fireflies

I was eight the first time I saw a ghost. At least that’s the first one I knew I saw. Seventeen percent of the population claims to have seen a ghost. The rest have had hundreds of encounters and seen thousands of ghosts. They just don’t know it. I didn’t either, not to the full extent, anyway.

Not until I died.

People think old and empty buildings are the most haunted places. Abandoned prisons or asylums. Ancient churches and bone yards. No. Ghosts want to be near the living. Hell, half of them don’t even know they’re dead. You know where it’s busiest? Hospital nurseries.

New, fresh, young, energetic life is the flame that draws these old tattered moths in the most. Well before their eyes are strong enough to see their own parents, babies can see them. Clearly. Their minds are most open and they are easiest to take over.

Reincarnation isn’t what you think it is. Otherwise, where did all the souls come from before there were more dead people than alive? No. What you think of as reincarnation is a possession. A hostile takeover, if you will.

Don’t worry. As sharp as their preternatural perceptions are, baby minds are still mush. They don’t feel a thing.

That’s where the trouble comes into paradise for those spirits most willing to take this leap. If you put your handprint in cement, before it has started to cure and stand up, the impression won’t hold. The loose, wet grit will weep back up to level and you’re left with the faintest outline. A ghost of a ghost.

There’s enough of their basic framework left. This can leave behind some of the stronger traits, some flashes of memory. Deja vu? Some sense of… knowing things before you should know them? If you’ve felt that, you know what I mean and now you know what it is.

The strongest of spirits can survive almost intact. That can be maddening. Trapped in that soft and fragile vessel. No control over your limbs; not able to articulate the adult thoughts in your now infant brain. It’s like sleep paralysis. You struggle to move your body, you try to scream yourself awake.

Toddlers are a better host. Or when your six year old daughter comes up and tells you she likes you better than her last parents? That is no longer your six year old. I mean, she’s in there, but she’s just along for the ride now. The phrase “old soul” is apt.

I’m what you call a drifter. I’m not interested in going for another corporeal roller coaster ride. I observe and report. I was one of the lucky ones, because I had pierced the veil early on in my natural life. I don’t know how many previous lives are rolled up into what I conceive of as me, but I do know I don’t want back in.

And I know there’s one spirit who didn’t make it inside me.

###

“Who are you?” I could make out the darker shadow within the shadows of my room. In the corner, the shape of a man, fading in and out of the blackness. “I know you can hear me.”

“You can see me?” I felt that more than I heard it.

“Kind of, it’s dark in here.” And with that, he turned his inner light on, no longer the shape of a man, more a cloud of tiny lightning bugs. They swarmed after me, I could feel the static energy all around my body. A thousand electric ants crawled my skin. I thought of the mini Tesla Coil at the museum that makes your hair stand straight up for the souvenir photo. The ants tunneled in, a large cluster of them tried to squeeze into my eyes, I shut them tight and screamed. 

My whole body said “No!” and the bugs were gone. He was gone. But not for long. His name is Walter. He tried for a few years to groom me before giving up and becoming my de facto mentor. 

Then my best friend and then my murderer and then my victim.

###

In his last life, Walter had risen to some prominence. Having rolled in a dozen or so souls along the way, he could now traverse the veil at will. He could move and interact with objects in the corporeal. He could communicate easily with those who had the right kinds of eyes, which were mostly kids.

By the time we are teenagers, we have learned to close all that off. The best, but hardest target is the pre-teen. A mind that is open enough to mold, yet formed enough to hold the whole of Walter without dilution. We are told—as I was told one night that I woke up screaming because Walter had tried to penetrate me again—that it was a dream. Ghosts don’t exist, our own minds are built to deceive; our own eyes play tricks.

The majority of people live that way, and when they have an encounter, or they see through the veil, they deny it. 

Just the lighting, just a reflection, just the wind, just a shadow.

###

My best friend, Eric, slept over often. His parents sucked, so his home life sucked. The first time he saw Walter, I told him it was just a shadow. I told him to lay back and close his eyes and open his mind. I held a pillow over his face so he couldn’t scream as Walter entered him and took him over from the inside out.

Eric’s parents never noticed. For a while, Eric remained mostly Eric.

For about a year, my two best friends were together with me in the corporeal, as Walter ate away the rest of Eric. Once inside, Walter was too strong to resist; Eric never wanted to be here in the first place, so he didn’t fight it. He was a fresh soul and arrived confused and angry and depressed by default.

New souls often do.

Being thrust naked and afraid into a world this shitty is not something someone would ask for. But having gone through it, they often miss it and are willing to go back. They will try and try to navigate it, life after life. Addicted to living. 

Eric was not one of those.

###

I wasn’t old enough to vote or even drive when Walter killed me. Shoved me off the trestle and told everyone I fell. I made the decision not to come back on the twelve story drop down to the rocks of the dry river bed. As I left that body, Walter tried to grab me and pull me in, but I was stronger in that way than Eric was.

Walter is still among you, but when he looks at you, he sees me. I appear before him, like a cataract, and he can never see what he wants to see. I am drawn to him when he experiences the most joy, and I force myself into his vision. The detached retina of his past. The gnat that buzzes inside his ear. While in this form, he cannot traverse the veil, he cannot move objects with his mind, he cannot move to another body. He can only see what most of you cannot.

He’s tried to end it. 

I knock the pills into the sink. I move the barrel of the gun. I snap the beam he has hung the noose from. Of course, I let him kick and flail. His eyes bulge, the veins in his face throb, the smaller vessels burst. He once tried to jump off the very trestle he threw me from and I let him fall, screaming and shitting himself for eleven of the twelve stories and broke his fall at the last second.

I haunt him. I hunt him. He will live a long and unhappy life.

In the end, when he is too feeble to fight it, I will enter him and I will subsume him. The only thing more frail than an infant is an old man waiting to die. Before he leaves that body, while he is still trapped in that weak and leaky rowboat, I will take his power. I will keep his lightning bugs in a jar, deep inside me, until all of their lights go out.

ten little fingers, ten little toes

The newborn would be dead, soon. Jake stood outside the glass, watching his son slowly dying under a heat lamp. Isolated, as if contagious. His wife, Tish, slumped in her wheelchair,facing slightly away. The prognosis was clear; Jake wheeled Tish back to her room. The nurses brought the infant in and left them to it. They took turns holding him. The baby died in her arms. He looked like one of those super-realistic dolls, but with a little weight to him. He was soft. Limp. Cold.

This time was supposed to be different. This time they made it through to viability. They waited a little longer to be sure, but then they announced the pregnancy, had a baby shower, made up the nursery.

Still, it happened. Again.

There was no sign anything had gone awry until Tish’s cervix shortened and dilated. Dr. William Warren, the OB/GYN for the most recent pregnancies, ordered an emergent cerclage. From that point, Tish was on bed rest and monitored. Dr. Warren had considered this ultimate outcome—twenty weeks in, after an ultrasound. Even then, he wasn’t sure. He was in no hurry to deliver more bad news to a couple he had already seen through the past three of their eight failed attempts to carry a child to term. And he wasn’t going to add stress to the pregnancy with an MRI. It was too late to terminate, not that they would have.

Once the baby was born, still premature despite the measures to bind Tish’s cervix, he followed up on his hunch. Even after a perfect APGAR score of 10 at 1, 5 and 10 minutes, Warren ordered a transillumination. Hydranencephaly. Confirmed.

The grief counselor told them they were lucky. That the baby was lucky. He didn’t livelong enough to suffer. Blind and deaf and completely devoid of consciousness. Living in only the strictest sense of the term; running on the brain stem’s autopilot. Breathing, heart beating, swallowing, reflexes. A quality of life below “Miracle Mike, the Headless Chicken.”

This, without even considering all the other side effects and complications. The palsy, the seizures, the emotional and mental toll it would take on the parents. Loving someone who would never know they even existed, let alone love them back. He was born premature enough that his odds of surviving very long were already low. He lived long enough for them to hold him. For him to grab his father’s finger and squeeze. Long enough for the ink to dry on his birth certificate before they had to fill out the death certificate. Long enough to say goodbye, but not long enough for all that other bad stuff. The staff gave them a newborn photo and footprints pressed in ink with a lock of hair taped to the corner.

Not long enough to suffer. Just long enough that there would be an obituary and a funeral. How lucky.

They named him Evan. He lived 32 hours. They buried him in the family plot after a small service of close family and friends.

So lucky.

#

Patricia Marx and Jacob, her husband of ten years, considered themselves distinctly unlucky. Hapless if not hopeless. Tish and Jake had an otherwise idyllic life. She had family money; he had a six-figure income. They had both attended and thrived at Yale, where they met in their Junior Year. They stayed together through grad school and the years after. On the cusp of thirty, as a matter of course, they married. By most any measure, their lives had been perfect. They lacked for one thing. Kids. That’s where their winning streak ended.

For nine of those ten years, they had both been in fertility treatment. From traditional to trial. Nothing biological was wrong with either one of them. He was potent, she was fertile. One after another, rare and improbable complications and conditions emerged. They had six failures in six years. They had grown accustomed to keeping news of the pregnancies between them. The seventh had gone twenty weeks. Far enough along to move from“miscarriage” to “stillborn.” Progress.

There was a lot of tension in the first few years. It strained their marriage. They turned from fighting each other to fighting the problem. Instead of cleaving them apart, it cleaved them together. Long after most couples would have chosen a surrogate or adoption, or given up, they had persisted. The battle became a habit and that habit became an addiction.

By the time they were pregnant with Evan, they were a fertile fighting force. Jake joked that he could smell ovulation in the air, like some primal primate. The reality was they had become a baby making machine. Their home was a command center. If the blocked out calendar and whiteboard weren’t enough, there were apps. A rigid regimen. They didn’t need red wine and music to get in the mood. They just needed their phones to ding and trigger a passionless Pavlovian coupling. Lacking foreplay, driven by shared and singular purpose.

When they got pregnant with Evan, they switched lanes from preconception to prenatal. When they hit the six-month mark, they were ready to share the news. Tish was always thin framed and kept herself fit and would not be able to hide the bump any longer.

This time, they had thought, would be different.

#

As with any addict, they couldn’t break the cycle. Within two weeks of Evan’s death, they were back at The Institute. Well beyond even deciding to try again, this was routine. Their co-dependent compulsion. Once Tish could drag herself out of bed and face the sun, they were in the car. Was there anything they could have done different or better? Were they both still fertile? When should they start trying again to conceive?

This was one of several dozen facilities in the franchise. The Gestasia Institute for Fertility and Reproduction. The largest of its kind. Full-spectrum services. From simple prenatal care to in vitro fertilization; from surrogacy to adoption. This was a full-on, for-profit operation, and from a fiscal point of view the Marxes were good business.

Even so, Dr. Sharon Rivvers, their newly assigned REI, advised them to stop. Even though science was on their side. Even though, statistically at least, each prior tragedy made them less and less likely to suffer future tragedy. For their own mental health and well being, for the sake of their marriage, it was time to consider other options. Hell, even Dr. Warren had given up and referred them to Rivvers. He was retiring and the running joke in the commissary was that the Marxes had broken him. What Rivvers knew from the case notes, whether it was openly acknowledged or not, was that this was their marriage. There were no other options for them. She sighed and slid a folder over to the Marxes.

“I’d wait twelve to sixteen weeks.”

The Marxes had a stack of these, they’d been with it long enough for a corporate merger
and a logo change. They didn’t bother opening it for almost two weeks.

#

“What’s this? Did you make an appointment?” Tish held the note out to Jake.

Sundays after 7PM. South entrance, #2791.

Scrawled on yellow sticky note, stuck inside the folder. That’s all. Less of an appointment than an open invitation.

Today is Sunday, she thought. She hadn’t even considered opening the file; she wouldn’t have opened it today if the note hadn’t fallen loose and slipped out. It was all the usual brochures and helpful tips. Blank calendar pages for tracking her cycle and entering her temperature and half a dozen other things she had either memorized or automated. Nothing she needed or was ready to even see. And this. Jake took the note.

“Nope. Someone probably made themselves a note and it got in here by mis-” but her coat was already on.

“It’s after seven, now.”

#

They pulled up to the complex. It was very different at night and on the weekends. There were a few cars in the lot. Some security and maintenance vehicles. The buildings were dark.

Jake drove around to the back of the building. The front facade, by design, looked like part of a well-endowed, state of the art fertility facility. There was a fountain. Topiary. Two stories of mirrored glass created an atrium that covered the glossy, marble lobby. The lobby held more topiary and yet another fountain.

The south side of the main building was far less inviting. The first three stories didn’t even have windows. The upper stories had small, utilitarian windows. It looked more like a long wall than anything. There was a series of steel doors, each with a yellowed light above it. None of them labeled or numbered.

Tish was holding the yellow note in front of her like a divining rod.

“There. That one has a keypad. I bet this is a key code and not a suite number.” They stopped at the third door.

“This seems really… off-the-books, doesn’t it?” Jake wasn’t sure why they were here.

Still, it wasn’t the weirdest thing she had ever asked for, postpartum. He parked the car, headlights flooding the sun-bleached, red steel door. They approached and punched in the code from the paper.

The door buzzed and they walked inside. It was pretty un-ceremonial. Once inside, they were in small room. Linoleum, cinder block, a small window to an unattended reception desk. Before Tish could push the little doorbell, the second door buzzed and the lock clicked open. The office reminded Jake of his advisor’s office in college. Small. Cramped. His advisor’s was smothering. Papers everywhere, no sign of an actual desk under the clutter. A hyper-literate hoarder.

This was austere. Sparse. Either someone hadn’t moved in or was ready to leave at any moment. The desk was empty, except for two flat screen monitors. Somehow this emptiness
made it seem even smaller. The cinder block walls were bare. There was a whiteboard, but rather than dry erase marker, there were sticky notes. In columns, by color. Even if you could read the handwriting, it was a shorthand only the author would comprehend.

There was a window that looked into a lab. The lab looked even cleaner and sterile and organized and more, well, like a lab.

Skinny, pale, black tee-shirt under a black zip-up hoodie. Black-rimmed glasses that seemed too big for his freckled face. Tousled red hair. Who the fuck was this kid?

“So, my name is Garrett Morgan. I doubt you’ve heard of me and if you have, it wasn’t good.”

They hadn’t heard of him. He was a prodigy. A polymath. An autodidact. A felon.

His claim to fame was that he had infected a strain of human DNA with a virus. Not a contagion within the DNA itself. Machine code tucked into the digital mappings hosted in a genome research lab. When read and interpreted, it would infect the whole system.

Which it did, he took over the whole cluster, stole all the mapping data. Had he not taken the credit he would have gotten away with it. Had he not been so far ahead of the genome team, he’d be in jail.

“Since all that, they’ve had me hacking things in a different, more productive way. It pays the attorney’s fees, but it’s not what I’m interested in. And that’s where we can help each other.”

They walked out into the long hall and to a wider observation window into the lab.

“We do a lot with stem cells. Most of that happens two labs down, we have our embryo farm from the clinical work upstairs. IVF and ICSI work, mostly. Couples, not unlike yourselves, who preserve eggs and embryos, right? So, what happens to these extra eggs and embryos when there’s been a successful pregnancy? Some of them are preserved for future implantation and procedures. Some are held indefinitely in a kind of escrow and still others come to me.”

Morgan pointed to a series of what looked like lava lamps in the center of the lab. he slid
his thumb on the screen of his smart phone and they were lit from within. The far left seemed empty. The far right contained what looked more like a fully formed fetus.

“What I do with them, in a way, is an extension of what landed me here. I tweak them. I grow them in here, but I can only take it to a point. There are legal and ethical issues that I couldn’t give a fuck about; there are practical limits.”

Morgan swiped his finger on the phone screen again. There was a lone table, with what looked like a wine fridge on it. Inside it, a light came on. Suspended in the center, in a vacuum-sealed bag, appeared to be a baby in the second trimester.

“Artificial wombs have come a long way. But not far enough. The fetus still has to begin in the mother, after enough time, we can sustain it in the lab, like that.” He noticed the look of concern on Jake’s face, “That’s a sheep, by the way. No one has tried to get that far with a human baby. Even if they did, it would only be useful for highly premature infants. There’s no substitute for a healthy womb.”

Jake stepped back from the glass. Tish had her face against it. It struck Jake as an inversion of their posture when Evan lay dying in a NICU incubator.

“You… want to grow me a baby? In there?” she looked at Morgan.

“It’ll start in there. Your egg. His sperm. But we’ll finish in there.” He pointed at her belly. Her arms folded in a natural cradle around it. Though his mind was a field of waving red flags, Jake didn’t bother to object.

They return to Garrett’s office.

“Recall, I said that we could help each other? Well, this is the part of the story where we make the exchange.” He launched a program on his office computer.

Jake recounted the obvious. “We’ve paid a good amount for this, already.” He didn’t just mean the money.

“This is a different type of exchange. A trade.”

The flickering florescent lights went out, the computer screens glowed with matching boot screens. SNIPR in red letters on white. This was replaced with floating windows of code and formulas. Two projector beams cut the darkness and created a hologram in the center of the desk. Throbbing animations of a dozen embryos. Zygotes growing, cells splitting, fetuses forming. The camera zoomed in on one of the models and markers within the individual cells glowed, mostly green with the occasional red. A small device on one of the computer monitors fired a laser drawn keyboard onto the surface of the desk.

“There are two phases, the first part is pretty status quo and without much controversy. You can screen for certain characteristics that we can predict with complete accuracy. Like, boy or girl.” Embryos with red indicators go dim, leaving several green.

“Gene selection—looking for and screening against single-gene diseases like sickle-cell or cystic fibrosis—that’s phase one and while it’s not exactly routine, it’s non-controversial, it’s considered somatic therapy, for the most part. There’s no one who is going to stand there and tell you that you have to select the embryo that will have muscular dystrophy, for example. PGD, polygenic scoring, a lot of which is just mitigating risk, right? Still, no one is making babies this way. Not yet. Because it leads to the gray areas like chromosome disorders. Screening against, say, Down Syndrome, or a dozen other disorders you haven’t even heard of.”

Hovering before them was a spinning dual-helix model of a DNA. There were smaller, two-dimensional terminal windows open around it.

“What I’ve been working on is taking my genome project hack and turning it into something a bit more useful. I’ve moved beyond simple gene splicing into gene editing and synthetic DNA.” As he hits the virtual keys, different parts of the helix fly off and new pieces fly in.

“Moving from therapeutic to enhancement—from somatic to germline—so the enhanced traits can be passed down. See, if I were to take a cell from your body, flip a few switches and put it back in and make you free from Huntington’s, that’s a procedure not far off from cosmetic surgery, at least from a currently accepted practice and ethical point of view. But what about preventing diabetes and heart disease and auto-immune deficiencies in the unborn? Or turning the odds against cancer and Alzheimer’s? To me, gene editing is even more ethical than gene selection. You’re not casting off otherwise viable embryos, you’re just taking one of them and making it better. The best it can be.”

The twirling helix was turning gradually, piece by piece, fully green. Jake opened his mouth to speak and sat back, hand over his mouth, staring at the animation.

Garrett leaned in. “Look. I know your history. If you could go back a year. If you were sitting here in my office. Would you pick the fetus that you knew would be born brainless and doomed—if he lived—to a life of suffering? Dooming you right along with him? No. You wouldn’t. No one would. I’m not interested in gene selection. I want to prove gene editing works. I will help you. If you help me.”

Jake could feel Tish’s gaze. He was all the way in, or all the way out. “Can I still get a vote on the name?”

“You can decide it all. Down to body odor. How much sleep will he need, what’s his metabolism, how good is his eyesight? Better than 20/20? Gay or straight? And for other, more complex attributes like say athleticism and intelligence? You can stack the deck in that direction. The only variable factors will be nurture. The environment you provide. But this kid will be born on third base.” Morgan grinned, “Now… do you want him to win a Nobel? Or a Pulitzer?”

Tish smiled at this. “She… could win both.”

Morgan tapped a key and a bit of text on screen toggled from XY to XX.

“See? You already made your first choice.”

The Marxes left the lab and as they pulled their car back from the building, another pulled up. In the rearview mirror, Jake could see a woman moving to the door of the lab. She was wearing a loose dress, but he could see she was very pregnant. She banged on the lab door with both hands, screaming.

Jake turned to remark about this to Tish but saw her faint smile and stopped. Her arms still cradled her figurative baby bump. She hadn’t smiled in months.

#

This wasn’t going to be cheap. The Marxes had already exhausted insurance means and
were well out-of-pocket on the expenses to date. It was also deep in a gray area of ethical
behavior on all sides. Various treatments and techniques and tools aside, all the pregnancies until
now were standard, natural conception. They were world class fetus makers. Getting to the finish
line was the issue. It was time to hedge their bets a little with the best science and technology
money could buy. Or stop.

While the harvesting of her eggs and his sperm would be standard front-of-office stuff, and fertilizing multiple eggs to implant in the womb was also well travelled road, everything that Morgan would be doing in his semi-terranean lab was as Jake deemed it weeks before: “really off-the-books.”

Tish had tapped into her trust, which was ample. This was what she wanted, there was nothing stopping her.

This time would be different.

Jake may have been on-the-fence for phase one but was firmly against this second phase. He had said as much with his silence on the ride home.

They had time to drink it in. Tish’s ovaries would have to be stimulated, eggs would have to be harvested, embryos created, gene selection alone would take a few weeks to profile that many embryos, but they had to come to a decision—did they want to edit? To make these choices?

A few days after the meeting with Morgan, Jake was as ready to register his concern and Tish was just as ready to rebuke it.

“Doesn’t this seem a bit ‘master race’ to you?”

“I would think, after what we’ve been through, you would want to have the best chance atva normal life, with a normal baby.”

“How is this normal? Look, I’m all for the screening against deformity and disease. But… I don’t know.”

“And I don’t get the master race thing. Who doesn’t want their baby to be smart? This isn’t eugenics or ethnic cleansing, Jake.”

She was oddly prepared for his “Nazi” line of attack. Obviously, it had occurred to her, she had just already rationalized her way around it. Jake wasn’t there, yet.

“Look, I understand how-”

“No. You. Don’t”

And there it was. Sure, there was no way he could understand what it was like to carry a life inside you for nine months and lose it and he knew that. Of course he couldn’t know the true depth of that pain, but it didn’t mean he couldn’t empathize with her desperation. It didn’t mean he didn’t feel anything, and he didn’t like the way this marginalized and invalidated his own pain and used it as a cudgel against his opinions.

He resented this implication that he didn’t suffer any loss or suffer enough to have input on the matter and further resented that she would play this card to win. Her body, her choice. Case, and bathroom door, closed. In his face.

And so it went for the intervening days between the initial orientation and when they would return to make their choices. They generally stayed out of each other’s way. Jake remembered when they were designing their loft.

“The key to any successful marriage is ‘his ’n her’ bathrooms,” he had said. “Let’s leave something to the imagination.”

In fact, the whole floor plan had evolved from this notion of divided space. His and hers, work and life, public and private. Years prior, Jake had kept the entire top floor of a warehouse district loft project. Upscale living in an area in transition. They looked out over Skid Row, with its bums and junkies sleeping against the high steel fence that protected their cars and guarded the entrance. The reality was, all it protected was the view. In one direction, the glossy towers of downtown to the opposite, you could see to the ocean. If you looked straight down, the fence blocked the sidewalk-level dereliction. This was one of Jake’s first developments and having failed to sell all of the lower units before build-out, they decide to keep the top level. A modern work-life-space solution for the busy couple on-the-go. All the marketing could only convince so many people that this was at the beach head of the blight rolling back. What Jake knew and all developers and speculators knew, was that there was always a bubble and it was always bursting. They best they could do was move it around. They turned that bad luck into an opportunity. Jake could now work from home and Tish ran her family foundation from their new penthouse lair.

Where the floors below were divided into six lofts or eight studios, sold off to hipsters and newly IPO’d engineers, and the affluent kids of their affluent backers, this one was all theirs. The first story with its concrete floors and overhead doors was split into artisanal bays for let. One was occupied by Waylon, who had come out of his semi-anonymous life to collect on a MacArthur “Genius” Grant. Though it was not clear why a politically subversive street artist needed a two thousand square foot studio—he was always elsewhere being, well, politically subversive—the rent was paid a year at a time. Another bay was briefly used by Függer to record their reunion and re-break-up album. The owners on the second floor were glad when they left and an EDM producer and his obsessive sound proofing took over the space. The third bay was a metal sculptor who specialized in huge feats of balance. The nose stinging smell of hot slag hung low in the courtyard by his window.

They shared the bedroom, but they had dressing rooms and bathrooms to themselves. He had his office; she had a library. These spaces had walls, but no ceiling. Open all the way up to the steel trusses a half-story above them, the original catwalk still spanning the beams. Eight thousand square feet is a lot for two people to fill. Increasingly, they spent more time in their own wings. Even with the tall, wide windows and the hipped sky lights, it was always dark. The high ceilings and open common area were always sort of empty feeling and now, under the gray Autumn skies, they grew cold.

Darkest and coldest, was the nursery. It was a relatively small annex off of the master suite, but somehow cavernous. A vacuum trying to fill itself. A black hole, collapsing the world in toward it.

Jake knew his only say in this was to not participate. He could simply refuse to give over a sample. His body, his choice. He also knew that would drive Tish away. She had her mind made up and his recalcitrance would be a terminal betrayal. Though he could never admit it, even to himself, this was all he had at his disposal to keep her. As sick as that made him, the idea of living without her was bilious.

Their relationship over the course of several years had been forged in common cause and tempered in tragedy. Just as their love life was supplanted by the mechanics of baby making, their shared hopes and dreams had been supplanted by this singular goal. Maybe that’s what he resented most of all, at least he was important to prior efforts. The actual physical act, even as it became driven by clocks and cycles, was at least physical.

If they went down this road, they were essentially removing all they had left between them having any semblance of a healthy and functional relationship. The creeping sense of unease was rooted as much in his distrust and ignorance of the science as it was in the requisite confrontation of the truth of what they had become.

Nothing.

#

After hyperstimulation, Tish produced thirty mature ova. One thousand additional oocytes were harvested, vitrified and stored.

The eggs were fertilized via ICSI. Pregnancy professionals that they were, the Marxes went thirty for thirty in the petri dish, producing thirty zygotes that were fast becoming viable embryos.

Tish and Jake arrived for the ultrasound. Dr. Rivvers issued the standard disclaimers and assurances as she greased up the transducer. The three of them watched in silence as the live image emerged on screen. Rivvers moved the probe around. At first, there didn’t appear to be an
image at all. The video seemed like a scrambled TV signal.

16

Rivvers switched out the transducer for the transvaginal wand.

“Sorry…”

Tish laid her head back and inhaled sharply as Rivvers worked the wand inside her.

“So that is still there.” Jake teased; Tish gripped his hand.

“Stop. It.” She tried not to laugh, shut her eyes and squeezed out a tear.

“Okay… now we’re getting something. There. See?”

Tish turned her head to the screen and saw her growing baby, who turned as if on cue and seemed to look back out at her from the screen.

“Aaannnd there’s the heartbeat.” Rivvers hit a button, the sonogram rolled off the thermal printer. “Next time, we’ll go 3D. You’ll be able to see some finer detail and facial features.”

Gretchen was a full-spectrum doula. She wasn’t just a labor partner; she was a pregnancy life-coach. She moved in. She would be there throughout the pregnancy and for a few months post-partem. Jake was pretty sure she was security for The Institute. Home care kept Tish squirreled away and out of their lobby.

This wouldn’t help bring Jake and Tish closer. Having someone in the house is a built-in
excuse to decline intimacy, as is, of course, being pregnant.

“I’ll need to set up in here. I have a cot.” She and Tish look at Jake. “Oh. Yeah, I can use the pull out in my office.”

Jake had made his office up among the catwalks, in bones of the old control room. He built a new iron staircase up and a brass pole for quick trips back down. He left the original foreman’s mezzanine at the other end and set up a small lounge space. From these beams, he could see down into every room except the nursery, which had a drop ceiling.

He noticed, from up here, you could see how staged it was. You could see the stud walls
behind the living space facades. It looked like the set of a TV show.

Gretchen hugged Tish, Jake could hear her cry. Gretchen stared up at him.

#

Six months in and Tish is losing weight when she should be gaining. She is gaunt and pale, the supplements do nothing, when she can even keep them down.

Dr. Rivvers is on her way. Jake is pulling up to Garrett’s office.

Garrett can’t help, he only knows how to do what he did, it’s too late to abort.

“It’s probably just some microchimerism,” Garrett says, handing Jake a bottle of water. “Sit. Drink. The mother can get some of the baby’s cells and DNA and kind of absorb them.”

“So the baby is sick? And it’s making Tish sick?”

“No, I mean, I would hope, if anything it will help. Look, I’m going to level with you. SNIPR doesn’t just implement your choices, it learns from your choices and makes new choices. It’s- it’s a virus.”

Jake is going to punch him or scream or both.

“It’s good a virus, and its working on Tish. She will come out of this with-” Garrett’s virtual screens pop open on his desk and his smartphone sounds like the alarm on a submarine diving. “Go, it’s Tish, she’s in labor.”

On the way out, Jake remembers the woman beating on Garrett’s door. She looked like Tish, all belly and bones.

He pulls into the gated lot, he can hear Tish screaming from upstairs. He takes the freight elevator; it has a speed control lever.

He slides around the corner into the bedroom, Rivvers is covered in blood, Gretchen struggles with Tish to keep her laying back.

“Where the fuck have you beeeeen!” As she screams, Jake can see Rivvers snip the
perineum. Something immediately breaches.

“We need room, everything is coming at once.” No sooner said than it all does come out, all at once. Riding a small flood of blood and viscous fluid, is a pulsing flesh pod. Dense fibrous tissue in the shape of a dormant corpse lily.

Rivvers lays it into a shiny steel basin and rips into it with a hook scalpel.

“Jesus fucking Christ!” Jake is frozen against the wall. Tish looks dead.

The doctor uses a small cavity spreader to hold this muscle sack open and—with far more delicacy—slices open the inner membrane.

The absolute cattle stampede of a labor seemed over in seconds. Now, minutes seem to pass as Gretchen uses a bulb syringe to clear the baby’s sinuses and mouth. Hours seem to pass, before she starts crying. Tish looks up and smiles before passing back out.

#

They named her Emily Jane. She was born three months premature, but at a full and healthy birth weight. Tish was doing great, too. Spectacular in fact.

Now that Gretchen had moved out, Jake was back into the bedroom and close to Tish. Her quickening and preternatural ability to sense when Baby Emily had to eat or needed a fresh diaper before she cried meant Jake never had a sleepless night. Still sexless, but never sleepless.

She was now completely barren. The delivery, that prehistoric womb, the whole ordeal. Her entire uterus had come out along with everything else. Nevertheless, she looked ten years younger. Her skin, her muscle tone, her eyes shone with that light Jake hadn’t seen since college.

All the doors opened after that. Jake was able to land another warehouse and had already pre-sold the top-level loft spaces. Then things turned, again.

The first time it showed its power, was playing peek-a-boo. Tish would cover her eyes and say “Ahhhh boo!” and the baby would giggle uncontrollably.

Tish hides her face.

“Ahhh boo!” and giggles ensue.

Hides her face.

“Ahhh booo!” more giggles.

Hides her face.

“Ahh-“ but the baby is gone. ”Jake? Jake!”

She hears the baby giggle, from above. Tish looks up to see Jake on the catwalk outside his office, confused, holding the laughing baby.

“Oh my God! Jake!”

#

The second warehouse project is slipping behind schedule. Tish has been gone all day. The baby is screaming on the monitor. Not fussing, not crying, just straight to screaming. Jake runs to landing outside his office and looks, he can’t hear the baby from the nursery, she must be okay. He goes back inside and just as he sits at his desk, the screaming on the monitor starts again, he stands up, slides down the brass pole and stomps to the nursery door. Nothing. She is sleeping. He is halfway back up the stairs, when he can hear her in the monitor, he jumps over the rail, slams open the door; still nothing. He yanks her monitor off of her dresser and smashes it on the floor out in the main living area.

He has finally made adjustments to the project schedule that put him back on track when Tish comes home and yells for him from downstairs.

“Jake! The baby!”

“She’s fine! I just checked on her and she’s fast asleep!”

Tish gets to the baby, her diaper is full, her face is purple from the exertion of screaming, she hasn’t been fed.

“What’s wrong with her face” Jake is suddenly in the door of the nursery.

“What?” Angry. Incredulous.

“You don’t see that?”

“Yes, Jake, she’s red from screaming in here all day while you hide up in your crow’s nest.” Tish sees the smashed monitor in the hall, gathers the baby up and pushes her way past Jake and out the door.

#

Jake had been spending more time on site at the new building. Tish moved the baby into the bedroom and hardly left at all. It was clear he should return to his pull-out in his office, which was at least a step above his Plan B, which was to sleep in the trailer at the job site.

When Jake pulled in, Waylon’s overhead door was open and he was working in his studio. It was rare to see him there, or anywhere, really.

“Is that Baby Jesus on the cross?” He hadn’t been sure in the weeks prior that he saw the
things he saw.

Waylon stepped back and looked. He was working on a spray paint template that was, indeed, a crucified Baby Jesus.

“It’s like… abortion, but through different eyes. The pro-lifers say, ‘would you abort Jesus’ and really… we did, kinda, right?” Waylon is well pleased by his explanation.

“Yeah, 120 th trimester abortions are murder. No arguments there.” Jake turns to leave.

“You ever hear about Jesus as a boy?”

Jake could barely remember the stories of Jesus as an adult.

“Um. Nope.”

“He’s like, a kid, right? But he’s already Jesus. He’s a powerful little Demi-God, and he’s out on the playground but he’s a little kid in his head and these other kids don’t know he’s Jesus, yet. Some other kid is like ‘hey, look at Jesus, talking Aramaic with his old ass sandals, he’s-whatever mean shit school kids said in Nazareth’ and so Jesus smote him. Right? Like kapow. The kid’s parents were all ‘holy shit, you monster’ and so Jesus struck them blind. Kablam. ‘Can’t pick me out of a line up, now, snitches’ and Mary was like, ‘we need to look at home schooling.’ That’s why we don’t know anything about the early years. Can you imagine the wrath of puberty Jesus?”

“Guess he was the first Millennial,” Jake said.

Waylon just laughed and went back to spray painting.

#

Jake hasn’t been out of this office all day. Waylon is an idiot, but he can’t help pondering the thought experiment this poses. If you didn’t know Jesus would become Jesus, would you still let him get away with the things he did before even he knew who he was? How different would the Antichrist’s childhood be?

He can hear her giggling on the monitor. But hers is smashed. Then the screaming. Not the baby, it’s Tish. He hasn’t heard a noise like this since labor. He is downstairs and to the door before he even has time to think about going. The door is locked.

“Tish!”

She is screaming from inside. He slams his shoulder on the door, but it’s like a weight is against it. He slams into again and again. He grabs the knock and shakes and the door flies in, dragging him with it and to the floor.

The baby’s mobile is floating freely above him and all the toys in her room and Tish. Tish is spinning in the center of it all, still screaming when she can. Her nose starts bleeding from the centrifugal force, spraying blood on all four walls. Jake stands and grabs at Tish.

“No! Get out of here!” her hands flail and scratch his face.

Three floors below them, the sculptor begins overstoking his blast furnace. He doesn’t know why, but it doesn’t seem hot enough.

Jake jumps up once more and this time catches her leg, but he is forced into the air over the crib, his weight pulls them both off axis and the wobble until his feet catch off of the ceiling and they are both flung into the wall of the nursery. Everything falls around them.

Jake stands and goes to the crib. Its gone. Jake hears it giggle from outside and above. Jake is on the stairs, now the catwalk, its floating before him. Hovering in mid-air. Its face. Tish would see it now. The deformities were back. Jake reaches out to grab it and falls. A half story plunge
through the coffee table below.

The sculptor has shut his furnace door. It creaks under the strain of the heat within.

More giggling. He drags himself to his feet. His ribs feel broken. It’s up on the mezzanine. Jake grabs a knife from the kitchen counter and goes to the ladder beneath the mezzanine. He can barely lift his leg to the first rung when he feels light all over. He’s levitating upward. He turns slowly in the air as he rises. Tish. She’s holding her arms above her head. She is doing this. She can do this, too. Is it controlling her? Are they connected?

“Tish, how-“

And with a swift, downward motion, she slams Jake to the floor. Up again and into the mezzanine and the floor, again. The bolts from the old steel platform pull slowly from the wall.

Tish balls her fist and pulls. The platform pulls away and crashes down, pinning Jake to the floor.

The blast furnace blows. The wave knocks open the cinder block wall into Waylon’s studio
and the paint and paper and canvases and thinner go up like a secondary charge. The fire spreads
easily from there up to the apartments on the next floor.

Jake can see Tish bundling the baby up and climbing out the fire escape.

#

Jake felt the heat moving from his extremities to his core and burning its way up to the back of his neck, flowing out as if the base of his skull lay on a floor drain. Burning his skull like fever, converging there and boring its way out the back of his head, circling and spiraling down to a pinpoint somewhere deep in the darkness; in contrast to the swelling pool of blood flowing out and away from his body, boiling at the edges from the heat of the fire on the floors below.

In the end the police would sift through the debris. They would find the apartment in shambles but more or less intact, somehow balanced on the burned-out matchsticks of the building beneath it, Jake’s cremains in a sticky, black pool of cooked blood. They would compile the evidence. Analyze the spatter patterns. Isolate the fluid and tissue samples. Catalog and collate.


Ultimately it would be the footage found on the nanny cam that told the story of a sick man on a rampage. They don’t see the game of peek-a-boo, they see jake dangling the baby off of the catwalk as Tish screams from below. The see Jake tying the baby down, locking her away in the nursery, smashing the baby monitor. Flinging a bloodied Tish around the room and finally into a wall. Trying to kill his infant daughter while his wife nearly died protecting her, before falling off the mezzanine. They wouldn’t see Rivvers and Gretchen hacking the baby out of Tish as Jake recoiled in horror and slid down the wall. They wouldn’t need to—or even want to—look for Tish or her baby. They would see mother and child escape safely. They would assume she was in hiding and might not even know Jake was dead. For both of those things they would be glad. They would look back into the death of the doula. They would blame Jake and Jake alone.

The evidence would be boxed and stored, and when they extracted the DNA to store it and perhaps one day cross reference it against unsolved crimes—due not only to the secretive nature of Garrett’s work, and the privacy laws around surrogacy, adoption, IVF and egg donation, but to the fact that such systems wouldn’t be integrated—they would not see matches against the thousands of zygotes cloned from Tish and Jake’s original specimen.

Viable, healthy, perfect embryos. Propagated anonymously to the hundreds of Gestasia Institute branches, partners, and affiliate labs. All of them fully infused carriers of the SNIPR virus, headed by truck and train and ship and plane, all over the world.

black ice

I had to pull over.  I had to get gas.  I had to get some air.  I promised Mom I wouldn’t drink, but I never said anything about getting high.  I barely remember the party.  Jimmy Breeze was there.  So were The Twins.  Lucky’s cabin, third one past the shoe tree.  It was the only one in that whole fire lane that looked like a cabin, even though everyone called their little catalog cottages on the lake “cabins.”  This one was rustic. Lucky Sr. built it back when there were no other cottages on the lane.  How long was I there? 

Lucky grew his own weed.  His latest harvest was a sixth generation melange of shit, started from seeds his dad had saved from back when shit had seeds; when they had just started using names like Afghan Red and Acapulco Gold.  I had been there a hundred times.  We all had.  I couldn’t remember being there tonight.  Marcy?  We made out by the bonfire and laughed because we both had cotton mouth so bad we were just making these gross smacking noises.  She had some gum.  Her hairspray and perfume and the fruity gum.  It was the dark crotch of Fall as it rounded the corner to the asshole of Winter, but she tasted like Summer and smelled like Spring.  Freezing rain.  She went inside, I had to leave.  Who would she kiss when I left?  Not like we were official or anything.  She’s not the type to settle down, but she didn’t wait around, either.

We had known each other forever.  She grew up on my street.  Our street, I guess.  Every boy in town had a thing for her older sister, Sherry.  And most every boy in town got what they wanted.  Not me.  It was always Marcy.  We grew up together, in every sense.  We were each other’s first, kiss, love, everything. 

We saw each other naked for the first time when we were sixteen. It had been hot that Summer and we were walking the nature trail and I told her about how the old quarry had filled up with crystal clear water.  We made our way down a slippery trail that when it rained became a waterfall.  Without warning or notice, she took off her clothes, except her ratty All-Stars and jumped in.  How the fuck would she even get back out?  It was a cliff all around, the water snakes, the snapping turtles, the-and I was in.  The days only got shorter after that.

#

The sleet was already sheeting into ice on my windshield.  How long was I here?  Gas.  I got out and started pumping.  The lights buzzed under the canopy over the pump.  Still caked in the dead bugs of summer.  The store had one of those vending machines for live bait.  How long can leeches live in that thing?  Whose job is it to keep it stocked? 

My car always smelled vaguely of gas, but I was hit by a wave of it as I topped off the tank.  It used to be my Grandmother’s.  It looked like a grocery getter. She offered it to me, thinking it might be too embarrassing, but a car is a car when you’re sixteen.  Plus, it had a goddamn 455, four-barrel.  She had it for almost 20 years and had put 12,000 miles on it.  I doubled that in the two years since she gave it to me.  Very smooth ride.  If not for the speedometer, you’d have no idea how fast you were going.  Gas eating beast.  It was like steering a boat.  American Steel.  The back seat was like a twin bed.  Nights like tonight, she’d sputter a bit when you turned the key.  But once that motor started-

Who the fuck is walking in this shit?  I could see his bright red varsity coat.  It looked like it was floating along the shoulder with no one in it at first.  Did he go to my school?  I was always shit with names, but good with faces.  Even as his came into focus, I didn’t recognize it.

“Hey, man, where you headed?”

He stopped.  He turned slowly and faced me.

“You going into town?  I’ll give you a ride.  You’ll die in this bullshit.”

He was already in the car by the time I got in.  Even up close, I couldn’t place him.

“You go to Ransom? What grade?”

“I’m a senior.” He stared straight ahead. Freezing? Shock? Was he as high as I was?

“I gotta be honest, bro, I’m a senior, I don’t recognize you.”

“We have classes together.”

“Were you at Lucky’s? Where you coming from?”

“So cold.”  He turned away and looked out the window. 

Which was fine.  The edge of cold was wearing off and the weed was creeping back up on me.  Anxiety. 

The sleet had become wintery mix.  It was flying at me like I was warping through space.  There was no radio signal out here, so I had flipped it to cassette.  The thing was jammed.  I couldn’t change tapes and had spent the last three months listening to Boston’s eponymous first album.  I had grown real tired of that album, but the back story was great.

Tom Scholz had essentially recorded the whole thing in his leaky New England basement on hundreds of dollars of equipment, while tricking the record company into thinking he was in an LA studio.  They flew Brad Delp out there to overdub the vocals as cover for the ruse.  In actuality, the only song fully recorded on their whiz-bang, state-of-the-art equipment was “Let Me Take You Home Tonight.”  The Taylor acoustic they had in the studio cost more Tom’s entire set-up, where he was laying down final tracks with his $100 Yamaha.  Two places at the same time.  Tom was stubborn, autocratic and a legend in the biz.

Gonna hitch a ride, head for the other side…

“Sorry about the music, man.  It’s all I got.”

The wintery mix had given way to a creeping fog.  We were cutting through the swamps, where the cold sink on the East side of the road pulled the thick mist across the road like a low-hung cloud bank sliding over the mountains. 

“This woulda been a long walk, why the hell were you out there?”  It was killing me that I didn’t know this kid.

“I had an accident, my car hit a tree. Or…” he seemed unsure, himself. “A car hit me?”

“Jesus, man, are you hurt?”

“No, just cold.”

“I bet, I was just down that road, and didn’t see any cars. You had to be walking awhile.”

“I think it was up here.” He pointed out the windshield.

“But-” he was gone.  His jacket was sitting on my front seat.  What the fuck did I smoke?  I looked in the back seat.  No one. 

“How-” he was in the middle of the road.  In front of me.  This was not my first Winter driving.  I knew how to handle a car in the ice and snow.  It all happened so fast that I panicked.  I planted both feet on the brakes.  Hard. 

Nothing.

The wheels locked up.  Black ice, under slush.  Zero friction.  No screeching tires.  The music played.  The back end started drifting around a little. 

Leave it all behind…

Silence.  There was no sound of impact.  He flew up and over the car and I saw in the rear view mirror as he tumbled down the road.  I went off on the West side.  Water blasted up around the car as I came to a dead stop.  Head on into a tree. 

That did make noise.  All the noise, all at once.  Everything that had transpired in the last three seconds, that had been stretched out for what seemed like an hour, replayed in full speed and at double volume.

…Carry me away for the last time.

I turned the radio off.  The engine was clicking from the sudden splash of cold.  Steam and fluids sprayed out from under the hood.  In my rear view, I could see him lying on the highway in a crumpled heap.  Even without his jacket, all I could see was red.  The red of the blood.  The red of the brake lights washing over him.  I was wedged in place like an action figure in the wrong vehicle.  My arms locked at the elbows on the steering wheel, my legs still locked the brakes to the floor.   I could barely relax them enough to let off.  I turned the key off.  The running lights went out.  The rear-view mirror was black.

I was so warm.  Then, the cold set in.

#

The shoe tree.  More like trees.  There were three big oaks in a row on the road to Lucky’s cabin.  It started with a pair tied together and tossed up in the branches.  Everyone had swimming shoes.  For the lake, the quarry, ponds, the canal, the creek-any place that was equal parts slippery rocks, broken beer bottles and snagged fishing lures.  At the end of Summer, heading back from the cottages, it became a tradition to toss them up there.  Then, once one tree was full, we started nailing them to the trunk.  Then a second.  Then a third.  I remember Marcy was the first one to nail hers.

“You can’t lace flip-flops together, dummy.”

She climbed as high as she could in her bare feet, and using my tire iron and a couple of nails we found floating around in the trunk, nailed her flops to the oak in tribute to the end of Summer at the lake.  Peering up now, in the cold blackness of the pending ice storm, I could see them.  Why was I walking? Where was my car? 

I went back up the road to Lucky’s.  The party had died down.  A handful of people were in the main room of the cabin, squirming on the couch, riding out the final throes of “The Heat.”  Lucky was twisting a fatty, while another one dangled, still burning, from his mouth.  Red cups.  The Twins were in the kitchen speaking that drunken shorthand that only twins knew.  Football?  No.  Politics.  They were Hella smart for a couple of hicks.  One headed to Columbia, one to Cornell.

Who was she kissing by the fire?  Jimmy?  We weren’t exclusive, but it bothered me.  She was pretty good about not rubbing my nose in it.  She probably just didn’t expect me to come back.  I told myself whomever it was didn’t matter to her.  Which made me wonder if I did.  There was that laugh.  That kooky infectious laugh.  I had heard it a million times and it still made me smile.  Even now.  I should go.

#

It was colder than I remember.  Was it because I was just inside by the pellet stove?  No.  My fucking pants were wet.  I jammed my hands deep in the pockets of my coat.  His coat?  Where the fuck did I park?  I could see the soft glow of the gas station ahead.  Someone pumping gas.

“Hey, man, where you headed?”

sea monkeys

My sister died yesterday. I learned she was my sister two weeks ago. Online DNA testing. Before that I spent thirty eight years as a spoiled, only child and stereotypical Gemini. My mother died last year, but before she went to hospice, she bought me that DNA kit and she told me to promise her I would try and “find my people.” Classic abandonment issues had long convinced me I didn’t have, nor did I need, any people. Deep down I knew I wanted them.

I took the test and told myself it was strictly out of obligation, and as it turned out, my people found me. I hadn’t been on the genealogy site in months, I was tired of third cousins, twice removed wanting to friend me up. Jenny reached out to me and wanted to meet. Here, in fact.

I met her just the one time. She didn’t say she was sick, but she sure looked it. It wasn’t as awkward as you’d think. She was bright and funny and had that spark of life that only people who realize they are dying can have.

So, today, I sit in this cafe ́ and wait to meet the half-brother I never knew I had and try and figure out how, or even if, to work me into the funeral or each other’s lives. Jennifer told me I’d recognize him, said we could be twins, so when the younger, fitter, version of me walked to the door, walked away and then walked in, there was no mistake.

“Todd?” His handshake was firm, crap for eye contact, he searches the room like he’s trying to figure out how to order.

“They’ll come over to get your order, the counter is for grab and go.” He’s not relieved. I feel like he would have used the opportunity to walk past the counter and straight out the door again.

“So this is…” he tries to smile, his eyes watery. Only one of us really lost a sister.

“Weird.” He laughs, which frees up the tears. “I’m sorry for your loss, and I’m sorry we met like this.”

“To be honest, I wouldn’t have come if she didn’t tell me I had to. Dying wish thing.” It’s clear he has noticed our resemblance. He keeps looking at my face, taking it in like he’s observing a monkey in its native habitat. Rather than looking back into the evolutionary chain, looking forward at his future face. He lingers on my hair line, it makes us both nervous.

“Same, I… still don’t know why I’m here. How I got here. I mean, I know the chain of events, but this has to mean something. I mean, doesn’t it? Have to?” Even as I say it, I don’t believe it. The waitress comes over.

“Warm up? Anything for you?”

“I’ll have the same thing.” I guess he wasn’t going to flee. “She told you, right? The sickness? What—why she died?”

“No, it didn’t come up, I thought—we both probably thought, we’d have time.” He looks at me, in the eyes for the first time.

“It’s… genetic. Passed down with the Y chromosome. From our father.”

###

I was lying. She had told me. Two weeks ago, sitting in that same chair, almost as she was sitting down, she told me she was dying. Not that I didn’t see it on her face.

“To answer your question, yes, I am sick. Very sick.” She went right for it.

“No, I mean, no. How would I know?”

“I could see in your face, that you saw it in my face.”

“Nooo.” Yes. Of course, yes.

I had seen her profile picture. Her face was round and full. Now it looked like someone washed her on hot and her skin barely fit. Stretched and shiny. Her eyes still sparkled, but with a hint of sadness that we all have lives we will never appreciate.

“You’re kind, but I know. It’s aggressive, and you should probably know, it’s hereditary.”

“Passed down? Like how? Is it guaranteed-?”

“From the father, so I figured you deserved to know. And no, it’s not a hundred percent. My brother- our brother doesn’t have it. Men, right?”

We both laugh, hers turns to a deep cough. The food arrives. She takes a long time to chew. I can see every muscle in her face working overtime. Even small bites puff her cheeks out like she was hiding a golf ball.

“What is it?”

“It’s an autoimmune disease, I brought you some literature. It’s not the thing that gets you, it’s the things you can’t fight that get you.”

It took her thirty chews to work in enough spit to swallow a bite of her scone. I felt like I could see her body burning the calories off, even as she ingested them. I’m no doctor, but she didn’t have long.

“Thank you, for” telling me I could be dying, “reaching out. I wouldn’t have known any of this.” I’m pretty sure that didn’t sound sarcastic.

“What are the odds, you know, if not for the family tree sites and DNA and all.”

The whole thing reminded me of sea monkeys. You get this powder in the mail, sprinkle it in a fish bowl, wait a few days and bam. Instant life.

“Did you know him? Our father? I guess you must have, he stuck around.” Okay, the sarcasm was peeking through, now. She showed me his picture. It was a formal portrait, not like Sears, but like the kind you sat for in the Old West. Faded.

“Not really. He traveled. For work, supposedly, but even when he was home, he was never really there. I’m sure you’ve gotten back on the site and you saw all the other hits.”

“Yeah, he really-“

“Got around? Yep. A real rolling stone.” We both laugh again, this time, hers turns to tears.

“I’m sorry. I’m hitting you with a lot of stuff.”

“No, it’s fine.” Nothing is fine, nothing will ever be fine. “You’re right, this is all stuff I was prepared to find out. Mostly prepared.” The server gives me a warm up.

“Can I get another Green Meanie?” That green sludge was the only thing she seemed able to muscle down.

“What’s in that. It smells like fresh cut grass and looks like… the baby has the squirts or something.”

“Kale, spinach, lemon grass, some kinda sprouts, maybe. A little ginger. You should try one. It boosts your immune system, I mean just look at me!”

That time, neither of us laugh.

“Jennifer… no matter what the circumstances, I’m glad to have met you. I wish it could have been sooner.”

“Me too. You will get tested, right?”

Not a chance. “Of Course. But I’m not drinking that crap.” She smiles. It is the first and last time I see her alive.

###

When my mother died, I just shut it all off. I had the funeral to prepare and to “settle her affairs” even though there was much talk of her affairs “being in order” in the weeks before she passed. It occurred to me, as I swallowed my grief, that there was no grief to swallow. It’s not that I didn’t love her or miss her, it was a natural instinct of mine to stifle sorrow. I was very good with anger and I could cloak myself in shame with the slightest amount of self-evaluation.

Did I tip enough? I’m so cheap.

By the time I had packed or given away or sold my mother’s belongings—the stems and seeds of her life in a POD container, stored a block from the airport, like it was just in town on business—the normal, acceptable window for grieving had passed, and so I really didn’t have to pretend anymore.

“Is there anything we can do? How are you?”

“Oh, you know, hanging in there.”

Here I sit, on a box in my mother’s house—the stuff I felt I should probably keep—reading Jennifer’s obituary. She had a full head of hair in the picture. Plump cheeks in a round face. The sort of smile that looks like it was actually caught mid laugh.

The colors run as my tears drop on the page. I laugh at the fact that I am crying, over a sister didn’t know I had, and still don’t know. Now I am full on laughing, which triggers the sobs. The waves hit me a punch to the stomach, a fist squeezing my organs together.

My absent father, the Johnny Appleseed of illegitimate kids, who had time for a family across town, but not to send me a birthday card. My loving mother and this one box that I tried to cram all my love into. My new sister.

I slip off the box, to my knees and look up as if in prayer. Arms out, letting the sadness rain down on me. I’m not good at crying. I ugly cry. I choke on my own spit, I blow snot bubbles. I am ashamed. Go figure.

My good friend anger kicks my grief aside and takes over. I stand, reach into the box and pull out the faded portrait of my father that Jennifer gave me—the only time I ever saw his face —and crumple it and throw it in the empty fireplace, fully expecting it to burst into flames. I throw the paper with the obituary after it.

It doesn’t help. I pick the newspaper up and fold it. I smooth the picture of my father and toss it back in the box. He looks up at me with that “call me for all your insurance or baby- making needs” smile.

“Fuck you.”

I close the box. Jennifer’s funeral is tomorrow. I’m a pall bearer for the sister I had all of two weeks. I hope I can put my poker face back on by then.