asked.
âOf course not!â
âWell, tonight you are Emily McBickle, lead soprano in the Sandusky, Ohio, Girlsâ Choir. And silly you! You got separated from your group and are all alone and lost in New York City. â
âIs that what Iâm supposed to tell Patient X?â Clara guessed.
âWith tears in your eyes. â
âI donât cry.â
âPractice. â
For the next hour, Clara thought of all sorts of sad thingsâher parents dying, herself dying, Pish Posh closing downâbut all she could manage was a weak squealing sound, which made her sound like a dolphin, and she couldnât manage to work up any tears.
âForget it. You might pop a blood vessel,â Annabelle said finally, rolling her eyes. âJust try not to look so superior.â
CHAPTER-THIRTEEN
A s it turned out, it was quite easy for Clara to not look As it turned out, it was quite easy for Clara to not look so superior: she was dressed in a pair of cheap stonewashed jeans that were rolled up three times at the cuff and a perfectly hideous lime-green shirt with a giant panda-bear head appliquéd on. The pandaâs eyes were made of huge clear-plastic bubbles, which contained little black balls for pupils that bobbled around crazily as Clara walked. On her feet she wore a pair of Annabelleâs old sneakers.
Annabelle was dressed as Patient X, with a large designer tote bag slung over her shoulder containing burglary equipment, including the Spyfocals.
On the street, Claraâs hand automatically shot out to hail a cab, but Annabelle grabbed her by the wrist and pulled her hand down.
âNo cabs. Weâre going by subway,â Annabelle said, and she began walking east at a brisk pace.
âThe subway?â
âOf course.â
Â
âYou can go by subway, if you want. Iâm going by cab,â Clara said firmly. In truth, Clara had never been on a subway. According to everything she had heard, they were filthy and dangerous, and to be avoided at all cost.
âNo, youâre not,â Annabelle replied just as firmly. âThe idea is to be inconspicuous. Cabdrivers are nosy. On a train, people donât look at each other. In fact, itâs practically a rule that they donât look at each other. Weâre going by subway.â And she picked up her pace, not even bothering to look back and see if Clara was following her.
The sneakers were not at all what Clara had expected. Her feet had never felt so close to the ground, yet they were delightfully cushioned and so bouncy that she had a strange urge to run, and a few times she deliberately let Annabelle get ahead of her in order to launch herself into a springy jog to catch up. At the subway station, as they descended the long flight of stairs, Clara covered her nose.
âI smell urine,â she complained.
Annabelle gave her a sidelong look. âSubway stairs always smell like that. â
Clara breathed through her mouth until they reached the bottom, where there was a large booth and several turnstiles, past which was a concrete platform.
âHere.â Annabelle pressed a thin paper card in Claraâs hand.
âWhatâs this for?â
âWhatâs it for?â Annabelle asked incredulously. âIt gets you into the subway. You swipe it at the turnstile. â She gazed at Clara curiously for a minute, and then said, âCripes, youâve never been on the subway before, have you?â
âYou have lipstick on your teeth,â Clara said diffidently.
Annabelle rubbed at her teeth with the edge of her thumb. âIâve never heard of someone who grew up in New York and has neverââ
âItâs seven thirty-five, Annabelle.â
âOkay. Just swipe the card through the slot there. Thatâs it. And just push through the turnstileâharder. There you go.â
On the subway platform was a smattering of people milling around. They
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