Her face quivering with fury, she slammed a hammer against the glass again and again.
“Aunt Iris!”
With her bare fingers, she pulled at a shard of silver that remained in the corner of the frame, trying to free it. I saw a trickle of blood. She didn’t flinch.
“Aunt Iris, stop!”
She swung the hammer at the frame’s backing, though only the corner sliver was left.
“Stop!”
A large fragment of the mirror lay on the table. Seeing it, she raised her hammer and brought it down swiftly. Shards exploded, jagged pieces of glass flying everywhere.
I stepped back into the dining room. Part of me wanted to run; the other part was afraid to leave my aunt alone. I picked up a candlestick — as if a sane person clutching a candlestick would be a match against an insane one wielding a hammer! Entering the hall again, I found her banging a small piece of glass on the corner of the table, hammering it until the fragments were glitter.
“Stop it!” I screamed at her. “Stop it now!”
She froze. Her eyes traveled up my right arm, and she shrank from me. “Put it down,” she said, staring at the candlestick.
“After you put down your hammer,” I replied.
She licked her lips. She began to whimper: “Don’t do it.
Please don’t do it.” She dropped the hammer and ran upstairs.
I set down the candlestick, surprised, and then I remembered: When my mother was killed, two candlesticks were missing, and they never found the murder weapon. My hands shook. I had to sit on the steps for a few minutes.
Finally, I rose to sweep the hall. When the glass was cleaned up, I climbed the stairs to check on my aunt.
She had left her door open and lay motionless on her bed. With the press of trees outside her window and the shades pulled, it was nearly night in her room. I tiptoed toward her.
“Who’s there?”
I took a half step back. “Anna. Just Anna. How are you feeling, Aunt Iris?”
She didn’t reply. Her hands were folded and resting on her stomach. A loosely rolled towel covered her eyes.
“Do you have a headache?” I asked.
Still, she didn’t answer.
“What can I do to help?”
“Make them stop,” she said. “Make them stop talking.”
“They — who?”
“They’re talking their fool heads off.”
“You mean the voices?”
“They won’t leave me alone.”
I moved closer. “What are they saying?”
She didn’t reply.
“Aunt Iris, what are the voices saying?”
“I can’t tell you.”
She lay as still as death.
“Why did you break the mirror?” I asked.
“They were making faces at me.”
“You mean the voices — they have faces?”
She shuddered. “Every time I looked in the mirror, someone was making a dreadful face at me.”
What face could she have seen except her own? I thought. But perhaps a mirror was like a psychic’s glass, a crystal ball. Perhaps she could see ghosts of the past in it.
“Did you see someone — in the mirror — who doesn’t like you?”
She didn’t reply.
“Maybe you saw Uncle Will. Were you and Uncle Will arguing again?”
She remained silent. I felt as if all the answers I wanted were locked inside her head, and I couldn’t find the question to open the vault.
“I’m tired,” she said. “I want to be alone.”
“All right. Get some rest. I’ll be downstairs.”
I checked the other rooms for broken objects, then returned to the first floor and checked the living room. Given the number of candlesticks, heavy lamps, and knives in the house, I felt silly locking the hammer in the trunk of my car, but I would have felt even sillier if I had left it out and she used it again. Then I headed for the den, hoping that Aunt Iris would sleep for a while and give me time to study my mother’s notebook.
I found it where I had left it, behind a row of books, and carefully unfolded the old newspaper it was wrapped in. The journal’s entries started in January of the year my mother died. While other clients were listed only once a week or once a month, appointments for the initials A.S. appeared twice a week or more. About half of the entries, which I assumed were for Audrey Sanchez, had been marked
“Paid.”
I found an appointment for A.S. two days before Mick Sanchez’s accident. An appointment that had been set for the day after the accident was scratched out. Another appointment, four days after, was also crossed out. The final listing I found for A.S. was exactly one week after Mick Sanchez’s death. It was checked off, as were other appointments that Audrey appeared to have kept. I wondered if there had been a big blowup that day.
At some point I needed to examine the book line by line, but I was impatient to get to the poem. I carried them both to Uncle Will’s desk, sat down, and unfolded the paper to read.
The seed cracks open, the green sprout of a plant emergesa green snake.
The snake slides past a rabbit, glides past a cat.
Winding itself around flowersa garden shaped like a heartthe snake turns to me.
It wears a mask.
Flowers wilt.
I had remembered correctly the second half of the poem.
The sentence structure was inverted, but “snake” was the subject — it was the snake winding itself around flowers, winding itself around a garden shaped like a heart. I imagined a heart of flowers, something like a picture on a Valentine’s Day card, being wrapped and squeezed by a snake till all the flowers wilted. But what was this “mask” thing all about? Perhaps the snake was in disguise — or rather, the snake itself was some kind of disguise. This much I understood: Whatever was killing the heart of flowers, it was not what it appeared to be.
I backed up in the poem. The snake had come out of a seed. I imagined it looking like a green sprout from a germinating seed, but growing into a snake. So. . so what appeared to be good was really bad. What appeared to be as harmless as an emerging flower was really an evil snake.
I moved on to the other animals. Why had my mother bothered to include them? I stared at them, puzzled, then tried to think about the images the way an English teacher would. A rabbit was a symbol of fertility, as in the phrase
“breeding like rabbits.” It was a symbol of spring, as in the Easter Bunny. Rabbits were shy, gentle, innocent-looking creatures. Cats, on the other hand, were connected with witches and often perceived as sneaky predators in the natural world. Symbolically, they were not innocent. So what did this mean? A rabbit and a cat — innocence and sneakiness, prey and predator“ What are you reading?”
I jumped at the sound of Aunt Iris’s voice. She was standing a few feet from me on the other side of the desk, having entered the room as quietly as a cat.
“Joanna, what are you doing?”
So I was my mother again. “Checking through my appointment book,” I replied.
She stepped closer to the desk, eyed the notebook, then picked up the sheet of paper resting on it. “What is this?”
“A poem.”
She read it, her face tense with concentration. Then her eyes lifted slowly above the edge of the paper, locking on mine. “You’re working,” she said accusingly. “This is a reading.”
A reading — as in psychic reading, I thought. Maybe when a psychic saw images — in a crystal ball or anywhere elsethey weren’t necessarily literal images. They weren’t photographic glimpses, but symbols, like symbols on Tarot cards, like symbols in a poem. She had to interpret what she was seeing, had to read into them the way you read into a poem. Which is what my mother was doing, jotting down and mulling over images she had accessed psychically, trying to understand Mick’s death and how she had missed foreseeing it.