But here was a chance for friends.
“Okay.”
“Okay, then what house?” asked Philly.
“There’s one on Ann Street.”
The decision was made.
And now she had broken into the house, broken the law, and broken her thumbnail, but she still had no friends.
She closed her eyes, and thought of her grandmother. All the woman had done was help a detective find the body of a murdered man after the case had gone cold, but knowing where the body was lead to suspicion, planted evidence, and conviction. Then Carol’s mother, who’d left her cruel husband when Carol was six, was declared insane and placed in an institution. Carol’s father actually had evidence — recordings of Carol’s mother screaming in the voices of those who had passed on, recorded videos of her in trances on the floor. Her institutionalization was to be intensive though not necessarily permanent, but she lost custody of Carol to the father, who, in a matter of weeks decided he didn’t want her. This landed Carol in one foster home after another. She bounced around the state, kicked out time and again because her foster families found her extremely unsettling, overly sensitive.
Peculiar.
Carol sighed. A song she’d heard and liked long ago came back to mind. It made her happy and sad at the same time, the music at once hopeful and resigned.
“You got to have friends, the feeling’s oh, so strong,” Carol sang softly off-key into her knees. “I had some friends but they’re all gone….someone came and took them away.”
“Hello.”
Carol’s head snapped up. She looked around. She didn’t know who had spoken. Rachel and Philly were still upstairs.
“Hello there,” came the voice again.
Carol stood, shakily, and walked around the corner to the other section of the cellar. She stopped and stared. A young girl was in the middle of the floor. She wore a long pink nightgown. Her long dark hair was parted in the center; her skin was brutally pale.
“Did my mother say you could come down here?” asked the girl softly.
Carol’s brows furrowed. “Your mother?”
“No one comes down here but her. Not even my father.” The girl took in a long, silent breath then let it out. One hand moved to her hair. The arm trailed a strange, ethereal blue light. “He doesn’t want to catch the fever. He works to support our family.”
“Oh.”
The girl’s face lit up with a pained smile. “I’ve been lonely for ever so long. Mother has let you come visit! I am so glad to have a friend!”
Carol glanced over at the wooden steps. She angled her head to listen. There was a laughing upstairs, a crash, and a door slamming. Rachel and Philly could be heard running off across the yard.
Carol looked back at the pale girl. “Who are you?”
“Bessie, silly,” said the girl. “Will you play with me? I was so very sick but am much better now.”
“It was you, wasn’t it?” asked Carol.
“Me?”
“I felt you in here when I was out on the sidewalk.”
“I don’t know what you mean.”
But Carol did.
Her grandmother and mother had told her she was like them, carrying in her blood and bones their own their own unique abilities, passed down, though Carol often tried to pretend it wasn’t true. She was special. She was different. Tuned in to what others weren’t. Things beyond the physical. Things of other dimensions.
Carol took several steps toward Bessie, staring at her in wonder. Bessie was not of this time. She was not flesh and blood. Something sad, something terrible, had happened to her long, long ago.
But she wanted a friend as much as Carol did.
And so they played.
Each day after school, under pretense of staying late for choral practice, Carol slipped down through the cellar window and visited Bessie. They ran about the chilly rooms for hide and seek. They skipped rope. They made up songs and riddles. Never did they touch, though. This was something Carol’s mother had told her. The two dimensions could never connect in that way. It would only lead to disaster.
For the first time in Carol’s life, she was happy. She caught herself smiling, at times even laughing. Carol drew pictures of herself and her new friend, though always tore them up so no one else would see them.
On the seventh day, when Carol and Bessie were in the middle of a game of hopscotch, they heard footsteps upstairs, and deep voices.
“Shh,” said Carol.
“Who is that?” asked Bessie.
“I don’t know.”
The girls stood and listened. A man’s voice. A woman’s. Little girl’s voices. The man said, “I’d love to buy this old place. It’s fantastic.”
The woman replied, “Let’s take some photos.”
Carol backed toward the window, her eyes locked on the wooden steps. “I have to go,” she whispered.
Bessie shook her head. “No! Don’t go away. Stay here with me.”
“I can’t.”
“But you can! If you hold my hand you can stay here forever! Those people up there will never know. We’ll play oh, so quietly!”
Bessie extended one pale, thin arm toward Carol. Carol gazed at her only friend. Bessie was right, of course. If Carol touched her she would be changed; she would be like Bessie.
Forever.
Carol looked up at the sunlit sky outside the cellar window. A ladybug landed on the pane, crawled about then took off again. Carol looked back at Bessie in the dim light of the cellar, at the low ceiling and filthy, uneven floor covered in broken glass and old papers.
Then she scrambled up and out through the window. On her hands and knees she turned to peer once more into the cellar. Bessie had backed up against the cold brick wall, her hands folded, her head down. A sparkling tear trickled down her cheek.
“I’m sorry, Bessie. I’m so sorry.”
She raced around to the front yard, down to the street, and home.
I Am Not My Smell
The moon is a chalk rock, hanging in the sky in the black of the night and the blue of the day. It is there because it has room there; it is comfortable there. The moon is not its light, though some would say it is. The moon is a big round body with a purpose which I don’t understand but don’t need to understand.
I am a woman with a bad foot. My foot was crushed last month by a passing car on Ocean Front Boulevard. I didn’t get out of the way fast enough and it was run over and now my foot is dying. It is purple and fat and aches when I move it. I have washed it in the salty surf when no one else was around. I have pressed on it to pass the pus but it is still dying.
The boardwalk along the beach is where I live. I scour the rusted barrels in the sand in the blue of the day and curl up under the lip of the walkway in the black of the night. I have room here, but I am not comfortable. My swollen and pounding foot smells very bad. My body is covered with old sweat from my arm pits to my ankles and new sweat from each new day, but I am not my smell. Some think I am. I am a body with a purpose which I just now understand.
Last week I found two wonderful things. One was a brand new tee-shirt in the trash outside Surf Side Souvenirs. I clawed it out before the manager chased me away and threatened to call the police. It was tight but I ripped it up the sides and pulled it on over my sleeveless blouse. The other treasure was a dog. I named him Sunshine.
A dog has never been a treasure to me before. In fact, when I first found Sunshine, I thought he was ugly and gaunt. He growled at me and snapped, but I offered him some French fries I’d found in the dumpster behind Dairy Queen, and he calmed down. And then he sniffed at a small gash in my bad foot and began to lick. This amused him, or pacified him, I’m not sure which. His ears went up and his tail began to wag. It didn’t hurt me at all. I shut my eyes, sitting there behind a beach bench on the boardwalk, and let Sunshine lick my swollen, dying foot. I squeezed on the foot, letting it drain for him. Sunshine licked. I pretended I was having a massage from the Man I Love.