Author's note:
This is the first part of a slow burn about a brother and sister who reunite and grow closer than most. They discover secrets invading their work, school, and family life, as they navigate coffee, sex, abandonment, social contracts, fish, Easter candy, encryption, protests, binge drinking, and King Tut.
My editor Liz deserves enormous credit. She generously poured her insight and wisdom into this story, and it is much better because of her efforts. Thank you, Liz.
All characters over eighteen.
Part 1 of 6.
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CHAPTER 1
"Get whatever you want," says the Red Haired Lady. Her dark glare burns at me across the table. "I don't suppose you have any money, do you?"
"No," I say.
"That was his little addition." She lifts a plastic saucer off a stack next to the window, and tells me I need to do something for her.
"I need to?"
"Yes." The Red Haired Lady splits her wooden chopsticks, and scrapes one down the side of the other, carving away tiny splinters.
I try to ask a question, but she holds up her hand, and I stop.
She says they can take care of all my problems. Money, work, school, everything.
I say, "I can do all that on my own," but I have no idea.
Outside the window, a bullhorn screeches, then a voice barks garbled orders over a loudspeaker. Sirens wail in the distance.
"I didn't want to do this," she says. "But think of your sister."
"What about her?" I'm always thinking about Jessica. But that's not what she means.
"This affects her too."
"She knows," I say. "We've talked about it."
"Yes," says the Red Haired Lady, with a hint of a smile. "I imagine you have." Crimson nail polish slides something in front of me.
A chill runs up my spine, and I'm thinking about the Easter basket I took from my sister when we were little. Hiding under Mom's blue birdbath in the garden and feasting on stolen treats.
The Red Haired Lady speaks more, but I'm miles away. Fiery curls dissolve into black rain pouring over clear bright emeralds. Five sharp talons pierce my back, and pin my face against a wall of gold paint. Above me, a black and blue window screams, shattering the emeralds into daggers, but the talons hold me tight in a bath of warm fruit.
"I'm almost impressed," she says. "In public, like that."
For the first time since we sat down, I hope my phone is dead.
The Red Haired Lady takes a bite of fish, and her curls bounce up and down, as she chews. She wistfully turns her head to the side, as though she's admiring an invisible landscape. "Do you know how I found out?" She reaches into her purse, and the smooth bronze tan of her knuckles fades to white, as she waves the trophy back and forth. "Your father. Is. Not. Careful. And neither are his children, it would seem."
She keeps talking, but I'm back under the birdbath. Then I'm wrapped in a purple comforter, safe and warm, in a bed that's not my own.
"Didn't he cheat on my mother with you?" I ask.
The Red Haired Lady studies me. "I seem to recall you had a girlfriend. What was her name?"
"Rachel. We broke up."
One thin eyebrow floats higher. "Was she not exciting enough? Clearly Jessica shares your taste for things." She takes a tall drink of water. "You're not going to deny it?"
"I don't see the point."
"Hah." The Red Haired Lady roars back, and her lips carve a smile of pristine ivory. "You own it, I'll give you that. Now I see why she likes you."
Sirens pierce my ears from outside the restaurant, as I look at the trophy, held tight in her fist. "What are you going to do with that?"
"It depends. You can help me, and go back to whatever sort of life you're living. Hang out with Rachel, or--" She stops herself. "Whoever."
"Or?" I say.
"Or a court reporter transcribes all the sordid details of your life." The Red Haired Lady rests her chopsticks across the tray in front of her. "What do you want to do?"
I'm not sure how to answer.
***
This all started the day I broke up with Rachel, right after my sister moved in.
See, the house has this problem with the hot water heater.
The day before school starts, I'm scrubbing shampoo into my hair when the water loses its heat. But it doesn't turn cold right away. A brief window of a few seconds allows me to rinse, before the stream becomes a glacial torrent. I crank the stainless steel knob all the way hot, and that rejuvenates the warmth, but it won't last. Hot water pours over my head, as I run my fingers through my hair as fast as I can. Then the water starts to cool again. Satisfied that I'm clear of all suds, I shut off the water. Pipes clunk behind square white tiles, and the cold flow over me dwindles to a few drops. I shiver and freeze as I reach through the vinyl curtain, grasping for a towel.
"Did you use it all?" Jessica yells from down the hallway.
"I think so." I step onto the bathmat and wipe my sides as hard as I can stand, hoping it produces some warmth. It does not.
"When does the bus come by?" Her voice carries through the cracked door, but I don't see her. "I need to go buy stuff for school."
"In a bit." I wrap the towel around my waist. "You can come in."
Jessica pushes the door open and stands in the doorway. She's barefoot, bundled in a white bathrobe, with her straight black hair tied up in a bun, and a long silver nail file poking out of her clenched fist. Her green eyes flare at me briefly, then turn to the shower.
"I tried to go as fast as I could."