the ceiling, and she wondered why sheâd never told Michel that sheâd wished he was her grandfather. Sheâd stitched the sequins on his vest, squared the edges on his ties, and watered his scotch whenever she could, because a wrong fall might kill him.
The sequins ruined her fingers. Thimbles might have saved her, but sheâd hadnât known about them when sheâd started, and by the time she did, the damage was done. Sheâd stabbed herself enough that her left hand barely had feeling in the fingertips, making touch a negotiation of where she ended and everyone else began.
âPaulina?â
Daniel was home, which meant it was 5:45. Sheâd been in bed for an hour and the blindness would soon dissolve, but the pain would sharpen, and within two hours sheâd be in the bathroom, throwing up. Enola hadnât been crying the full hour. That was good, better than last time. It had been a nice notion to call her Enola, reclaiming a tarnished name with something as hopeful as a baby girl. But in the years after Simonâs birth she and Daniel had forgotten that babies could be like bombs.
Her name, again. She didnât answer. Her voice rattling around inside her head would only make the pain open. As harsh as outside noises were, the ones that came from inside were worse.
Daniel smelled like ride grease, though machine oil all smelled the same. Heavy, sour, and sharp. She knew he understood why she loved the smell of grease.
âDid you take your pills?â
âNo.â
âPaulina.â
âFine. Get them.â
Pills were a crapshoot, a wish more than anything, and not as pleasant as a large cup of coffee with two shots of whiskey, a trick Michel had taught her at thirteen, when the headaches first started, after sheâd spent night shows in the mermaid tank, living on five breaths an hour. She swallowed the pills and waited for her stomach to roll.
In an hour and forty-five minutes, her cheek was pressed to the bathroom tiles. She squinted and saw Simon peering around the door. Big-eyed, snotty-nosed. Red-stained Kool-Aid mouth. He needed a haircut. Beautiful.
âMom?â
âJust napping.â She smiled and closed her eyes.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
For days after a headache, her sleep was erratic. In the dark morning hours, the ritual of paper against paper was calming, even if she couldnât always feel the edges of the cards. Shuffling, cutting, was as automatic as braiding her hair, tying her shoes, or wiping a smudge away with spit and a thumb. She asked questions. Michel had taught her that all cards came with questions, whether reading tarot, playing poker, or doing magic.
Mom, I need to talk to you.
Queen of Cups.
Mom, I need to talk to you.
Queen of Swords.
Mom, how do you get away from water?
Ace of Cups and the rolling water.
âMom?â her little boy said. Always watching, that one. Like his father, like the water right before a good storm rolled in. How was it possible to want to stay and leave somewhere so badly?
âWhatâs wrong, darling?â
âCanât sleep.â There was too much spit in the S. Heâd grow out of it eventually; it wasnât worth real concern, but silly things like that pierced her. Had he no faults, she would miss the soft worries she had over all his imperfections. The joy of children was the worry, the constant reminder that a piece of you was running loose in the world.
âCome here,â she said. Simon folded into her, a missing rib come home.
âWhat are you doing?â he asked, face pressed into her side.
âJust talking to myself,â she said. She scratched his head lightly with her right hand, feeling each hair in a way that her left hand wouldnât allow.
âWhy?â
âBecause Iâm the best listener.â
âTell me a story,â he said.
âDad read two whole books to you at bedtime.â
âYeah. But your
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