Burning Woods, Oregon, 1994
The Northern Harrier flew higher than usual above the fence line, catching an updraft off the hillside and letting the warm air loft her into the sky. Below, in the Willamette Valley, an orchard-bordered grassland gave way to the foothills of a small mixed conifer forest. From the great height where the tawny bird hung as though paused, a thin patchwork of forest extended below in a jagged line westward toward the ocean—the slimmest of remnant green corridors for the songbirds, insects, or hard-pressed large mammals to travel from the valley all the way to the Pacific. The bird let her senses take in the immensity, as it is not just humans who find pleasure in regarding the expanse of water at the edge of land. Beating hearts are mapped by this longing for the infinite. She let the wind carry her as high as it could and then slowly glided back toward the earth. Her ears picked up the rustle of life below, and she was hungry.
At the back of their filbert orchard, Alice and her teenage daughter, Lily, played a game to pass the time as they crouched in the messy, expansive garden pulling weeds. The game was called Mary-for-Jesus and the rules were simple: swap out the name of a male protagonist for a female in a notorious work of literature and imagine how the plot would change. Mary-for-Jesus. Humila-for-Humbert-Humbert. These moments discussing books, reimagining the canon, marked increasingly rare peace between the two.
“Okay. How about Nineteen Eighty-Four?” Alice started.
“Let’s see…Winston. Winston.” Lily stabbed her trowel deep into the earth to get at a dandelion taproot. “Winnie.”
“Nice!” Alice threw a handful of rush weed onto the pile. “And how do you think Winnie would rewrite history?”
“Less party line, more panty line?” Lily inspected the dirt under her nails, the dark brown loam filling in the gaps where her black nail polish had chipped off.
“That’s the spirit,” Alice said. “One point for you. Maybe not a Camille Paglia–approved answer, but I’ll take it.”
“Whatever, feminazi.” Lily ducked a flung dirt clod and cut some arugula with scissors, starting a pile to take into the house later. She turned to her mother. “How about Lord of the Flies? If those boys’ mothers had anything to say about it, that conch shell would totally be intact at the end of the book.”
“Exactly,” Alice laughed. “Rogerina-for-Roger.” One point for Alice—not that anyone was really keeping score. “And if London’s protagonist in To Build a Fire were female, she could probably will that fire into existence with her mind, then convince the fire it was its own idea to start in the first place.”
Lily paused, trying to recall the name of the character. “No-name-dude-for-no-name-lady,” she offered. Another point for Lily. She turned the scissors on a slug and snipped it in half without remorse, leaving the carcass in the garden as if to warn off others, then gathered the rocket and stuffed the spicy greens into her overalls pocket. Alice threw a handful of weeds in the general direction of the wheelbarrow and said, “How about…”
“How about we are done with this game?” In the way teenagers are like wolves, Lily cut her off, turning suddenly impatient. “I have to go meet people. Plus, I’m ahead.” She smiled a canine grin she liked to call the “grim reaper.”
Alice blew a fluff of dandelion seeds in her direction.
“Mom. We’re just going to have to pull more weeds if you do that.”
“How else would I get to spend time with my beautiful and gracious daughter anymore?”
The barely warm rays of spring sunshine bore down on the soggy valley, lifting steam off every green surface as Lily and Alice gathered up armloads of the uprooted weeds and piled them into an ancient, rusted wheelbarrow. The wheelbarrow could have been any color once, but no one who might remember was still alive to name it. Some thirty feet away, on the property line of their hazelnut orchard where the razed and tilled land gave way to a stand of smallish Douglas fir, one of their barn cats leapt from behind the corner of the old, peeling blue storage shed, chasing a mouse. There was a splash of blood from the pursued rodent on Fickle Cat’s front paw and the flayed mouse tumbled over itself in the dirt and grass ahead of the predator. Just before going in for the deathblow, Fickle made her singular mewl—a honk like a groggy drunk—then bolted off into the long grass, abandoning her prey. Busy watching the cat and mouse, mother and daughter failed to see the harrier flying low on the left, just grazing the sedge with the tips of her wings. The striking raptor looked disheveled and half plucked in her worn winter plumage. She rose and circled the ground a few feet above the mouse before dropping with precision. Alice set down her trowel and drew closer, compelled, her long, strawberry blonde braid sliding over her back and off her shoulder as she crouched.
“Lil,” she whispered. “Come look.”
The harrier consumed the finally, truly dead mouse, taking strips from the flesh with her long, hooked beak. As they approached within twenty feet of the bird, something strange became apparent. Where there should have been golden, knowing raptor eyeballs were two empty, healed-over sockets.
“She’s blind,” Alice whispered. “Hunting blind. Unbelievable.”
At the sound of Alice’s whisper, the bird held her head at attention and rustled her large wings, the smallest of small intestines dangling from her beak, then returned to her meal and let the two watch her briefly before swallowing the rest whole and flying off, her crop bulging. She skimmed the grass and disappeared behind the pressboard skeletons of future tract housing on the adjacent acreage, stealthy as a serpent’s retreat.
After dumping the weeds in the compost, Alice and Lily walked the quarter mile back to the house through their hazelnut groves. Alice was alive with speculation. She thought that maybe the harrier was able to hunt blind because she had facial disks like owls that allowed her to hear her prey more easily than other raptors. She thought that maybe Fickle Cat, never a particularly adept huntress, had been inadvertently helping the harrier survive by providing prewounded prey. She thought that maybe—and for this she raised her eyebrows and turned to look into her daughter’s eyes—they had on their hands some sort of divine creature. The manic intensity in her mother’s voice made Lily brace for a fall. She knew this phase well.
The word “divine” was secularly defined in their house but used often. Wine was divine, film was divine, books and music were divine. These moments received the heavenly, swirling crescendo of her mother’s contagious enthusiasm. Lily’s outfit from her first day of high school of ripped jeans and an old Pendleton wool shirt, or her black nail polish and matching lipstick and attitude—not so divine, according to Alice. Lily’s sass about her mother’s opinion on such matters, also less than divine. This decrescendo could be steep. For Alice, divinity was really a matter of opinion, and people should understand that on her farm, in her world, her opinion was the only one that counted. The orchestra of whim and wonderment was not to be conducted by anyone other than herself.
At the suggestion of a divine creature, Lily simply nodded with a clenched jaw and said, “Divinity is really in the eye of the beholder. Isn’t that what you always say?”
Alice smiled and put her arm around her much smaller daughter as they walked back toward the house. Something caught Alice’s eye and she stopped to check out a small oval-shaped black sore on the trunk of one of the hazelnut trees, her mood shifting further out of orbit.
“Goddamn it. Damn fucking dammit.” She turned to her daughter with her finger still on the sore. “This fungus is going to kill my trees and then me, I swear.”
“Yes, you do swear. That will be a dollar twenty-five since noon,” Lily said. “Leave it. Come inside and eat something.” The turn in her mother’s voice released a familiar turn in Lily’s stomach. The pitch up in tone indicated she would soon be swinging wildly down from her happy place, and the mere thought of it made Lily’s shoulders tense up.
“Dammit all.” Alice sighed as they approached the old two-story white house, listing on its foundation a little more every year. She waved her daughter into the house without really looking at her. “I just want to put out some oranges for the tanagers, then I’ll be right in.”
“Bird nerd your heart out,” Lily said, letting the screen door slam behind her.
Alice picked up the oranges she’d set on the deck railing and sliced them with a deer-dressing knife she produced from her pocket, the blade flicking open with dangerous grace. She pulled the flat of the blade across her arm, the risk of the blade pushing into her skin a familiar, comforting thrill. She then halved the oranges and speared them on prominent nails sticking out from the side of the deck. The stabbing of fruit flesh released some of the pressure building in her brain.
“I saw the first western tanager of the season yesterday,” Alice offered to no one in particular, as though idle chitchat could stave off the inevitable storm churning in her neurons. She punctured another orange half hard, then glanced around, as if the brightly colored migratory birds were waiting in the trees to rush the oranges.
“You feed the birds, Mom, but forget to feed yourself. It’s messed up!” Lily yelled through the screened-in kitchen window.
“Whaaat? Can’t hear you!” Alice lied, splitting the last orange.
Fickle Cat slunk up from underneath the deck through a broken, rotting slat and rubbed herself on the doorframe, still hungry. Because barn cats are regularly taken by coyotes in the night, Alice decided they should always name the creatures _______ Cat, as if the “Cat” suffix were some sort of acknowledgement that these animals were one paw in this world, one paw in the next. She let her daughter name them all, and in Lily’s fifteen years of life they had gone through Moo Cat, White Cat, Fatface Cat, Stinky Cat, Chicken Cat, Zombie Cat, and now finally Fickle Cat and Concatenation Cat (named after the kitten found its way to their door during one of Lily’s PSAT study sessions). Though, Alice always let Lily choose the name, the attached “Cat” was not up for debate. “A cat is a cat is a cat,” Alice’s mother used to say when a barn cat went missing.
It used to be that no one in the family was allowed to name them. Animals were not bound for the kingdom of heaven, so why should they be christened with names? But after Alice’s parents died in quick succession, leaving a young Alice and even younger Lily alone on the farm to fend for themselves, the changing names acted as a sort of abacus ticking off Lily’s awkward progress toward adulthood—from Moo to Fickle and everything in between.
In the kitchen, Lily made sure her mother couldn’t see her, took four dollars’ worth of quarters from a jar on the shelf, and pocketed the change to buy cigarettes later. The small thievery always elicited a thrill, a shudder, in Lily’s core.
Lily cut up their early spring harvest, the arugula she’d collected from the garden, and wilted it in a pan with leftover roasted potatoes in some fresh sage and butter, then cracked a duck egg over the top, adding a little hard cheese at the end. The plate was steaming on the table when Alice came in.
“Eat,” Lily ordered. Both girls were a little surprised to hear the forceful intonation in the way Lily said this. In some moments she could sound just like Alice, but with a force majeure.
“Yes, ma’am, your highness.” Alice took a seat. “But come eat with me.”
“Already did. The food’s salted and peppered, but there’s more if you want it. I’m going out. You owe me a dollar twenty-five, no, dollar fifty. Don’t forget.” Lily glanced toward the large glass jar full of quarters on the wall among the preserved beets and beans with a sign reading I SWEAR I didn’t mean it. The price was one quarter per transgression. More than once Lily had imagined lugging a red wagon full of jarred quarters into the financial aid office at the university. At that point she might have enough for, maybe, a half semester of classes. Or if life continued on status quo, she could just keep smoking cigs for a year or two.
“Stay.” Alice bordered on pleading.
“Can’t,” Lily said, dabbing her black lipstick on a napkin and checking her reflection in the hallway mirror.
“Please?”
“Don’t, Mom.” Lily looked annoyed. “I. Have. Plans.”
Alice sat in front of the plate and whispered an almost inaudible “fine” after her daughter had already left the house.
The still-young Alice, at thirty-one, looked like a child in some ways and acted like one in several others. Her long, strawberry blonde braid and thin frame led people to regularly mistake the duo for sisters, or cousins. Lily was even lighter in coloring than her mother, her pigment-poor skin almost that of an apparition. Her curly, fine hair bordered on white, her veins a visible blue underneath the surface of thin, pale skin. It bothered Lily that anyone on the street had a window to her inner workings, that map of blue pumping blood intended to be understood only by doctors and deities. But her natural patina paired with her requisite black lipstick left Lily resembling the walking dead, and that’s just the way she liked it. She respected all things zombie.
Alice sat alone thinking about the fungus that had killed off half her hazelnut crop last year, leaving them almost destitute, facing off with the food prepared by her increasingly surly teenage daughter. She sat and tried to forget about the black spots on her trees, the rotting floorboards and sagging foundation of her house, her daughter’s growing disdain, and the dark pit inside her that felt like it was trying to turn her inside out. She got up and poured herself a large mason jar of cheap wine, then, finally, once the wine hit her blood, she ate.
That evening, Lily woke in the middle of the night to the sound of glass breaking against metal and her mother’s howl trailing off into the quiet night. The drawn out, “Fuuuuuck yoooooooou, asshooooooole,” echoed faintly on the hills by far away neighbor hounds. From the second-story window, Lily recognized Alice’s on-and-off boyfriend Randy’s old Ford truck hauling up the dirt driveway with one taillight newly busted out. His part-wolf mutt Party Dog turned quick circles in the bed of the pickup before settling in a corner just as the one red light disappeared behind a bend of alders. Down on the front porch, Lily saw her mother sitting on the steps with her head in her hands, her reddish mane a tangled mess, glass shards littering the driveway, catching light like a flattened disco ball in the moonlight. Lily decided not to go downstairs. She was familiar with this scene and there was really nothing she could do. Instead, she lay in bed with the spotlight moon fixed on her face, listening to her mother’s soft sobs drift up. She didn’t even close the drapes to block the light. If she concentrated hard enough, maybe her flesh would actually turn to stone.
“That’ll be fifty cents,” she whispered. “But who’s counting.”
◆
In the morning, Lily walked into the kitchen to find her mother vacuuming a hole in the wall with one hand, a large jar of white wine in the other. Alice wore a diaphanous nightgown that, with the strong morning light pouring in behind her, left little to the imagination. Alice was thin but strong, her muscles taut from a lifetime of harvests and other manual labor, her limbs and core perhaps a little too lean from malnutrition, resulting more from absentmindedness than vanity. Tufts of fine hair glowed from between her legs, under her arms, and tapered to fuzz on her long legs. Her eyes were rimmed in pink as she vacuumed the wall, her irises an urgent seafoam color they turned only when she’d been swimming in chlorine or crying.
“Breakfast of champions,” Lily yelled over the sound of the vacuum, nodding at the almost empty magnum of wine on the table.
“I’m glad you found the Vonnegut I left out for you, honey.” She flashed her daughter an exaggerated thumbs-up before returning to vacuuming the wall. “These damn ladybugs hatched in the walls. They were everywhere this morning. Literally covering the table.”
“Can’t hardly blame the ladybugs, now can you?” Lily said, quieter than before.
“Whaaat?”
“Nothing.”
Alice turned off the vacuum and the last few ladybugs left in the long black tube clacked against the plastic, two flying out from the end of the hose and circling her head like a halo. She swatted at the bugs, knocking herself off balance for a moment before removing the vacuum bag. The bag pulsed, alive with the hundreds of bugs ticking inside. She placed it on top of the garbage under the sink and changed to a new bag, taking the opportunity to refill her wine jar and address her daughter before she could slink out the back door.
“So, I have some news for you,” she sighed dramatically. “Randy and I broke up.”
“Shocker,” Lily said as she cracked two duck eggs into a hot pan.
“That damn wolf-mutt Party Dog attacked Donnie Jr.”
“What?!” Lily looked up, wrested from complacency by concern for her pet duck. “Is she okay?”
“She’ll be fine. It’s just a little scratch on her neck. We pulled the dog off in time and I dressed the scratch and put the cone the vet gave us on her to prevent her picking at it with her bill. So, anyhow, just thought you should know. She might not be laying for a while if she’s too stressed out. We’ll have to trade for eggs with the Wilkes or something.”
“I always hated that dog.”
Randy owned a bar in town called the Re-Bar that filled nightly with farmhands and construction workers. When he started dating Alice, he let her start a monthly poetry reading that baffled many members of the community and delighted a handful of others. He even bought a little beret for Party Dog and everything. Back when Party Dog was just a puppy, he taught her to shotgun a beer as a sort of perverse parlor trick. The stunt was a big hit with customers until Party Dog developed a problem and started turning surly, nipping more than one customer’s heels when they wouldn’t share their libation. Randy stopped letting her drink and kept her behind the bar to limit his liability as a business owner, but really she just turned into a dry drunk—nasty and without an ounce of humor to her disposition. She would sulk behind the bar looking daggers at anyone who addressed her by name. Party Dog, as it turned out, was not such a party after all.
“Dogs are a direct reflection their owners, you know,” Alice said.
“True story,” Lily sighed.
“So anyhow, after that mutt went after Donnie Jr., all hell broke loose and Randy and I started going at it, too. But it wasn’t just the dog, of course. It was a looong time coming.”
“No kidding.” Lily returned to her egg frying, feeling herself about as social as Party Dog.
“That’s one particular mistake I won’t be making again,” Alice said, her voice rising louder and higher as she flipped on the switch to the vacuum and continued to suck the little red, freshly hatched ladybugs from their brand-new world to an even newer and blacker one.
“Déjà vu,” Lily said quietly to the egg pan. She pulled some toast and buttered it, put one of the eggs on the table, and nodded at her mother.
“Eat. Join me, honey.” Alice wasn’t asking.
“Can’t. I’m meeting Sarah.”
And with that, Lily grabbed her own egg sandwich and left the kitchen with its lingering aroma of alcohol and eggs mixed with the pungent funk of thousands of newly hatched ladybugs. If Lily were to bottle the scent and name it, like they do in fancy department stores, she would call it “Despair” and use the torso of a thin, hairy, naked woman as its vessel.
“Be home by dinner!” Alice yelled, but her daughter had already slipped through the door and off the back porch.
As Lily crossed the field toward the small housing development, she saw the blind harrier skimming low over the grass. The raptor kited for a moment, then landed hard into the grass, rising with empty talons before flying off into the distance. To Lily, the bird looked fatigued. She wondered how long a blind bird that size could possibly live. At the fence dividing their property from the new development, she rustled at the base of the fence post and retrieved an old rusty tin from under a patch of loose, wild grass. From it, she took out a packet of cigarettes from a ziplock and slipped one from the package, pocketing the rest. Alice would kill her if she knew. Crossing into the taupe wasteland, she ducked under some construction tape to enter the largest of the unfinished pressboard palaces, a cigarette dangling from her lips like Gloria in The Lost Weekend, Lily and Sarah’s favorite movie.
“Don’t be ridic,” Lily said seductively into the dark room of their usual meeting place, the cigarette stuck to her lip.
“Don’t be ridic,” Sarah squealed from a dark interior corner of the house, jumping out to greet her friend.
“I mean, for cereal.” Lily hugged Sarah and sighed. “Mom’s on a total bender again.”
“Dang. What happened?” Sarah accepted a cigarette from her friend and lit it with a pink, unicorn-stickered lighter. She blotted her matching black lipstick on the filter.
“Randy happened, I guess. But how many times can she freak out on different dudes before she notices, maybe, some sort of pattern?”
“Yeah, for real. Adults are so asinine sometimes. My parents totally hate each other but pretend they don’t for our sake. As if we can’t tell as they stab, stab, stab that salad that they’d rather be stabbing each another.”
From the shadows, a figure stepped out into the light.
“Fuck! You scared the shit out of me,” Lily said to the figure as Sarah giggled.
“That’s some ugly talk for a pretty lady,” the figure said, moving closer.
“You know Max,” Sarah said. “You chicken shit.”
At the realization that it was their classmate, Max, who had called her a pretty lady, who moved his being closer to her being, Lily’s neck reddened, waves of pink moving up her translucent skin. She felt like an octopus standing there, emoting waves and colors for all the world to see. Thankfully the light in the bare-beamed construction site was dim.
“Well, if it isn’t the entirety of the Philomath High science club in one place,” Max said with mock surprise. “Meeting in secret to plan our world domination through the fabulous world of fusion?”
Max was the most handsome nerd Lily had ever met. Half Siletz Indian with a long, perfect nose and dark hazel eyes, he understood molecular science like it was Disney. Lily was more into ecology, and Sarah was smart but mostly just kind of a punk. Sarah, at sixteen, already had five tattoos she said she’d sweet-talked her way into receiving for free from various admirers in Eugene. Lily suspected she had done more than sweet-talk to get them. While science didn’t really get Sarah going as much as standard forms of teenage deviancy, Lily was her best friend, and she thought Max was hot, so she attended science club on Wednesdays after school to be with them.
Max had always been kind of a nobody until one of the football jocks called him a “Redskin Redneck” early in the school year. After saying nothing to the jock in the moment, that afternoon Max donned full native regalia with an eagle-feather-and-fur headpiece, a brightly colored beaded shawl, and little moccasins. As the team prepared for an important homecoming game, they laughed at him as they did drills and called him an “asshole,” an “injun,” and a “half-breed.” They flung whatever insults they could get their dirty hands on as they paused between running lines. Max ignored them as he padded in the dry fall grass around the football field doing a rain dance, singing low and looking up at the skies. That night in the fourth quarter, with the game tied, the sky threaded gray, then black, and poured down on the field in sheets of rain. Lightning struck one of the goal posts and a cheerleader who had been high-kicking a little too close to the pole got knocked unconscious. The game ended early, a draw. After that, no one made fun of Max—in fact, there was a whiff of fear among those in the student body. Jocks offered him seats and patted him on the back for no real reason. Lily suspected that Max’s revenge was sweetest not because he had called on ancient gods to do his bidding but because he had secretly called to check the weather graphs at NOAA. Max was an ardent believer in the power of science and achingly clever.
As the trio walked around the half-built houses, they speculated on what would go where.
“This is where they’ll keep their Jet Skis and other superfluous shit,” Max offered.
“That’s where the Jacuzzi bath will go,” Lily said.
“For the wild orgies,” Sarah added. Sarah was always full of life lessons.
After half a pack of cigarettes and a few hours of aimless wandering, Sarah announced she had to go.
“Sunday dinner,” she said with a fake smile. “Everybody sit around looking miserable together now.”
“See you at school,” Max said. “Stay strong.” Sarah gave him a lingering peck on the cheek and Lily felt something like bile, or jealousy, rise in her throat. When she and Max were alone, they sat on the front steps of the house looking out over the sea of tan pressboard. The effect was that of a giant, poorly placed, wrinkled Band-Aid laid out over an otherwise wild field.
“You ever wonder why we, I mean man, generally feel the need to dominate the landscape instead of just live with it?” Max asked after a moment.
“Yeah. I get you. Other species seem to have it all figured out. I mean, look at foxholes, beaver dams, bird’s nests,” Lily said.
“Exactly. They say it has something to do with thumbs, but I reckon it’s more about hair.”
“How’s that now?” Lily did her best Randy impression in a deep backwoods accent.
“Like, because we don’t have hair on most of our bodies, we’re always trying to find ways to cover up. Our outfits have just gotten more and more elaborate until they look like factories and train tracks and skyscrapers.”
“How very scientific of you, friend.” Lily squinted her eyes at him and wrinkled her brow into a farm of furrows.
Max laughed and put his warm arm around Lily and she thought maybe she would like to wear him as an outfit, the blood rising again in her neck and down to her fingers and toes.
“Hey,” he said, “I’m sorry to hear about your mom’s bender. She seems like a cool lady from what I can tell. She has that old aqua Chevy truck with the bumper sticker that says, A Woman Needs a Man Like…” he trailed off.
“…a Fish Needs a Bicycle, yeah. Brilliant, isn’t it?”
“Is she a lesbian or something?”
“Nah. She’s kind of a slut, to be honest.”
“Lesbians can be sluts,” Max offered. “Just not in Burning Woods.” They sat there for a moment to ponder this important idea.
“Well, I’ll see you tomorrow in physics, right?” Max asked, peeling himself off Lily’s arm, giving her a little pat on the shoulder.
“You bet your quarks, buddy.”
Did I really just say that? Lily wondered as she made her way home through the grass. You bet your quarks, buddy? She stopped to put the cigarettes back in their tin at the base of the fence and rubbed some rose essential oil on her wrists, fingers, and neck to cover the smell of cigarettes. It wasn’t even seven but it was already getting dark. She checked in on Donnie Jr., who looked miserable and ashamed of her little neck cone, sitting morosely in a corner of her pen by the kiddie pool, which was growing a significant layer of green slime on it. Lily reminded herself to clean the pool that week as she clicked her tongue gently at her bummed-out duck.
Inside the house, she heard the ladybugs ticking away inside their vacuum bag prisons. She looked around for her mom before taking all three bags outside, slipping the deer-dressing knife lying on the table into her pocket. She hauled the bags out to the tree with the pockmarks of spreading fungus. She switched the knife open, drawing the flat end along her forearm to clean it first like she always did, then slit the bags lengthwise with the precision of a surgeon. The sleepy bugs emerged, lining the slit with their red, tentative bodies before the first one took flight. It was as if the moonlight reanimated their bodies. They followed the leader in a perfect line and trailed off like little soldiers of fortune into the sky, out into the unknown with carnal appetites for aphid blood. To Lily’s eyes they formed a perfect circle in the sky, like synchronized swimmers, then moved into a hypnotist’s swirl before finally dispersing. A truck rumbled out on the highway in an unusually loud way as the bugs disappeared to far corners of the orchard. After the last ladybug had disappeared into the night, everything was quiet. Lily put the knife away. She must have smoked too many cigarettes or something because her eyes were playing tricks on her. She felt pretty sure there was no such thing as a ladybug hoedown.
Back inside, Lily found her mother passed out drunk in a fetal ball on the living room couch. She found the patchwork blanket her grandma made when she was born, the one with various animals and plants and patterns living in harmony. “Your own little Eden,” Grandma liked to say when Lily was little, “where the lions lie next to the lambs.” Alice would pull her aside after such comments and whisper, “You know that in real life the lion would eat the lamb, right? No denying that fact.” It all left a young Lily a tad confused as to what was fact and what was fiction.
Lily pulled the blanket over her mother and briefly inspected the paisley skies above a giraffe and bluebird duo before sitting in the chair facing the fireplace that once upon a time had belonged to her grandfather. The only light on in the room was the accent light her mother had installed to highlight her most prized possession: an antique wrought silver box engraved with vines and flowers, with thick beveled glass and sun-bleached pink velvet inside, the threadbare velvet holding up an almost full collection of emptied bird eggs. The antique was over a hundred years old, and as Lily stood in the dark, fixed on the glowing speckled orbs, she wondered how a thing so fragile could last as long as it had. Glancing at her sotted mom shifting under the blanket of Eden, she wondered how anyone or anything could stand the pressure of merely existing any longer than fifteen years.