Marie made a keening sound, like a fox, trapped.
Like a carnival trick, the rusted spike of the desk bill holder piercing his right eye, a starburst, a pinwheel, its center red and wet.
He needs an eyepatch, Dara thought, her brain not working, like Herr Drosselmeier.
It gave him the look of a perpetual wink, an eternal one. But the blood was dark and final.
THREE
THE NUTCRACKER
It was impossible to remember Christmas without it.
This is how we keep the lights on, their mother always told them. Those dreams of Clara are how we keep the lights on.
* * *
*
The Nutcracker, a young girl’s dream of peering over the precipice into the dark furrow of adulthood and finding untold pleasures. Of the eye, of the mouth.
Because, foremost, The Nutcracker was a dream of hunger, of appetite.
Consider the exquisite torture of all those little girls never allowed to eat dancing as costumed Sugar Plums, as fat Bonbons gushing cherry slicks. Tutus like ribbon candy, boys spinning great hoops of peppermint, and everywhere black slathers of licorice and marzipan glistening like snow.
When they were too young to dance it, too young even to play a Candy Cane or one of the darling Polichinelles, their mother read them the E.T.A. Hoffmann story Nutcracker and Mouse-King. An old book that smelled like must and was illustrated with gaudy, frightening images—rodents with fierce claws, the Nutcracker’s teeth long and sharp.
A young girl named not Clara but Marie becomes fixated on the wooden doll her seductive godfather gives her. In bed with the doll, she drifts into a fantasy world of her own making and, at the end of her nocturnal adventures, is forbidden by her family to speak of them again.
You have to dance it long before you understand it, their mother always said.
But Dara could never remember a time she didn’t understand all of it.
It was a warning for those who become lost to desire. Because, at the end of the story, Marie awakens from her dream, changed. No one believes her when she tells her tale. They say it’s a fantasy and it’s time to let it go. And, at the end, she is unable to live in reality. She is lost in her dream.
In the ballet, though, the story ends with Clara still in her fantasy world, her dream world. She never has to come back at all.
* * *
*
Marie’s favorite part of the book was when the little girl sees a spot of blood on the Nutcracker and rubs it with her pocket handkerchief.
How, slowly, as she rubbed the Nutcracker, he grew warm under her hand and began to move. How his mouth began to work and twist, and move up and down until he could speak. Until he could tell Marie what she needed to do.
No picture books! he insisted. No Christmas frock!
Instead: Get me a sword—a sword!
In their bunkbed at night she’d make Dara read it to her.
From below, Dara could see Marie’s girlish arm swing out and grab for the bedpost, to rub it like the Nutcracker, to summon it to life.
Dara would read and read and Marie would say again, again until Dara felt her stomach turn and flip, to work and twist like the Nutcracker’s mouth.
Oh, Dara, Marie would say, her fingers working the bedpost, we must get him his sword!
HE DIDN’T GO HERE
The police detective was waiting for her but Dara wasn’t ready yet.
Instead, she was standing in front of the dust-daubed mirror in the powder room.
This isn’t a matter of life or death. That’s what she used to tell herself back in her dancing days. Before a big performance, or after one. Before an audition, a solo. But your body doesn’t know the difference.
Because it was true. Those moments just before, standing in the wings, the floor humming from the orchestra, breath heavy and body heavy and how will it ever happen?
But it does, the body going into flight-or-fight mode, summoning all its energies to defeat the threat, to conquer the danger.
The body knows so much better than you do what it needs to survive.
* * *
*
In the seven, eight hours since it had happened, she hadn’t stopped moving, nor had Charlie.
Instead, she’d gone into the adrenaline-fired, cortisol-seething space of performance. A space of needle-sharp concentration, boundless energy, nerves jangling, senses elevated, her body taking over, her brain blank.
One breath, two breaths, she took a paper towel from the roll on the sink—
That sink, wobbling on its pedestal, flashes of Marie pressed up against it, the rutting bull, tearing it loose from its screws, tearing Marie—
Tank top stripped to her waist, she wet the paper towel, rubbing it across her skin, across the three sheets of sweat, the oldest now-gray flakes. The sweat like the sweat after a performance, three skins to shed to make oneself new again.
Somehow, all those hours had gone by. Seven, eight hours since they’d all stood over the fallen contractor, his body twisted and broken. Since Marie began moaning, her hair in her hands, her hands shaking against Charlie’s chest. Since Dara watched the two of them clinging to each other, assuring each other (it was an accident, oh god, he slipped, he fell), while Dara looked down at the contractor, at Derek’s face, the spiral of his ruined eye. The other eye vacant and heaven-tilting. Reminding her of something she couldn’t quite name.
Now it was only when Dara closed her eyes that she saw him. Derek. The sprawl of his body, his ankles twisted upon themselves on the bottom step, almost daintily, almost like a sur le cou-de-pied, one foot wrapped like a scarf around the other.
His body in death had been surprisingly graceful. The fall like the descent of a majestic animal, a panther, a condor, its wings spread. The descent of a dancer from a grand jeté.
But then he was just dead, his shirt pulled up above his belly, his face like stiff paper, the awful red slick of his right eye, its jellied center.
He was dead and there was nothing they could do about it.
It was an accident, after all. And, as they would tell it, it was an accident he’d had alone.
If they stuck to the plan, everything would be okay.
* * *
*
That moment, staring down at him, had been the only pause. The only time Dara had given herself before she took a breath, turned to Charlie and Marie, and told them both there was no time for anything but correcting this.
Spine straight, chest lifted, eyes up, breathe, breathe, breathe. Make it perfect. Make it right.
“We’re going to take care of this,” she’d said. That was what you did. You kept it behind closed doors. Peeping Toms, voyeurs, their mother used to call them—neighbors, truant officers, social workers, police officers. It was no one’s business. No one else would ever understand.
“We were never here,” Dara had said to Charlie and Marie. “When it happened. We were never here and that’s all we know.”
Best to keep it simple. To keep themselves out of it. Dara made the plan in an instant. Someone had to.
They both looked so relieved. They looked so grateful.
* * *
*
Moments later, at three a.m., Charlie and Dara had climbed that same staircase to the third floor.
No one can know about Derek and Marie, Dara kept saying. No one.
It would draw suspicion. It would complicate things. It might make Marie look guilty. It might make them all look guilty.
Swiftly, they’d gathered Marie’s belongings—a fistful of tank tops, a dark knot of tights, a mound of elastics, a pair of tangled, torn underwear that made Dara gasp—and thrown them into a garbage bag.
They’d folded the futon upon itself, and unplugged the windup Cinderella record player, wrapping its extension cord around it, stuffing it under the futon frame.
She had so little.
They took the sheets, the pillowcase with them.
Later, Dara would run them through the washing machine three times, putting her hands on them, scalding, after. Looking for any signs of him. A hair, a stain.