Authors: Brian Mercer
I looked toward the door, trying not to look guilty, wondering now what had happened to my admirer. "I am. I am."
Uncle Alex nodded as if he'd known something was up. "No need to worry, my dear. I won't keep you long. But I did want to speak privately with you."
"Oh? With me?"
"Is everything all right at home. No upsets?"
I shook my head. "All's well."
"What about school? Everything's going smoothly?"
I never really thought much about such things. "It's good, I suppose. It is what it is."
"You have friends there?"
I shrugged. "Kathryn. Lauren. You know."
He nodded, studying me. He took a few draws from his pipe and let it out in a long, slow exhale. There'd been an omniscient quality about his deep brown eyes. It wasn't so much that he could look inside you but, rather, that he already knew what was there.
"How do you feel about change, Sara?"
"You mean like a new wardrobe?"
He laughed a little under his breath. "Yes, something like that."
I nodded thoughtfully. "It's good. Change is good."
He took another puff on his pipe, his eyes moving from me to the cat to me again. "Sometimes change can be frightening," he went on, "especially when you're not expecting it. It is frequently alarming because it so often involves a very clear loss of some kind, when what's gained from the loss often isn't completely clear."
"All right," I replied, not certain what he was getting at.
"The most important thing about change is trust," he explained, "trust that where you're going will ultimately be for the better. But trust can be a difficult thing to invoke when the ground under your feet, something you've always relied upon, has just shifted unexpectedly."
"Sure, Uncle Alex. Whatever you say."
"Trust, Sara. Know that things happen for a purpose. There are no accidents. Not really."
"All right."
He smiled and whatever vague shadow had passed over his bright features lifted. "All right, my dear. Run along now. You're missing the party."
I felt warm inside. I returned his smile, hugged him, and made my way back to the lighted hallway, concerned about the boy and why he'd never made an appearance. I'd discovered why a few seconds later, when I entered the foyer to find that Charlotte had cornered him against the recess under the stairs. The boy, Collin, a distant friend of the family, politely introduced himself, but it was clear that Charlotte had already plunged her fangs into him.
That had been last night. Now, as Charlotte and I left the muddy trail of Dorchester Ride, walking out thoroughbred-mixed Welsh ponies on the brief span of pavement toward Rotten Row, Collin had already texted Charlotte a half dozen times. They were tentative messages expressing his pleasure at meeting her, his hopes that they might talk again soon. He might be expressing genuine interest or he could be merely being polite. He had, nevertheless, contacted Charlotte and not me, when he had both our mobile numbers.
I cantered my horse until I reached the broad expanse of The Row, hoping to put a little distance between me and my she-devil cousin. The towering maples that lined the left side of the muddy trail arched overhead, forming a canopy of green and yellowing leaves. The park had once been a private deer sanctuary for Henry VIII. A century or so later, Rotten Row had been The King's Private Road, the fashionable place for the affluent to be seen. These days the sandy track was little used on account of so few stables in the vicinity. This morning Charlotte and I had it all to ourselves.
"I don't see what you're on about," Charlotte called out, urging her horse to keep up with mine. "It's not like I stole him from you."
"It's not fair," I said, standing in the saddle. "He saw me first!"
"What do you mean he saw you first? He likes me
best
. He's had just as much of a chance to text you as me. I don't see him ringing you up this morning."
The speed of my chestnut was definitely pressing park limits. Charlotte fell behind again. I knew without looking that Blackfriar was stirring up great saucers of mud in his wake and dearly hoped that they were landing on Charlotte's breeches and splattering across her wool coat.
"There's no need to be nasty," she cried. "It's not my fault that he likes me better than you."
"Likes youâ" I replied through gritted teeth. "It was you putting your greasy claws all over him."
"Greasy? Claws?"
"You treacherous, evil, back-stabbing bum crumb!"
I spurred my horse hard, sending him into a full gallop. Not to be outdistanced, Charlotte aped my gesture. Big clods of mud flew from our horses' hooves as they fought to advance. A cool, autumn wind pressed against my cheeks. I'd never ridden so fast and didn't know quite how I might stop, but I didn't care. All I wanted to do was beat my cousin who all my life had been undermining and betraying me.
Park stewards had seen us galloping and were waving their arms for us to slow down, but I urged my horse faster anyway. Charlotte had gained a length on me and was pulling ahead. Argh! I couldn't even beat her at this!
That was when I saw him, up ahead, standing alongside the trail. His garb immediately struck me as odd. He was dressed entirely in black: A robe of black broadcloth, black hose, black leather shoes, a black skull cap. In one hand he held a tall walking staff and around his neck hung an ivory crucifix. Everything about him screamed religious fanatic.
At first I assumed that he must be an actor, for London's theater district was only a mile or two away and his costume was clearly out of another age. Then I saw his face, the long countenance, drawn features, sunken, hollow eyes that instantly reminded me of wood carvings I'd seen of medieval nobility. This wasn't the face of someone from the twenty-first century but a being out of time entirely.
Long, wispy white hair curled out from around his skull cap, framing an expression of pure anger and malice. He despised me, that much was clear. He seemed to hate what I'd been, what I was, and what I would become. I was no stranger to him, no random park-goer upon whom he had suddenly unleashed his rancor. No, he seemed to hate me personally and with great wrath. Mere death wasn't good enough for me. Torture was too temporal. He seemed to demand my utter and eternal damnation.
My reaction was instant. It was as if all the air had been sucked from my chest and the weight of tons of gravel and debris had collapsed upon me. Suddenly, I couldn't move, couldn't think, couldn't breathe.
My horse must have seen it, too, or leastwise
felt
it, for Blackfriar halted abruptly, skidding over the uncertain footing in order to avoid the wall of pure hate. Entirely unprepared for the sudden stop, I flew out of the stirrups and past the animal's neck, carried up and over by the momentum of the race. The last thing I saw as my body connected with the trail was the old man's furious black eyes promising punishment in the flesh what his anger alone could not deliver.
****
I lifted my head from the pillow. For the first time in days I wasn't wracked with pain and filled with nausea. Severe concussion, doctors had said. After forty-eight hours of tests and observation, I'd been sent home from hospital and prescribed rest and inertia. Confined to my bedroom, I'd napped contentedly, happy to escape the woozy feeling in my stomach every time I tried to sit up. The headaches had lessened, yet I still felt the vertigo sometimes when I closed my eyes, an obscure dizziness that reproduced the clump, clump, clump of horseback riding. It was that sensation, the feeling that I might be reliving the moments before the accident, that seemed to be making me ill.
I slowly sat up and surveyed my room. Tabatha, Renfield and Sam â my gerbil, cockatiel, and turtle â were safe in their containers, perched among the antique furniture of my family's London flat. I'd known all along they were there. I'd heard them stirring as I lay half-conscious. Their presence, where there'd been only silence and the muffled hum of traffic, comforted me. My parents had banished my two older sisters from this wing of the residence and it had been otherwise still and museum-like.
I eased my feet to the floor, testing my balance as I grasped the headboard. Feeling no ill effects, I ambled stiffly to the window, admiring the third-floor view of Regent's Park and what little I could see of the London Zoo. The sky gleamed battleship-grey. Without shadows falling alongside the trees it was impossible to gauge the time of day and Mummy had silenced the old grandfather clock in the foyer. I missed its telltale chimes that might otherwise offer markers to my tedious incarceration.
Slipping back under the covers, I reclined into the pillows that I'd propped behind me and settled in with a resigned sigh. How I longed for a little furry companionship. Closing my eyes, I imagined a cat nestled at my side, a mental exercise I often carried out at night when I couldn't sleep.
Why won't they just let me have one?
I thought with a flare of resentment at my parents, who'd forbidden it.
I can cope with it. I'm not a baby anymore.
I hadn't given up my appeals for a cat, ever since the last aborted attempt when I was eight. Why wouldn't they at least reconsider?
Nine years ago, when I was only five years old, our family had adopted a pure white kitten named Dandelion. For two weeks, Dandelion had been the terror of the house, launching himself from the concealment of curtains and bedskirts and into the ankles of his guiltless victims. Then one afternoon, while workmen were shifting furniture in preparation for painting, Dandelion came reeling out from between a desk and bureau from which he had nearly been sandwiched. He seemed to recover after that and played for a little while, but an hour later had fallen into a sleep from which he had never awoken.
Three years later, in response to my persistent lobbying, we had taken in another cat, a full-grown Ragdoll named Clawsimodo. He did not last long, however. I'm not proud of this, but bear in mind that I was only eight. Fearing that something sinister might happened to him, I'd locked him in my bedroom and refused to let him out. Eventually, my parents had been compelled to relocate Clawsimodo to my aunt's house in Leeds, where I still get to visit him on long holidays.
My surrogate cat these days was Sid, a Birman who lived across the hall with elderly Mrs. Norris. I called on Mrs. Norris most Saturday afternoons. She would serve out cookies and milk whilst I stroked the aging cat until his ragged purrs settled into contented snoring. Today was Saturday and past noon, as likely as not; maybe Mrs. Norris wouldn't mind a short visit.
I slipped on my dressing gown and slippers and moved silently into the hallway. Our flat had originally been three sizeable apartments that architects had reconfigured into one large home. While the flat's revisions were not immediately obvious, there were clues. For instance, there were three entrances to the home from the outer corridor, a working main door and two obsolete doors that remained locked and unused.
My sisters and I occasionally availed ourselves of the dormant door at the end of the hall to leave the flat without being detected, ever since my eldest sister, Mary, had discovered the tarnished brass key in a remote closet drawer. It was this door that I approached now, sliding stealthily on my soft slippers so as not to draw any attention. The lock turned with a stubborn click that echoed down the quiet hallway. When no one stirred, I eased it open as little as I could, just enough to pass into the outer corridor.
Mrs. Norris answered the door after the third bell. "Oh my. Sara. What are you doing here? And in bedclothes, I see." Mrs. Norris opened the door wider and beckoned me inside. "Don't just stand in the hall. Come in, come in."
I followed Mrs. Norris to her sitting room and lounged in my customary place on the sofa while the old widow moved into the kitchen. "Your parents were dreadfully worried about you," she called out. "And so was I."
I felt a little dizzy but immensely relieved to be in Mrs. Norris's cozy home with its Victorian display of knickknacks. I regarded the small table concealed by dozens of ornately framed photographs, most of Mrs. Norris and her husband, whom she referred to only as The Colonel, but also portraits of her with the various cats she had owned throughout the years, arranged chronologically, ending with her latest animal, Sid. The old Birman was presently reposed on a nearby reading chair, his azure eyes regarding me with drowsy interest.
I'd never met The Colonel, he having died years before I'd been born, but his presence was still felt here in the small but luxurious flat. The chair in which Sid was presently arranged had once been his. Mrs. Norris never let anyone sit on it, even Sid, and it was strange to see the cat there now. I had to check the urge to bestow the old Birman with hugs and kisses and force myself to wait until Mrs. Norris invited me.
"Tell me, child, how are you feeling?" Mrs. Norris appeared in the doorway with a tray. "Up for biscuits and cream?" Mrs. Norris placed a small platter of sugar cookies and a glass of milk in front of me.
"Always." I relished the sweetness on my tongue before washing it down with milk. The food settled pleasantly in my empty stomach.
"How are you feeling?" the widow asked with sincere concern in her old blue eyes. She smiled sweetly. "I must say, you look as well as ever."
"I am feeling much better today," I answered. "But I'm tired of being tired."
My gaze moved from Mrs. Norris to Sid, wondering when the old lady would shoo him off the upholstery. Sid knew he wasn't allowed on The Colonel's chair. He only climbed up there when he wanted attention. Mrs. Norris ignored him.
"What happened?" the old woman wondered. "Your mother said you had fallen off your horse."
"I don't remember what happened, exactly. My cousin and I had been, er, riding faster than we probably should have. You remember Charlotte? We were having a bit of a row over a boy who had been paying me the kindest sort of attention at a party last week. He clearly yearned to meet me but before we could get away together, my vampire cousin intercepted him in a shadowy corner beneath the stair and plunged her ragged incisors into him and there we were, riding together next day, she on her high horse as if all along she had been the object of his affection, as if she wasn't the fiend who'd mesmerized him the night before and I'm like, 'He saw me first,' and she's all, 'He clearly fancies me,' and all the time we are going faster and faster... Mrs. Norris? Mrs. Norris, are you attending?"
I hadn't noticed before, because at first Mrs. Norris had looked perfectly normal, dressed as she ordinarily was in a wool sweater and old lady's pleated skirt. Yet now I observed that there were stray strands of wiry grey twisting out of her normally well-groomed bun and that the flesh beneath her eyes was swollen and tear-worn.
"Mrs. Norris, are you all right? What is the matter?"
She fumbled with a hanky and daintily blew her nose. "Nothing, child. I don't want to upset you." Her voice warbled miserably, as if all semblance of dignity and civility might suddenly crumble.
My heart throbbed at the sight of it and a wave of grief hit me with a shudder. To see this sweet old woman suffering, this woman who always had a smile and kind word and biscuit at the ready, who had no one in the world save her neighbors and her cat, was almost more than I could endure. "Mrs. Norris, what's wrong? Please tell me."
The widow placed her hand over her mouth and tears flowed unbidden down her cheeks. "I am so sorry. Forgive me."
"It's all right, Mrs. Norris." I took Mrs. Norris's hand and sat on the floor near her chair while she wept.
Composing herself with a deep breath, Mrs. Norris announced, "I am sorry to be the bearer of bad news. I am very sad to reveal that Sid is gone."
"What do you mean
gone
?" I frowned. "You mean escaped?" My eyes flicked from Mrs. Norris to Sid, who sat placidly there on the colonel's chair.
"No, dear," she replied, clearing her throat. "Sid passed away last week, quietly, in his sleep. He was with me on the bed in the night and in the morning he was cold. It was the morning of your accident."
"But Mrs. Norris, Sid is right there." I pointed to the colonel's chair, but it was empty now.
"I'm so sorry to have to upset you when you're recovering from your fall."
"But Mrs. Norris, I just saw Sid right here in this chair a moment ago."
"Oh, Sara, you know no one is allowed in that chair. Sid wouldn't sit there."
"He
always
sits there!"
"Oh, dear. I have upset you."
"But Mrs. Norris, I just saw him. I swear. He was right here."
I continued to protest and Mrs. Norris continued to insist, even after she showed me the polished silver urn in the china hutch where she kept the ashes of all her former felines. Mrs. Norris indicated the fresh engraving, "Sydney Ragamuffin Norris III," but I refused to be convinced. Finally, she gave me a fretful, careworn look, thinking no doubt of my recent knock on the head and possible lingering brain injury. Fearing that Mrs. Norris would think I'd gone mad â or, more directly, that she might report the visit to Mother â I allowed myself to be persuaded and said nothing more.
Now, hours later as I lay in bed in the dark, I wondered if maybe I'd hallucinated it. It occurred to me that perhaps I'd seen Sid because I expected to see him, had
wanted
to see him, and had somehow been mistaken. But if that was true, why would I see him on the colonel's chair, the very last place I would suppose him to be? I dozed fitfully. My headache had returned.
I awoke in the deep hours of the night, when the flat was quiet and the traffic outside subdued. No one had bothered to draw my curtains closed that evening and a pale shaft of moonlight slanted onto the Persian rug in the middle of the room. And there, in the center of the dim puddle of light, I saw movement.
I blinked sleepily, forcing my eyes into focus. A cat sat curled up there, licking its paw and cleaning his ear with the wet fur. He lapped at his paw and cleaned his ear, lapped at his paw and cleaned his ear. I could make out the faint lines of his dark face and tail, the brilliant white mittens and feet. The cat was clearly Sid.
I rubbed the crumbs from my eyes, but Sid's image remained. Now I understood that the old Birman must really have died, for there was no way for the animal to have crept into our locked flat and into my closed-door bedroom. Even if that were possible, the cat defenses at Mrs. Norris's flat were maximum security. Her cat was always her most precious possession and she'd often bragged that she'd never permitted one to escape in the many decades she'd lived there.
I was simultaneously frightened and excited. I thought of sweet Mrs. Norris's despair and wanted desperately to show her that Sid was all right after all. Yet as much as I wished to crawl out of bed and try to pet him, I was petrified of leaving the sanctuary of my covers. By now Sid had stopped bathing and had curled up to sleep. The end of his tail wagged placidly.
I considered calling out to my sisters, whose rooms were closest to mine, but fretted that Sid might vanish in response to a loud noise. Eventually, I decided to pin my eyes on him and stay awake for the remainder of the night. I was certain that if I watched him the entire time he would still be there in the morning when, in the sunlight, I might feel better about approaching him. I imagined how happy Mrs. Norris would be when she saw that her beloved old companion was thriving and keeping her company, albeit not always visibly. The thought of driving out Mrs. Norris's sorrow, even for a little while, filled me with delight.
For several hours I lay there, studying him, my eyes feeling dry and swollen, like a pair of hot coals in my head. Several times I drifted off briefly, starting out of sleep to see Sid's furry coat shining in the moonlight. Each time he seemed to change positions slightly, until at last he was facing me full on, his eyes two gleaming, ghostly orbs.
There seemed to be a connection forming between us. The longer we looked into each other's eyes, the stronger it became, until there was a sort of click in the center of my head. That's when I felt it, an upsurge of overwhelming love that was at once warm, soft, innocent, and absolutely unconditional. I'd sensed such love before when one of the many animals that I'd cared for â cats, horses, dogs, birds â had shown me affection, but never had I
felt
it so strongly and so viscerally, yet in that one moment when Sid seemed to be wordlessly whispering to me, it was the only real thing in the whole of reality.
With that warm sense of love, I finally fell asleep. When I awoke a few hours later in the thin, grey light of early morning, the spot on the carpet was empty. Sydney Ragamuffin Norris III was gone.