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Chapter no 28 – Early Spring

Ninth House

Alex woke to the sound of glass breaking. It took her a moment to remember where she was, to take in the hexagon pattern of the Hutchโ€™s bathroom floor, the dripping faucet. She grabbed the lip of the sink and pulled herself up, pausing to wait out the head rush before she padded through the dressing room to the common room. For a long moment she stared at the broken windowโ€”one leaded pane smashed, the cool spring air whistling through, the glass slivers scattered on the plaid wool of the window seat beside her discarded falafel andย Suggested Requirements for Lethe Candidates,ย the pamphlet still open to the page where Alex had stopped reading.ย Mors irrumat omnia.

Cautiously, she peered down at the alley. The Bridegroom was there, just as he had been every day for the last two weeks. Three weeks? She couldnโ€™t be sure. But Mercy was there too, in a belted jacket patterned with cabbage roses, her black hair pulled into a ponytail, a guilty expression on her face.

Alex thought about just not doing anything. She didnโ€™t know how Mercy had found her, but she didnโ€™t have to stay found. Eventually her roommate would get tired of waiting for Alex to show and sheโ€™d leave. Or throw another rock through the window.

Mercy waved and another figure stepped into view, dressed in a purple crochet coat and glittery mulberry-colored scarf.

Alex leaned her head against the window frame. โ€œShit.โ€

She pulled on a Lethe House sweatshirt to cover her filthy tank top and limped barefoot down the stairs. Then she took a deep breath and pushed the door open.

โ€œBaby!โ€ her mom cried, lunging toward her.

Alex squinted against the spring sunshine and tried not to actually recoil. โ€œHi, Mom. Donโ€™t hugโ€”โ€

Too late. Her mother was squeezing her and Alex hissed in pain.

โ€œWhatโ€™s wrong?โ€ Mira asked, pulling back. โ€œJust dealing with an injury,โ€ Alex said.

Mira bracketed Alexโ€™s face with her hands, pushing the hair back, tears filling her eyes. โ€œOh, baby. Oh, my little star. I was afraid this might happen.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m not using, Mom. I swear. I just got really, really sick.โ€

Miraโ€™s face was disbelieving. Otherwise, she looked good, better than she had in a long time. Her blond hair had fresh highlights; her skin was glowing. She looked like sheโ€™d put on weight.ย Itโ€™s because of me,ย Alex realized with a pang.ย All those years that she looked tired and too old for her age, she was worrying about me.ย But then her daughter had become a painter and gone to Yale. Magic.

Alex saw Mercy hovering near the alley wall.ย Snitch.

โ€œCome on,โ€ Alex said. โ€œCome in.โ€

She was breaking Lethe House rules by allowing outsiders into the Hutch, but if Colin Khatri could show Lance Gressang how to portal to Iceland, she could have her mother and her roommate in for tea.

She glanced at the Bridegroom. โ€œNot you.โ€

He started moving toward her and she hurriedly closed the door. โ€œNot who?โ€ said her mother.

โ€œNobody. Nothing.โ€

Climbing the stairs left Alex winded and dizzy, but she still had enough sense to be embarrassed when she opened the door to the Hutch and let them inside. Sheโ€™d been too out of it to realize just how bad her mess had gotten. Her discarded blankets were crumpled in a heap on the couch, and there were dirty dishes and containers of spoiled food everywhere. Now that sheโ€™d had a breath of fresh air, she could also tell the common room stank like a cross between a swamp and a sick ward.

โ€œSorry,โ€ said Alex. โ€œItโ€™s been โ€ฆ I havenโ€™t been up to housekeeping.โ€ Mercy set to opening the windows, and Mira began picking up trash. โ€œDonโ€™t do that,โ€ said Alex, skin prickling with shame.

โ€œI donโ€™t know what else to do,โ€ said Mira. โ€œSit down and let me help. You look like youโ€™re going to fall over. Whereโ€™s the kitchen?โ€

โ€œOn the left,โ€ Alex said, directing her to the cramped galley kitchen, which was just as messy as the common room if not worse.

โ€œWhose place is this?โ€ asked Mercy, removing her coat.

โ€œDarlingtonโ€™s,โ€ Alex said. It was true in a way. She lowered her voice. โ€œHow did you know I was here?โ€

Mercy shifted uneasily. โ€œI, uh โ€ฆ may have followed you here once or

twice.โ€

โ€œWhat?โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re very mysterious, okay? And I was worried about you. You look like hell, by the way.โ€

โ€œWell, I feel like hell.โ€

โ€œWhere have you been? Weโ€™ve been worried sick. We didnโ€™t know if youโ€™d gone missing or what.โ€

โ€œSo you called my mom?โ€

Mercy threw up her hands. โ€œDonโ€™t expect me to be sorry. If I disappeared, I hope youโ€™d come looking.โ€ Alex scowled, but Mercy just jabbed her shoulder with her finger. โ€œYou rescue me. I rescue you. Thatโ€™s how this works.โ€

โ€œIs there recycling?โ€ Mira called from the kitchen. Alex sighed. โ€œUnder the sink.โ€

Maybe good things were the same as bad things. Sometimes you just had to let them happen.

 

 

Mercy and Mira were a surprisingly efficient team. They got the garbage packed away, made Alex shower, and got her an appointment at the university health center to get on a course of antibiotics, though she didnโ€™t go so far as to show them her wound. She said sheโ€™d just been dealing with some kind of flu or virus. They made her shower and change into clean sweats, then Mira went to the little gourmet market and got soup and Gatorade. She went back out again when Alex told them sheโ€™d had to throw away her boots.

โ€œTar,โ€ she said. โ€œThey were ruined.โ€ย Tar, blood spatter. Same difference.

Mira returned an hour later with a pair of boots, a pair of jeans, two Yale T-shirts, and a set of shower sandals that Alex didnโ€™t need but thanked her for anyway.

โ€œI got you a dress too.โ€ โ€œI donโ€™t wear dresses.โ€ โ€œBut you might.โ€

They settled in front of the fireplace with cups of tea and instant cocoa. Unfortunately, Alex had eaten all of Dawesโ€™s fancy gourmet marshmallows. It wasnโ€™t quite cold enough for a fire, but the room felt snug and safe in the late- afternoon light.

โ€œHow long are you here for?โ€ Alex asked. It came out with an ungrateful edge she hadnโ€™t intended.

โ€œFirst flight out in the morning,โ€ said Mira.

โ€œYou canโ€™t stay longer?โ€ Alex wasnโ€™t sure how much she wanted her to. But when her mother beamed, so happy to be asked, Alex was glad sheโ€™d made the gesture.

โ€œI wish I could. Work on Monday.โ€

Alex realized it must be the weekend. Sheโ€™d only checked her email once since sheโ€™d holed up in the Hutch and hadnโ€™t read any of Sandowโ€™s messages. Sheโ€™d let her phone go dead. For the first time she wondered if the societies had continued meeting without Lethe to oversee them. Maybe activity had been suspended after the attack at Il Bastone. She didnโ€™t much care. Sheย didย wonder if her mom could afford a last-minute cross-country flight. Alex wished sheโ€™d extorted some money from Lethe along with that grade bump.

Mercy had brought notes from the three weeks of classes sheโ€™d missed and was already talking about a plan of attack before finals. Alex nodded along, but what was the point? The fix was in. Sandow had said heโ€™d make sure Alex would pass, and even if he didnโ€™t, Alex knew she didnโ€™t have the will to catch up. But she could pretend. For Mercyโ€™s sake and for her motherโ€™s.

They ate a light dinner and then made the slow walk back to Old Campus. Alex showed her mom the Vanderbilt courtyard and their shared suite, her map of California and the poster of Leightonโ€™sย Flaming June,ย which Darlington had once rolled his eyes at. She let Mira coo over the sketchbook sheโ€™d tried to make herself pick up once in a while for the sake of appearances but admitted she hadnโ€™t been drawing or painting much.

When her mom lit up a bundle of sage and started smudging the common room, Alex tried not to melt into the floor in embarrassment. Still, she was surprised at how good it felt to be back in the dorms, to see Laurenโ€™s bike leaning up against the mantel, the toaster oven topped by boxes of Pop-Tarts. It felt like home.

When it was time for Mira to head back to her hotel, Alex walked outside with her, trying to hide how much it took out of her just to descend the few steps to the street.

โ€œI didnโ€™t ask what happened and Iโ€™m not going to,โ€ said Mira, gathering her glittery scarf around her neck.

โ€œThank you.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s not for you. Itโ€™s because Iโ€™m a coward. If you tell me youโ€™re clean, I want to believe you.โ€

Alex wasnโ€™t sure what to say to that. โ€œI think I may have a job lined up for

the summer. But it means I wonโ€™t be coming home.โ€

Mira looked down at her shoes, handmade leather booties sheโ€™d been getting from the same guy at the same craft fair for the last ten years. She nodded, then brushed tears from her eyes.

Alex felt her own tears rising. How many times had she made her mother cry? โ€œIโ€™m sorry, Mama.โ€

Mira drew a tissue from her pocket. โ€œItโ€™s okay. Iโ€™m proud of you. And I donโ€™t want you to come home. After all of those horrible things with those horrible people. This is where you belong. This is where you were meant to bloom. Donโ€™t roll your eyes, Galaxy. Not every flower belongs in every garden.โ€

Alex couldnโ€™t quite untangle the wave of love and anger that rushed through her. Her mother believed in faeries and angels and crystal visions, but what would she make of real magic? Could she grasp the ugly truth of it all? That magic wasnโ€™t something gilded and benign, just another commodity that only some people could afford? But the car was pulling up and it was time to say goodbye, not time to start arguments over old wounds.

โ€œIโ€™m glad you came, Mom.โ€

โ€œI am too. I hope โ€ฆ If you arenโ€™t able to manage your gradesโ€”โ€

โ€œIโ€™ve got this,โ€ Alex said, and it felt good to know that thanks to Sandow she wasnโ€™t lying. โ€œPromise.โ€

Mira hugged her and Alex breathed in patchouli and tuberose, the memory of being small. โ€œI should have done better,โ€ her mother said on a sob. โ€œI should have set clearer boundaries. I should have let you have fast food.โ€

Alex couldnโ€™t help but laugh, then winced at the pain. No amount of strict bedtimes and trans fats could have kept her safe.

Her mother slid into the back seat of the car, but before Alex closed the door, she said, โ€œMom โ€ฆ my dadโ€ฆโ€ Over the years, Mira had made an effort to answer Alexโ€™s questions about her father. Where was he from?ย Sometimes he told me Mexico, sometimes Peru, sometimes Stockholm or Cincinnati. It was a joke with us.ย It doesnโ€™t sound funny.ย Maybe it wasnโ€™t.ย What did he do?ย We didnโ€™t talk about money. He liked to surf.ย Did you love him?ย I did.ย Did he love you?ย For a while.ย Why did he leave?ย People leave, Galaxy. I hope he finds his bliss.

Had her mother meant it? Alex didnโ€™t know. When sheโ€™d gotten old enough to realize how much the questions hurt her mother and to realize the answers were never going to change, she stopped asking. She decided not to care. If her father couldnโ€™t be bothered with her, she wasnโ€™t going to bother

with him.

But now she found herself saying, โ€œWas there anything unusual about him?โ€

Mira laughed. โ€œHow about everything?โ€

โ€œI meanโ€ฆโ€ Alex struggled for a way to describe what she wanted to know without sounding crazy. โ€œDid he like the same stuff you did? Tarot and crystals and all that? Did you ever get the sense he could see things that werenโ€™t there?โ€

Mira looked down Chapel Street. Her gaze turned distant. โ€œHave you ever heard of the arsenic eaters?โ€

Alex blinked, confused. โ€œNo?โ€

โ€œThey would ingest a little bit of arsenic every day. It made their skin clear and their eyes bright and they felt wonderful. And all the while they were just drinking poison.โ€ When Mira turned her eyes back to Alex, they were sharper and steadier than Alex ever remembered them being, free of the usual determined cheer. โ€œThatโ€™s what being with your father was like.โ€ Then she smiled and the old Mira was back. โ€œText me after you see the doctor.โ€

โ€œI will, Mom.โ€

Alex closed the door and watched the car drive away. The Bridegroom had stood a respectful distance away, watching the whole exchange, but now he drew closer. Was he ever going to let up? She really didnโ€™t want to go to Il Bastone, but she was going to need the Lethe library to figure out how to break their connection.ย โ€œNo one is immortal,โ€ย she snapped at him, and saw him reluctantly shrink back, vanishing through the bricks.

โ€œYour mom okay?โ€ Mercy asked as Alex entered the common room.

Sheโ€™d put on her hyacinth robe and curled up on the couch.

โ€œI think so. Sheโ€™s just worried about me getting through the rest of the year.โ€

โ€œAnd youโ€™re not?โ€

โ€œSure,โ€ Alex said. โ€œOf course.โ€

Mercy snorted. โ€œNo, youโ€™re not. I can tell. So continues the mystery of Alex Stern. Itโ€™s okay. Mystery is good. I played softball for two years in high school.โ€

โ€œYou did?โ€

โ€œSee? I have secrets too. Did you hear about Blake?โ€

She hadnโ€™t. She hadnโ€™t heard about anything during the weeks sheโ€™d hid at the Hutch. That had been the point. But according to Mercy, Blake Keely had attacked a woman in her home and her husband had fought him off with a

golf club. Forensics had matched the knife heโ€™d been carrying with the weapon in the Tara Hutchins murder investigation. There was no mention of Dawes, or the mansion on Orange, or Hiram Bingham IIIโ€™s fatal marble noggin. No discussion of Merity. Not a single word about the societies. Case closed.

โ€œI could have ended up dead,โ€ said Mercy. โ€œI guess I should be grateful.โ€

Grateful.ย The word hung in the air, its wrongness like the sour clang of a bell.

Mercy tilted her head back, letting it flop on the arm of the couch, staring up at the ceiling. โ€œMy great-grandmother lived to be one hundred and three years old. She was doing her own taxes and swimming at the Y every morning until she keeled over dead in the middle of a yoga class.โ€

โ€œShe sounds great.โ€

โ€œShe was a total asshole. My brother and I hated going to her house. She served the nastiest-smelling tea and she never stopped complaining. But you always felt a little tougher at the end of a visit. Like youโ€™d endured her.โ€

Alex figured sheโ€™d be lucky if she made it to the end of the semester. But it was a nice sentiment. โ€œI wish my grandmother had made it to a hundred and three.โ€

โ€œWhat was she like?โ€

Alex sat down in Laurenโ€™s ugly recliner. โ€œSuperstitious. Religious. Iโ€™m not sure which one. But she had a steel spine. My mom told me when she brought my father home, he took one look at my grandmother, turned right around, and never came back.โ€ Alex had asked her grandmother about it once, after her first heart attack.ย Too pretty,ย sheโ€™d said, waving her hand dismissively.ย Mal tormento que soplo.ย He was a bad wind that blew through.

โ€œI think you have to be like that,โ€ Mercy said. โ€œIf youโ€™re going to survive to get old.โ€

Alex looked out the window. The Bridegroom had returned. His face was taut, determined. As if he could wait forever. And he probably could.

What do you want?ย Belbalm had asked her. Safety, comfort, to feel unafraid.ย I want to live to grow old,ย Alex thought as she pulled the curtains closed.ย I want to sit on my porch and drink foul-smelling tea and yell at passersby. I want to survive this world that keeps trying to destroy me.

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