CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA, 2009
THE THING LUCY had once wanted to happen more than
anything else in the world, that she had given up on ever
happening, did actually happen a little after six o’clock on a
Tuesday evening in January.
She was sitting outside Campbell Hall, the building
that housed the landscape architecture program along with the rest
of the School of Architecture, where she’d spent the previous ten
hours in the studio. Now she sat in a hungry daze, wearing her down
coat and brown wool hat, breathing the cold air and giving herself
a moment of peace before she rejoined the rhythm of the regular
world.
Marnie and her boyfriend, Leo, were making Chinese
food for dinner that night in their tiny apartment by Oakwood
Cemetery. They’d rented the apartment in August. Marnie was working
at Kinko’s by day while taking an LSAT prep course and applying to
law schools by night. Lucy had expected to be working full-time as
a barista at the Mudhouse through the fall and early winter. She’d
gotten her application for graduate school in so late, the
admissions officer told her she’d have to wait until January to
begin the master’s degree program. But a space had opened up, and
to Lucy’s exhilaration they had bent the rules and allowed her to
start in September. So she was working only ten hours a week at the
Mudhouse and going deeply and calmly into debt to pay for graduate
school. She and Marnie had rented the apartment, just the two of
them, but since then Leo had become the unofficial third nonpaying
roommate. At least he was a good cook.
“Does it make you lonely now that Marnie has a
serious boyfriend?” her mother had asked her a few weeks earlier.
Lucy could tell it made her mother lonely. “Not really,” she’d
said. “I’m busy in the studio.”
“You’re not still waiting for Daniel, are you?”
Marnie had asked her accusingly last Saturday, when Lucy had
declined to go to a party with her and Leo.
“No,” Lucy said. Marnie thought she was
perplexingly celibate, and Lucy didn’t correct her. She couldn’t
admit to Marnie that she’d slept with her brother, Alexander, four
times over the past summer.
Lucy wasn’t still waiting for Daniel. Not in her
conscious mind. She’d made herself accept the fact that he wasn’t
coming for her this time around. But in her dreams she still longed
for him. Her dream-self thought the story of her and Daniel was
only paused; it wasn’t over. I can’t wait for you forever,
she found herself thinking as she lay in bed most mornings,
thinking about her dreams, waiting for her alarm to ring.
And now she was sitting on the bench in the winter
dark, considering these things, when a young man walked up to her
and said, “Are you Lucy?”
She looked up at him, expecting that she should
know him. He was well dressed and clean-shaven, like an
old-fashioned jock or a former fraternity boy. “Yes,” she said. She
didn’t know him. He was probably in one of her classes, and she
didn’t feel like cultivating the association.
“I’m Daniel,” he said.
She startled a little at the name, as though it had
been lifted from her thoughts. “Do I know you?” she asked. It
wasn’t probably the most tactful thing, and if she’d thought to be
polite, she would have phrased it differently.
His eyes were secretive in some way. “You might not
think so, but you do.”
She didn’t want to play. Usually when she wore her
clumpy brown hat pulled down over her face and huddled deep in her
coat, she didn’t have to. “And how is that?” she asked without
curiosity or pleasure. She picked at the lint on her gloves. Maybe
he’d been in one of her undergraduate classes. Maybe he was a
friend of a friend who’d put him up to this because members of
Lucy’s circle thought she needed to get out more.
He bent down closer to her, like he was trying to
get her to look at him again. “I know I look different now. I know
it will be hard to make you believe it, but I am Daniel. The Daniel
you used to know.”
Now she did look up at him. “What are you talking
about?”
“I knew you in high school. I knew you many times
before that.”
She stood up, both doubtful and beginning to feel
electrified. “I don’t understand.”
“I’m Daniel Grey. From Hopewood.”
She could barely keep herself upright. “You’re
telling me you are Daniel Grey?”
“Different, as you see. But yes, I am.”
She stared at him, searching his eyes. “How can you
be?”
“Do you want to walk with me?” He started walking,
and she followed him. She felt dizzy, as though everything was at
the wrong angle. She was shivering and also sweating in her coat.
He had a long stride, and she took extra steps to keep up.
“I don’t know how much you know about me,” he said,
looking forward, not at her.
She stared at the side of his face. Was this some
kind of weird prank? He couldn’t really be her Daniel, could he? It
almost felt like her old longing was so fierce it had turned
somebody up, whether or not it was the right person.
“I don’t think I know anything,” she said and
immediately realized it wasn’t true. “I mean, I might know
something.” She hurried along. What if it really was him? Maybe it
was. She tripped on a curb and splashed her pants with mud and
slush. “I know about Constance,” she said quickly. “I know about
Sophia.” She wasn’t caring about self-protection right now. She
didn’t care about whether she sounded sane or not.
“You know a lot, then,” he said. His voice was
sharper, different than she expected.
She wished she could look him in the eye again. How
could it be him? If it wasn’t him, why was he doing this? She was
open to the idea of people coming back in different bodies, but
this didn’t make any sense. “I don’t understand you,” she said. “I
don’t understand how you could be Daniel. If you died at the bridge
three and a half years ago, then you would be a little kid now,
wouldn’t you?”
In her fantasies of seeing Daniel again, she’d
pictured running into his arms, holding him for hours at a time and
telling him everything that she had learned and thought since the
last time she’d seen him. This wasn’t how it went.
“You don’t understand, and I can’t explain it all
to you. There are mysteries no one understands. But when you’re
like me, you don’t need to grow up every time. In rare cases you
can . . . take over a body that has been abandoned.”
“What does that mean?” She was in a wild and wilder
version of the universe, but at least she was in a conversation
with someone besides herself. “You can take over somebody
else? Why would anyone abandon their body?”
“Usually it’s not a choice. Sometimes it is. They
abandon it when they die.”
“But if they die, it’s because it doesn’t work
anymore, isn’t it?”
“Yes, usually. But people sometimes . . . How can I
put it simply? They get out before they have to. They get scared
and drawn away. It’s tempting in that moment.”
“Why is it tempting?”
“Because usually they are in pain, and it feels
better to get out.”
Lucy tried to read her own feelings, but beyond the
pounding symptoms of shock, she couldn’t. “And you take
over?”
“The opportunity is extremely brief. And the body
has to be salvageable, obviously.”
Distantly, she wondered how this conversation might
sound to a passerby. They were walking too fast to be overheard for
long, and besides, she was too strained, too overwhelmed to really
care. But what were these things they were saying? How could she
even begin to accept it, and how could she not? Had she given up
all expectation that the world would behave in the old way? “But
what happens to them? What if they want back in?”
His look was unequivocal, almost demanding. “They
don’t.” Was this a way that Daniel had looked? “I only take what’s
left,” he said. For a moment he covered her gloved hand with his
bare one. “And the soul that was there goes on to their next stage,
whatever that is.”
“Do they come back in a new body?”
He rubbed his cold hands together. “Most likely.
Most people do come back.”
Some part of her wanted to run away, and she felt
disgraced by that part of her. She was so full of doubts; she
always ruined everything. After what she’d learned, why couldn’t
she just try to believe him? The fact that she was having a
conversation like this meant it had to be Daniel. Who else knew
about these kinds of things? “So you just sort of . . . jumped into
this person you are now. There used to be somebody else in
there?”
“It’s hard to fathom, I know. There is so much
about birth and death and everything in between that ordinary
people don’t know. But you are beginning to grasp that, aren’t
you?”
She walked into a puddle. She barely felt the cold
soak into her socks. “I think so,” she said.
He stopped. He held out his hands, and she realized
he held them out for hers. She gracelessly shoved her hands in his,
and he squeezed them.
“Lucy.”
She nodded. She felt the pressure of many tears
behind her eyes, though she couldn’t explain their nature. It made
it harder to look at him.
“I am happy to see you. Are you happy to see
me?”
The things she had imagined saying to him all these
times, she couldn’t say unless she knew it was him, and she still
couldn’t feel sure.
“It’s hard to believe you are Daniel,” she said
honestly. She tried to look into his eyes, but he was busy pulling
off her gloves. “Are you really Daniel?”
“I am really Daniel,” he said.
She nodded again. She could believe him or not. If
she didn’t, and it was him, as it almost had to be, she would have
blown her chance yet again. She didn’t want to blow it again. “I’m
sorry for last time,” she said quickly. “I’m sorry I didn’t try
harder to understand.” One or two of the tears made it out.
“I don’t blame you for that. No one ever believes
it. And it’s probably for the best.”
“But I wish I had tried.”
“Right. I know.” He was looking down. “There are
things in the past you regret.”
His expression was different from how she thought
it would be. But then, what did she think it would be? Why did she
pretend to herself that she knew him or had reason to expect or
think anything? She didn’t know him then, and she didn’t know him
now. Her only relationship, as Marnie had put it, was her
relationship with her own imagination. And now she was trying to
hold him to that?
“But we have the chance to start again.”
She stared at him in some wonder. His words managed
to penetrate her fight with herself. The problem was not the
difference between this man and the old Daniel. The problem was
between Daniel and her imagination. Of course, the actual Daniel
was going to be different from the Daniel with whom she had spent
so many hours in the privacy of her mind. It took the real thing to
show you the size of your delusions. It made her think of when the
Dominion power company couldn’t get into her basement. They sent
estimated bills for eight straight months, and when the guy finally
read the meter he told her parents they’d been so far off they owed
four thousand dollars.
“If you want to,” he added.
They could start again? Could they just do that? Is
that what would happen now if she let it?
This was Daniel. It didn’t feel like it yet,
because she was shallow and bound by her own fantasies, but it was.
If she was really going to favor her delusions over the real
person, then she should just get a lot of cats and shut herself in
right now.
He looked different before, but now that she took a
moment to think of it, she looked different, too. In high school,
every time she saw him it was in full pose and pucker. She had a
constant coating of lip gloss and her cheeks sucked in and her
precise jeans and hair all going in one direction. Now she was
distracted and absorbed by other things, forgetting to look in the
mirror at all. She forgot to make her face for anyone’s eyes
anymore. She was lucky he didn’t run in the other direction.
Her entire life had once ground to a halt because
of him. Her sense of the world was blown open because of him. Would
she really not take this chance? Her cowardice had kept her from
him before, and it would stop her again if she let it. She was
older now. She was on her feet. She could handle it now.
“Yes,” she said. Another tear got out.
He smiled at her. It was a different smile from the
one she expected. And then she wanted to punch herself. No
expecting.
“I’m up in D.C. now, working at a marketing firm.
I’ve got to go back for a business thing tonight. I didn’t know I’d
find you on my first try. If I’d known, I would have left myself
all night. But I’ll be back this weekend, all right? Can I take you
out on Saturday? What’s your favorite restaurant here?”
She was a little bit crestfallen that he was
leaving already, but she was also frankly relieved. She could
torment herself better on her own. “Yes. Okay.” She named a place
twenty minutes east. “I’ll meet you there,” she said nervously. She
realized she didn’t want him coming to her apartment. She wouldn’t
know how to explain him to Marnie.
“Great.” He leaned in and kissed her cheek,
catching the very corner of her mouth. He straightened up and
strode away, calling good-byes over his shoulder.
She stood still, feeling the kiss sitting
unabsorbed on her face. When he was very small and ready to
disappear around the bend into a parking lot, she composed her face
with the thought that he would turn around another time, but he
didn’t look back. Shut up. You don’t know anything, she said
to her own disappointment.
She began to walk. Without thinking, she ended up
at the serpentine wall, where she climbed up and sat with her knees
pressed to her chest and her arms holding her together. It was a
hard world to know anymore.
What was wrong with her? Daniel had come. Why was
she so weird and prickly feeling? Why didn’t she throw her arms
around him? We have the chance to start again, he’d said.
What was her problem? What more had she wanted to hear?
This isn’t how I thought it would
feel.
Could she not get over the fact that he looked
different? Was she really that superficial? It wasn’t that he
didn’t look good; he did. He was plenty handsome in every objective
sense. Maybe more so than before.
A stubborn, renegade memory of the fateful night
with the old Daniel came to her. It gave an instant stretch and
tingle to her abdomen. When he pulled her in that desk chair to
face him. When they were knee to knee. When he kissed her. A
four-year-old overworn memory had more punch than a fresh kiss
sitting on her face.
Because you don’t know this new version
yet.
I didn’t know the old version, either.
The old Daniel was the one Constance loved. And
Sophia loved. That had made sense to her before. Why didn’t it make
sense now?
She put her hand to her mouth. She saw bits of icy
lace on her dark glove and looked up to see big, uncoordinated
flakes of snow drifting around her. It was a Virginia snow, where
the sky didn’t look like it really meant it and the flakes were out
on their own.
Maybe it was she who had changed. Maybe that was
the real problem. She was so much softer then, so much more willing
to fall in love, or believe she was. She was colder now, more
solitary, and her outlines were scratched in deeper. Maybe she
wasn’t capable of that kind of connection anymore.
But why not? Because of the things she’d learned
from Madame Esme and Dr. Rosen and the falling-down mansion in
England? Maybe she’d buried herself with the discovery of the old
people she’d been. Maybe she’d lost that old self under the weight
of them.
She felt sad, and she put her hands to her eyes.
She wondered if it was really her he’d ever wanted.
He was different now, too, and maybe that was good.
Not only in how he looked, she realized. For one thing, he called
her by her name. He called her Lucy.