But suddenly there was no sound now on the other side of the door. Not even the sound of the bedsprings. Holly knocked, hard, and then she stepped back. She thought again about throwing her weight against it, and how easily the lock would snap away from the door and the frame, but even as she thought of it, she knew she would never do it. If she were the type of woman who could throw her weight against a door and break the lock, how many times would she have done that by now in this life?
It was like the rubber band! Holly’s whole life, she’d protected herself, or she’d been protected. Her sisters used to cut advertisements for the Humane Society out of the magazines that Holly read so that she never saw the photographs of homeless cats and dogs. She thought of Annette Sanders, who’d died in a car crash, drunk, years after Holly’s therapy had ended. She recalled how simple it had been to step out of that room in Siberia, to escape the hydrocephalic boy and the beautiful smiling girl on the floor, strapped to a bedpan.
One must have a mind of winter.
Holly lifted her hand to knock on the door again, and then, as if the sound had been programmed to stop her, “A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall” began to play on her iPhone from the living room, where it still lay on the dining room table.
AS SHE HURRIED to the phone, Holly felt a piece of glass, a small one, but very sharp, stab her in her heel.
It hurt, but she didn’t stop to pluck it out. She found her phone just before it stopped ringing ( And what did you see, my darling young one? ), picked it up, touched the answer button with her finger, and said, trying to keep her voice steady, “Hello?”
“Holly, honey.”
“Thuy?”
“Yeah. How are you guys doing over there? Did Eric get back there with his parents?”
“No.”
“No? Oh dear. Did they check Gin into the hospital then? Is she okay?”
“I don’t know,” Holly said. “It’s been a while since I spoke to him. He was with her in a room. His dad was having chest pains, too.”
“Oh my God,” Thuy said. “ Stress. Do they think she could have had a stroke?”
“I don’t know,” Holly said. “She’s confused.”
“Oh, Holly, I’m so sorry. This isn’t the Christmas we thought it would be, is it? Have you been outside at all?”
“No.”
“It’s incredible. If it ever stops, we’re going to have some serious shoveling to do. But we’ll try to come over tomorrow, okay? Will you call when you get news from Eric about his mom? I mean, I know we only see her at Christmas, but we’re all really fond of Gin. And Gramps, too, of course. I even wish we could have seen the Coxes today. And your sisters-in-law. Especially what’s-her-name.”
“Crystal.”
“Ah, yes, Crystal. She’s the one who says ‘Gosh golly’ when she drops something, instead of ‘Oh, shit,’ right?”
“Yes,” Holly said. And then she said, “I also dropped something.”
“Oh, shit. Or, I mean, ‘Gosh golly!’ What’d you drop, hon?”
Holly said nothing. She stepped over to the picture window again. She realized that it must be later than she thought. The sky behind the blizzard seemed to have turned pewter blue. Now, if she squinted, Holly could see that the hangman’s hoods on her roses were casting long shadows over the accumulated snow.
Thuy said, “Are you still there, Holly? Are we breaking up?”
“I’m here,” Holly said.
“Well, we ate tuna casserole and opened presents, and we watched It’s a Wonderful Life. What’d you and Tatty do?”
Again, Holly said nothing. She saw a bird swoop from a branch of the dogwood tree in the backyard to the ground. It appeared, now, to be doing a little dance on the cat’s empty grave.
“I’m going to take the hoods off the roses,” she finally said. “They can’t see.”
“Huh?”
Holly got on her hands and knees, still holding the phone to her ear. She saw that, despite her vacuuming, there was broken glass all over the living room floor. This couldn’t all be from the one water glass, could it? She stood back up, using her free hand to brush the sharp dust off her knees. It cut into her hands with its nearly invisible, razor-sharp flakes.
“You still there, Holly?”
“Yes,” Holly said. She turned her palms down so that she couldn’t see if they were bleeding.
“Well, before we get cut off, Patty wants to say hi to you, and I’d like to say Merry Christmas to my Tatty, okay?”
“Okay,” Holly said.
“Okay, hold on then, Holly. Come here, Patsy Baby. Auntie Holly wants to say hi.”
From the other side of town, but so close (so close it seemed!) to Holly’s ear, the little girl’s voice was high and light and sweet, sounding like the rim of a glass ringing at the flick of a fingernail.
“Hi?”
“Patty, sweetie,” Holly said. “Did Santa bring you any presents.”
“What?”
“I asked if Santa brought you any presents.”
“What?”
“Can you hear me, Patty?”
“What?”
After that there was no sound at all for a few seconds except for the little girl’s breathing. She still sounded so close that Holly could even hear her swallow. Then Patty whispered something, and then perhaps she held the telephone to her chest because Holly could hear her healthy little-girl heart beating loudly in her ear. It was as if Holly herself had put her ear to Patty’s tiny chest.
How small her heart must be!
You could probably fit it in the palm of your hand—and still the sound of it managed to fly through the air for twenty miles between their houses. Please , Holly thought, please let it be that Santa brought her gifts, and that Thuy and Pearl can keep Patty believing in Santa for many years to come. What a holy, simple pleasure.
“Holly?”
It was Thuy again.
“Is everything okay there? Patty said she can’t understand you. She said you’re not speaking English. Uh, you are speaking English aren’t you, hon?”
“I have to speak English,” Holly said. “I only know a few words of Russian. I tried to learn more. I’m no good with languages.”
Thuy laughed. She said, “Well, something’s wrong with the phone then. Let me talk to my Tatty before it goes completely dead, okay? We’ll try later, and we’ll get over there tomorrow if we can shovel ourselves out of here.”
“Hang on,” Holly said.
She held the iPhone to her own chest as she tiptoed across the glass-strewn living room to her daughter’s bedroom door. She touched the doorknob, carefully at first, thinking it might somehow burn her hand the way the iPhone had blistered Tatiana’s fingertips. But the doorknob was cold. She turned it and pushed against the door, thinking that she would hit the obstruction of the hook and eye. But she didn’t. The door was unlocked. It’s unlocked, Mom. I never lock the door!
“Tatty?” Holly said to her daughter’s naked back. Both of Tatiana’s arms were inside the sleeves of Gin’s red velvet dress, as if she’d tried to slip it over her head but it had been too difficult, as if her arms were too stiff. As if she were as unbendable as a Barbie doll. Her nightgown lay on the floor, and her black ballet slippers were tucked under her nightstand.
“Tatty?”
Holly knelt down beside Tatiana’s bed, but she was careful not to touch her daughter, who looked so naked, so vulnerable, so like a child, abandoned. Holly would never want to scare her, or to wake her, or to hurt her. There had been so many times since she and Eric had brought Tatiana home from the Pokrovka Orphanage #2 that Holly had thought to herself, Thank God I didn’t bring her into this world myself. She’d thought, really, that it would have been a kind of sin to snatch a soul out of whatever other world there might be out there, to bring her into this one. Surely, she thought, wherever babies resided before they were born, it was more peaceful, less dangerous, than here. Surely the souls of the unborn and the dead were never again tucked into these bodies—so soft! so exposed! so defenseless!—and left to fend for themselves. What could possibly be worse than this? Than to place a soul as exquisite as Tatiana’s into the body of a dying animal?
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