The anger in his voice is dark and surprising. “You’re always going, that’s the point.”
She doesn’t answer, just lies silent beside him and imagines one long running leap out the window, a flight up the street, into the forest, through the trees. Up the long slope of the mountain, the air thin in her lungs. She steps out of her skin and deep into its dirt, and then she is no more.
The girls grow bigger and more restless by the day. She walks to the strip mall to retrieve her ration of oatmeal, she cooks eggs given to them by Joseph over their backyard fire. Tasha sends people out to hunt. B joins with some of the other men—Kevin and Alan, and Annie goes too. They take hunting rifles into the forest, bring back what they can. A deer they butcher in the old town square, squirrels they skin and roast over backyard fires.
The Council, people have begun to call Tasha and the rest. The Council will know what to do.
Heather hardly pays attention. She changes the girls and throws the dirty diapers into the ravines that line some trails along her mountain walks. She sets buckets out to collect water whenever it rains and boils it in their backyard firepit to make sure it’s safe to drink. She walks the girls beneath the sky. She whispers his name until her throat hurts.
He does not come for her.
She is walking by the greenhouse when nausea creeps up and then explodes, a heavy crampish feeling that does not go away. Her breasts hurt. Her whole body feels swollen.
She is so tired. She stops and lets the girls down on the forest floor and smiles, with effort, as they reach for her.
She’s known for a while what’s been happening to her—the subtle but unmistakable changes in her body, the unrelenting fatigue. You’re starving, she told herself. That’s all it is. You’re starving, you’re unwell. You should go see Tasha, and see if she can give you something for despair.
But what kind of medication is there for this level of sadness? So one day passed and then another, and she did not go to Tasha, she did not go to Annie, and now she is here, in front of the greenhouse, the girls laid out on the ground in front of her as another life blooms inside her.
She sobs aloud, then catches her breath. Colours swim—bright-red flowers that cover the greenhouse, dark, husky berries that sway up from the ground. She leans her forehead against the cool glass of the greenhouse and closes her eyes, reminded of her father. Soon the snow will come in earnest and bury them all.
She doesn’t want to bring another child into this mess. She doesn’t want to die, frozen and starving.
She picks some berries and brings them to her mouth. Belladonna. Belladonna, oleander, poison oak in the shade beyond the greenhouse. Her father had loved poisonous plants the best.
The babies coo; she barely hears them. The berries won’t kill her, just make her sick, and maybe that will do the rest. Her father was right, all those years ago. She isn’t strong enough. She never was. The world smells of amaryllis and lilies and orchids and the jacaranda tree and the sweetness of the berries in her hand and then something else. A sudden dark shadow comes toward her, rippling the leaves. A shape that smells of mountain and snow and crystalline air but also of sunlight and flowers, of animal and darkness.
“You,” she says, as he comes out from the trees. “It’s you.”
After he brought the knapsack, the centaur returned to her night after night. She snuck out after her mother was asleep. Out the back door and into the trees. If her mother suspected anything, she didn’t ask. Or she didn’t want to know.
Instead of flowers, Estajfan brought her stories. They walked through the silent fields and the cicadas stopped to listen. The crickets went still, like they knew him.
He told her about the time that he and his brother—Petrolio, the name like a flower on the tongue—ran down the mountain so fast they almost fell. The rage that their father had been in when they’d returned—how he’d yelled at them, how he’d wept. How he’d been so sure they’d been killed.
Don’t go down the mountain, his father had said, and they raced each other anyway.
Estajfan told her about the other centaurs—how they’d grown from his father’s bones, how they’d pulled themselves out of the earth. They had no names, he said, because they didn’t need any. He told her fairy tales she hadn’t heard before—stories about octopuses who guard treasure in the deeps, mountain deer who kidnap and raise a human child. Fairies who lived in the salt mines beneath the mountains, long ago, who coated themselves in salt crystals before mating. That one sounded familiar—an old wives’ tale her father once told her, about elders who threw salt across a doorway to ask good things into a woman’s life.
“Stories are never just stories,” her father had said. “There’s always a kernel of truth hidden deep within the words.”
In turn, she told Estajfan about walking late at night. About the twelve dancing princesses, the goose girl, the queen. She talked through the silence that surrounded her, her words like a knife, cutting a web that had grown thick and hard.
She entered ninth grade with no friends except the one she met late at night. She read fairy tales at lunch and drew dragons in her notebook. Dragons, Estajfan told her, had lived on the mountain long ago. They’d disappeared before the horses were there.
“Were they dinosaurs?” she asked him.
“I’m not sure,” he said. He knew many things and yet often seemed like a child—fascinated with mundane human objects like combination locks, a cafeteria tray heaped with food, the money humans passed to one another.
She brought him things for his collection—picture frames, a baseball glove. Her first job was at a bookstore and instead of saving her wages for college she bought paint and pencil crayons and thick sheets of creamy paper and passed them to him in the dark. “So you can draw, if you want to.”
“Draw?” he said.
She showed him what she meant—spreading the paper on the ground, the moon just strong enough to show the pencil lines. Four legs, two arms, a tangle of hair in dreads. He smiled when she finished.
“Is that me?” he said.
She was suddenly too shy to say yes, so she just shrugged. “I’m guessing you all look the same,” she said, and he laughed.
“Mostly we do.” He took the pencils, the paper, and the drawing with him up the mountain.
The years went by. She graduated high school and decided not to go to college after all, telling herself that she didn’t want to leave her mother alone. It was mostly true. She got a full-time job at the bookstore, and started to send out her illustrations. Bears with long teeth. Unicorns and strange birds. Dark forests with shadowed beasts among the trees. Her illustrations began to be published. She illustrated a picture book, and then a volume of fables. She stopped working at the bookstore, and moved into her own apartment. She walked the trails up to the mountain in the dusk to meet Estajfan. Every birthday he brought her flowers, which bloomed in her windows for months. Fifteen years went by like that.
She drew centaurs, over and over. She drew her father falling, his face rigid with terror. Estajfan’s fingers just missing his. Her father’s broken, mangled body somewhere down far below. No one saw those.
She drew herself, a wide-eyed twelve-year-old, one leg shorter than the other, her feet twisted and bent. Her mouth open in a silent scream.
She drew herself now. Her father’s eyes, her father’s smile. The uneven legs and lopsided shoulders that were entirely her own.
Once upon a time there was a father and daughter who went up a mountain together, and only one person came down.