Dreamland Social Club(65)
“With Loki,” he said. “And the city council.”
“Oh,” she said, and she instantly, viscerally—like in the buzz of her fingertips and the quiver in her throat—remembered why she’d dreaded spring to begin with. “What’s going on?” she asked and felt wobbly—as if she were on skates. As if winter had been a smooth glide on a frozen lake but now cracks were forming on the surface.
“Big presentation of Loki’s new plan Thursday night at the Aquarium.” He was straightening his jacket. “Loki is opening it to the public on a first-come, first-served basis and footing the bill for a dinner buffet. To try to win people over, I guess.”
“And the new plan is a lot better?” Jane asked, pushing down the sick feeling in her gut. She’d sort of assumed the new plan would take longer, even though they’d been saying spring all along.
He nodded. “Which tie do you like?” He held up two, and Jane pointed to the one with gray and blue stripes on a diagonal.
“How is it different from the old plan?” she asked.
“I’m not sure. I just know the Tsunami made the cut.” He looked in the mirror. “Speaking of which, I need to get this mop trimmed.” He ran a hand through his hair, then disappeared upstairs.
Jane sat in the living room for a moment, absorbing this new information. The presentation was happening. She knew about it. But did Leo? Did anyone? Had the news been made public already? Because she did not want to make the same mistakes she’d made in the fall. She wanted to be open. Honest. Wasn’t that the way forward?
She went upstairs and knocked on her father’s door. “Have they announced the event yet?” she asked when he opened.
“I don’t know,” he said. “But I think so. Or it will be. Maybe tomorrow. What’s on your mind?”
She sat in a chair in the corner. “I don’t know. There’s someone I might need to tell about it, just to be sure he doesn’t hear it somewhere else and realize that I knew. It’s complicated.”
“Sounds it.” He was hanging up the suit, brushing off a few bits of fuzz.
“Dad?” There was more on her mind than she’d actually realized at the start of the conversation. “If they veto Loki again—and I know it’s a big if—do you think the city might be interested in the Tsunami?”
He turned to her. “I’m not sure it works that way, honey. And the city seems to have just stalled its own plans anyway. Something about a change in leadership, I think.”
He was emptying his shopping bag and said, “Oh, I almost forgot.” He handed her a postcard—“This was in the mailbox when I came in”—and she studied the image on the front—a black-and-white shot of a million people on the beach. She didn’t have to turn it over to know it was from Mr. Simmons, but she did anyway. It said, “Are we having fun yet?”
After dinner that night, Jane went to the window in her room and looked out at the Parachute Jump, lit red in the night. Tomorrow all the boardwalk stores and clam shacks and pizzerias and bars would open for the season, and the crowds would be endless and annoying.
Crowds were good, she knew.
Good for Coney. It depended on them.
But she was going to miss the quiet, the knishes, the truce. She was going to miss the way Coney felt more like a secret than the playground of the world.
Crossing the hall to Marcus’s room when she couldn’t shake a restless feeling, she poked in her head. “I’m going to go for a walk. You want to come?”
So they went up toward the boardwalk together, with light jackets on, and just walked and walked until they hit Brighton—where Russian women in fancy dresses were talking and smoking in groups in front of Tatiana. The sounds of the cabaret—electronic drums and poppy female vocals—floated out into the air.
And then they turned around and walked back and cut down the side of Wonderland, where a barker stood outside the sideshow building with a megaphone. “Free show tonight!” he said to no one, then he spotted Jane and Marcus. “Hey, you two,” he said. “Free show. Come in. You don’t have anything better to do. It’s our dress rehearsal for tomorrow.”
Marcus looked at Jane and shrugged, and she said, “I don’t know.”
“Jane,” he said, “we go to school at a sideshow practically every day. And I mean, look at your friends. You, of all people, shouldn’t be squeamish about this.”
She still couldn’t believe the mystery of the Dreamland Social Club had been solved. If it weren’t a secret society she’d be telling the whole world—or at least Marcus—about her new-member status.
“Fine,” she said, and they ducked into the dimly lit theater and climbed to the middle of a set of small bleachers facing a stage. Jane had, she only realized now, been consciously avoiding the sideshow ever since they’d arrived on Coney. It had seemed sort of scary to her when she’d first laid eyes on that mural on the building. But now, well, now she wasn’t sure. Marcus was right. Maybe something about being a member of the Dreamland Social Club—a club inspired by a group of freaks—made her sort of calm about geeks and sword swallowers and fire-eaters. They were just people. People with tricks, sure, but still just people.
The sideshow performers didn’t seem that enthused about working for a crowd of two, but Marcus and Jane did their best to clap loudly after a man lifted the bowling ball with a chain attached to his tongue, and after another man put a power drill up his nose. And when that same performer—the Human Blockhead—asked for a volunteer, Marcus said, “Go on,” and elbowed Jane. “It’s your destiny.”