Page 28 of Wax


  “You okay?” Jill asked.

  Poppy sighed. “I miss him.”

  ∗ ∗ ∗

  She got home around ten. Her mother and father were curled up on the couch, watching a Dr. Steve rerun.

  “Hey, Pops,” her father said as she walked into the living room. “How’s the family hero?”

  “Full of ice cream.”

  “Friendly’s again?”

  “I am nothing if not loyal.”

  Her mother laughed. “I guess when you find your true love, you love it forever.”

  Poppy nodded and gave her a sad smile. They sad-smiled back.

  And all three knew they weren’t really talking about ice cream.

  ∗ ∗ ∗

  Poppy stared at her Broadway posters in the dark, at the whirly autographs that now looked to her like a hundred little arrows, all pointed at the thing in the backyard shed, as if to say, If you miss him, go look at him! There’s a startlingly good replica in there!

  But she couldn’t, not yet. The thought was too distressing.

  She tossed and turned some more. She didn’t want to fall asleep. No, that wasn’t right​—​she did want to fall asleep. It was the waking up that she dreaded, the fading away of all that transpired in her dreams.

  She glanced at the closet. It was silent and mostly dark​—​except for a muted, flickering light.

  This was getting ridiculous. A whole week had passed since . . . since. She hadn’t opened her closet once in all that time, had gone so far as to borrow a bunch of Jill’s clothes so she wouldn’t have to.

  But she couldn’t avoid it forever.

  Her breath caught as she opened the closet door. Everything was just as he’d left it: sleeping bag crumpled up into a ball, radio shoved to the side. The long-burning wax of the stone candle was still lit, but Poppy didn’t bother to look inside​—​its message had ended more than a week ago. She fleetingly thought about blowing it out but banished the thought once again, as she had every night, unable to extinguish the one thing he’d left/sneezed behind.

  At the memory, a giggle formed in her throat, followed by a lump. She hastily started to close the door​—​but stopped as she threw one last glance at the candle.

  She carefully lifted it from the floor, brought the heavy stone up to her eyes, and gasped.

  After seven inches of blank space and more than a week of burning, Madame Grosholtz had spoken one last time​—​way down at the bottom of the candle, in the shaky writing of one who knows the end is near:

  AND YET, THOUGH MY REGRETS ARE MANY, MY GREATEST IS THIS: THAT I WAS NEVER ABLE TO CREATE A LIFE FROM SCRATCH. WITH ALL THE WAR AND SUFFERING AND EVIL I’VE SEEN OVER MY YEARS, I WANTED TO CREATE A PERSON WHO WOULD TRULY APPRECIATE LIFE, NEVER TREAT IT CALLOUSLY OR TAKE IT FOR GRANTED LIKE THE CHANDLERS HAVE. ONE WHO’D NEVER BEEN ALIVE IN THE FIRST PLACE​—​FOR ONLY THOSE WHO TRULY UNDERSTAND THE GIFT OF LIFE SHOULD BE THE ONES ALLOWED TO LIVE IT.

  SO I PROPOSE ONE LAST EXPERIMENT. I WILL PLACE AN EMBER IN ONE OF MY EXPERIMENTAL HOLLOWS. NOT A FULL COPY OF MY FLAME-SOUL​—​IT IS FAR TOO RISKY TO ALLOW MY LIFE TO CONTINUE, TO LET THE CHANDLERS FIND IT AND EXPLOIT IT ONCE MORE​—​BUT MERELY AN EMBER, A SHADOW OF MYSELF, AS PARENTS PASS ON THE GHOSTS OF THEIR SELVES TO THEIR CHILDREN. IT IS MY HOPE THAT THIS EMBER WILL CATCH FIRE AND CREATE A NEW SOUL ALTOGETHER.

  I HOPE THE FLAME WILL GROW.

  I HOPE THE FLAME WILL ENDURE.

  Hardly breathing, Poppy stared at the flame.

  Then turned her head toward the window.

  Looked at the shed.

  And bolted out of her room.

  The Future

  THE TOWN OF PARAFFIN SMELLED OF NOTHING.

  Gone were the cloying, clashing scents of fruit mixed with seawater, flowers mixed with cookies, licorice mixed with grass, old New England charm mixed with magazine-worthy modern living.

  On the eve of its sestercentennial celebration, the town of Paraffin smelled pure.

  Many things hadn’t changed. Just as it had been at its bicentennial fifty years before, the gazebo was adorned with a large banner. Smitty’s was packed with hungry donut eaters, though all that remained of Smitty was a Polaroid photo taped to the cash register. The lake still lured strolling citizens to its shore, where evil geese pecked at their ankles, their ferocity not tempered by time.

  The Grosholtz Candle Factory was still in operation. It had been taken under new management forty years before and had catapulted into previously unheard-of levels of success. The CEO knew everything there was to know about candles and had replaced the retail shop with a world-class wax museum, attracting tourists from far and wide with his exquisite sculptures. Visitors often remarked that he almost seemed to be a wax sculpture himself​—​but of course, that couldn’t be, as he aged the same way everyone else did. “He’d have to resculpt himself anew every few days,” his partner would say when confronted with such rumors, “adding wrinkles and gray hairs one at a time! How ridiculous!”

  Now the president of the factory herself, she was notorious for being a confident, tenacious leader, with a systematic way of doing things that couldn’t be beat. She’d even written a bestseller outlining her process, titled The List.

  But her business acumen wasn’t her biggest source of fame. Not long after she and her partner had acquired ownership of the factory, she called a press conference that was to take place, oddly, inside Mount Cerumen.

  The media were shocked to find themselves in a beautiful, soaring cavern, Gothic in its natural design and lit solely by candlelight. The audience took their seats​—​refurbished and reupholstered, taken from the local high school auditorium right before it had been demolished​—​sat back, and reveled in the inaugural performance, a fully staged production of The Phantom of the Opera. The acoustics were astounding, as was the lead actor, a Broadway star who had returned to his hometown for a special one-time performance. In the forty years since that night, the Candlelight Theater had been home to several productions staged every year, featuring just about every musical in existence​—​except for The Sound of Music. Never The Sound of Music.

  But for Paraffin, the candles were still the main attraction. All agreed that the products now shipping to countless happy homes all over the world were the finest the factory had ever produced. No more pungent smells. No more cheesy names. Just pure, durable candles blazing longer and brighter than any that had come before, as if the wax itself were imbued with immortality.

  And they all burned waxily ever after.

  Stolen

  Max’s life of crime started poorly, with the theft of a glittery pink bobblehead in the shape of a cat.

  His boss had burst out of the back room moments earlier. “Forest-green Honda Civic license BNR one seven five!” she yelled in a heavy Greek accent as she waddled out the door of the small convenience store, chest heaving and dyed-red bouffant hairdo bouncing. Stavroula Papadopoulos was neither young nor physically fit, but she hadn’t let a gas-and-dasher go without a fight for well on thirty years, and she wasn’t about to start.

  Max’s gaze followed her bobbing hair to the abandoned gas pump but got hijacked by the cat, sitting in all its glory next to the cash register. He could hardly believe his luck.

  It’s breathtaking, he thought.

  In actuality, the thing was hideous—poorly made, terrible paint job, practically falling apart. Stavroula must have ordered it from one of those crappy gift store catalogs she was so fond of. Max normally would never have dreamed of taking it, no matter how much irresistible enchantment it exuded, but something strange had come over him. One minute it was sitting there on the counter, all smug and catlike and made in China, and the next it was in his hands, the glitter already beginning to coat his palms.

  He wiped his hands on his stiff blue employee vest—then, realizing that this was only incriminating him further, he turned the vest inside out and put it back on. The cat he rammed into his backpack, its head nodding up
and down as if to say Yessiree, I’m contraband!

  Sweat started to seep through Max’s T-shirt. His hands were shaking, his stomach queasy. He told himself to knock it off, to sack up already. This was not the sort of behavior befitting a felon.

  He was a hardened criminal now, and it was time to start acting like one.

  Seventeen-year-old Max Kilgore suffered from the unfortunate curse of having a name that was far cooler than the person it was attached to. Max Kilgore evoked images of Bruce Willis mowing down every law enforcement officer in Los Angeles with a single machine gun, then lassoing a helicopter, stealing the Hollywood sign, and blowing up an army of cyborgs, all in the name of Vengeance.

  But the real Max Kilgore was not one to break the rules. He did his homework every night. He never talked in class. He obeyed every bicycle traffic rule in the bicycle traffic rule book—which he had requested from the library and read cover to cover, lest God forbid he ever be pulled over by a police officer, a thought that made him want to vomit up a kidney or two. Trouble was something that kids with piercings and sculpted calf muscles got into, and as he had neither, he toed the line like a perpetually paranoid parolee.

  As far as Max could tell, this phobia didn’t stem from any traumatic events in his childhood, which had been relatively happy. His father had exited the picture long ago, being a “rotten hippie” his mother had slept with “on a dare” and had soon after kicked out of the house owing to his “lack of deodorizing and parenting skills.” His mother had picked up the slack just fine, raising him as if single parenthood were as natural to her as breathing clean, patchouli-free air.

  Of course, Max had made it easy for her, well-behaved as he was. And until his sophomore year they’d been doing okay on their own, just the two of them. Now life was a bit harder. Now, instead of paying real American dollars for a plastic animal with eyes facing in two different directions and ears that looked as if they’d been designed by someone who had never seen a cat firsthand, he had to break the law and steal it.

  And not even in the name of Vengeance.

  The sound of jingling bells snapped Max to attention as Stavroula returned to the store, a flood of Greek words—probably of the swearing sort—gushing out of her mouth. “Second one this week,” she spat. “I leave old country for this? Headaches and scoundrels?”

  “Headaches and scoundrels” was Stavroula’s favorite phrase—Max heard her utter it three or four times over the course of each of his shifts at the Gas Bag—and with it came a pang of guilt at the thought of stealing from her. Grouchy though she may be, Stavroula had given him a job when he’d needed it most, and he knew it wasn’t easy for her to have taken over her husband’s business when he’d died a few years earlier.

  But it was only a small pang. One he could live with.

  “Bah!” She threw her hands up in the air, still vexed. “Tomorrow I buy shotgun.”

  The fear of getting caught was interfering with Max’s ability to speak properly. “You said that last week,” he said, his voice cracking.

  “Last week I buy pistol. This week I buy shotgun.”

  “What we really need is a trained velociraptor.”

  She made the same face she always made at his dinosaur references, then frowned, leaning in on the counter until he could see each and every whisker above her lip. “I hate thieves.” She narrowed her eyes. “I despise thieves.”

  She knows, he thought with a rush of terror, cat-shaped spots flying across his vision. She knows, and she’s going to call the police, and I’m going to go to jail, and I’ll need to figure out how to use cigarettes as currency or I’ll become someone’s bitch—Oh, who am I kidding, I’ll become someone’s bitch no matter what—

  Just when Max was sure the sweat accumulating on his forehead was about to cascade down his face in a majestic, disgusting waterfall, Stavroula pounded a fist on the counter. “Restock the meat sticks!”

  Max exhaled, taking great pains not to emit a nervous honk as he did so. “The Slim Jims, you mean?”

  “Is what I said. Thin Jims.”

  Perhaps cheerfulness would mask the foul stench of wrongdoing. “You got it!” he chirped.

  As he crouched down to retrieve the last remaining box of Slim Jims from beneath the counter—Audie was going to be so pissed—he pushed the incriminating cat farther into his backpack, and only once it was out of sight did his pulse begin to settle back into a normal rate. You’re fine, you’re fine, he chanted to himself, to the beat of his heart. You were out of the security camera’s line of sight, and she wasn’t even in her office watching anyway, and even if she was, she stopped watching those tapes once the Booze Hound retired. You’re fine.

  Meanwhile, Stavroula took out her iPhone and dialed the police station. “Hello, Rhonda? Yes, we get another one. No, I no break windshield this time—”

  She rattled off the numbers of the license plate all the way back to her office and slammed the door shut. Relieved, Max ran a hand over his drenched forehead and into his ridiculous hair, which was black and short except for the front, which stuck out over his forehead like an awning at a Parisian café. Old people liked to say that it was “hair you could set your watch to,” whatever that meant. Max just took it to mean that his head was permanently shaped like a batting helmet and there wasn’t anything he could do about it.

  Although he was beginning to recover most of his faculties, he still felt on edge. As if he could be struck down at any moment by God, or whichever deity it was that handled knickknack robberies—

  His cell phone vibrated.

  Max’s eyes bulged. Is it the police? Did they somehow see what I did? Do police make courtesy calls before they arrest people?

  He watched it dance across the counter, a beige, bricklike plastic thing designed exclusively for the elderly, with gigantic glowing numbers and a frustrating lack of caller ID. There wasn’t really room in his budget for a phone at all, but the situation with his mother required that he be reachable at all times.

  His shaking hand knocked against the counter as he picked up the Beige Wonder, wishing yet again that he’d had enough money to afford a communication device that wasn’t a glorified coconut radio. “Hello?” he said tentatively.

  “You got the stuff?” a gruff voice answered.

  It wasn’t the police. Or a supreme being. Though maybe Audie did have a little bit of divinity in her—how else could she sense that Max was restocking the Slim Jims at that very moment? “Sorry, Aud, I can’t spare any this week,” Max said, ripping the cardboard open. “It’s our last box. I’ll have to reorder.”

  “So reorder, punk!” his best friend replied, punching every word with a blast of pure concentrated glee. If Audie were candy, she’d be a bag of Skittles: bright, shiny, and bursting with real fruit flavor.

  Max, on the other hand, would be a bowl of stale licorice, bland and unwanted. “I don’t like reordering,” said Max, waving his large hands about. “The customer service guy is named Izzy, and he’s really awkward, and every time we lapse into an uncomfortable silence, I end up saying, ‘It isn’t easy, is it, Izzy?’ and it just devolves from there.”

  “Yeah,” Audie said, deadpan. “Izzy sounds like a real freak.”

  “I know, right?”

  Audie let out a sprightly sigh, no doubt twisting her fingers through her spiky dreads as she always did when her patience was being tested. People said she looked like a cross between Rihanna and a palm tree, but to Max she’d always be the girl next door who made him eat a worm when they were six, then a firefly when they were seven. He swore for weeks that it made his pee glow, until the day she demanded he prove it and the topic was mysteriously dropped.

  “Anyway,” she said, “you coming to the game?”

  Max cleared his throat and looked down, pretending to count the pennies in the take-a-penny tray, even though Audie couldn’t see him. “I can’t.”

  “Come on, man,” she whined, a twinge of hurt in her voice. “You haven’t come
to a single game this season! What are you so busy doing on Friday nights? And don’t say you got a hot date—”

  “I do have a hot date.”

  “With someone who hasn’t been dead for seventy million years?”

  “Hey, I’ll have you know that with recent 3D imaging, Ichthyosaurus communis is more alive than ever!”

  “Talk like the Discovery Channel all you want, but a book of fossils and a tub of plaster does not an orgy make.”

  “Gross, Aud.” Max reddened as he glanced at the smutty magazine rack behind the counter, then switched to his reflection in the window. With his big brown eyes and thin, pointy nose, he could easily be mistaken for a barn owl. Audie liked to assure him that there were plenty of girls who would go for that sort of look—Gaunt British Standup Comedian, she called it—but always with the caveat that he wouldn’t be encountering such girls until he got to college and joined the Science Society, or “whatever it is that lamewads congregate in.”

  “A gaggle of geeks?” Max often suggested.

  “A warp of nerds?” Audie would counter.

  “A woot of dweebs?”

  “A bunch of virgins?”

  And so forth.

  He returned the Slim Jims to the shelf under the counter. Of course he’d save them for her; he always did.

  “I’m just sayin’,” Audie was just saying, “if you can’t master the art of small talk with a jerky meat salesman, you’re never going to be able to manage it with a lady.”

  “You make a variety of fine points.”

  Audie yelled at someone in the background, then came back to the phone. “Gotta run. Thanks for the laughs. Come to the game.”

  “Goodbye. You’re welcome. Can’t, but good luck.”

  Audie muttered a sarcastic “Can’t” as she hung up.

  “Sorry,” Max said to the dead phone.

  And he was sorry. But a date was a date.