. Anna grew up years ago.
"Do you think Anna's doing okay?" Julia asks.
"I don't think she would have filed a lawsuit if she was." I hesitate. "Sara says she wants attention."
"What do you think?"
To buy time, I take a forkful of eggs. The horseradish turned out to be surprisingly good. It brings out the orange. I tell Julia Romano this.
She folds her napkin next to her own plate. "You didn't answer my question, Mr. Fitzgerald."
"I don't think it's that simple." I very carefully set my silverware down. "Do you have brothers or sisters?"
"Both. Six older brothers and a twin sister."
I whistle. "Your parents must have a hell of a lot of patience."
She shrugs. "Good Catholics. I don't know how they did it, either, but none of us fell through the cracks."
"Did you always think so?" I ask. "Did you ever feel, when you were a kid, that maybe they were playing favorites?" Her face tightens, just the tiniest bit, and I feel bad about putting her on the spot. "We all know you're supposed to love your kids equal, but that's not always how it works out." I get to my feet. "You got a little extra time? There's someone I'd like you to meet."
*
Last winter we got an ambulance call in the dead of winter for a guy who lived up a rural road. The contractor he hired to plow his driveway had found him and called 911; apparently the guy had gotten out of his car the night before, slipped, and froze right to the gravel; the contractor nearly ran over him, thinking he was a drift.
When we got to the scene, he'd been outside for nearly eight hours, and he was nothing more than an ice cube with no pulse. His knees were bent; I remember this, because when we finally pried him out and set him on a backboard, there they were, sticking straight up in the air. We got the heat cranked in the ambulance and brought him inside, starting to cut off his clothes. By the time we had our paperwork in order for the hospital transport, the guy was sitting up and talking to us.
I tell you this to show you that in spite of what you'd think, miracles happen.
*
It's a cliche, but the reason I became a firefighter in the first place was because I wanted to save people. So the moment I emerged from the fiery arched doorway with Luisa in my arms, when her mother first saw us and fell to her knees, I knew I had done my job and done it well. She swooped down beside the EMT from the second crew who got a line into the girl's arm and put her on oxygen. The kid was coughing, frightened, but she would be fine.
The fire was all but out; the boys were inside doing salvage and overhaul. Smoke drew a veil over the night sky; I couldn't make out a single star in the constellation Scorpio. I took off my gloves and wiped my hands across my eyes, which would sting for hours. "Good work," I said to Red, as he packed up the hose.
"Good save, Cap," he called back.
It would have been better, of course, if Luisa had been in her own room, as her mother expected. But kids don't stay where they're supposed to. You turn around and find her not in the bedroom but hiding in a closet; you turn around and see she's not three but thirteen. Parenting is really just a matter of tracking, of hoping your kids do not get so far ahead you can no longer see their next moves.
I took off my helmet and stretched the muscles of my neck. I looked up at the structure that was once a home. Suddenly I felt fingers wrap around my hand. The woman who lived here stood with tears in her eyes. Her youngest was still in her arms; the other kids were sitting in the fire truck under Red's supervision. Silently she raised my knuckles to her lips. A streak of soot came off my jacket to stripe her cheek. "You're welcome," I said.
On our way back to the station I directed Caesar the long way, so that we passed right down the street where I live. Jesse's Jeep sat in my driveway; the lights in the house were all off. I pictured Anna with the covers pulled up to her chin, like usual; Kate's bed empty.
"We all set, Fitz?" Caesar asked. The truck was barely crawling, almost stopped directly in front of my driveway.
"Yeah, we're set," I said. "Let's take it on home."
I became a firefighter because I wanted to save people. But I should have been more specific. I should have named names.
JULIA
BRIAN FITZGERALD'S CAR IS FILLED with stars. There are charts on the passenger seat and tables jammed into the console between us; the backseat is a palette for Xerox copies of nebulae and planets. "Sorry," he says, reddening. "I wasn't expecting company."
I help him clear off a space for me, and in the process pick up a map made of pinpricks. "What's this?" I ask.
"A sky atlas." He shrugs. "It's kind of a hobby."
"When I was little, I once tried to name every star in the sky after one of my relatives. The scary part is I hadn't run out of names by the time I fell asleep."
"Anna's named after a galaxy," Brian says.
"That's much cooler than being named after a patron saint," I muse. "Once, I asked my mom why stars shine. She said they were night-lights, so the angels could find their way around in Heaven. But when I asked my dad, he started talking about gas, and somehow I put it all together and figured that the food God served caused multiple trips to the bathroom in the middle of the night."
Brian laughs out loud. "And here I was trying to explain atomic fusion to my kids."
"Did it work?"
He considers for a moment. "They could all probably find the Big Dipper with their eyes closed."
"That's impressive. Stars all look the same to me."
"It's not that hard. You spot a piece of a constellation--like Orion's belt--and suddenly it's easier to find Rigel in his foot and Betelgeuse in his shoulder." He hesitates. "But ninety percent of the universe is made of stuff we can't even see."
"Then how do you know it's there?"
He slows to a stop at a red light. "Dark matter has a gravitational effect on other objects. You can't see it, you can't feel it, but you can watch something being pulled in its direction."
*
Ten seconds after Campbell left last night, Izzy walked into the living room where I was just on the cusp of having one of those bone-cleansing cries a woman should treat herself to at least once during a lunar cycle. "Yeah," she said dryly. "I can see this is a totally professional relationship."
I scowled at her. "Were you eavesdropping?"
"Pardon me if you and Romeo were having your little tete-a-tete through a thin wall."
"If you've got something to say," I suggested, "say it."
"Me?" Izzy frowned. "Hey, it's none of my business, is it?"
"No, it's not."
"Right. So I'll just keep my opinion to myself."
I rolled my eyes. "Out with it, Isobel."
"Thought you'd never ask." She sat down beside me on the couch. "You know, Julia, the first time a bug sees that big purple zapper light, it looks like God. The second time, he runs in the other direction."
"First, don't compare me to a mosquito. Second, he'd fly in the other direction, not run. Third, there is no second time. The bug's dead."
Izzy smirked. "You are such a lawyer."
"I am not letting Campbell zap me."
"Then request a transfer."
"This isn't the Navy." I hugged one of the throw pillows from the couch. "And I can't do that, not now. It'll make him think that I'm such a wimp I can't balance my professional life with some stupid, silly, adolescent . . . incident."
"You can't." Izzy shook her head. "He's an egotistical dickhead who's going to chew you up and spit you out; and you have a really awful history of falling for assholes that you ought to run screaming from; and I don't feel like sitting around listening to you try to convince yourself you don't still feel something for Campbell Alexander when, in fact, you've spent the past fifteen years trying to fill in the hole he made inside you."
I stared at her. "Wow."
She shrugged. "Guess I had a lot to get off my chest, after all."
"Do you hate all men, or just Campbell?"
Izzy seemed to think about that for a while. "Just Campbell," she said finally.
What I wanted, at that moment, was to be alone in my living room so that I could throw things, like the TV remote or the glass vase or preferably my sister. But I couldn't order Izzy out of a house she'd moved into just hours before. I stood up and plucked my house keys off the counter. "I'm going out," I told her. "Don't wait up."
*
I'm not much of a party girl, which explains why I hadn't frequented Shakespeare's Cat before, although it was a mere four blocks from my condo. The bar was dark and crowded and smelled of patchouli and cloves. I pushed my way inside, hopped up on a stool, and smiled at the man sitting next to me.
I was in the mood to make out in the back row of the movie theater with someone who did not know my first name. I wanted three guys to fight for the honor of buying me a drink.
I wanted to show Campbell Alexander what he'd been missing.
The man beside me had sky-eyes, a black ponytail, and a Cary Grant grin. He nodded politely at me, then turned away and began to kiss a white-haired gentleman flush on the mouth. I looked around and saw what I had missed on my entrance: the bar was filled with single men--but they were dancing, flirting, hooking up with each other.
"What can I get you?" The bartender had fuchsia porcupine hair and an oxen ring pierced through his nose.
"This is a gay bar?"
"No, it's the officers' club at West Point. You want a drink or not?" I pointed over his shoulder to the bottle of tequila, and he reached for a shot glass.
I rummaged in my purse and pulled out a fifty-dollar bill. "The whole thing." Glancing down at the bottle, I frowned. "I bet Shakespeare didn't even have a cat."
"Who peed in your coffee?" the bartender asked.
Narrowing my eyes, I stared at him. "You're not gay."
"Sure I am."
"Based on my track record, if you were gay, I'd probably find you attractive. As it is . . ." I looked at the busy couple beside me, and then shrugged at the bartender. He blanched, then handed me back my fifty. I tucked it back into my wallet. "Who says you can't buy friends," I murmured.
Three hours later, I was the only person still there, unless you counted Seven, which was what the bartender had rechristened himself last August after deciding to jettison whatever sort of label the name Neil suggested. Seven stood for absolutely nothing, he had told me, which was exactly the way he liked it.
"Maybe I should be Six," I told him, when I'd made my way to the bottom of the tequila bottle, "and you could be Nine."
Seven finished stacking the clean glasses. "That's it. You're cut off."
"He used to call me Jewel," I said, and that was enough to make me start crying.
A jewel's just a rock put under enormous heat and pressure. Extraordinary things are always hiding in places people never think to look.
But Campbell had looked. And then he'd left me, reminding me that whatever he'd seen wasn't worth the time or effort.
"I used to have pink hair," I told Seven.
"I used to have a real job," he answered.
"What happened?"
He shrugged. "I dyed my hair pink. What happened to you?"
"I let mine grow out," I answered.
Seven wiped up a spill I'd made without noticing. "Nobody ever wants what they've got," he said.
*
Anna sits at the kitchen table by herself, eating a bowl of Golden Grahams. Her eyes widen, as she is surprised to see me with her father, but that's as much as she'll reveal. "Fire last night, huh?" she says, sniffing.
Brian crosses the kitchen and gives her a hug. "Big one."
"The arsonist?" she asks.
"Doubt it. He goes for empty buildings and this one had a kid in it."
"Who you saved," Anna guesses.
"You bet." He glances at me. "I thought I'd take Julia up to the hospital. Want to come?"
She looks down at her bowl. "I don't know."
"Hey." Brian lifts her chin. "No one's going to keep you from seeing Kate."
"No one's going to be too thrilled to see me there, either," she says.
The telephone rings, and he picks it up. He listens for a moment, and then smiles. "That's great. That's so great. Yeah, of course I'm coming in." He hands the phone to Anna. "Mom wants to talk to you," he says, and he excuses himself to change clothes.
Anna hesitates, then curls her hand around the receiver. Her shoulders hunch, a small cubicle of personal privacy. "Hello?" And then, softly: "Really? She did?"
A few moments later, she hangs up. She sits down and takes another spoonful of cereal, then pushes away her bowl. "Was that your mom?" I ask, sitting down across from her.
"Yeah. Kate's awake," Anna says.
"That's good news."
"I guess."
I put my elbows on the table. "Why wouldn't it be good news?"
But Anna doesn't answer my question. "She asked where I was."
"Your mother?"
"Kate."
"Have you talked to her about your lawsuit, Anna?"
Ignoring me, she grabs the cereal box and begins to roll down the plastic insert. "It's stale," she says. "No one ever gets all the air out, or closes the top right."
"Has anyone told Kate what's going on?"
Anna pushes on the box top to get the cardboard tab into its slot, to no avail. "I don't even like Golden Grahams." When she tries again, the box falls out of her arms and spills its contents all over the floor. "Shoot!" She crawls under the table, trying to scoop up the cereal with her hands.
I get on the floor with Anna and watch her shove fistfuls into the liner. She won't look in my direction. "We can always buy Kate some more before she gets home," I say gently.
Anna stops and glances up. Without the veil of that secret, she looks much younger. "Julia? What if she hates me?"
I tuck a strand of hair behind Anna's ear. "What if she doesn't?"
*
"The bottom line," Seven explained last night, "is that we never fall for the people we're supposed to."
I glanced at him, intrigued enough to muster the effort to raise my face from where it was plastered on the bar. "It's not just me?"
"Hell, no." He set down a stack of clean glasses. "Think about it: Romeo and Juliet bucked the system, and look where it got them. Superman has the hots for Lois Lane, when the better match, of course, would be with Wonder Woman. Dawson and Joey--need I say more? And don't even get me started on Charlie Brown and the little redheaded girl."
"What about you?" I asked.
He shrugged. "Like I said, it happens to everyone." Leaning his elbows on the counter, he came close enough that I could see the dark roots beneath his magenta hair. "For me, it was Linden."
"I'd break up with someone who was named for a tree, too," I sympathized. "Guy or girl?"
He smirked. "I'll never tell."
"So what made her wrong for you?"
Seven sighed. "Well, she--"
"Ha! You said she!"
He rolled his eyes. "Yes, Detective Julia. You've outed me at this gay establishment. Happy?"
"Not particularly."
"I sent Linden back to New Zealand. Green card ran out. It was that, or get married."
"What was wrong with her?"
"Absolutely nothing," Seven confessed. "She cleaned like a banshee; she never let me wash a dish; she listened to everything I had to say; she was a hurricane in bed. She was crazy about me, and believe it or not, I was the one for her. It was, like, ninety-eight percent perfect."
"What about the other two percent?"
"You tell me." He started stacking the clean glasses on the far side of the bar. "Something was missing. I couldn't tell you what it was, if you asked, but it was off. And if you think of a relationship as a living entity, I guess it's one thing if the missing two percent is, like, a fingernail. But when it's the heart, that's a whole different ball of wax." He turned to me. "I didn't cry when she got on the plane. She lived with me for four years, and when she walked away, I didn't feel much of anything at all."
"Well, I had the other problem," I told him. "I had the heart of the relationship, and no body to grow it in."
"What happened then?"
"What else," I said. "It broke."
*
The ridiculous irony is that Campbell was attracted to me because I stood apart from everyone else at The Wheeler School; and I was attracted to Campbell because I desperately wanted a connection with someone. There were comments, I knew, and stares sent our way as his friends tried to figure out why Campbell was wasting his time with someone like me. No doubt, they thought I was an easy lay.
But we weren't doing that. We met after school at the cemetery. Sometimes we would speak poetry to each other. Once, we tried to have an entire conversation without the letter "s." We sat back to back, and tried to think each other's thoughts--pretending clairvoyance, when it only made sense that his whole mind would be full of me and mine would be full of him.
I loved the way he smelled whenever his head dipped close to hear what I was saying--like the sun striking the cheek of a tomato, or soap drying on the hood of a car. I loved the way his hand felt on my spine. I loved.
"What if," I said one night, stealing breath from the edge of his lips, "we did it?"
He was lying on his back, watching the moon rock back and forth on a hammock of stars. One hand was tossed up over his head, the other anchored me against his chest. "Did what?"
I didn't answer, just got up on one elbow and kissed him so deep that the ground gave way. "Oh," Campbell said, hoarse. "That."
"Have you ever?" I asked.
He just grinned. I thought that he'd probably fucked Muffy or Buffy or Puffy or all three in the baseball dugout at Wheeler, or after a party at one of their homes when they both still smelled of Daddy's bourbon. I wondered why, then, he wasn't trying to sleep with me. I assumed that it was because I wasn't Muffy or Buffy or Puffy, but just Julia Romano, which wasn't good enough.
"Don't you want to?" I asked.
It was one of those moments where I knew we were not having the conversation that we needed to be having. And since I didn't really know what to say, never having crossed this particular bridge between thought and deed before, I pressed my hand up against the thick ridge in his pants. He backed away from me.
"Jewel," he said, "I don't want you to think that's why I'm here."
Let me tell you this: if you meet a loner, no matter what they tell you, it'