would even consider releasing me again.
Yet there stood Faraday in the yard below me, his upturned face pale with worry and moonlight, and I couldn’t sit on the windowsill forever. “I have one question,” I whispered down to him. “If I told you I hate you and don’t want to talk to you or see you ever again, would you go away and leave me alone?”
He barely even paused. “Yes.”
He wasn’t lying. He’d allowed me to believe any number of things about him that weren’t true, but he’d never directly lied to me.
I crab-walked down the shingles to the edge of the roof, rolled over on my belly and swung my legs out into space. The drop from the porch overhang to the picnic table was only a few feet, but if I didn’t land just right . . .
“I’ve got you.” Strong hands gripped my thighs, pulling me downward. My fingers scrabbled wildly at the shingles, and I nearly ripped out the eavestrough before I let go and fell backward into Faraday’s arms.
He caught me so easily I might have been made of cotton. “All right?” he whispered, breath warming my cheek as he set me down. He smelled like sweat and chemicals, neither one pleasant, and yet for one treacherous second my knees buckled. Part of me wanted to turn around and slap him, to shout my fury and my betrayal, to demand the answers only he could give . . . and the rest of me wanted to slide my fingers up into his hair and pull his mouth down to mine and not ask any questions at all.
And that really
was
crazy. How could I let myself forget, even for an instant, what he’d done to me? “You could have warned me,” I snapped, as I twisted away.
“But I did,” he murmured, sounding perplexed. “Or are we not talking about the roof anymore?”
Ignoring the question, I climbed off the picnic table and jumped down onto the patio. He followed, and we soft-footed it out to the street, where a rust-speckled Volkswagen was waiting. “This is your car?” I asked.
Faraday jingled his keys at me, a shower of tiny gold stars. “For what it’s worth. Where do you want to go?”
I glanced back at my house, with its darkened windows and curtains closed against the night. This was my last chance to change my mind. If I left with Faraday now, anything might happen.
“Just start driving,” I said. “I’ll tell you when we get there.”
. . .
The parking lot of the mall wasn’t the most interesting place in the city, especially at one in the morning. But it was quiet, and close to home, and lit well enough for us to see each other without anyone else seeing us. Faraday’s car smelled even soapier than he did, so I rolled down the window to let in the mellow night air.
“Sorry about the smell,” said Faraday. “I came straight from work.”
I looked at him—really looked at him, for the first time that night. He was wearing a button-down shirt with the sleeves rolled up to the elbows, and gray uniform trousers that made him look vaguely like . . .
No, it couldn’t be, the idea was ridiculous. And yet as soon as it had crossed my mind, all the clues I’d been missing slotted into place: the scent of industrial-strength cleanser on his hands, the muffled whirring I’d heard when he picked up the phone. . . .
“You’re a
janitor
?”
“A night custodian, yes. I don’t need much sleep, and it gives me time to work on other things during the day.”
“Like your magazine, I suppose,” I said.
“There is no magazine,” he replied. “But if you’re planning to poke around in odd places and ask questions, it helps to pretend you’re a journalist.”
My jaw tightened. “Or a scientist.”
“No,” he said. “I really am a scientist.”
He was telling the truth, but it wasn’t helping. Irritably I scraped my long hair back from my face and tied it into a knot. “All right, then. How about you start by telling me exactly what kind of scientist you are and where you really came from and why you fabricated a whole research project just so you could talk to me, and I’ll interrupt whenever you lie or stop making sense?”
“I’ve never lied to you,” he said.
“I know. I would have tasted it if you did.”
“Not just that.” He unbuckled his seat belt and turned to face me. “I didn’t want to. You’d been honest with me, told me things you’d never told anyone else. It seemed wrong not to be honest with you in return.”
“But not completely honest,” I said with a touch of bitterness. “When Dr. Minta told me what you’d done—”
“I was going to tell you. I was just waiting for the right moment, when I could be sure you were ready to listen. Because . . .” He blew out a sigh. “It’s not the kind of story that most people would find easy to believe.”
“Faraday. . . .” I began, then was struck by a disquieting thought. “Is that even your real name?”
“Legally yes, otherwise no. Michael Faraday was a famous physicist, as you probably know, so it seemed like a good choice for an alias. Sebastian is closer to the name I was raised with.”
But I’d
liked
Faraday. And I wasn’t ready to start calling him Sebastian, especially if that wasn’t his real name either. I felt like I’d been cheated somehow, robbed all over again of the man I’d thought I knew. “Go on, then,” I said flatly. “Tell me your story.”
Faraday was silent for a moment. Then he said, “Once there was a young man—just a boy, really—who was part of a team of scientists, an apprentice to one of their leaders. They lived on a base that was very remote and isolated, a place you wouldn’t know even if I told you the name. And they were there to study an extraordinary and very powerful natural phenomenon, which they’d discovered by accident some years ago and were only just beginning to understand.
“So far their experiments were going well, but the boy was impatient. The scientists had some very sophisticated instruments, but they were still making all their observations from a distance. The boy believed that they could learn even more if one of them went and investigated the phenomenon firsthand, and he even volunteered to do it.
“The other scientists said no, it was too dangerous. There were too many things that could go wrong. But the boy was determined to prove himself, and with the help of another apprentice, a boy about four years older than he was, he went ahead with his plan anyway. They borrowed a machine that the scientists used to transport cargo, and the older apprentice set it up to take the boy right into the middle of the phenomenon they’d been studying.
“At first, the plan worked perfectly. The boy arrived safely at his destination, and spent a couple of days exploring and making discoveries without suffering any obvious harm. But when he tried to contact his friend to tell him he was ready to come home, there was no answer. And when he looked for the machine he’d used to get there, he could no longer find it. He was stranded.”
A group of scientists in a secret base, studying some weird phenomenon—this was almost as bizarre as one of Sanjay’s delusions. If Faraday hadn’t sounded so serious about it, I’d have thought he was mocking me. “The boy was you?” I asked.