Thank you for the fabulous feedback and interest everyone. As soon as I get a moment to sit down and breathe, I promise to try to ans. your questions. In the meantime, keep it coming! LOL
Apologies for the delay. Here are two parts to make up for it. Happy Holidays!

************************************************************
References: Walter de la Mare
Chapter 4
And some win peace who spend
The skill of words to sweeten despair
The Riddlers
The drive to the hospital was mostly silent. A lot of things had changed, but now just as then, no one could ever accuse Max Evans of being overly chatty. Or even, talkative at that!
“So,” I asked once we were a little way from home, “how long have you been working for my grandmother?”
“A little over a year and a half.”
For a moment I thought that was the end of the conversation and I frantically began searching for some other inoffensive topic. But then he continued.
“I was at odd ends. She needed a researcher/assistant. It was fortuitous.”
As an answer it gave me exactly the information I had asked for, but it lacked something by way of … anything. There was no way to continue that topic without making it seem like prying so I mumbled vaguely and turned my head to look out the window.
The silence gave me time to organize my thoughts. While not very comfortable, it gave me the space I needed to plan out my first meeting with grandma Claudia in two years. The last time I had seen her, God the last time I had seen had been so wonderful. Great going Liz, I muttered irritated with myself. Thinking about our conditions then and now weren’t going to do me any good, if anything they were depressing me even more. Not the most suitable frame of mind for meeting someone at the hospital.
Snapping to attention I realized that the car had stopped and Max was patiently waiting by my door.
“Oh, sorry. Mind was wandering.” I muttered to him as I slid out of the car.
Nodding, he ushered me to the hospital doors and led me to the nearest elevator. We went to the sixth floor and turned right when the elevator doors opened. Her room was on the same floor as the ICU. If Max felt me falter or hesitate he gave no indication of it as his long strides ate the distance to the nurse’s station.
“Hi Julia!” He called out smiling to the strawberry blonde sitting at the nurse’s station.
“Max, hey! Can you just give me a second?” She replied looking up from the computer.
“Yeah, sure.” He replied, helping himself to the small jar of peppermints sitting on the counter looking very much at home.
“Ok, all yours.” Julia said a few minutes later, getting up from the computer.
“These are really good,” Max said, before pointing to me, “This is Claudia’s granddaughter, Elizabeth Parker. Could you add her to the visitor’s list, please?”
“Of course,” she replied scribbling my name in a log book, before walking around the counter toward me, “Hi Elizabeth. It’s good to finally meet you. Your grandma talks about you a lot. Her room’s this way, follow me.”
We walked swiftly down toward the end of the corridor. Stopping in front of Room 600, Julia spoke, “Here we are. I’ll just go in with you for a second, Elizabeth. I just need to check her charts real quick. Is that ok?”
“Please call me Liz,” I said to her softly before asking, “How is she doing?”
“She’s doing well. Nothing to worry about. Really.” Julia replied with unimpaired cheerfulness. And I wondered if one of the criteria for being selected as a nurse was to be impressively happy under adverse conditions.
She was opening the door when I realized that Max wasn’t standing beside me anymore. Turning around, I saw him sitting on a chair along the wall.
“Aren’t you coming?”
He replied casually, “Why don’t you go in first? I’ll be along in a bit.”
Biting my lip I turned around and faced the door. Behind that door lay the person who meant the most to me in the world, the person who had supported my every dream and aspiration. Straightening my shoulders, I smoothed my hair back and walked into room 600.
************************************************************
I’ve always wondered why hospitals smell so sterile. Why they are so white and colorless.
They smell cold and look detached. No matter what kind of a hospital it is, where it is, or what section you are in: each and every one smells and looks the same. It’s a smell that makes me sick to my stomach. It reminds me of being alone and of being unhappy, of being unloved and unwanted. Sometimes, I think, hospital staff is so depressingly cheerful because their surroundings are so awful. It’s a coping mechanism or they’d go mad.
Looking at my vital grandmother laying in a white hospital bed, looking frail and old, the smell hit me with the force of a sledgehammer. The smell of life ebbing and the knowledge that there was nothing I could do about it.
I didn’t even realize we were alone until I heard the door click softly behind the nurse.
“Lizzie?” her voice rose weak and faint over the whirr of hospital machinery.
“Nana,” I replied reverting to the childhood name.
I was moving to sit on the chair next to the bed, when her hand patted the space next to her stopping mid-gesture as if her strength had failed her.
I suppose it was that gesture, which broke me. I sat on the bed next to her, laid my head on her breast and started crying.
*************************************************************
Her soothing motions on my back forced me to raise my red-rimmed and splotchy face. Scrubbing away at my face furiously, I said tremulously, “Ugh, I must look so awful. And here I’d promised myself that I wouldn’t cry when I saw you.”
“Honey bear, there’s nothing wrong with crying. If you could only see what I see.”
Trying to gain control of my seesawing emotions I said, “Daddy called me yesterday. I took the first flight out. Alex and Maria picked me up from the airport. They said they’d come by later to see you.”
“They come every day,” she spoke softly through her careful breathing. “Have you seen your parents?”
“No, not yet. I wanted to see you first. Max said that they come in the evening, I’ll meet them then.”
“Max?”
“Yes, he’s here. Do you want me to call him?” I asked, hoping she would say no.
I know it sounds selfish, but I didn’t want her to call for anyone but me. I didn’t want her to think of anyone but me. They’d all had so much time with her…and I’d, I had lost out.
“No, Lizzie. Why would I want anyone else, when you’re here?” She spoke lovingly, her eyes on my face, focusing through the haze of sleep and the pain medication.
“I’m sorry nana! I’m so sorry I wasn’t here. Why didn’t you tell me you weren’t feeling well?” I accused.
“I’m old,” she started to say just as I exclaimed,
“NO!”
“Darling,” her reproach filled voice replied, “I’m old. These things happen when people get old.”
Taking in a long breath, her chest quivering under the weight of it, she continued.
“I’m glad you’re here Lizzie, I have so much to tell you.”
“I know nana. I have a lot to tell you as well,” I replied trying to ease the conversation.
She was looking tired.
“No, Lizzie,” she responded surprisingly firmly before coughing loudly. It was a long serrated sound.
“Nana, please, you’re tired. Just rest for a minute. I’m going to be right here.” I pleaded with her, concern making my voice hoarse.
“Plenty of time to rest, later.” She coughed out. “This is important,” clutching my hand tighter. “You remember, Liz?”
“Remember what nana?” I asked putting my hand over hers. It felt so frail.
“What I said? The question?” Her voice struggling against the faintness of breath to make itself heard.
“I remember everything you tell me nana.” I said quietly responding to her obvious tiredness, to ease her mind as she drifted.
“Good,” she sighed. “Remember, Lizzie…it’s important. So tired,” her eyes fluttering shut.
I held her hand, as she drifted into sleep, as her breathing smoothed and her grip on my hand eased. I kissed her forehead, and sat next to her, listening to her heartbeat.
I didn’t move until the nurse came to get me, saying that visiting hours were over.
************************************************************
I came out to find Max in the same place and position I’d left him in. As I sat next to him, he reached beside him and handed me a styrofoam cup.
“Careful it’s hot. Coffee.” He said economically. Smiling faintly in gratitude, I took a long sip and realized how thirsty and tired I was.
Looking at me carefully, he got up and said, “Maria is here. She brought food with her, I’d hold out for that. Your parents are talking to the doctors. They got here a little while ago.”
Startled, I said, “What time is it?”
“4:00. Julia thought you might need some time,” he replied before walking away.
4:00, I thought incredulously doing some quick math in my head. We had gotten here around 2. I had sat with my grandmother for two hours. It had seemed only a fraction of that time.
“Liz,” my father’s voice broke through my thoughts.
“Daddy! Mum!” I cried out putting down the cup before rushing headlong into his arms.
“Honey, we were so worried, when you didn’t call,” that was my mother.
“I’m sorry. I was just so…” I stammered out.
“Don’t worry about it.” Dad comforted me. “Alex called us when you left the house. And Max just called us a little while ago.”
“Max called?” I asked bewildered.
“Yes,” my mother fielded that one her arm around me shoulders as we moved toward the seating area. “He let us know that the doctors thought she should get some rest today. All the excitement isn’t so good for her.”
“What does that mean?” Maria asked approaching from the side, holding a straw bag in her hand.
“Just that, they let Lizzie sit with her after visiting hours, so now we can see her tomorrow.” My father replied as Maria set the bag down on the table next to me.
“Ok,” Maria replied equably. “Lizzie, you have to eat this sandwich. The boys said you haven’t eaten anything all day,” she said handing me a large chicken salad sandwich.
“Maria, I can’t.” I protested feebly. Just the thought of food was making my stomach churn.
“You haven’t eaten all day?” my mother questioned. “You know how sick you get when you don’t eat.”
“No, but I still can’t eat all that.” I said staring at the six inch sandwich in my hand as though it would bite me back.
“Eat as much as you can.” Maria replied, before looking around.
“Who are you looking for?” I asked chewing a small piece slowly.
“Max,” she said spotting him coming down the hallway. “He hasn’t eaten either.” Sandwich in hand she walked toward the nurse’s station where he was standing talking to the nurse from before. What was her name, I thought about it briefly before abandoning it as too much effort.
“Honey, how much time do you have off?” Daddy asked, always the planner.
“Well, my accumulated paid leave is around 6 months. I’ll talk to them about extending it, in a few days.” I said washing down another mouthful of the sandwich with coffee. 6 more bites and then I could put it down without attracting too much attention, I promised myself grimly.
“Have you thought about where you’ll be staying?” daddy asked hopefully.
“Umm,” this could be tricky, thinking quickly I tried to think of a compromise. “I was hoping to spend some time at grandma’s house. She’s set up my room and it will be easier to come to the hospital everyday.”
Seeing the hurt look on my mother’s face, I continued quickly, “I was thinking of coming home over the weekend. Is that ok?”
“Of course, honey. We know you’re worried about your grandmother. So whatever you decide will be fine with us. Right, Nancy?”
“Yes, that’s fine.” My mother replied twisting her fingers. “Jeff, it’s getting late. We should head back.”
“We’ll see you tomorrow, Lizzie.” My father said standing up and hugging me.
“It’s good to have you home, honey,” said my mother kissing my cheek.
Picking up her purse, they walked together to the nurse’s station where Max and Maria were standing. Stopping to say their farewells, I saw my mother jerk her head in my direction as both Maria and Max nodded. Looking at me one last time, my parents left the hospital as I sat in my plastic chair wondering what to do next. The momentum of the day had carried me this far but now, I just felt lifeless and drained. Standing up with effort, I tossed my half eaten sandwich in the waste bin and headed towards Maria.
Thanking the nurse on duty, I asked Maria if we could go home. Maria had brought her car with her and it was parked right in front. Before I could thank Max for bringing me to the hospital and for letting me sit with my grandmother, he tossed a quick wave and a ‘see you at dinner,’ in my direction before jogging off in the direction of his car.
Waves of tiredness swept over me. Keeping my eyes open seemed like such an effort that I thought I’d rest them for a second or two. Maria later told me that I’d fallen asleep before she had even started the car to head home.
************************************************************
“Maria,” “Yeah,” she replied.
We were both sitting on the swing on the back porch. It was evening and everything was still and silent, gilded in the waning light. The day was ending with a hush that soothed my jangled nerves, helping me regain my equilibrium. This close to the desert, the light was purer, clearer. Motes of dust flickered in the air, like a gold speckled filter creating a soft-focus dream-like reality.
I’d missed the desert.
I waited a moment, before changing my question. “How was your day?”
Pulling my feet into her lap, she leaned her head back and said, “It was fine. Those people I was telling you about earlier,”
“mmm” it felt so good to have her rub my feet. I had just woken up and was still drained from my meeting with nana.
“They came and liked everything. I think the lounge will be a big hit,” she finished. A grin lighting up her face.
“Of course it will. You are Maria Deluca and you are fabulous are you not?” I teased repeating her mantra.
A gurgle of laughter echoed, then “Yes, yes, I am quite fabulous.”
“Lizzie,” she began tentatively her hands stilling on my feet.
“Yes?”
“I’m sorry I didn’t tell you about…you know. It was just…I didn’t want you to think. It doesn’t mean anything,” she rushed out.
Turning my head to look at her, I could tell she was worried about my reaction. Not to mention her jumbled sentence had been a dead giveaway that she was afraid of upsetting me. Sighing a little, I tried to calm her.
“Ria, it’s ok. Alex told me. Don’t worry about it.”
The quick hopeful light on her face dimmed a little when I finished. She still looked uncertain. I suppose, she must have remembered our fight just as clearly as I did. Even though we’d mended our fences that day, it took some time before things were back to normal. Even then, we both knew that there was a part of my life that I wouldn’t share with her and that would always remain between us.
Trying to assuage her concerns, I asked, “When did Max Evans get here? I mean, how did he meet grandma?” Seeing her lips turn up at the corners, “What?”
“Nothing,” she replied her smile growing. “Do you know you’ve always called him ‘Max Evans’? You never refer to him by his first name.”
“Really?” I hadn’t really thought about it. He just seemed like a full name kind of person so that’s what I called him. Not to mention I didn’t spend any time thinking about him at all. I told Maria the first part, omitting the second. They seemed like good friends there was no need to bring my…whatever.
“Anyway, so do you know?” I prodded her.
Moving to sit cross-legged, her favorite story telling pose, she resumed rubbing my feet before saying, “Well, I know he started about a year and half go. I think he went to Columbia after high school. I think he said something about having family in New York.” Her expression turned grim.
“Wasn’t he adopted?” I asked curious about this development. Everyone in Roswell knew the story of the Evans adopting two children who had been found wandering on the side of the road. It must have taken courage to look for his birth family when they had been so cruelly abandoned. I said as much to Maria.
“Yeah, I suppose,” Maria pursed her lips.
“Did he find them, ok? I mean, they had abandoned them – he has a sister right?” I wondered aloud.
“He didn’t seem to keen on them. I think he said something about them being very different from him and Isabelle and that sometimes it was better to not know your past. He doesn’t really talk about it much.” Maria’s voice was dripping with indignation and disgust on his behalf. I couldn’t help but agree with her.
“Yeah, must have been rough,” I murmured wondering what kind of people would abandon two children. That just seemed brutal. If they didn’t want children then they shouldn’t have had any.
Dismissing Max Evans’ culpable family from her mind, Maria continued. “Anyway, he did something in Archeology and History there, or was it Astronomy?”
Shaking her head, she continued, “I’m pretty sure it was two of those three. Turns out he was pretty bright, you know? He met grandma Claudia in Roswell, she’d read a paper of his or something…anyway seems he was interested in the same kind of work so she offered him a job and well, that’s pretty much it. He got pretty lucky.”
“Yes, fortuitous,” I unconsciously echoed the words he’d said to me this morning. A part of me wondered why he’d bother to come back to Roswell if he had already published a paper and had graduated from Columbia.
“You know something weird though,” Maria continued puzzled, “grandma Claudia mentioned something about meeting him before. Did you ever introduce him to her in school?”
“Me? No, I didn’t even know him.” I replied reflexively. “Wait, she’s met him before?”
“Yeah, I’m not sure though. Maybe it was when…” whatever she was going to say next was lost in Alex’s enthusiastic,
“How are my girls! How did it go Lizzie?”
*************************************************************
Dinner was a quiet affair. We ate Chinese take out in the kitchen out of cardboard containers. The three of them carried on an undemanding conversation, about their respective days, which included me but didn’t expect any responses. It suited me fine.
I excused myself after dinner calling out goodnight. Maria said she’d be up in another few hours. Alex hugged me goodnight and said it was the weekend so he was going to be at home tomorrow. Max just nodded and smiled politely.
I lay in my darkened fairy-tale room and thought of my grandmother, my parents and my friends. I thought of all the people whose lives were intertwined with mine. All the people who I knew, loved and trusted, had been there for me today. Except … except for the one who mattered the most.
He had promised me He would be there, that I would never be alone. Lying in the dark room, in my first night in Roswell, utterly bereft I deluged him with my grief, my memories and the fear that this was the last time I would see my nana. My soul unfurled across the flickering ties that linked us to each other and softly, incessantly called to him in search of hope, in search of love…
“Lover, lover, are you there?” I cried out soundlessly tasting the lone tear rolling down my face.
“Please…oh, please.”
*************************************************************
References: Rhina Espaillat
Chapter 5:
What bird it was that sang me through the cold
I know…. Then in failing light,
it sang out my need, and never grieved
at all, driven to daring, unresigned;
it sang to me promises, and I believed,
though evidence was slight and hard to find.
Sequel, i-viii
The air smelt unbearably sad and sharp: frankincense and myrrh, memory and grief. It prickled across my skin. It warmed my face, like a gentle hand easing away the memories of grief.
“Hi,” He whispered in my mind.
“Where were you?” I asked Him, unable to keep the tears out of my voice.
“You were upset,” He said, as though that answered my question. And I suppose in a way it did. He had kept away because…
“I needed you.” I said, unable to finish my last thought.
“I’m always with you,” He soothed, knowing that I would ask Him again, knowing that I needed to hear Him say it.
“Why didn’t you come?” I asked insistently.
“You needed to cry. I knew that.” Then softer still, His voice thick with suppressed anxiety,
“sweetness, you were so very upset. You hate crying in front of me, even more than you hate crying.”
He was right. We had had this conversation before. I had been crying then too, and had slammed the door on Him. He had been hurt but I told Him in no uncertain terms, that if He should ever find me crying He was to leave me completely alone. He’d been stunned that I’d shut him out like that. If we were forever, in everything for always, then why? And I hadn’t been able to explain why.
In some ways, it was for the same reason that I’d never come out and said that I loved Him, when He said it to me often. My only concession was to call Him lover. It was for the same reason that while I wanted to meet and be with Him, I was afraid of what He’d think of me. I’d never completely opened my emotions to Him and He knew that.
But it was getting a little harder everyday.
“What is it?” He asked me immediately, sensing my withdrawal.
“Can you tell me what’s wrong?”
Startled, I said to Him,
“What do you mean?”
A little bewildered He spoke hesitantly,
“Why were you crying?”
“You don’t know?” I asked sharply – my voice a burst of sound in His mind.
“No. I just....I suppose, I just acted like a telephone exchange.” His voice was ironic but nonetheless anxious about my reaction and questions.
“Telephone exchange?” I asked quizzically.
How had He known? But more importantly, why hadn’t He recognized grandma Claudia? Fine, He didn’t know her, hadn’t been introduced, but He could have at least identified her voice, known what was wrong. But He hadn’t. He hadn’t known any of those things, only that something was wrong.
“You know how two people use separate telephones to talk to each other but they are connected through one telephone exchange?”
“Yes,” I replied my mind whirling.
“I was…umm, I was the exchange.” He ended, a little apprehensive of my reaction.
“It just came out of nowhere, somebody calling for you and it came through me. Sweetness, I was so afraid that I’d be too late.” His voice filled with guilt.
Confusion. Apprehension. Guilt. Those were the three main emotions I’d picked up from Him that night. He’d been confused about what was happening, apprehensive that He’d be late to stop whatever it was, guilty that He’d been responsible for whatever it was that had happened.
“Oh, baby no. Was it horrible?” I couldn’t help but ask.
The reply was low-key and characteristic of Him:
“I suppose, it was what water pipes feel like when they have scalding water rushing through them.”
I winced in sympathy and made a move to soothe Him, only to have Him brush it aside and focus His laser-like intensity on my feelings.
“Sweetness, please tell me. Tell me anything. Was it very bad?” He pleaded.
Unable to stop the hitch in my breath, I simply shook my head, hoping He’d feel it, wouldn’t make me say it. Finally, I settled on saying:
“It’s…someone I care about isn’t well.” I couldn’t say she was dying.
My nana was dying…I couldn’t say it to Him, until I could say it to myself, until I’d accepted it. Because this time, I knew that I would need Him to carry me through it, to hold me.
The curtains fluttered silver in the moonlight. Shadows thickened and the light concentrated in pools away from the bed. The potpourri of roses shouldered its way through the sharp echo of grief surrounding me and a thicket of shadows fluttered to my right. Out of the corner of my eye, I felt them shift and slide across the foot of the bed leaving the silk and lace rustling in their wake. The faint scent of roses crept across my ankles, mimicking His gossamer light touch in my mind.
The shadows slithered up the bed and the roses grew stronger and stronger until I was surrounded by them. He enfolded me in the deepest recesses of His love and showered me with affection and comfort. A warm weight drifted over my abdomen, where my night shirt had ridden up. But still He floated, uncertain, unsure of His reception.
A sharp intake of breath then, He said,
“May I lie with you?”
In response, I simply turned on my back, the night shirt rode higher and the weight settled on my stomach with a sigh. The shadows slid formless and weightless beside me, a creak and He lay on His side, His hand rhythmically stroking my stomach.
“I’m sorry,” His whispered breath warmed my ear.
“I knew something was wrong…I just didn’t know what.”
Unable to bear His comforting gaze or I’d spill everything I turned on my side, scooting back into Him, pulling my knees to my chest.
He simply folded himself around me. Like a cocoon, the silken net of shadows laced with roses draped itself over me. He slid deeper into my mind, just as His body pressed intimately into mine.
I felt like I was sitting inside Him breathing the very fabric of His being. I could feel His love for me swell and unfurl a swathe of brilliantly colored fabric: hammered gold mixed with green like cats eyes, sparkling amethysts intertwined with sapphire blues, and through it all ran a river of crimson.
It was crimson like poppies, crimson like life, crimson like the desire that undulated and breathed between us.
My breath caught in my throat as He drenched me in the colors of His soul. His absolute, overpowering, faithful, endless love for me flowed from His mind to mine. The roses seeped into my skin, fevering my blood, scenting my hair, a thousand sparklers exploded behind my eyes as the intensity of our feelings grew violently. It grew louder like a burst of static, thrilling and electrifying everything within reach, like the pitch of noise or pain reaching the threshold of its tolerance….
And then, it shut off as abruptly as it started. The door opened and Maria stood at the threshold.
*************************************************************
I woke up early the next morning, around 5 or so. Crowded to the edge of the bed, I barely stopped myself from falling off, courtesy of Maria-bed-hog-Deluca! Shaking my head, I stumbled off to the bathroom. A quick shower, change of clothes and I felt a little more like a human being.
Making my way downstairs quietly, I checked both Alex and Max’s rooms. But their doors were closed. I seemed to be the only one both hungry and awake. Dinner had been a sketchy affair and I hadn’t eaten much the previous day. This morning I was starving, and the kitchen seemed the best place to take care of that.
The kitchen was a huge and comforting yellow tiled affair. Oddly shaped, it had a small breakfast nook in one corner, accompanied by two large windows overlooking the backyard. A butcher block stood in the middle with copper pots and herb planters hanging from the ceiling. I decided to try my luck with the double-door fridge poking my head in I looked around for something to eat…milk, butter, eggs, day-old Chinese. Nothing looked good. I decided to make some coffee before my deprivation hit me.
Slamming the last cupboard shut, I huffed out, “Where the hell do they keep the damn coffee!”
I whirled around on a sharp squeak when a voice said smoothly, “In the tea canister, the second cupboard to your right!”
“Max!” I gasped out. I hadn’t heard him walk into the kitchen. He must walk like a cat. From the looks of it, I wasn’t the only one who was having an early start. Shaved, showered and dressed in jeans and a black t-shirt he looked like he’d been up for hours.
Looking apologetically in my direction, he said “I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to scare you.” Then taking a step back out of the kitchen, “Would you rather be alone?”
“Oh, no! Umm, that’s ok. I wasn’t paying attention.” Feeling a little awkward for being so jumpy, twice now, I gave him a hopeful look and said, “You weren’t going to make any coffee by any chance, were you?”
An answering smile swept across his face and heading towards the coffee stash, he said, “I was actually going to have breakfast. Omelettes and toast, ok?”
“Uh, yeah sure. I didn’t mean…”
“It’s ok. I like to cook.” Moving to the island he efficiently unhooked a frying pan, pulled out some eggs and a variety of cheeses from the fridge before putting on the coffee pot. Twenty minutes later, we were sitting across from each other, eating some really good eggs and chicory coffee.
Feeling more comfortable, I began earnestly. “I’m really sorry about my reaction yesterday. I was stressed I didn’t mean to be rude. And umm, thank you for giving me time with my grandma.”
He shrugged and adding more tobasco to his eggs said, “I imagine it must have been difficult for you to see her. Julia didn’t mind letting you sit there, don’t worry about it.”
Considering how gracious he was being, and curious about my conversation with Maria I asked him, “How did you meet grandma Claudia, if you don’t mind me asking?”
Swallowing, “Not at all. I met her in Roswell around two years ago. I was finishing up my thesis at the Reservation and she’d come there for a study. We hit it off. She’s really great!” He said beaming, getting up to refill his and my coffee cups.
“I’d read up on a lot of her work and her theories, you know similarities of First Nation symbols the world over, their significance and things like that. We talked about it. I guess we had a lot of views in common and well, she offered me the job and I took it.”
Blowing a cooling breath on my coffee, I looked up to see his eyes glowing with enthusiasm and enjoyment and it struck me. He really loved it. He loved getting dirty, translating dead languages and giving people long gone a history. I suppose it wasn’t strange that someone who had been so disappointed by his past would want others to have better, to do better.
Wanting to know more, I asked him, “How did you like NY and Columbia?” Oh God! You idiot, Liz! I wanted to smack myself. He’d found his ‘birth family’ in NY. How stupid could I be, I wanted to kick myself.
Smiling faintly, he said “Columbia was great. It was a lot of fun and hard work. They have a great program.” A shadow passed over his face, “NY was a bit rough. It’s a big city and things work differently there, as I found out. I took care of it, though.” He ended cryptically.
Not wanting to upset him, I stood up with dishes and asked him, “What do you do with grandma?”
Leaning back in his chair, Max said “My degree program requires a piece of substantive publishable research at the end…umm that’s what I am doing. I have another year left to finish it up. Anyway, when I was last in Roswell, I found some interesting symbols in a cave on the reservation. They didn’t fit the pattern of what we expected so I worked on identifying and translating them. Come up with a theory of what they meant, how they came to be, stuff like that. Ms. Parker was interested in the same thing and she’d done work on it before. We are sort of writing a book together on what her and my cumulative research has discovered about First Nation history. It’s some pretty cool stuff.”
Impressed, I said, “And Alex?”
Studying his hands for a second, Max replied, “Alex kind of works under me as a cryptologist. Some of the symbols can’t be translated. I studied Native American languages but they don’t fall into that category so Alex came in to see if they were code or something. He seems to think that it is, but hasn’t gotten very far in translating it.” Sighing, “It’s very frustrating.”
It all seemed like a very big deal to me, especially the new research and discovery aspects of it, so I wondered out loud, “how do you keep it quiet?”
Catching his look for surprise, I continued, “This is all pretty new, right? So how do you make sure that no one can steal your ideas?”
Max stood up and pushed his chair back. Facing me he answered, “Access to the site is restricted. Since it isn’t a dig very few people are allowed in the caves and where we do our work. The Chief has given us full permission to use the site, as long as we acknowledge them and inform them what we find before publishing anything.”
Continuing a little more slowly, “That’s the tricky part. Some of it isn’t for them.”
“What do you mean?”
“About what?” He asked startled.
“What do you mean that some of it isn’t for them?” I asked wondering if he had even realized what he’d said.
Shuffling his feet, Max replied, “Oh, I just meant that carbon estimates suggest that the markings were made before the Reservation communities arrived there. So, umm, whoever the intended recipients of those messages were, well they aren’t the Indians, so technically they don’t have any rights to them.”
He looked at me seriously it seemed to make sure whether I was following what he said. Either that or he wanted to see if I believed him and I am not sure that I did.
*************************************************************
Maria and Alex made an appearance for breakfast around nine just as I’d finished checking my email. It was decided that all three of us, Maria, Alex and I, would head over to the hospital around noon. Max excused himself saying that he had to finish up writing his notes and look over what Alex had brought back from the lab.
It was at the hospital, while we were waiting that Maria asked Alex, “Hey Alex, do you remember what grandma Claudia said about Max?”
Used to Maria’s abrupt changes in conversation he replied equably, “When?”
“About meeting him?” Maria asked. “Did she meet him in Roswell first or was it before?”
Wrinkling his brow, Alex rifled through his memory. Alex has the most amazing memory of anyone I have ever known. I think it’s as close to photographic as you can get. If he remembers something then it must have happened. But since I’d just asked Max this question early this morning, I was pretty sure he wouldn’t come up with anything.
Much to my surprise, he said “I’m pretty sure she said it was England.” Putting his thoughts in order, he snapped his fingers. “Yeah, ok, got it. She saw him in St. Ives in Cornwall. He was doing some work on ruins.”
Bemused as to why he’d lie about something like that, I asked, “When was this?”
“I think it was two years ago, cause I remember she was going to visit you and I’d sent Maria some stuff to send to you.”
Before I could question him any further, the nurse on duty, strawberry blonde again, came along and told us we could go in to see grandma Claudia.
*************************************************************
This time when I walked into room 600, I was prepared. The much needed succor my lover offered had gone a long way in easing some of my misery. I was prepared to be cheerful and to not let her drift into talks of death or dying. Today we would talk about life and all things we would do together, once she got better.
“Hi nana! How are you feeling?” I asked brightly settling down beside her. Her hand tucked into mine.
“Lizzie,” she whispered, looking so much frailer since yesterday.
“Yes,” I leaned in.
“Must talk to you…important,” she breathed out her voice sinking even lower.
“Nana, we aren’t going to talk about depressing stuff today, ok? You know I was thinking, once you get better, you should come back with me. Won’t that be great?” I spoke cheerfully.
Looking at me through lowered lashes, she rasped out, “Honey bear stop.”
Shaking my head, I opened my mouth to disagree but she beat me to it.
“Lizzie, listen.” Forcing in a deep breath she clenched her hand before speaking, “Honey bear, should have told you sooner. Sentinel, will awaken.” Her voice faltering, she pushed out, “Look…key…inside” her sentence broken by coughing.
I stared at her in astonishment. She didn’t make any sense. She sounded like she was rambling, incoherent but her eyes and her voice were both clear and steady. She was focusing her entire will on me, urging me to listen and remember. Without thinking about it, I leaned in further to listen to her better and tried to memorize every word that she said. What it meant though was beyond me.
Her eyes burned in her face, like two black coals burning with intensity while her voice sank to a broken breathless rasp.
“Lizzie, not much time now. Be careful. Danger…wicked thing…I feel. Should have told…thought there…time left. So sorry…told…not sure, now. Tried...ask boy.”
Frantic with worry, I tried to ease the pace of her words, but the rough sounds fell upon one another.
“The boy must know….trust. Depend. Love. Lizzie,” her other hand scrabbled for mine, “have faith. Believe. Remember canyon?”
I nodded vehemently, every nerve in my mind screaming that this was bad, that I should tell her to stop before it was too late. I wanted to stop her and press the panic button, because her breath was wheezing in and out, because she was babbling, because something wasn’t right. But I didn’t do any of that. Instead I sat and listened, holding her hand, because she said:
“Listen…remember. Promise. Promise me, both do right.”
Helpless against the fervency in her voice, I said “I promise nana.”
The grip on my hand eased a little, and little red moon-shaped welts appeared where her fingers had dug into my wrist. Smiling faintly, her hand rose part way to smooth my hair, “Follow your heart. Blessing…both.”
And just like that, her hand fell from mid-air and the oxygen fighting its way into her lungs seized. Staring at her waxen cheeks stunned, my heartbeat sounded abnormally loud in my ears. The whirr of the machinery in the room replaced the sound of her heartbeat until it faded into nothing. The scream clawing its way to my lips was overtaken by the piercing shriek of the alarms.
The next second, I was standing outside Room 600, staring in silence through a small 2 by 4 window, the frenetic activity and buzz of life fighting to bring her back. But I knew better. The shroud that slid over me smelled like death: myrrh and frankincense.
Memory and grief.
*************************************************************