I clenched my hands, digging my fingernails into my palms, and asked before I could change my mind, "Where did you go? Where have you been all this time?"
Daniel sighed and looked up at the tall statue next to him. This angel was a young man--early twenties, maybe--who was accompanied by a stone dog that sat at attention at his side. The dog was tall and slender like the angel, its triangular ears stretched to the man's elbow. It had a long snout, and its bushy coat and tail seemed to get lost in the intricately carved folds of the angel's robes.
"I went back east. Down south. Out west. Pretty much every other directional cliche you can think of." Daniel crouched down and studied the dog. "I met him when I was back East. He gave me this." He brushed his black stone necklace with his fingertips. "He said it would keep me safe."
"The dog or the angel?" I goaded. T should have known better than to think Daniel would give a straight answer to my question regarding his whereabouts.
Daniel swept his shaggy hair out of his eyes. "I met the man this statue was carved for. Gabriel. T learned a lot from him. He talked about Mrs. Bordeaux and the things she did for other people. He was the one who made me want to come back here. To be close to this place again ... and other things." Daniel stood and sucked in a deep drag of foggy air. "Coming here always gave me such a high."
"You mean you used to come here to get high," I said, hazarding a guess.
"Well, yeah." Daniel laughed and sat on a stone bench.
I instinctively took a step farther away from him.
"But T don't do that anymore." He tapped his fingers on his legs. "I've been clean for a long time."
"That's good." I dropped my hands to my sides and tried to look casual and unshaken by his admission. I knew that he was no saint. I knew that his life had gone to a dark place long before he'd disappeared. I'd seen him only three times in the six months after he moved away to Oak Park with his mother--the six months that led up to his vanishing altogether. The last of those three times was when the Oak Park public high school called Dad because Daniel had been expelled for fighting. They couldn't reach his mother, so Dad and I had to escort him home. But in some ways it was like thinking of my own brother doing drugs or something worse.
I glanced at the tall statue of Gabriel the Angel looking down on us. His carved eyes seemed to rest on the crown of Daniel's head. That thread of curiosity pulled me to the seat next to him on the bench. "Do you believe in angels? Real ones?"
He shrugged. "I don't think they have feathery wings or anything like that. I think they're people who do good things even if they get nothing out of it. People like your father ... and you."
I looked up into his glinting eyes. Daniel reached out his hand like he wanted to brush my cheek--little tingles sparked under my skin--but he pulled his hand back and coughed.
"You're all crazy, if you ask me," he said.
"Crazy?" My cheeks flamed even hotter.
"I don't know how you all do it," he said. "Like Maryanne Duke. She had nothing and she still tried to help people like me. I think she was an angel."
"Is that why you came to the funeral? For Maryanne?" And not for me?
"I used to stay with Maryanne when things got messy between my parents. If I wasn't at your house, I was with her. She was always there for me when others weren't."
Daniel wiped at his nose with the back of his hand. His fingernails were blackened with what looked like marker ink. "I just felt like I should pay my last respects..."
"I guess I forgot. Maryanne took care of a lot of people."
"Yeah, I know. I'm not special or anything."
"No. That's not what I meant... I'm just sorry I didn't remember." I put my hand on his shoulder. He shrank away, and I could barely feel the firmness of his body under the fabric of his coat. "Things were really hard for you. I'm sure Maryanne made you feel--"
"Loved?"
"I guess. Loved, or at least normal."
Daniel shook his head. "I felt close to loved sometimes. Like when Maryanne read me stories at night, or when I'd sit around the table with your family. There's nothing like a Divine family dinner to make you feel like someone might care about you. But I never felt normal. Somehow, I always knew I didn't ..."
"Belong?" For some reason I could understand.
"I never did belong, did I?" Daniel reached up and wrapped his long fingers around my wrist. He moved like he was going to cast my hand away, but then he hesitated and turned my hand over, cradling it in both of his. "But I can't tell you how many times over the last few years I wished I could be eating at that table with your family. Like I could take back everything I did, change things so I could be a part of it again. But that's impossible, isn't it?" He traced his warm fingers up the heart line in my open palm, and slipped his fingers in between mine.
It may have been the glimmering from the spotlights or the swirling of the fog, but for a moment he looked like the old Daniel, the one with white-blond hair and mischievous but innocent eyes--like the years had melted away and the darkness had drained out of him. And in that moment, something--an energy--passed between us. Like the thread that had drawn me to him was now a live wire, a lifeline, that bound us together, and I needed to pull him to safety.
"We're having a big Thanksgiving dinner tomorrow," I blurted out. "You should come. I want you to."
Daniel blinked. "You're freezing," he said. "We should go inside somewhere."
Daniel stood up, still holding my hand, and led me down the gravel lane. I didn't know when he was going to let go of my hand--and I didn't want him to. And I held on because I knew he needed me.
He finally let go as he stepped off the path and into a patch of decaying plants. "The fence isn't as high if we go this way," he said.
I hesitated for a moment on the edge of the path, watching him slip away into the mist. I stepped off the gravel walkway and followed him through the depths of the garden. When we made it to the iron fence, I let him help me over, his hands skimming my waist and legs as I climbed. We walked side by side as we found our way back to the motorcycle. Our fingers brushed once, and I longed for him to take my hand in his again. I climbed on the back of the motorcycle and took in a deep breath of Daniel's earthy scent as the bike shot into the city night.
A FEW MINUTES LATER
The motorcycle lurched to a stop in front of Daniel's building. I slammed into his back and almost flew right off into the gutter.
Daniel gripped my thigh and steadied me. "Sorry about that," he mumbled, and let his hand linger for a moment.
Daniel got off the bike, and I followed. He rested his arm on my shoulder and steered me up the sidewalk and through the door less entry of the apartment building. My heart thumped so hard as we went up the stairs I feared that Daniel might hear it. The thumping grew louder and heavier as we climbed, and I realized there was music coming from behind a door on the third landing. Daniel put his key in his pocket and tentatively pushed open his door. Sound engulfed us. Gyrating dancers packed the front room, and Zed--looking much more lively than he had before--sang (i.e., screamed) into a microphone while a few other guys banged on musical instruments with reckless abandon.