I've never met anyone like her before. It's hard to believe she's almost my age. When I compare the girls at school to her, they just seem like a bunch of kids. Susan dresses so cool, like she just stepped out of an MTV video. She's got short funky black hair, a leather jacket and jeans so tight I don't know how she gets into them. Her T-shirt's got this really cool picture of a Brian Froud faery on it that I'd never seen before.
When I asked her if she believes in Faerie, she just gave me this big grin and said, "I'll tell you, Lesli, I'll believe in anything that makes me feel good."
I think I'm going to like living with her.
When Anna Batterberry regained consciousness, it was to find herself inside that disturbingly familiar house. She lay on a soft, overstuffed sofa, surrounded by the crouching presences of far more pieces of comfortable-looking furniture than the room was really meant to hold. The room simply had a too-full look about it, aided and abetted by a bewildering array of knickknacks that ranged from dozens of tiny porcelain miniatures on the mantle, each depicting some anthropomorphized woodland creature playing a harp or a fiddle or a flute, to a life-sized fabric mâché sculpture of a grizzly bear in top hat and tails that reared up in one corner of the room.
Every square inch of wall space appeared to be taken up with posters, framed photographs, prints, and paintings. Old-fashioned curtains the print was large dusky roses on a black background stood guard on either side of a window seat. Underfoot was a thick carpet that had been woven into a semblance of the heavily-leafed yard outside.
The more she looked around herself, the more familiar it all looked. And the more her mind filled with memories that she'd spent so many years denying.
The sound of a footstep had her sitting up and half-turning to look behind the sofa at who or maybe even, what was approaching. It was only Meran. The movement brought back the vertigo and she lay down once more. Meran sat down on an ottoman that had been pulled up beside the sofa and laid a deliciously cool damp cloth against Anna's brow.
"You gave me a bit of a start," Meran said, "collapsing on my porch like that."
Anna had lost her ability to be polite. Forsaking small talk, she went straight for the heart of the matter.
"I've been here before," she said.
Meran nodded.
"With my mother-in-law Helen Batterberry."
"Nell," Meran agreed. "She was a good friend."
"But why haven't I remembered that I'd met you before until today?"
Meran shrugged. "These things happen."
"No," Anna said. "People forget things, yes, but not like this. I didn't just meet you in passing, I knew you for years from my last year in college when Peter first began dating me. You were at his parents' house the first time he took me home. I remember thinking how odd that you and Helen were such good friends, considering how much younger you were than her."
"Should age make a difference?" Meran asked.
"No. It's just you haven't changed at all. You're still the same age."
"I know," Meran said.
"But ?" Anna's bewilderment accentuated her nervous bird temperament. "How can that be possible?"
"You said something about Lesli, when you first arrived," Meran said, changing the subject.
That was probably the only thing that could have drawn Anna away from the quagmire puzzle of agelessness and hidden music and twitchy shapes moving just beyond the grasp of her vision.
"She's run away from home," Anna said. "I went into her room to get something and found that she'd left all her schoolbooks just sitting on her desk. Then when I called the school, they told me that she'd never arrived. They were about to call me to ask if she was ill. Lesli never misses school, you know."
Meran nodded. She hadn't, but it fit with the image of the relationship between Lesli and her mother that was growing in her mind.
"Have you called the police?" she asked.
"As soon as I got off the phone. They told me it was a little early to start worrying can you imagine that? The detective I spoke to said that he'd put out her description so that his officers would keep an eye out for her, but basically he told me that she must just be skipping school. Lesli would never do that."
"What does your husband say?"
"Peter doesn't know yet. He's on a business trip out east and I won't be able to talk to him until he calls me tonight. I don't even know what hotel he'll be staying in until he calls." Anna reached out with a bird-thin hand and gripped Meran's arm. "What am I going to do?"
"We could go looking for her ourselves."
Anna nodded eagerly at the suggestion, but then the futility of that course of action hit home.
"The city's so big," she said. "It's too big. How would we ever find her?"
"There is another way," Cerin said.
Anna started at the new voice. Meran removed the damp cloth from Anna's brow and moved back from the sofa so that Anna could sit up once more. She looked at the tall figure standing in the doorway, recognizing him as Meran's husband. She didn't remember him seeming quite so intimidating before.
"What what way is that?" Anna said.
"You could ask for help from Faerie," Cerin told her.
"So you're gonna be one of Paulie's girls?"
Lesli looked up from writing in her diary to find that the creepy guy by the War Memorial had sauntered over to stand beside her bench. Up close, he seemed even tougher than he had from a distance. His hair was slicked back on top, long at the back. He had three earrings in his left earlobe, one in the right. Dirty jeans were tucked into tall black cowboy boots, his white shirt was half open under his jean jacket. There was an oily look in his eyes that made her shiver.
She quickly shut the diary, keeping her place with a finger, and looked around hopefully to see if Susan was on her way back, but there was no sign of her new friend. Taking a deep breath, she gave him what she hoped was a look of appropriate streetwise bravado.
"I I don't know what you're talking about," she said.
"I saw you talking to Susie," he said, sitting down beside her on the bench. "She's Paulie's recruiter."
Lesli started to get a bad feeling right about then. It wasn't just that this guy was so awful, but that she might have made a terrible misjudgment when it came to Susan.
"I think I should go," she said.
She started to get up, but he grabbed her arm. Off-balance, she fell back onto the bench.
"Hey, look," he said. "I'm doing you a favor. Paulie's got ten or twelve girls in his string and he works them like they're dogs. You look like a nice kid. Do you really want to spend the next ten years peddling your ass for some homeboy who's gonna have you hooked on junk before the week's out?"
"I"
"See, I run a clean shop. No drugs, nice clothes for the girls, nice apartment that you're gonna share with just one other girl, not a half dozen the way Paulie runs his biz. My girls turn maybe two, three tricks a night and that's it. Paulie'll have you on the street nine, ten hours a pop, easy."
His voice was calm, easygoing, but Lesli had never been so scared before in her life.
"Please," she said. "You're making a mistake. I really have to go."
She tried to rise again, but he kept a hand on her shoulder so that she couldn't get up. His voice, so mild before, went hard.
"You go anywhere, babe, you're going with me," he said. "There are no other options. End of conversation."
He stood up and hauled her to her feet. His hand held her in a bruising grip. Her diary fell from her grip, and he let her pick it up and stuff it into her knapsack, but then he pulled her roughly away from the bench.
"You're hurting me!" she cried.
He leaned close to her, his mouth only inches from her ear.