Hungry for More

CHAPTER 22



The next morning, Amy walked to Roni’s apartment, the chilly morning air urging her on, the pit in her stomach urging her to turn back.

Amy took a deep breath. Just because Roni holds all the cards doesn’t mean she knows she holds all the cards.

Think positive thoughts . She could still taste the nutty oatmeal she had eaten an hour ago. James had left it for her that morning with a note: Heat on LOW for three and a half minutes while stirring CONSTANTLY counterclockwise. Do not put in microwave under any circumstances. Sprinkle with berries and syrup. Enjoy. P.S., Come bus and dice at the restaurant tonight. We’re booked solid. We need you. —J.

There was something odd about the note, as if it were written in a woman’s hand. She passed a liquor store and stopped. The handwriting on the note was just like the scrawled writing on the wine bottle label in James’s apartment. The mysterious Jules, Amy realized, was a woman. And she must be close by to have written the breakfast instructions.

Amy shook her head. She must be imagining things. Why would James get some woman to write her a note on how to cook oatmeal? It didn’t make sense.

She waited at the corner for a Septa 44 local to lurch past, spewing another layer of fumes onto the already-gray snow, then walked on through the cold.

Forget the note; the oatmeal was pure James. It hadn’t looked like much, but it tasted like maple trees and grandmas. She ate two servings, then licked the bowl. Then the pot. She wondered how much better it would have been if she had stirred it counterclockwise like the anal-retentive directions had instructed.

Still, she would have preferred James’s warm body to a pot of mush, no matter how delicious. She stopped on the sidewalk, the woman behind her almost colliding with her. Had their appetizer-foreplay last night inspired oatmeal? She shook off the horrid thought. She stepped off the curb and made her way down Chestnut Street, bustling amid the people bundled under coats and hats, moving through the slush.

Maybe she shouldn’t have left him all hot and bothered like that last night. Maybe he was trying to tell her something.

She pinched her stomach and eyeballed the half-inch of captured flesh. Talk about mush. Maybe that’s what made him think “oatmeal.” She had put on at least five pounds since she’d been hanging out with James. Who could help it? An entire stick of butter. Her mouth watered.

Ah, James.

Who cared about extra weight? More of her to love.

She gulped. Images of James’s flashing eyes raced through her mind. And her body. I inspired more than oatmeal. She had to stop thinking like a nervous schoolgirl. After all, what did she care? It was just sex. He wasn’t her soul mate.

Or was he?

It was time to meet Roni and figure out if this woman was for real.

Roni and Troy’s apartment loomed across the street. She stared up at the familiar windows and said a little prayer: Please, Maddie, see reason . Then she hopped the soot-black pile of plowed snow that had formed at the curb and crossed the street, her dread building with every step. An angry cabdriver swerved around her, and she gave him the finger.

Amy rang the buzzer to Roni’s apartment and waited.

Maybe no one was there. That was fine. She could think another day about how to handle this. Go back for another soak in the tub.

Wait . She had to command Roni not to tell her True Love’s name. She had promised James a menu, and finishing her obligation to him meant staying focused: If she found out that he was her One True Love—she still wasn’t convinced that Roni was telling the truth about Gladys Roman—Amy would bolt. Plus, she had to also focus on getting Maddie back without being flustered by things that didn’t matter, like James. She’d get her soul mate’s name as soon as she and James finished their commitment. Or not. It didn’t matter. What mattered was that she didn’t fall for her True Love, whoever he was. So best not to know.

“Hello?” a small, soft voice came over the intercom. “Who’s there?”

Amy felt like a pimpled thirteen-year-old come to pick up a prom date. “Amy Burns. I’m a friend of Troy’s.”

The door buzzed, but she didn’t push through. She rang the intercom again.

“Hello?” Roni asked. Her soft voice was barely audible through the tinny speaker.

“It’s still me, listen—”

Roni buzzed the door longer, cutting off any further conversation. Amy waited impatiently until the infernal noise stopped. She rang the intercom again.

“Hello?” Roni was clearly confused. “Push. The. Door.” She said the words slowly, as if Amy might not understand English. Or doors.

Amy waited. Roni could only hear her when she pressed the intercom button upstairs. The static crackled, indicating that the line was open.

“Hello?”

“I’m not coming up until you promise me something,” Amy said quickly, before Roni could buzz again.

Silence. Then static. Then, softly, “What?”

Amy called into the small speaker, “I can help you. But you can’t, can’t, can’t tell me the name you hear when you touch me. Do you understand? Under no circumstances tell me the name or I’m history.”

Another moment of static. “You’re thirsty?” Roni asked.

“No, history. Oh, damn. Just buzz me up.”

Roni obviously hadn’t heard a word Amy had said through the shoddy intercom. This was going to be tricky. Roni buzzed Amy in, and she took the stairs two at a time toward the third floor.

“Aaaah!” she screamed as she came around the second-floor landing.

“Shhh,” Troy whispered. “Don’t freak out.”

Amy gathered herself, embarrassed that she had been so startled by the boy. Then she saw the look on his face. “What’s wrong?”

“My mom,” he said, slumping to sit on the landing’s top step. “Something’s really not right.”



Amy sat down next to him. This was a Troy she had only seen glimpses of before. He looked utterly beaten.

“You gotta help her,” he whispered. “She’s like a whole different person. She keeps shaking and then popping these pills.” He let his head fall into his hands.

“I will help her,” Amy said, meaning it—that is, truly meaning it—for the first time. She inhaled deeply. Troy looked like he might cry, and Amy didn’t think she could handle that.

“She’s all shook up. She’s . . . I’m . . . worried.” He turned to her. “Can you really help her get rid of that voice?”


I don’t know. Oh, hell, she couldn’t let Troy down. Something shifted inside her. I’m not doing this for me, Maddie. See? I’m doing it for the kid and his mom. He looked really scared.

Amy felt torn in two. She had no idea if she could get Maddie back, but now, face-to-face with Troy, it seemed to matter more.

He looked so helpless.

She reached up around her neck and unclasped her pendant. “Here, take this. Wear it.”

Troy didn’t take the necklace. “It’s bad luck to give away your jewelry.”

“I’m not giving it away. I’m lending it to you.”

“Why?”

“Because, it’ll keep away evil spirits. If you have this, you can help me help your mom. I can’t do this myself.” It wasn’t really true, but it sounded good. She had to make him believe he had power, to let him know he could help. But most of all, to let him know that she trusted him, so he should trust her.

“Yeah?” He looked doubtful.

“Yeah.” She urged the necklace toward him. “It’ll give you strength. I promise. Now, c’mon, your mom is going to think I fell down the stairs.”

He worked his mouth nervously, then reached out and took the necklace. He weighed the heavy gold in his hand. A twinge of regret rocked her—that pendant was her insurance policy, her life savings, her identity, her good luck. It had been handed down from her great-great-grandmother. There might be two of them like it in the country. Four of them in the world. With craftsmanship and materials like hers, maybe none. The sapphires alone could put the kid through a year at the Culinary Institute.

But right now, she knew it would make him feel better, and that was all that mattered. Anyway, she’d get it back from him. It was just a temporary good-luck charm.

If only her sisters could see her now, they wouldn’t recognize her. If only Maddie could see her now. I really care, Maddie. See, I can put other people first. I’m finishing James’s menu no matter what. And I’m helping this family.

Troy cinched the chain around his neck. He didn’t smile, but he didn’t scowl either, which was progress. “Thanks. But I don’t know how this is gonna help.”

Me neither . “It will protect you both.”

He fingered the gold, and she could see some of his anxiety lifting. She felt her spirits lifting, too.



Roni was peering out of her partially opened door, one dark blinking eye and a stream of long black hair showing in the gap.

A rush of sympathy for her almost knocked Amy back down the stairs. The woman looked truly terrified. No way did she have the balls to be pulling a con.

A flood of memories from when Amy didn’t understand the names almost upended her as she entered the small apartment. “I know you’re hearing names,” Amy said, holding up her hand to silence Roni as she strode into the familiar apartment, Troy right behind her. “But you must not tell me the name you hear when you touch me. Do you understand? I can help you. I know the spirit that’s possessing you. But if you tell me the name you hear when you touch me, I’m outta here. I’m history.”

Roni was holding an open can of generic diet cola. “So you’re not thirsty? I thought you said you were thirsty.”

Amy studied the small Gypsy before her and the lousy-looking drink in her hand. The woman looked even smaller than Amy had imagined her. She was tiny, maybe five feet small, and delicate as a bird. Amy couldn’t help but think of the bird skull at Madame Prizzo’s trailer, with its vulnerable, thread-thin bones.

Amy had the urge to feed Roni. When had she ever had the urge to feed anyone?

But Roni looked like she really needed a good meal. Her pin-straight black hair hung to just beyond her shoulders. Her big blinking eyes stared out with such childish innocence from below a fringe of bangs that the woman looked almost younger than Troy.

She had no tits at all.

And her clothes. Black pin-straight pedal pushers, black ballet flats, a pink (pink!) sweater over a pinker (pinker!) shirt. Had she just mugged a boring, goody-goody, teacher’s pet twelve-year-old? Her submissive I’m-here-to-serve demeanor wasn’t showmanship like Stu’s or Dan’s when they waited tables. In this woman, it was real. Roni lived to please. She was a server through and through.

Plus, her hands were shaking like mad.

Maddie was definitely loving this.

But where was Maddie? Amy didn’t sense her presence in the room at all. Was that because Maddie was contained inside Roni, her presence for Roni alone? A wave of hurt rolled through Amy. Or was it because Roni was lying? Amy watched the woman’s hands. Was the shaking Roni’s tell, the thing she couldn’t help doing when she was lying? Amy filed the possibility away for later.

“You told Madame Prizzo you know about the voice.” Roni’s small voice broke into Amy’s thoughts. She had actually sat down at Amy’s feet and was now staring up at her, blinking her huge brown eyes. Troy was standing, arms crossed, by the door, unwilling to come all the way in.

Amy tried to arrange her thoughts. “Okay, first thing, get off the floor.”

Roni cocked her head like a sparrow, but she got up and sat opposite Amy. Her hands were still shaking.

“Now, listen very carefully. Now that you have the voice—and the power—you need to be assertive. Got me? Like you know you wield great power and you’re not afraid to use it.”

To her dismay, Roni took both her hands and held them tightly. “But I am afraid.”

Amy yanked her hands free. “You heard a name? Right? Just then? When you touched me?”

“Yes, I heard—”

“La-la-la-la-la!” Amy pressed her palms against her ears. She sang until Roni was forced into confused silence, her hands folded in her lap like a choir girl.

“Do you know what the names mean?”

“Madame de Guize told me they’re the names of the dead who need something from me. But I don’t know what.” Tears filled Roni’s eyes. “I don’t know how I can help if they’re dead. All it says are names, and, Amy, they’re not all dead.”

“Madame de Guize is a moron.” And a con-woman. Amy wondered how much Roni had paid her and how much Madame Prizzo got as a cut. A wave of anger washed over her at Madame Prizzo for conning this simple soul. Not that Amy had been above conning the woman until five minutes ago, before meeting Troy on the stairs. It was decided: Roni was too timid to be pulling a con. “ Listen, when you touch a person, Maddie speaks the name of that person’s One True Love. The one person on this Earth chosen by destiny to be the soul mate of the person you touch. Do you understand?”

Roni blinked. “Maddie?”

Troy made a guttural, coughing noise. “Don’t touch me, Mom. Oh, hell. You’ve already touched me. Is it Andrea Pruis?”

Roni shook her head. “No, Troy, it’s someone else.”

Amy shot Troy a warning glance. “Don’t worry. The voice never gives kids their soul mates’ names. I don’t know why. Maybe so they don’t tease each other.” She turned to Roni, who looked a little relieved. “Maddie is the name I call the voice. I don’t know her real name, but that’s what I made up. She never says a word except for the names, right?” Amy thought back to Madame Prizzo’s grungy trailer and all the words Maddie had spoken that night. A haze of doubt clouded her mind. Had Maddie really come? Maybe she had imagined it all. But she had felt the spirit’s presence. She was never wrong about things like that.


I don’t feel the presence now.

“I call the voice Ms. N.,” Roni admitted sheepishly. “N for ‘Names.’ Get it?”

Amy tried not to roll her eyes. Who could make this garbage up? Only Roni could be so nice and so unfunny, Amy’s least favorite combination in a person.

Roni sat up straight, like a goody-goody in the first row at school. “So, when I touch you and I hear”—Roni paused, alarmed by Amy’s frantic arm waving—“I hear a name, it’s the name of your One True Love?” Roni looked at her quizzically. “Don’t you already know who your One True Love is?”

“See, that’s the rub. Maddie won’t tell the person who hears the names their own True Love.”

To Amy’s utter astonishment, tears again rose in Roni’s eyes. Her face went pale. “I’ll never know the name of my One True Love unless I get Maddie to leave?” The tears spilled over.

Bingo.

Of course this woman wanted True Love above all else—just look at her. Amy had been scheming and conniving over how to get Roni to give up Maddie, but the woman had been through with the spirit before Amy had even begun. This woman didn’t want power. She didn’t even seem to understand what power was.

If Roni was already won over, all Amy had to do was convince Maddie to come back to where she truly belonged. She was half done already. She really could help this family. “I can help you get rid of the voice,” Amy said.

“Oh, thank you!” Roni threw herself into Amy’s arms.

Amy felt as if she were holding a child.

After a few moments of awkward back-patting, Roni pulled away. “But you poor thing! You’ve never heard the name of your One True Love! I could tell you.”

Amy lowered her eyes. “It’s my fate not to know.” A pang of curiosity zipped through her, but she pushed it away.

Roni’s eyebrows crested in confusion.

“It’s my fate to have Maddie.” That pang again, only sharper. Maybe she was hungry.

Roni looked even more confused.

“I used to have Maddie. She used to tell me the names. Since I was five.”

“Why did she come to me?”

“Fresh blood.”

Roni’s eyes widened in horror.

“Joking. Joking.” Geez, you had to be careful with this one. “I don’t know why she left me and went to you. She doesn’t speak except the names, so it’s hard to say.”

“How did you find me?”

Bribes to some very well-placed Gypsy informants and a wee touch of extortion. “A sense. Maddie and I, I believe, are true soul mates.”

Roni threw her arms around Amy again and drew her to her. Amy tried to accept the hug with grace, but uneasiness made her awkward. I’m not conning her. I’m being up front. I’m helping her. And Troy.

Amy glanced at Troy. He was fingering the pendant, and his face had lost its earlier pinched look.

“I know exactly what we need to do first,” Amy said.

“A séance?” Roni asked, breathless. “I’ll call Madame Prizzo! We could do it tonight.”

“No. I’m making you both lunch.” Amy went to the little kitchen, but the cupboards were bare. Had she really eaten that many crackers while she was staying with Troy? “I’m going shopping, making you lunch, and then we’ll talk.”



A half hour later, in the kitchen, water boiling and butter melting, Amy felt weightless, unsettled, and happy. Without the necklace, at first she thought that she might float away. But now she was light, free. Plus, she liked the way it looked around Troy’s neck. She liked the way giving it to him made her feel proud.

She liked him. And his mother. Well, like was a strong word. She could help Roni, anyway, do it for Troy.

The sensation of helping was so odd, she almost couldn’t stand it. Time to go. Time to move on. Don’t get close. Who knew it could feel so good to be so—she struggled to get the word out—good. She had to work on trusting people more. She had to stop being so suspicious. Maybe, with Troy and Roni and James, she could stick around a while. Trust them.

Troy was at the table, slicing garlic just like James had, maybe even better. Roni was sipping hot tea. In this apartment, Amy felt useful. It was the way she had felt at James’s last night.

I belong. I want to help these people. Roni, Troy, James. I have something to offer.

She felt Maddie’s presence in the room. There. She was being paranoid before; that was all. Maddie was here. Maddie was moving toward her, step by step. It was working.

Amy scooped up Troy’s garlic pieces and tossed them into the melting butter. “Now, let’s talk spirit-voices.” She stirred the garlic, trying to flip the pan the same way she had seen James do it, while she told her story.



Troy felt the warmth coming off the necklace Amy had given him. He was dying to inspect the pendant more closely, but he didn’t want his mother to notice it and make him give it back.

So he stared at his mom instead. Since she had come back, she’d been different. Shakier. Was this voice really driving her that mad? Was there really a voice? Or were both of these women nuts? And what was with the pills his mom kept popping? Sure, she said they were just herbal, completely natural. But still, the fact that his mother seemed to need them so desperately was not reassuring.

Amy continued to blah blah blah about her past while she cooked. She had even bought fresh sage. How had Amy learned about fresh sage?

As she cooked, she told weepy stories of not understanding the voice. How when she was little she had pretended her teddy bear, not a mysterious voice from the otherworld, was speaking to her. Amy spoke with her eyes and her hands, and even her tits got into the act. You’d think she was on a stage, not here in their filthy kitchen in the gloom of a Philly winter, freezing their asses off, dirty laundry leaking out of the liquor cabinet.

You’d think she wanted them to like her. Like she cared all of a sudden.

And yeah, he kinda liked her show. Liked that she had trusted him with the necklace. Liked the smell of the cooking garlic. His mom never cooked for him.

He shot her a quick glance. Something was up. Something more than she was telling him. She kept looking away from him, not meeting his eyes. Had she heard his True Love’s name? God, that would be awful. What if it was someone lame? But Amy had said that kids didn’t get True Loves. But his mom sure seemed like she had heard something. He filed the inconsistency away for later.

The warmth from the pendant was turning to heat. It was almost uncomfortable how hot it was becoming. He let his hand cover it, but Amy caught the motion and smiled at him, causing him to pull his hand away. He half-listened to her tell her life story—voices, names, lovers united, lovers destroyed.

Troy let the stories wash over him. The problem with being a Gypsy was that this mumbo-jumbo psychic stuff was in your blood. To laugh it off like he did with his buddies at school was impossible when he was alone with his mother and her friends. The curses, the evil eyes, the possibility of your mother hearing voices that told a person’s One True Love—all that mystery was in his life the way other people had their soccer schedules.

He played striker on the weirdo team.

But if Amy could take the voice away with her, things could go back to normal.

Normaler.

Amy was going on about breaking up families as she put one bowl of gnocchi in front of him and one in front of his mother. She told them about how she had once read a pair of seventy-year-old brothers who were married to each other’s One True Love. Troy couldn’t help but let out a laugh at that one, despite the chill that rocked him down to his balls. The brothers almost killed each other. Then one of the wives died of asthma complications caused by the anxiety of the dilemma. The other wife divorced her husband and married the widowed brother.


This voice is f*cked up. He snuck a look at his mother, who was eating with gusto. Had she eaten anything since last night? He had heard her barfing in the bathroom earlier this morning.

But Amy’s food was pretty good. No, it was really good. She used fresh sage leaves and a whole stick of butter. The gnocchi were store-bought average, but she had done a nice job with them. She wasn’t half bad in the kitchen.

Amy regaled them with more stories as they ate. His mother’s eyes were popping out of her head. Why this spirit-voice had to come and bug them was just one more of life’s f*cked-up mysteries. His mother didn’t want psychic power. She was practically trembling, begging Amy to help her get rid of it, whenever she could get a word in edgewise. His poor mother just wanted to get by and wait tables without having to cause tragedies. This voice clearly brought only tragedy.

Well, if anyone could scare away this voice, Amy was the one. He’d never met as fearless a Gypsy as Amy. Well, maybe Madame Prizzo. She was grisly.

Amy winked at him mid–punch line of a story about a born-again woman from Detroit who found out her One True Love was a radical polygamist from Utah named Clive who already had three wives.

His mother smiled, and the relief of her smile let Troy laugh out loud. “Oh, shit, what happened?”

“Oh, that one had a happy ending,” Amy said. “After all, what was one more wife? It worked out fine. Best thing that ever happened to that woman. She said she always wanted sisters.” She punched his shoulder, and he punched her back. His mother smiled, and for a minute, he thought things might just turn out okay.



That night, Amy and James made love. It was slow and soft and sweet. There were words, and cries, and sighs, and moans. There were caresses and touches and deep, lingering kisses, there, and there, and there, too.

If you had asked Amy how it began (James’s kitchen), who made the first move (James), or what that move was (kisses, down the neck, slow and soft), she wouldn’t have been able to tell you. In fact, she wouldn’t have told you even if she could have separated out the details before her final climax (“James. Oh. God. James.”). But she could have told you the look in James’s eye when they were done (possessive, demanding, intense; then soft, tender, loving). More likely, though, she would have said something snide like, “He was amazing. Of course, with me as his muse, what else could he be?” But what she had felt had been deeper: a mixture of tenderness and yearning and desire.

And it frightened her.

James, if asked, would have been able to tell you about the taste vision that he got from Amy (figs and foie gras). Warm. Sweet. Rich. A combination that was wrong and shouldn’t have worked but yet was perfect. Beyond that, he wouldn’t have said a thing, because that was the sort of man he was. But also because, like Amy, he had felt something rare and deep that went beyond the recipe, beyond the body in his bed, beyond the usual hunger of physical desire.

As he lay beside her, sated, images of her filled his head, twirling and settling, then taking flight again. “Ames?”

“Hmmm.”

“Why do you draw on the walls?”

“Hmm?”

“The horseshoe with the A . There’s one in the walk-in, right? And tonight, I spotted one in my bathroom, by the tub, behind the soaps.”

She shrugged. “Just a sign that I’ve been somewhere.”

“Not a sign that you’re leaving somewhere?”

She kissed his lips. “No.”

“I’m going to tattoo it on my skin.”

“Yeah?” He felt her smile on her lips. “You could use a few tattoos. I’ve never slept with such a naked man.”

“Do any of yours represent a man?” He traced the snake down her arm.

She kissed him again. “No.”

“Do you kiss me when you lie?”

“Yes.” She kissed him. “If I did put you on my skin, you’d be a hawk.”

“A hawk?”

“A creature of the night. Lone, beautiful, soaring. But ruthless.”

“I think I’d make you a chameleon. Always changing to suit your needs. Adaptable. A survivor, no matter what.”

“A reptile? Hey, wait. Don’t hawks eat lizards?”

“Not this one.”

“That’s not how I remember it just a few moments ago. I remember—”

“This?” He bent and kissed her.

“Mmm. Yes.”

And then they began again.





Foie Gras a la Tres Fleurs

Warm foie gras with black mission figs

—JAMES LACHANCE, Meal of a Lifetime,

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