We ate half the pita before she tossed it in a trash can, then bought our tickets and entered the theater lobby, with its coffee bar and black-and-white posters on the wall. I felt swept into it suddenly, and I remembered how much I had loved the movies once: the glamorous men and women glimmering from the dark screen, the thick velvet curtains that pulled back on either side. I hadn't been in a theater in years.
“I'm so glad you asked me to come today,” I said. “You have no idea what a treat this is for me.”
“Oh, me, too,” she said, handing her ticket to the young usher and giving him a flirty smile.
He blushed back at her.
We went into the theater and sat down side by side in the dark and hush of it. Veronica kicked up her boots onto the seat in front of her and slid down, clasping her hands in her lap.
“Look at how many people are here,” Veronica whispered. “In the middle of the day. I love that. Everyone bailing out on the real world to see some old flapper film. Awesome.”
I looked around the theater, then back at her. I felt as if I were seeing the world through Veronica's eyes, the power of her vision was so strong. It was the same world, but brighter and more colorful than it had been before. There was no trace now of the sadness she'd felt only two days before, but I knew she occupied each moment fully, perfectly, and that the next time she felt pain or disappointment, she'd weep just as openly.
It was this that I had envied once. Exactly this.
The film began, but it was hard to pay attention. Gorgeous images flickered over me, sumptuous, as if from a dream. I lost track of time, let them lull me into an almost-sleep.
“Lil.” I opened my eyes, and Veronica was leaning into my ear, whispering. “Are you into this, Lil?”
“Yes,” I said. I sat up to clear my head. “Yes. It's beautiful.”
“Oh, okay.” She sank back down in her seat.
After a moment I leaned in toward her. “Why?”
“I don't know, it's a little slow. I was just seeing what you thought.”
“Shh!” A woman in front of us turned and looked at us sharply.
I lowered my voice. “Well. It is pretty slow.”
She looked up at me sheepishly, her eyebrows raised. “Do you … maybe want to go?”
“Do you?”
She made a face, then nodded. “Unless you don't.”
“Oh, I do.” I stood, and she followed, and we made our way out of the theater, stumbling over people's feet and purses to get to the aisle. The moment we were in the hallway again, we both burst out laughing.
“I thought I was going to die of boredom,” she said, taking my arm and pulling me to the exit. “That was beautiful to look at, but my gawd! I like a bit more plot with my well-coiffed dames.”
“I know,” I said, gasping for breath. I felt a part of things. A part of things!
We erupted onto the sidewalk, almost colliding with a man walking a fluffy little huge-eyed dog. Veronica stopped in her tracks, and the dog bounded up to her.
“Aren't you precious!” she cried out, dropping to her knees and reaching out to the dog, who immediately turned and tried to jump up onto my body.
“Oh, it likes you!” she said.
“Yes,” I said. I bent down and looked at the dog, its melting black eyes. I thought of my sister and the horse, how it had looked at her. I wondered if she was nearby, if the animal sensed her.
I patted the dog's head, my hand disappearing into its fur. I could hear Veronica and the man talking, but as if from a distance, about Pomeranians and the dog's strange habits and a dog named Farrah that Veronica had kept as a child.
The animal kept blinking at me, staring up at me as I ran my hand through its fur.
“You see her, don't you?” I whispered.
The animal blinked and let out a small bark, and then Veronica was kneeling beside me, taking its face in her hands. “Look at how pretty you are,” she said. I looked up at the man, his smooth young face.
“Have a great night, girls,” he said, nodding at us. “Come on, Janet.”
“Janet!” Veronica repeated as the man and dog walked away. “I love it! Lil, if that man weren't gay, I'd totally date him just to be near Janet. I think I'm in love with her.” She sighed dramatically and clutched her heart as we headed along Houston and then up Sixth Avenue. I watched men's heads turn as she passed, following her tall, slinky body.
We wandered up Sixth for a while, then turned west onto the zigzagging streets of the West Village. Talking casually about whatever entered our minds. It was a day of playing hooky from everything, and I was surprised at how well my body behaved, how good I felt.
“I love this part of town,” Veronica said. “I always wonder who lives in these gorgeous places. Probably investment bankers and fashion models, but I imagine all kinds of romantic doings behind these doors.”
“Yes,” I said. “I love them, too.”
She stopped suddenly and turned to me. “You're really cool, Lil. You know that?”
It was disarming, the way she could come out with things like that. “Thanks,” I said.
“There's just something … different about you. Like I said before. Like you know things. Do other people see that?”
“Actually, most people your age don't see someone like me at all.”
“That's terrible! Don't say that.”
“No, it's true. It's easy for people to miss things.”
“Well, there's something about you,” she said. “It feels like you're just … wise. I don't know, I know it sounds flaky, but I totally believe in all of that stuff—like past lives, like if someone hits you in a certain way, then you have to figure out why. I feel like I was meant to meet you.”
To go to a ball?
“A ball?” She laughed. “Maybe.”
It was growing dark, and the full moon had come out, rimmed by clouds. I pointed up at it. “There's always a beautiful moon here, isn't there? No stars, but the moon over the city is always so beautiful.”
“Yeah,” she said. “I miss it, though, the sky full of stars. You can forget about it, living here.”
Leisurely, we walked back to Sixth. The world seemed glowing, magical: the streetlamps just clicking on, the lights draped across windows and awnings, the people strolling past as if, for once, there was no specific place to go. I breathed in and smiled up at the sparse treetops, the night sky.
“Lillian?”
I heard my name once, then a second time, a bit louder. I turned, surprised.
A woman walked up, shaking her head. “I can't believe it, after all these years.” She looked like she was in her late fifties, with dark gray hair falling in short waves around her face. Well kempt.
Veronica looked back and forth from me to the woman, her face open and expectant. Suddenly my back ached, my wings pressed against the bandages.
“I'm sorry,” I said, “I don't …”
“You don't remember me? Come on. I may be an old lady now, but I don't look so different, do I? You don't!”
“I'm sorry,” I said. I wasn't sure what to think or say. Did I know her? Had she been sent to me? She couldn't be a fairy, not this woman.
We were stopped right in the middle of the street, crossing Tenth. A bag banged my arm as a young woman rushed by. I moved closer to the curb, and Veronica and the woman followed.
“It's Audrey,” she said. “Remember me? I was friends with you and your sister.”
“Oh, you knew Maybeth!” Veronica said, clapping her hands together.
“Maybeth?” the woman repeated.
“I don't …” And I realized then what was happening. My powers were returning. My sister was close by. Of course it would affect the occasional human, even cause some to know my name.
“I don't have a sister,” I said gently. “Not anymore. I think you're confusing me with someone else.”
“Your name is Lillian, though, right? You know, I did know your sister.” Her face clouded over, looked serio
us.
“I'm sorry,” I said. “We're in a hurry. You're making some mistake, I think.”
The woman just stood there, watching me.
“Again, I'm sorry,” I said. “But we do have to go.”
I started walking then, letting Veronica follow.
“You didn't know that woman?” she asked tentatively, after a few minutes had passed.
“No.”
“But she knew your name …”
“I think she knows me from the bookstore. She's probably just confusing me with someone else.”
“Oh, that could be,” she said. “We're just a few blocks away, aren't we?”
“A few blocks from your future?” I asked, winking at her. I forced myself to smile, and she rolled her eyes at me, laughing. “Why, yes, we are.”
Chapter Nine
IRECOGNIZE YOU,” SHE SAID, HER EYES FILLING WITH tears. “Yes,” I said, as gently as I could. “I'm your fairy godmother. I came to you before, many years ago, but you may not remember.”
“Why have you come now?”
There was something of the scared animal about her. I looked down the length of her body. The pale bruises on her arms. Her skin dusted with ash. The rags she wore, stained with dirt.
“Child,” I said, reaching out to her. “I'm here to send you to the ball.”
“The ball?”
“Yes, the ball that the king and queen are throwing tonight, in the palace.”
She just stared at me, her eyes blue and glowing. “My stepsisters are there,” she said. “I helped them prepare. They spent weeks preparing. It's not a place for someone like me.”
It was hard for me to speak. It felt as if something in my chest was on fire. For a moment we stood and watched each other.
“That is why I'm here,” I said finally, reaching out and touching her arm. “We'll get you all ready, and you will be the most beautiful girl there.”
She shook her head, unbelieving. “But my chores …” she said, flailing her arms. “I have so many things left to do still. You don't know what happens to me if I don't finish my chores. I should be doing them now.”
“Child,” I said. “You don't need to worry. I can take care of everything.” I took her hands in mine and was surprised to feel how cracked and callused they were. She didn't try to hide them.
“I'm sorry, Godmother, I do not mean to be impolite.”
“It's fine, child. But we need to hurry. The ball is starting even now.”
“Thank you. Thank you. I'm all alone here.” Something in her softened then. She fell into my arms, clinging to me. For a moment I just stood there, in shock. The only human I'd been this close to before was the prince. Strands of her hair floated up into my face, tickling me, smelling like powder.
“You're not alone now, my dear,” I said. “You won't be alone again.”
I smiled, but I was disoriented by the feelings moving from her to me. An emptiness, like a black hole. Right from her and into my chest. It was strange, but not unpleasant. I wanted that, the space in her that he would fill.
I extracted myself from her and took her face in my palm. “Are you ready? The clock is ticking, you know, and look at you.”
“Yes,” she said. “I am a mess, Godmother. Thank you for helping me.”
She looked at me with such love then. I could do anything to her. I looked away, uncomfortable.
“Now, you'll need a dress.”
She laughed like a small child, lifting her hand to her face. “Am I really going to the ball? A ball at the palace?”
“Yes.”
“What will my stepsisters and stepmother say? They've been talking of the ball for months. Oh, Godmother, you have no idea. They've ordered hundreds of dresses that I have ironed and washed in the river and let air in the gardens. They've refused to eat for weeks. They all believe that the prince will love them.”
A stab of annoyance moved through me, listening to her.
“They will not recognize you. But the prince, he will, the moment you walk in. He has been waiting for you. His whole life.”
She shook her head, put her hands to her head. “I am not worthy of a prince.”
“You are his destiny, just as he is yours.”
The sun was just beginning to turn, melting over the line of trees outside. The room smelled like dust and grass and flowers. How could she be sad in such a world? She should be embracing all of it, I thought. All of it.
“I don't think I have a destiny, Godmother.”
“Everyone has a destiny. And I am here to help you meet yours. Now, let's get started. Let's see. What do you need?”
At that moment I felt him. The prince. In his chambers, thinking of me. In the middle of the dance floor in his suit. Something broke in my chest, and I gasped with pain.
“What's wrong, Godmother?” She rushed forward, put her hand out on my arm.
I took a breath, let the pain spread through me.
“Nothing,” I said, gently pushing her hand away. “You'll need a beautiful dress. You'll need to be the most beautiful girl there.”
Her face seemed to change in the light. A flash of pleasure moved across it. She had dreamed of him, in the field. Longed for him as she scrubbed and mopped and hung wet clothes in the sun.
“Now, hurry. Go into the garden and bring me back three berries from the silver tree that grows in the center.”
“Oh!” she said. “The one the robins live in?”
I nodded, unable to speak, and with delight she turned on her heel and left the room. I heard her slight step on the twisting stone stairs.
I sat on her bed, suddenly feeling as if my chest were collapsing in on itself. I was astonished at what happened next. My throat opened. Hot liquid ran from my eyes and down my face. Droplets moved down my chin to the silk of my dress. I stood and walked to the glass, peering in at myself. I had never felt anything like it. That ache! The tears that wet my skin. My eyes were bright green and filled with water.
What was happening to me?
I knew that in this form, in human bodies, we took on human attributes, but I had never felt anything like this. It consumed me. Her pain had become my pain. All I wanted, all I wanted, was him. I was convinced suddenly that the only thing that could heal me was him. Was this how she felt all the time?
I smoothed my hands over my human body. Down my wet face, my long neck, my breasts and waist and belly. Is this what he would feel? Is this what he was imagining, even now? I moved my face in the mirror, the line of my cheekbones catching the light, my thick lashes dotted with tears.
I felt so full!
I leaned my head back, imagined his mouth on my mouth, the palm of his hand sliding across my spine, the way it had felt to breathe in his breath, feel his heart beating against my skin.
I heard her rushing up the stairs. For an instant I imagined leaving her here, going in her place. Me being the one in the dress, me walking into the palace and not having to hide, not having to be invisible, no longer fluttering in the corners of the room, whispering thoughts and dreams into them, but standing right there in the center of everything, my full beauty unmasked, being able to take all of it up into me until they were blinded from it and he could not see or feel anything except my hand on his, my eyes watching him.
“Godmother?”
It was like she'd slapped me.
I whirled around to face her.
She dropped the branch of berries she'd been clutching in her hand.
“Come here,” I said, stretching out my hand to her, and she shrank back, toward the door.
“Who are you?” she breathed, and I knew that something in my face had changed, scared her.
And then something in me snapped off, and I loved her again. “I am your fairy godmother,” I said. “As I told you.”
“Why have you come?”
To send you to the ball.
“But why? Why me?”
“Because it is your destiny. Your mother was a friend to the fa
iries, and for that reason her child is to be queen of all of this kingdom.”
“Oh. My mother! My father buried my mother under a silver tree that robins live in.”
“I know. I was there. All of us were.”
“You were there?”
“Don't you remember? You were a child. We were covering you. We were all over you.”
“No,” she whispered. “I don't remember anything. Just the silver tree and the hole my father dug under it.”
“Bring those to me,” I said, pointing to the berries on the ground. My face was dry now, though I felt remnants of what had passed over me before.
She bent down and picked them up, handed them to me.
Staring straight at her, I plucked off the first berry, then flicked it out of my hands and toward her. She blinked, and in that moment her soiled smock disappeared. In its place appeared a long pale blue silk dress that nipped into her waist and flared down to the floor. Her skin and hair gleamed, and her feet were bare.
She held up her arms and stared in amazement, then rubbed her hands down the silk that covered her body.
“How did … ?”
“Shhh,” I said, silencing her. I held out the twig. “Pick two more.”
She looked at me, her eyes wide, and then reached forward and touched one berry, then another. I plucked them off, opened my palm and let them drop to the floor. As they hit the stone, they transformed into a pair of sparkling glass slippers.
She gasped. “Oh!” she said. “They are so … I can't believe it.”
“Yes,” I said. Outside, the sun was sinking into the mountains, and I knew they were all already dancing. She was beautiful and would be there soon, and whatever heart I had was broken. “Put them on.”
She stepped into the shoes, leaning into the wall to balance herself. They fit over her feet perfectly, curving them into arches.
“WHAT ARE you doing now?” George asked a few days later, pulling out his keys and gesturing for me to leave the store before him. I stepped outside; the early evening was balmy, still light, with a breeze moving through it.
“Heading uptown,” I said. “Going home.”
He smiled. “I'm headed that way, too. Stopping by a friend's barbecue. Why don't you come along?”