again?â I said.
âHaley,â she said, âyou got it from me .â
Well, I have to admit that had never occurred to me.
âYou mean you know how to do it too?â I said. âJust the same way, with the water and candle and everything?â
âYou have to be taught,â she said, not answering me. âItâs like trying toâ¦I donât know, like trying to fly a jet plane when youâve only ever been a passenger. And almost as dangerous. You have to be trained in this.â
âThen train me,â I said.
âNo.â
âWhy not?â
âBecause youâre not ready!â she said.
âWell, obviously I am,â I said. âIf Iâm doing it on my own.â
âAnd because I donât do it!â she said. âI donât want anything to do with it, and I never want to. Ever. So donât ask me.â
âYou used to have something to do with it,â I said. âDidnât you?â
I could tell she didnât want to answer that question. She looked away.
âMother?â
âWhat?â
âYou used to have something to do with it.â
Silence.
âYes or no?â
More silence.
âTell me!â I said.
âAll right,â she said. âYes.â
I knew it. âSo when did you stop?â
She got pale then.
âYou want to know when I stopped?â she said. âAll right, if youâre so grown-up and smart Iâll tell you. I stopped when I saw your father die,â she said. âI saw it in the water, weeks before it happened. And I wish I never had, because it was terrible !â
This word came out as more of a scream. I jumped, and she started to cry. I wanted to hug her suddenly, but I was rooted to where I stood. Her words had seared me, frightened me to death. Suddenly the fiery image of the shed going up in smoke was in my mind, and that was an image that never failed to undo me. Even many years later, it was the worst thing I could think ofâit would always be the worst thing. And Mother had her arms wrapped around herself, encased in her own sadness, like an unborn baby in its sac of fluids.
âYouâre not ready to handle what you might see, Haley.â Her voice was low through her tearsâher voice got deeper when she cried. âYouâre not ready yet. And youâre never ready to see something like that.â
âIt was only sunflowers !â I shouted. âThatâs all it was!â
I started crutching myself out of there. She had me really spooked now. I wanted to go outside, but I had to get past her to get to the door, and she put her hand on my shoulder to stop me.
âThis time it was only sunflowers,â she said.
Well, she didnât need to finish that statement. Today sunflowers, tomorrow something elseâfire, maybe? Blood and guts? Death? I shook her off and went out the door to the corral. Brother was standing in his stall, asleep on his feet. He woke up when I came in and whickered at me. I was shaking pretty hard. I let myself into his stall and put my head on his neck.
âOh, my, horse,â I whispered. âOh, glory. Things are getting curiouser and curiouser.â
Whibbety whicket , he said.
I put my nose into him and smelled his horsiness. It was a smell that always calmed me down.
Â
I stayed out there for a while, not wanting to go back inside. I made myself comfy on a bale of hay and just sat there, thinking things over. I hadnât known for sure I could do it. I just thought I could. Now I felt like something in me had changed, just a little bit. I had looked through the Veil.
But what Mother said about seeing Dadâs death had busted me up inside more than a little bit. Iâd never known she could look through the Veil too, but it made sense. Just her and Grandma out there alone in the woods all those years, until my Dad came along. There would have been plenty of time for her
Sandy Kline
Wesley Robert Lowe
J. Dylan Yates
Paul Zindel
Laura Anne Gilman
Alexis Abbott, Alex Abbott
Christopher Bigsby
Albert Ruckholdt
Lyrica Creed
Simon J. Townley