6

Restless

The evening before her first day back at school, Alexandra had tried to take Jack, her bulldog, for a relaxing spin in the park. But Jack had sensed another big storm coming before Alexandra had even heard the first clap of thunder. His short bulldog legs were in full gallop by the time the first swift winds picked up. She ran behind him, his leash burning into her hand. Approaching the park’s exit, he reared to a stop as the concrete pathway spilled out to the busy intersection.

While they waited for the traffic light, her gaze drifted up to her tenth-floor balcony, and the first drops of the afternoon shower splashed in her face. In the sky above, dark clouds rolled in quickly.

“Mom will be worried about us,” she told Jack, holding his leash tightly.

Behind them, a crowd poured from the park to avoid the oncoming rain and gathered on the sidewalk, waiting for the light to change. While Jack panted impatiently at her feet, Alexandra listened to voices around her making dinner plans and movie dates. As the time passed, the crowd became a full-fledged throng of people. To avoid getting claustrophobic, she kept her eyes on the passing traffic.

“This light never takes this long to change,” she told Jack as he whined. Tossing a shy glance to the gathering crowd behind her, Alexandra’s eyes searched for the handsome guitar player.

I guess this isn’t the best weather for a concert, she sighed to herself, unable to catch a glimpse of him.

As she bent to soothe Jack’s head, a girl’s enraged voice from somewhere in the swarm behind her yelled, “That’s what you get, Bobby Higgins. I hate you!”

Someone in the crowd must have stumbled into Alexandra, because she abruptly fell forward into the street. A car horn blared as she lurched helplessly into oncoming traffic. Tires squealed against the pavement. She winced as a sharp pain pierced her arm. A tight grip yanked her shoulder back and nearly out of its socket. Her heart pounded and roared in her ears, but a pleading voice echoed above the sound of her racing heartbeat.

Be careful! a man’s voice said.

Alexandra’s eyes opened wide and stared back at the shocked faces of the crowd gathered around her. “What happened?” she asked, sitting up. Jack jumped into her lap and licked her face sloppily from forehead to chin. She realized that she had let go of his leash.

A chubby, towheaded toddler, squeezing his mother’s hand, looked at her and held his sippy cup up to her face. “A tall man grab you,” he said. “Want some juice?” he offered.

“A man? Where did he go?” Alexandra asked.

“That way,” the boy pointed east down the sidewalk, his hair blowing furiously in the approaching storm.

Alexandra raised herself to her wobbly legs and strained her eyes over the crowd. “I don’t see anyone,” she said.

“Maybe he fly,” the boy suggested. His mother picked him up in her arms.

“Maybe,” Alexandra nodded her head, noticing that her sunglasses had fallen to the road.

“Say ’bye, Joshua,” the boy’s mother told him. “He can be silly sometimes,” she said, smiling warily at Alexandra.

“Bye, bye, bye,” said the boy as his mother walked with him across the intersection. Waving goodbye, Alexandra watched the boy flap his arms like wings as his mother carried him.

Hours later, Alexandra’s heart was still racing as she tossed and turned, wide awake in bed. Jack was next to her on top of the blankets. The bold, red numbers lit up on her alarm clock warned her that it was already three in the morning. Only a few hours remained until dawn, the first morning of her senior year.

She flicked on the bedside lamp. Jack, in response, buried his head under a pillow. Pulling her Uncle Joseph’s journal from the drawer in her bedside table, she flipped through the pages until she landed on a handwritten entry, the ink faded against the yellowing pages.

October 20, 1944, 18:00

Winter has set in early in this ragged southwestern German forest, and never have I been as thankful for the campfire and my tent as tonight. The captain assures us that the only German soldiers in this sector of the woods around camp are dead ones. The rest have surrendered or have fled to Berlin.

But we patrol all the same. My turn on our sector’s perimeter came after noon, and the trail through the woods was soggy in the rain. The Jeep’s tires bogged in the mud, stuck, just as the rain turned to sleet. But with what I at first believed to be luck, I spotted the mouth of a cave carved into a nearby hillside. I waited hours for another Jeep to come pull my vehicle from the mud. As the icy rain pummeled the trees, I paced in the cave.

I waited, bored. So I turned on my flashlight and wandered back inside the cave. But I turned around when the stench became overpowering. Bones crunched beneath my boots, and I am sure that I recognized a human skull among those of the forest’s wild beasts. Tomorrow I may go back to the cave to be sure of what I saw.

Poor Uncle Joseph, Alexandra sighed as she shut the book and returned it to the drawer. Outside her bedroom window, an emergency siren pierced the night. “I guess I may as well give up trying to sleep,” she said to Jack as she rose from her bed to investigate. Pulling back the heavy curtains from her window, she saw the flashing blue lights of a police car parked on the street below her window. Two police officers hovered around a boy standing next to a bicycle, his head shaking back and forth.

Pressing her face to the window, Alexandra noticed a shadow pacing behind the policemen as they spoke to the kid with the bike. She had a high perch over the scene. With her forehead bearing down against the cool glass, she stared, her eyes riveted to the sidewalk. She gasped as a canine—a massive beast more wolf than dog—emerged from the shadows and into the streetlight. The beast had his face fixed upward, as if directly upon her window.

The kid jerked his arm and shook a finger past the two police officers. It was clear that he wanted them to look at something.

Alexandra held her breath. Be careful, she thought and closed her eyes.

A howl rang into the night, audible to anyone nearby awake at that hour, and she braved another glimpse down to the sidewalk.

But she could see only the police officers, climbing back into their patrol car. “Gone?” she asked herself.

She jumped back from the window, closing the curtains tight. “What was that?” she wondered aloud. Turning out her lamp, she climbed back into bed and pulled her blanket up over her eyes.

Her thoughts raced. Calm down, she told herself. It wasn’t looking at you. She said, “That’s crazy,” aloud to try to convince herself.

Go to sleep. Go to sleep. She buried her face in her pillow.

Wishful thinking now, Alex, she fretted.

On the street below, a pair of red sunglasses rested in the gutter. The raven-haired man approached. Kneeling silently, he picked them up gently and examined them in the streetlight as if they were a precious artifact.

“Alexandra,” he whispered. He cradled the red glasses in his palm and looked toward the apartment building across the street. His nostrils flared as a soft breeze touched his face. Breathing deeply into his chest, he searched the sidewalk behind him. “I will find you,” he said firmly. “You will not harm her.” He disappeared into the dark areas of the park across the street from Alexandra’s apartment.

Jack snored beside her as Alexandra’s eyes grew droopy. Finally she drifted into a restless sleep for a few hours until the alarm rang sharply at six.

The apartment was empty when she awoke, but the scent of freshly brewed coffee hung in the air. Slowly she dragged herself out of bed and to the kitchen. The note on the counter from her mother wished her good luck on the first day of her senior year.

Your uniform is ironed and hanging in your closet.

Make me proud.

xoxo,

MOM

Loading her coffee cup with French vanilla creamer, a habit she picked up from Taylor, Alexandra stalked to her closet. For the first time since last May, she dressed in her Collinsworth uniform: a blue-and-green plaid skirt and a white, button-down shirt. She buttoned her shirt tightly. She neatly tucked the shirt into her waistband, and then she threw on a blue blazer and rolled up the sleeves a bit. Around her neck, she hung the medallion, her father’s gift. She wanted to move forward with her senior year in a way that would have made her father proud, too.

“You can do this,” she said aloud, taking a final glance at herself in the bathroom mirror.

Wait, she thought as she turned back to her reflection in the glass.

“Where did you come from?” she asked a pink-and-white blemish on her chin, growing larger by the second. “If you get any bigger, I’ll look like I have two heads by lunch,” she said accusingly as she prodded her chin with a short, ragged fingernail. “Maybe with two heads, I’ll have better luck understanding chemistry,” Alexandra told Jack, who grumbled at her feet.

Picking up her book bag and car keys from her dresser, she rubbed Jack’s ears goodbye. “Wish me luck, boy. I think I’m going to need it.” Her shoulder was sore from yesterday’s incident in the street, and on top of that, her stomach was fluttering with excitement.

Realizing she would not be taking him out the front door with her, Jack turned and crawled back to bed.