The Rules of Magic (Practical Magic 0)(54)
“So now you know,” Vincent said.
“I think I always knew,” Franny said.
“Well, then, now it’s out in the open.”
“I’m sure you don’t mind if we speak privately,” Franny said to William, taking her brother by the arm.
“Not at all.” They left William with the dog, who seemed perfectly content to be entrusted to this stranger.
“He has the sight,” Vincent protested as Franny directed him toward an alley. “There’s no privately. It’s all out in the open. You might as well speak in front of him.”
Her brother could be so irritating when he pretended to be dense. “You know you’re not supposed to do this,” Franny said.
“Be with a man?”
“Fall in love!” They both laughed, then Franny’s expression darkened. “Seriously, Vincent. The curse.”
“Oh, fuck it, Franny. Aren’t you sick of being ruled by the actions of people who are long dead? Maybe everyone is cursed. Maybe it’s the human condition. Maybe it’s what we want.”
Franny was truly worried. There was no one of whom she felt more protective. She thought of sitting beside his crib with a canister of salt, refusing to leave him after he’d been returned to them. She had seen a halo around him, the sign of a beautiful, but short, life. Franny had the salt with her now, but here he was with a grin on his face. And there was William Grant, watching them, concerned, clearly mad for her brother.
“Franny,” Vincent said. “Do not argue with me. Let me be who I am.”
As she threw her arms around him, she forgot about the salt and the rosemary and the curse and the ways fate could surprise you.
“Then I wish you happiness,” she said, for that was really all she’d ever wanted for him.
There was a crow on the lamppost on New Year’s Day. They’d had a small dinner, stuffing a goose with Aunt Isabelle’s recipe, which included chestnuts and oysters sure to inflame the erotic center of anyone who partook of the meal. Vincent and William took off after helping to wash up, laughing as they packed some of Vincent’s belongings. He was so often at William’s apartment it seemed he lived there. After he’d gone, Franny saw that he’d left The Magus at home, which she took to be a good sign. She went after it, thinking she would hide it under a loose floorboard in the kitchen, and perhaps Vincent would forget about it entirely. But when she went to grab the text, it burned her fingers. “Fine,” she said to the book. “As long as you leave him be.”
As Franny and Jet stored away the dishes, Jet noticed the crow in the yard. “Isn’t that Lewis?”
Franny went to greet him, having not seen him in more than two years. When she held up her arms he came to light on her shoulder. No matter what anyone said about crows, there were indeed tears in his eyes.
“Is it Haylin?” Franny asked.
The crow rested his beak against her cheek and she knew that it was. She went inside and found the phone number of Dunster House.
The crow paced on the coffee table and kept an eye on her. Jet paced as well, as Franny did her best to get through to the school. It was a holiday, and Harvard was all but deserted. At last a custodian answered. As Franny wasn’t a relative, he couldn’t give out any information.
“Don’t take no for an answer,” Jet urged. “Stand up for yourself.”
Franny pleaded with the custodian, who at last gave in, telling her that the student in question had been taken to Mass General Hospital.
“Of course you’ll go,” Jet said. “There’s no question about it.”
“But what if I ruin him?” Franny asked her sister. “Maybe I should stay.”
Franny had never before asked for her sister’s advice and Jet was somewhat startled, especially because she had not been forthcoming about her own life. She had intended not to see Rafael again, but that’s not how things turned out. They often met outside the hotel, then walked through the park. Jet read the papers he wrote for class, and later when he wrote a book about teaching kids who had been labeled unteachable he thanked her in his dedication, although no one in his family had ever met her. She had not regretted a moment.
“Go,” Jet told Franny. “What’s meant to happen will.”
Franny stored her toothbrush and an extra T-shirt in her backpack, then had Lewis climb into the cat’s carrying case, for it was too miserable a night to fly such a long distance. She took a cab to Penn Station and bought a ticket on the first train to Boston.
The car was overcrowded, and Franny had to stand until they reached New Haven, when she could finally slide into an available seat. By then she had a deep sense of foreboding. The other passengers must have felt it as well; as crowded as the train was, no one would sit next to her.
When she got to Boston she let Lewis out of his case and he lit into the sky. She stopped at a shop outside South Station and bought a bag of jelly doughnuts, then took a taxi to Mass General. This time she knew she would be questioned about her relationship to the patient. When she said she was his sister, she was told that Hay had suffered from appendicitis. His roommate had found him curled up in a fetal position, teeth chattering, unable to respond, and had frantically called an ambulance. It was touch and go, the nurse divulged as she led Franny along the hall; they had feared septic shock and Haylin was still weak.