I had forgotten all about that. Or maybe I thought she made that bit up so that she could coerce me into coming to Stanford with her. “Right. And where am I, exactly, in this vision?”
“Like two steps behind me, most of the way. For moral support, I think.” She bats her eyes and pouts at me.
All of a sudden this feels like a test for me, too. As an angel-blood who’s supposed to believe in the visions. As her friend.
“All right, all right. I’ll be there, two steps behind,” I promise.
“I had a feeling you were going to say yes,” she says gleefully.
“Yeah, don’t push your luck.”
She reaches into her back pocket and pulls out a sheet of wrinkled paper, unfolds it for me. It’s an ultrasound.
“You went to a doctor?” I ask. “I would have gone with you, if I’d known.”
She shrugs. “I’ve been a bunch of times. I wanted to make sure it was okay.” She corrects herself: “He. It’s a boy.”
I stare at the picture, part of me stunned that this is really a tiny person growing inside my friend. It’s grainy, but I can clearly make out a profile, a tiny nose and chin, the bones that make up the baby’s arm. “Are they sure? That it’s a boy?”
“Pretty sure,” she says with a smirk. “I think I’m going to name him Webster.”
“Webster, like after the dictionary? Hmm, I like it.” I hand the picture back to her.
She looks at it for a long moment. “He was sucking his thumb.” She refolds the paper and puts it back in her pocket. The dryer beeps that it’s done, and she starts pulling clothes out and into the basket.
“I’ll take that,” I offer, and she slides the basket over to me.
When we’re back in her room, folding, she suddenly says, “I don’t know how to be a mother. I’m not very … maternal.”
I fold a shirt and lay it across her bed. “My guess is that nobody knows how to be a mother until they become one.”
“He’s going to be so special,” she says softly.
“I know.”
“Phen will know what to do,” she says, like a mantra she’s repeating to herself. “He’ll know how to protect him.”
“I’m sure he will,” I say to reassure her, but I have my doubts about Phen. I’ve seen inside him, and paternal is not a word that springs to mind.
I knock on Christian’s door. He’s sweating when he opens it, wearing a white tank top and sweat pants, a towel slung around his neck. He’s surprised to see me. He wishes I’d called first.
“But you’re not returning my calls,” I say.
His jaw tightens.
“You’re still mad at me, and I think that’s reasonable, considering. But we need to talk.”
He pushes the door open for me, and I move past him into his room. I look immediately in the direction of the TV for Charlie, but he’s not here.
“We need to discuss Angela,” I say.
He doesn’t answer. Involuntarily, it seems, his eyes move to a framed photograph on his dresser, a black-and-white snapshot of a woman swinging a small dark-haired boy up in the air. The picture’s a little blurry, since they’re both in motion, but the boy is unmistakably Christian, Christian at four or five years old, I’m guessing. Christian and his mom. Together. Happy. They’re both laughing. I can almost hear it, looking at them. I can almost feel it. Joy. And it makes me sad to think that he lost her when he was so young. And now Walter, too.
I turn to look at him. He’s standing with his arms crossed over his chest, closed off in every way. “You know, if we’re going to have a conversation, you’re going to have to speak to me. With words, and stuff,” I say.
“What do you want me to say? You ditched me, Clara.”
“I ditched you?” I repeat incredulously. “That’s what you’re mad about? You were the one who wanted to leave.”
“I don’t want to be mad at you about the other thing,” he says, not meeting my eyes. “You can’t control that.”
Sometimes he’s so understanding it bugs me.
“But then you disappeared on me,” he says, and I hear the hurt in his voice. “You left.”