Jen sat in a garnet-cushioned hotel chair, in the empty front row of the ballroom where Maxine Das had just completed her Q and A. Maxine was still onstage, trying to extract herself from the group of overly enthusiastic elephant fans grouped around her.
Maxine’s latest documentary had been framed by the heart-pulverizing story of Flower, a baby elephant born with a birth defect, and consequently ostracized by his herd. Jen still felt slightly sick from watching poor Flower desperately wander the savanna to the soundtrack of mournful violins.
Nature was brutal.
So was the nasty little voice in Jen’s head. It sounded a lot like Scofield and tended to lie in wait, piping up when Jen was weak and shaky.
Abe’s the vandal, the voice said. You know he is.
Jen did not know that. School, therapies, Colin; things were more hopeful than ever.
Only because you’re in denial.
Jen felt the world lurch.
Was she in denial? Maybe her brain was spending all of its energy obscuring unsavory facts about Abe, which was why she couldn’t focus on anything of substance?
Or maybe the Scofield voice had piped up because Jen had developed a warped kind of Münchhausen syndrome, where her identity had gotten so wrapped up in Abe’s conditions—
Jen stood up abruptly and marched herself to the long table with coffee urns and metal trays of cookies.
Another woman perused what was left of the picked-over treats. With that bushy gray hair and the long floral scarf overwhelming her tiny frame, she reminded Jen of Nan Smalls.
It was Nan Smalls, which made no sense at all unless Jen was now hearing voices and hallucinating. She slipped her right hand inside the left sleeve of her cardigan and pinched her forearm.
The woman, still there, turned and smiled. “Hello, Jen. So nice to see you here.”
“Nan?” Jen said hesitantly.
“My son got me into elephants,” Nan said. “He found them fascinating.”
Jen felt an ache deep in her heart. Sweet chubby-cheeked Danny Smalls had toddled around, stuffed elephant in hand. Years later, his mother was at Maxine’s talk, maintaining the connection.
Nature was brutal.
“Have you ever seen gummy elephants before?” Nan was regarding the tray of mini cupcakes, which were white-frosted with pink elephant gummies on top.
“No. Just gummy bears,” Jen said. “Well, everyone’s seen gummy bears, right?”
“Mmm.” Nan selected a cupcake, plucked the gummy elephant off the top, and popped it in her mouth. “I always feel a little thrill eating sticky candy. My ex-husband hated it.”
Jen managed a sympathetic cluck.
“It’s the ritualized bonding that amazes me,” Nan continued.
“With gummy candy?”
“With the elephants.”
“Yes.” Jen nodded vigorously. “Yes.” Speaking of bonding … “I’ve been meaning to check in with you.”
“Oh?”
“About Abe.”
“What about him?”
“Just, you know, how’s he doing?”
Do you think he might be destroying private property in his spare time and lying about it for kicks?
Nan beamed. “Colin’s wonderful, isn’t he?”
The nonresponse said it all.
Danny Smalls. Flower the elephant. The worry about Abe. The moment—this world—was gray and hopeless and suddenly all too much. Jen felt the prick of tears in her eyes.
Nan reached out her hand, paper-thin skin, knobby blue veins, to Jen’s shoulder. She spoke in a soft, quiet voice that made Jen’s eyelashes flutter. “Please draw strength from this.”
Jen felt herself lean forward, into Nan’s space. She held her breath.
“‘He will cover you with his feathers and under his wings you will find refuge. His faithfulness will be’—”
Without warning, Jen was yanked backward into a patchouli-scented embrace. Her cheek was crushed against Maxine’s beaded necklace.
“I’m free,” Maxine said. She released Jen from the clutch. “Shall we?”
Jen looked cautiously around the hotel conference room. “There was a woman here when you came up, right? Quoting a psalm?”
Maxine nodded, lowered her voice. “Oy. Sorry. Some of the fans are a bit … Well, let’s just say that this tour has been confirmation that it takes all kinds to make the world go ’round. Are you crying?” Maxine tilted her head and squinted at Jen.
“Your talk was so great,” Jen said, in broken voice. “Flower got me, and I know, I know. Preservation of resources.”
“Flower is just fine,” Maxine said, “very happy at the preserve, I promise. Listen, Laurence, my manager, wants to join us for dinner. He’s hoping you don’t already have one.”
“A manager?” Jen said. “For what?”
“You know, things like this.” Maxine gestured to the ballroom, now empty, and its rows and rows of chairs.
“Why on earth would he want to meet me?”
“Your book.” Maxine overenunciated the words like Jen was being dim. “Your grant.”
“I’m just in the research stages.”
“Fair warning: he’s pretty aggressive. Actually.” Maxine snorted. “You’ll be an excellent match.”
“Me?”
“Please. I was there when you hid those books in the library so no one else could find them for that paper on—was it novice management?” Maxine clasped her hands together gleefully. “I can’t believe I remember the topic.”
“It didn’t happen like that,” Jen said.
“It did. You hid the whole stack in the lower archives, you little rat.”
Jen recalled hazily the jostle of books in arms, a rushed walk, a charged feeling of battle-readiness. The memory should be embarrassing, but Jen only felt a dull melancholy for her loss of ambition.
It had been electric to feel such purpose, to have that fiction of control over her life.
“I was a total asshole.”
“No.” Maxine wagged a finger. “You were a tigress.”
“I’ve become a soft-boiled egg. I sit in the audience and weep for Flower the elephant.”
“Not buying it.” Maxine regarded Jen with an annoyingly superior grin. “People don’t change that much.”
“Hello?” Jen called. She walked into the kitchen. “I’m home.” She stepped out of her shoes, rubbed her heels.
The boys had left a half-full pot of congealing ramen noodles on the stove. And a pile of dirty bowls in the sink, but she didn’t care.
Dinner had been delightful. Laurence the manager had handed Jen his card, with a sincere-enough call me whenever you’re ready and a double-cheek kiss. She felt inspired to sit down at her computer and finish that leatherback-turtle study, maybe even take a peek at the one involving monarch butterflies.
Upstairs, a door slammed. There was the thunder of footsteps.
“Hello?” she shouted again. Above her head was the screech of something being dragged across the wood floor. She heard Colin’s footsteps on the stairs.
“You won’t believe who I saw tonight,” she said in a half shout. “I won’t make you guess, it was Nan, who said you’re wonderful, and then I got a personalized psalm, something about feathers, do you know that one? It made me think of Emily Dickinson, ‘hope is the thing with feathers,’ which is ironic, because I think it was about worry, which is the opposite of hope. She smelled it on me, but it wasn’t entirely my fault because—”
Jen glanced up.
Colin was still in the doorway. He shifted his weight from one foot to the other.
“We have,” he said, “a bit of a situation.”