Maybe theyâd get some real answers then.
And then I thought, why not try it myself?
It was one of those ideas that seems so crazy you almost toss it out the window right away, but you stop at the last minute and kind of examine it like a weird fossil or something, because itâs too damn interesting to get rid of. Try it myself? Well, maybe I could. Iâd seen her do itâGrandma, that is. I thought I knew what to do. There were lots of little steps involved, and I wasnât sure I remembered all of them, but the important part was having the feeling, or the seeing, or the knowingâbeing able to look behind the Veil. And that I was pretty sure I had.
The Veil, in case you donât know, means the covering that lies over everything we donât know or understand, everything that isnât right in front of our noses. There were probably a bunch of different ways to lift it, but Iâd only seen it done one way before, and that was Grandmaâs way. Before I knew what I was doing, I was out of bed and poling along into the kitchen, where I got a pot out from under the sink and filled it most of the way with water. I set it on the table and pulled the curtains shut. Then I took a little hand mirror out of the bathroom and propped it up against some books in front of the pot, so that when I looked into the mirror I could see the reflection of the water. That was the real secretâyou had to have two doors into the other dimension, one opening right into the other. I remembered Grandma saying something about that, a long time ago. Or at least I thought I remembered it. I didnât have any dope to burn, but my first time out I wouldnât worry about that. I wasnât seriously expecting it to work anyway. I mean, I had a feeling that it could work, but I didnât assume it would .
It was good and dim in the kitchen now. I lit a candle and set it next to the mirror, so it kind of made everything glow. Then I setmyself down in a chair and leaned over it, positioning myself just right so I could see the glare of the candle of the water, and I asked myself: Where is Frankie?
All this was just stuff Iâd seen my grandmother do before, but that was the outside stuff. What I didnât know was what to do insideâwhat to think about. I had to wing it. So I just cleared my mind and tried not to think about anything, which is a lot harder than it sounds. Everything distracted meâthe ruffles my breath made on the water, the throbbing in my leg, some damn bird chirping his head off right outside the window. But after a few minutes I kind of got into it, and next thing I knew the world around me went black and all I could see was the water like it was a screen, and there on the water was an image: a bunch of sunflowers.
For about a second it was as plain as a hog in a dress, and then it was gone. I sat bolt upright, feeling mighty shocked. Sunflowers? I thought. What the hell is that all about? What did that have to do with Frankie?
Nothing , I thoughtâ a misfire. Just a bunch of stupid flowers.
But then I started feeling a little warm glow, because Iâd done it âIâd seen something. It wasnât much, maybe not even accurate, but it was something. And it seemed like it happened right away, too. I couldnât have been sitting there longer than ten minutes. That was pretty good.
Call me an optimist, I guess.
I kept staring into the water. Right , I thought. Think. Sunflowers. What do those mean?
Suddenly I heard the pickup truck come crunching into the driveway, and Mother came up the back steps and into the kitchen. I didnât have time to move, I was so surprised.
She was surprised, tooâmore than a little. She came in the door and stopped and stared at me like Iâd sprouted horns.
âForget something?â I asked.
âHaley Bombauer, what are you doing?â she whispered.
Well, there was no need to answer that, so I just
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