It wasn't until Margaret worked with Carl and others to remove more of the tarp that she realized someone might have been on the other side when the ship keeled over.
She fell to all fours, tried to see anyone underneath, some sign.
“No one was there,” said a shouting voice behind her. “No one but me.” Estelle wheeled her chair closer. One wheel sunk in a patch of mud. Her hands slipped on the wet rubber treads. Margaret remembered that they'd extended the tarp out over a section of grass on the port side as a shelter for Estelle. They hadn't found a need to get her inside the ship yet.
Estelle gave up trying to move the wheelchair and held one hand over her eyes. She held thumb and forefinger close together and tried unsuccessfully to smile. “Missed me by that much,” she said. She laughed without humor.
“We're so sorry,” a woman's voice behind her said. Margaret ignored her.
The second wave of arrivals crowded in. Margaret could already see the stirring of bodies, their fear recharging at the sight of so many others come before them. Katie and Robin grabbed their mother’s legs. More cars were coming. The streets were choked with them.
Rain dripped into Margaret’s shoes and down her legs. A warm rain; the air was thick with humidity. Her slicker had come open; her blouse and jeans were soaked. Katie and Robin pulled the slicker around themselves. Margaret felt not as much like Jesus now, as the Ghost of Christmas Present with the two Sorrows hiding under her cloak.
She was losing it. Her mind, her control over her crew and the ship, the common itself. People reached for her, begged her to sign them on. Estelle screamed at them to move aside, and was eventually wheeled away by someone Margaret could not see. She heard Estelle's furious shouts of, “Get your fucking hands off my chair!”
The crowd began trying to right the ship.
The common was awash in flashing blue and white lights. The police cruisers whooped their sirens and hit their horns. In less than a minute, they’d formed an imperfect ring around the construction site, trapping those at the fallen ark within and the rest outside.
The blue lights flashing atop the cruisers cast the faces of the mob in a nightmare wash of soundless lightning. Red lights now, as the two large engines emerged from the fire station and lumbered onto the grass, horns blasting at people too confused or mindless to notice them. These joined the ring, circling the ship. Firemen in heavy coats and helmets added their bodies to the barrier.
* * *
The Meyers’ dining room was tucked in the far corner of the house, big enough to seat ten around a rosewood table, plus accommodate the matching serving table and buffet.. Rain pattered against the glass of a pair of French doors leading to a patio. The room was warm, the weather outside held at bay by a real fire in the fireplace centered against the adjoining outside wall. Orange flames licked around a single, fat piece of birch.
It was comforting. Heat, fire, the antithesis of rain and water.
Eight were seated for dinner with the two chairs immediately before the fire removed to avoid subjecting anyone to its direct heat during dinner. Conversation circulated from general hospital gossip to the Red Sox’s early-season losing streak. Try as everyone might to avoid it, the weather outside lingered behind every topic. The youngest of the group, Karen and Devin Jahns, steered the discussion from Red Sox to Bruins, whose surprising berth in the Stanley Cup playoff seemed to be the most amazing event they'd ever witnessed.
They also talked of recent stories about unexpected or unseasonable migrations of wildlife eastward, from all across the world. Topics changed to medicine, the stock market, everything except the weather. Suresh did his best to remain quiet, neutral on all topics.
A sudden, heavy gust battered the French doors. The meal was served by Meyers' wife, Linda, to whom Suresh and Neha had been only briefly introduced before the woman scurried away with their wet coats. Now, she placed the main course on the table, a sizzling half-round chunk of beef. It was accompanied by steamed vegetables and various slices of fresh fruit that would normally be served as an appetizer or dessert. The perfect compliment to the heavy fare, and a relief to Suresh, who was vegetarian.
When Linda Meyers sat beside him, Suresh noted only the slightest trace of a perfume from her, rosewater. He thought of the grove in his dream, of Neha lying among the blossoms.. Bernard Meyers carried most of the conversations, or led them in varying directions if he detected one or more of his guests was losing interest.
Noting a pause in the conversation, their host said casually, “It would seem, however, the biggest topic of conversation today has been the rain.” He paused. People were not quick to respond.
As if on cue, the French doors rattled as wind tossed another bucketful of water against the glass.
Neha was the first to offer any real comment. As she finished serving herself a modest helping of vegetables and accepted the plate of fruit, she said, “Rain is rain,” and smiled. “Though I suppose there are some out there who would say otherwise.” Suresh saw her consider the beef, but in deference to her husband, she did not take any for herself.
Polite laughter at her words, a couple of nodding heads. Maureen from radiology acknowledged the statement with an exuberant nod of her head. “Absolutely,” she said. “There's an ark right down the road in Arlington whose builder is probably dancing in the rain right now, saying 'I told you so'.” She giggled and took a bite of meat.
The director raised an eyebrow. “You sound skeptical, Maureen. Don't you believe them?”
Derek Jahns waved his fork for emphasis, “I saw the satellites on the web this morning. The whole country is suddenly under one big cloud!”
“Some say the timing is definitely fortunate for those people,” Neha said. “But I'd venture to say it's un-fortunate for them, as this is only going to feed their delusions.”
Suresh chewed his food and stared at his plate, seeing not his meal but Neha again, in the grove, in the warm soft light of a million stars.
The guests quickly, but subtly, took positions of cautious worry, blatant scorn (Neha already staking herself in that camp), or professional curiosity. Meyers and a silent, white-haired Eurasian man – a neurologist named Kane, if Suresh remembered correctly – took this latter stance, inquiring softly the views of both sides. Only their hostess seemed without a view or curiosity on the subject, more concerned with making sure glasses were filled and plates were not empty.
Suresh watched Meyers as the conversation and ensuing debate grew to a well-kindled fire of discussion. The older man kept looking to Neha and listened raptly to her elaborate arguments, hoping to prove his fears wrong. She said as little as possible, but projected a calm, unwavering assuredness that left no room for doubt that what was rattling against the doors and the side of the house was a typical Springtime Nor'easter and nothing more.
“But it's a Nor’easter that’s flooding parts of Phoenix,” Derek said.
Maureen giggled. Karen Jahns looked at her, obviously picking up the flirt in the laugh. Maureen returned the look with a smoldering, interested stare that actually made the other woman blush. Suresh smiled in spite of himself.
Meyers excused himself once during dinner to add two smaller birch logs to the dwindling fire, talking now of nothing but the preternatural predictions – or ravings – of those building the arks. As Linda began clearing plates to make room for dessert, no one seemed tired of the topic. None of the discussions, as heated as they sometimes became, ever turned biting. The fire, the food and the general atmosphere warmed spirits and cooled temperaments.
Suresh mostly avoided any part in the conversation. He had, in fact, begun to enjoy the banter, when Maureen turned her smoky gaze his way and said, “And what of you? I hold a certain affinity for the tall, dark and silent type, but I admit I'm not too clear on what you think of all this.”