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First We Were IV
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To Joe, thanks for the universe.
1
By the time the police arrived, there were three of us left. Three originals. Three best friends. Architects of what was once a secret society.
The difference between leaders and initiates was evident. We designed it that way, dictated that initiates wore the white of sacrificial lambs and us bloody red. No confusion over who appeared to be in charge.
There was a chaotic minute under the star-choked sky. Volleying accusations and bodily threats. I tried to kick out of the arms of an officer because I still hadn’t had my fill of revenge. Never would I. And you know, the dagger tipped in blood didn’t exactly help our case for looking faultless.
They herded the initiates into a line, ordered them to keep their mouths shut. Still, those kids, those snakes, whispered stories and secrets in the way the dying confess, anticipating forgiveness. Good little boys and girls, eyes innocent saucers, except they’d terrorized a whole town.
Our dagger lay a little outside the ring of fire. There was the truth serum, a few muddy, crimson sips they’d dredge up from the bottle to test. And the idol on a pile of rocks, her smile calling out from on top of her burial mound. No sense would be made of her origins.
Police circled the meteorite, probing the scene, coming up short in front of us three, searching faces for clues. Accident or murder.
They would ask the wrong questions later on, after the ambulance left without its sirens wailing, when the three architects and our six recruits were in the police station.
There was lots of hand-wringing and Make me understand. Parents arrived. Our initiates had been shaking their fists and snarling at authority just an hour before. The rebellion had drained out of them and they buckled with relief at the sight of their moms and dads. I didn’t acknowledge mine. All the adults needed help understanding how the night happened.
“October happened because September did.”
An officer warned me to stop being snarky.
“I’m not,” I whispered, voice all cried out.
“Then answer,” he demanded.
“Because August. Because July. Because June. I can keep going if you need me to.”
That was the only answer they’d get from me. Afterward, I stopped talking. For a few weeks. I sat in my room, on the top of my desk, watching the Pacific battle the shore. I sketched the four of us. Together. Hardly needing to watch the progress of my pencil. There was something unnerving in our eyes when the pictures were done. A glimmer of foreshadow that I hadn’t noticed was present before. Had it been? My best friends. The loves of my life. Strangers. Reeling. Ferocious.
I held my tongue and the lesson sunk in.
No matter how much you see, there are bottomless seas you don’t.
What I am certain of is the heart of it.
First we were four.
Now we are three.
2
There is an ancient rock at the edge of Viv’s apple orchard, where the foothills bubble up, brittle gold grasses encroaching on the sky. The rock’s gray metallic face is smooth, except for pits and crevices on its north side. At the height and width of a house, it’s unmovable. Its top is as flat as a stage.
Graham, Viv, and I were eight, sucking on watermelon Blow Pops, our scabbed knees under our chins, Graham’s ankle in a cast, as we watched the scientists cut up from the road alongside the orchard in jeeps.
They were real-life versions of the scientists in khaki vests, baggy cargo pants, and hiking boots from the glossy pages of our National Geographic magazines. We crept around their tents and stole the wooden stakes used to cordon off the rock so Viv could play at stabbing Graham and me, the vampires, in our hearts. After a few days, a strawberry-blonde scientist with a face full of freckles caught Graham, who was surprisingly swift on crutches. She must have hoped that we’d quit vandalizing if we felt included, so she told us about the rock in the whispery tone adults use when they want to impress kids.
The rock was one of the largest meteoric fragments to hit North America. Someone dated it to have been there for at least 50,000 years, an age Freckles called recent in terms of meteorites. What baffled them was that there was no crater, no giant gash torn into the land from it shooting from space. The meteor appeared to have been placed there, gently set in the rambling foothills.
The rock itself wasn’t even the significant part, not then.
The drawings were.
The three of us had discovered the drawings—actually, Graham broke his ankle and then we discovered them. Graham, Viv, and I had been stretched out on the rock. That was back when we’d pretend it was a desert island and water ran to the horizons. We liked to act as though we were stuck on top with no choice but to stay until the sky dimmed. It was one of those afternoons drowning in sun; I was biting an apple, making shapes in the red skin with my teeth. I showed Viv a butterfly as a tiny green worm poked through the alpine-white meat of the fruit.
“Eat it,” Graham said.
“Worms can live inside your belly,” Viv cried. “Don’t do it.”
Graham sprung to his feet. “If you eat it, I’ll jump.” He pointed to the undulating expanse of grass. It was twelve feet, at least.
“Will not,” Viv countered, lips twitching with uncertainty.
“Will too. Just like when you thought I wouldn’t climb to the barn roof, or that Izzie couldn’t hold her breath for a minute underwater, or”—he began hopping in place—“that Izzie and I wouldn’t race through the Ghost Tunnel and we did, we did, we did.”
“On the count of three,” I said.
“One, two . . .” Graham paused, glancing over his shoulder where he was poised at the edge of the rock. I held the apple, worm-side to my mouth. Graham and I met eyes before he gave an exhilarated whoop and yelled, “Three!” He shot into the air, his eyes on mine until he disappeared. Graham didn’t believe in looking when he jumped.
The worm popped between my teeth as Graham shouted out in pain.
Viv and I found him clutching his knee to his chest, his lips grimacing, his eyes intent on a vague brownish-red design I would have mistaken for dirt smeared on the rock. Even back then, Graham noticed ancient and in-the-ground things.
The freckled scientist called it one of the oldest and most complete surviving figurative drawings done by ancient humans. The scene was of the space rock, surrounded by men and women kneeling. Above them, on the rock, there were four-legged animals of an unidentifiable species. Whatever they were, the animals either didn’t exist anymore or couldn’t be classified using the pictures. Some experts thought they could make out paws, others hooves; still more saw horns rather than ears. The geochemists and archeologists went digging.
They found eight birds of different species, their tiny skeletons fully accounted for. Each was buried on its back, wings splayed open to the sky. Long stripes of linen fabric were wrapped from one wing tip to the other, mummifying the remains.
We were there, this time on lawn chairs we’d dragged up to the string and stakes demarcating the excavation. Sweat streaked Freckles’s forehead as she blinked dirt away, her arm shaking as she uncovered the first bird in its burial shroud. The birds were buried at quarter segments around the rock, two in each grave. Eventually someo
ne observed that their wings were oriented pointing north, south, east, and west. Each tiny bone of the skeletons was marked. Scratched in a series of designs. Tests were done in laboratories and bone-dating specialists decided that the birds hadn’t been buried at the same time but at different points over hundreds of years.
Freckles and her team had plans for more excavating until Viv’s parents were fed up and ordered everyone to clear out. Ina and Scott Marlo didn’t want scientists mucking about their orchard during harvest. They wanted to make their own hard apple cider. The rock would just have to remain a mysterious space rock. Those four-legged animals would have to stay unidentified. The birds would be studied elsewhere, packed up and carried away.
For weeks it was all we talked about. At first it was the birds that captured my imagination. Birds had a little magic in them—they had wings and flew. Nightly at dinner I’d ask my parents about them. Why were they buried? How did they die? Who buried them? Nothing they said could appease my curiosity. I re-created the birds, wings spread, in my yogurt parfaits, on the beach, in pictures I snapped of Graham and Viv staged on the ground. Finally, when Dad found me doodling birds on his and mom’s architectural plans, they intervened. Mom ordered me a ready-made rock collection to try to encourage an interest in geology, but it was the telescope Dad set up on the veranda that hooked me enough to move on from the birds.
Viv’s parents furnished their backyard barn, wrapped a red ribbon around it, and gave it to Viv as a play fort, hoping to distract her from the meteorite. To draw our play in closer to home. But the mystery of the space rock kept us buzzing. How were there horned four-legged beasts that scientists didn’t know about? Who were the people pictured on the rock? Were they predators or prey?
Graham and I filled his wagon with library books—fantasy and science fiction paperbacks from the library’s rummage sale, archeology texts from its shelves, a few we stored under our beds about human sacrifice and ancient burial customs. We looked for answers in their pages. We pored over bad illustrations of Papua New Guinean cannibals. I made my mom print out every news article she could find about the comet probe Philae that had been launched a few years earlier and wouldn’t land on its comet for six more.
We searched for answers. But the threads we followed led us farther from the space rock. The ploy of the barn worked. It was better than a fort. We grew preoccupied with other play. Our universe returned to revolving around what it had before the drawings were discovered: us.
From the time I was four years old, my universe had been steadily expanding.
I started as one.
First day of preschool: I remember the odor of crayons, the grainy cracker crumbs in my pockets digging under my nails, and how much I wanted to talk to the other kids, all sparkly in their first-day bests, but I kept chewing my tongue because I had nothing good to say.
Snack time rolled around and the teacher handed out sweets. I was cross-legged and bouncing over cookies. We sat in a misshapen circle, and I watched the boy across from me take a cookie out of a bigger boy’s lap, smile at me with his mouth full of stolen chocolate chip cookies, chew, swallow, and then deny it emphatically when the victim tattled. Graham was halfway to the time-out corner when I piped up.
I had no idea that Graham was acting out because his dad had moved to Chicago. Graham was the most interesting kid in the circle and he was being sent away. I’m not proud of lying, although I’m also not sorry. Graham and I were awarded an extra cookie each; one for the wrongly accused and one for the honest witness. Our bond was instantaneous. I’d broken the rules for him; I’d saved him from the solitary horror of time-out.
I was one and then: Graham. We were two.
Viv came next. She lived down the street. I considered the orchard behind her house an enchanted forest and she was the enigmatic creature who ruled it. I’d spot her rocking on the porch swing with her mom. Dad would stop the wagon or call for me to slow on my bike. He and Ina knew each other from growing up in Seven Hills. Mom didn’t seem to know Ina, although eventually I realized there was another reason Mom ignored the Marlos. I couldn’t ignore Viv. She was a sliver of a figure, imposing because of how decorated she was: swallowed by voiles, feathers fanning her hair, her mom’s heels swimming on her feet, lipstick hearts on her cheeks. The brave survivor of a dress-up chest explosion.
First day of first grade, Viv wore a silk dress with a train that dragged behind her and carried a grown lady’s handbag. Kids circled Viv, sang little old woman at her. The next day they made fun of the way she stuttered words beginning with S—a problem she went to speech therapy for. As that got stale, kids said she wasn’t in speech but in resource, which was code for her having a learning disability. The whole thing spiraled when they called her retarded.
Graham and I found her crying at the sunlit reach of the tetherball courts. She was curled on her side, velvet cape sticking to her sweaty neck, cheek on the warm asphalt, mouth open as she sobbed.
Graham and I were in the middle of one long game of chicken. It was fun to see how deep we’d walk into the hills before turning and fleeing. How long we could stand the dark of Graham’s creaky, musty attic before the ghosts scratched our arms. Other kids were boring. Our minds sparked. Our hands danced. But Viv wasn’t boring. Like us, she was engaged in her own battle of will.
She kept wearing costumes and vintage women’s apparel even though she was picked on. She didn’t stop laughing in her raspy way even when kids imitated her meanly. The feathers and tassels were her armor.
Graham and I had been two. With Viv: three. We had a whole apple orchard as our kingdom. We didn’t need to fit in with the others. Three was plenty.
The business with the rock when were eight was a hiccup; an anomaly that the external world became a part of our adventures. It was a temporary stretch of our universe. But the universe snapped back, shrank to accommodate only us.
Until Harry’s family moved to Seven Hills when we were twelve.
Until the girl was found on the rock.
3
Graham was on his way with a watermelon to meet Viv and me at the meteorite. We had planned to hurl the melon from its top, for no reason other than wanting to throw what was sure to break. The summer months were spent fleeing boredom. Belly flopping from Viv’s diving board until our fronts were slapped red. Daring one another to eat the least ripe and sourest apples off the trees. Camping on the rock with my telescope. Acting out plays that Viv wrote while on the meteorite. Sled races down the steepest sand dunes.
Viv and I were running late. We’d been lounging on the back lawn, weaving daisy chain crowns and admiring our new, brightly colored flats that her grandmother had sent us from where she lived in India. We lost track of time. “Seventh graders have the same lunch period as eighth and we’ll get to eat right next to Luke McHale. We could sit in his circle. If he asks us. If he sees I have cupcakes to share,” she said, breezy and hopeful. Viv was looking forward to the start of school in a few weeks.
I didn’t have sunglasses on and I was weaving around the trees, squinting at the orchard set on fire by the silver tinsel that scared off birds. Halfway to the rock we heard the eerie, frantic squawks. We should have known by the way the smell punched us in the face that it would be bad. But there were often putrid scents in those hills covered with cow patties and snakeskins. I was preoccupied with Viv swearing Luke was the cutest boy in the eighth grade.
The apple tree nearest the rock was full of crows, their sleek coal bodies hunched in between the glittering holographic tape. They reminded me of this photo of baboons on the plateau of a hill in Ethiopia. Their broad, hairy backs were a wall blocking out whatever they surrounded. I just knew they probably did something awful—violent—once the photographer lowered his lens. It was what the photo didn’t show that made me swallow twice. I had wondered if animals could be wicked or bored.
“Wait for Graham,” Viv said, catching my wrist, trying to keep me next to her. She was wearing one of her lon
g bohemian skirts and the gold, pink, and blue of her slippers poked out from its drape.
“Can’t. I’m too curious,” I told her, twirling her under my arm, slipping my hand from hers while her skirt caught air. I scaled my way up the rock’s face. At the top, the stench was crawling up my nostrils, making my eyes swell with water. A stiff, hot wind in my face intensified it.
I blinked three times before I believed the body was there.
“What is it?” Viv called. I glanced down at her. The flower crown looked like snowflakes in her chestnut waves.
“Stay there and call Graham,” I said. She cocked a hand on her popped hip. Waved her brand-new cell phone at me. All mock attitude. “Please, Vivy.”
I didn’t tell Viv to call 9-1-1. I was twelve. My brain didn’t have a setting for an emergency too big for Graham. Not then. Not at first.
Viv called him. “You’re late. Why walking? Couldn’t you strap the melon to your scooter?” Pause. “Weirdness on the rock.”
From the angle and the distance, I made out the body, tatter of clothing, naked skin. A big, shaggy vulture hunched over it. I inched closer. Long brown hair. Arms open.
My breath grew shallow.
A bruise as livid as her purple bra ran from her chest to the waistband of her buttoned jean shorts. A second bruise like a choker around her neck. A girl. On her back. And those arms, they were thrown open as if she were midflight. The girl’s T-shirt had been slashed down her sternum, its halves peeled back to expose her bruised rib cage and tucked under her arms as if she had wings. There were rocks, too, at the bottom of the wings like feathers. They pinned the fabric in place.
Wings. Like those of the vulture worrying her bellybutton into a larger hole with its beak. A cloud tapered across the sky with the look of a white fissure in the blue. The sky was cracking. It would fall soon.
The vulture looked reluctantly away from its meal, a patch of soft tissue hanging out of its hooked beak. There were holes in her thighs, too, just under the hem of her cutoffs. Channels cut into the muscles; the white gleam of bone.