Hyacinth responded to the sound of knocking with her usual deference, âItâs open, damn it!â A few moments later, she looked up from a young man with tonsillitis to see a young man holding a pair of black patent leather knee-high boots with five-inch spiked heels.
âIs Milo Rose here?â he said.
This, with the shoes, was momentarily disorienting. Could this possibly be some kind of delivery?
She shrugged. âWell, I mean, thatâs kind of complicated, I guess he could be here. Does he have to sign orâŠ?â She considered the young man. He was fair-haired with dark eyes and reasonably fashionable, in her ignorant estimation. She had to picture him in a bathrobe with wet hair before it clicked. âYouâre, um, one of those from the Slaughterhouse, arenât you?â
âSean Addison,â he said, nodding.
âOh, the murderer!â She pointed at him. âYeah. Iâm sorry. Ann has about a million friends and they donât usually show up at the house. Hang on a second. Okay, aspirin for the swelling and gargle with warm salt water. You want that written down?â
âNo, thank you,â said her patient, hoarsely.
She walked past him and into the dining room, still speaking, âIf it doesnât improve in, like, a week, youâre gonna want to hit up the free clinic and see if a real doctor wants to take those out. Or I can do it, but youâll end up with a gold-coated throat⊠Hey, Ann! Is it still you?â
Ann popped her head out of Calliopeâs room, âCin, do you need shopping?â She was a bit softer, due to Erik and Lucyâs proximity, and it wasnât all that difficult to hear.
Hyacinth pulled Sean out of the kitchen. âCompany,â she said, before abandoning him in the empty dining room.
He smiled, a bit uncertainly but quite fetchingly. He had a small mole under his left eye which added to his dramatic appeal, but had yet to get him any roles in what you might call a respectable establishment. The Slaughterhouse was quite fond of him for sympathetic-type parts, usually a victim, but once an ice-pick-murderer.
âSean!â cried Ann, approaching at all speed. She embraced him. âOh, itâs been ages! Howâve you been? How is everyone?â
âOh, Iâve been all right. Iâve got a new job! And Iâve just seen Roger, heâs doing the electrical, itâs a panto, for YuleâŠâ
A small woman with straight dark hair and a paint-spattered shirt had followed after Ann, and a green boy in a somewhat-smudged condition was shyly hiding behind her.
âSean, you must meet Calliope,â Ann said. âThis is my dear friend, Calliope. She is an artist! Calliope, this is my dear friend Sean. He killed me with an ice pick!â Ann put Calliopeâs hand in Seanâs.
Calliopeâs grip instantly tightened, and she gave Seanâs rather limp and surprised hand a damn good throttling. âHey. Was that before or after the musical number?â
âAfter,â Sean said. He retrieved his hand and checked it for paint. There was a little and he held it away from him. This was his good suit. He frowned at the woman. âNot a girlfriend?â he asked Milo⊠Ann, he corrected himself, noting the dress. Milo always introduced everyone as dear friends, even prop guys he barely knew.
Ann laughed. âOh, dear me, no. A friend-friend. Weâve been painting! Well, mainly Calliope. She likes us to pose for her.â
Sean smiled at Calliope and bowed, still somewhat wary of his painted hand. âI am very pleased to meet you, Calliope.â
âNice shoes, Sean,â Calliope said.
He blinked at them and held them up. âOh, yes. Milo, love â Ann, I needâŠâ
âAnd this is Erik, you know Erik, of course.â
Erik nodded at the ice pick man and did not quite dare to say, âHi.â He knew he had met this person, but that wasnât the same as friends. He wasnât like Ann.
Sean smiled at him. âI promise, no murdering.â
âYeahâŠâ
Ann crouched down and put hands on Erikâs shoulders. She planted a kiss on his forehead, which had a small effect on the concerned wrinkles there. âYou donât have to stay if you donât want to, sweetheart. Weâll be all right.â
Calliope considered Erik, Ann, Sean, and shoes. âYeah, Erik. Come on. I donât like to leave Lucy alone too long, and I can put in some work on your eye while Annâs talking.â
Erik nodded gravely and followed Calliope back to her room. âI can take it out if you want,â he offered her.
âLucy is Calliopeâs daughter,â Ann was saying, while clasping Seanâs hand. âTwo months old. Brown hair, brown eyes, sheâs the sweetest little thing⊠You simply must meet her!â
Sean dragged her back by the hand and touched it lightly to his lips. âIn a moment, Annie, my love. I do sort of have a bit of an emergencyâŠâ
Ann beamed at him. âYou donât need me for a part, do you, dear?â
âNo, Iâm afraid not.â He held up the shoes again and looked sheepish. âBut I suppose, in a manner of speakingâŠâ
âââ
The problem was the heels. Sean had landed a role in a pantomime, which were seasonal entertainment around Yule. Puss in Boots, but cross-cast⊠and not so much in a theatre as in a club with a stage, and some signs discouraging the audience from touching the dancers. But anyway, it was twelve shows and it paid well.
He was the Principal Boy. (Ann, who was not well-versed in traditional theatrics, required some clarification as to how a boy as the Principal Boy was cross-cast.) Naturally, boots and a cat (a cross-cast, scantily clad girl cat) were required. Sean had done some disreputable things in his young life, even some dancing, but never in heels.
âMy goodness, theyâve dropped you direct into the boiling oil with these,â Ann noted, examining the shoes. They were sharp enough to stab a man to death. âI suppose you didnât mention you might have a bit of trouble with them?â Like she didnât mention she might have an issue doing her lines in a male voice.
Sean shook his head. âItâs only two daysâ rehearsal, and thatâs this weekend. Iâve got to look like I know what Iâm doing. Iâve talked the wardrobe lady into letting me borrow them so I could practise. I tried it on my own, but I damn near broke my ankle. I have to go down stairs,â he added, gesturing at the sweeping staircase.
âSurely not that many,â Ann said.
âNo, but itâs a set and I donât imagine theyâll be as stable as those.â He sighed and looked down at his entirely-more-sensible shoes. âI need the work, Milo.â
Ann patted him. âI donât have any shows until Frigâs Day, and Milo doesnât have to be in early tomorrow. Do you want to make a start of it right now?â
Sean shot to his feet. âOh, please, yes, thank you!â
âââ
Sean was wearing a pair of tan and black chequered socks, a close-fitting wool gabardine suit in pale tan, and Annâs marabou-edged slippers, which had a kitten heel and fit him reasonably well, despite lacking a strap in the back. He was at the top of the stairs and Ann was at the bottom.
(Hyacinth was peeking out of the kitchen, interested in the potential disaster. Sean had already fallen a couple of times without stairs. She had to bandage his knee.)
âI think youâd better hang on to the banister, dear,â Ann called up. Sean had his arms out for balance and looked as if he were contemplating suicide.
âI wonât be able to for the show,â he replied. âI have to carry the cat!â
âBoth hands?â Ann asked.
He considered, shifting his position a few times. âI mean, I donât think thereâs a way to do it sexy with just one⊠What if I put her over my shoulder?â He turned, approximating it.
âIâm not certain,â Ann said, one hand to her mouth. âI suppose it would give the audience quite a good look at her rear.â
Sean smiled at her. âMilo, may I carry you?â
âI think it would be better to start with a sack of potatoes and work your way up,â Ann said. Sean was quite a bit smaller than her, though proportionately muscular. âWhat if you try it with one hand on the banister just to start, darling?â
Sean reluctantly laid a hand on the banister. âWhat about that girl, Calliope?â
Ann frowned. âYouâre not going downstairs with any girls until you get down at least once on your own.â
âââ
âYou want a stitch or a merger?â Hyacinth asked him.
âOo, right there in my lower lip?â Sean asked, removing the ice bag from his cheek. âIs it centred? Is there a mirror? Gold or silver?â
âWhichever youâve got the money for,â Hyacinth replied with a smirk.
âOh,â Sean said. âUm, I think I had better have a stitch, Miss Hyacinth.â
âAnd I think we had better quit for today, sweetheart,â Ann put in. âOne tends to be a little unsteady after a head injury.â
âShe said Iâm not concussed!â Sean said brightly.
âNot for lack of trying,â Hyacinth muttered. âStop talking, please.â
âMm,â Sean said. He winced.
âPetroleum jelly is our friend, and stay away from spicy foods and acidic things unless you have a thing for pain, which I am beginning to suspect you do,â said Hyacinth.
âMilo, can we try again tomorrow?â Sean said.
âAnn,â said Hyacinth.
âIâm sorry. Ann?â
Ann looked pained. âWell, I suppose we can if you really want to, Sean, my love. Iâm not sure I would if it were meâŠâ
Sean crossed a leg over his lap and displayed the one slipper that had managed to stay on. âI think itâs just that theyâre loose in the back. Iâm bound to get better at it!â He smiled, which made him wince again.
Ann put up both hands as if to prevent him from further damaging himself. âAll right, dear. MiloâŠâ She caught herself that time, though she didnât always. She shook her head and straightened, laying one hand on her chest. âI⊠I⊠I will be home by six-thirty. Would you like to come by for dinner at seven?â
âDinner?â Sean straightened as well. âOh, you must let me pay for it, Milo. Youâre doing so much for meâŠâ
âWell, I⊠I suppose, if you really want to, but you mustnât trouble yourselfâŠâ
âItâs no trouble at all! Iâll see you at seven!â Another smile, and another wince.
âAnn, doesnât he knowâŠ?â said Hyacinth, aside.
Ann shook her head. She waited until she heard Sean successfully navigate the porch steps before she replied, âMost of them donât, Cin. Itâs⊠Iâm kind of hard to explain.â
âYou told Auntie Enora.â
âYes, Cin. I told the god that lived in our kitchen for two weeks, where Milo needed to go to get food. Not the people I know from a play eight months ago and hardly ever see.â
âYou know, Ann, when you call people your friendsâŠâ
âThere are levels,â Ann said, rather coldly.
Hyacinth broke off for a time and had a look at the opposite wall. âSo does he just think youâre gay or something?â
Ann blinked at her. âWhy would he think that?â
âI have absolutely no idea,â Hyacinth said to the man in the dress. Hell, the more she thought about it, why would a man in a dress be gay? A man with a feather duster wasnât an ostrich, was he?
My experiences are warping my brain, thought Hyacinth. Iâve got Barnabyâs problem, but backwards. I canât tell anything about people from looking at them. Oh, the coloured guy? No, he couldnât magic his way out of a paper bag. Watch out for the cute little girl in the blue dress, though, sheâll blow your head clean off. And the crossdresser? No, no. Two completely different people sharing a body, of course. Why? Whatâd you think it was?
âIâm just not totally sure he thinks heâs going to sit down and have dinner with all of us,â Hyacinth said. She frowned and wandered back into the kitchen, âAnd Iâm not sure I have enough chairsâŠâ
âââ
âAnn-Annie-Ann-Ann,â Sean said. âYou naughty girl. When you said weâd go out and get dinner, I did not picture walking home in the snow with sandwiches in bags.â
âIâm sorry, dear, but Lucy isnât really suited for restaurants yet, and Cin simply canât leave Barnaby and Room 101.â
âWhatâs the matter with the person in 101?â He had a fairly good idea what was the matter with Barnaby, merely by reputation. To hear Hyacinth talk, the man was a cartoon character.
âI donât really know, and Iâm not entirely certain itâs a person â but it does eat sandwiches!â She bravely lifted the bag.
Sean offered her a somewhat mystified and subdued smile.
Ann was aware it was necessary for him to dim his smiles with the split lip, but she nevertheless inquired, âIt wasnât too expensive, was it, darling?â
âIt was terrifyingly within my budget, dear heart,â Sean replied. âI must admit, I am a bit suspicious of the mayonnaise.â He had decided to go with the chicken salad, with no oil and vinegar or tomatoes. In summer, he wouldnât have dared. Probably he wouldâve gone with lettuce on a bun.
âMilo and I have never gotten sick from the delicatessen,â Ann said, smiling. âBut donât ask Hyacinth about that kebab place on the corner!â
He snickered at her. âYes. âSean and Iâ had rather a bad experience with prawns purchased out of the back of a van with the engine running. I mean, we are right on the ocean, you wouldnât think theyâd have time to go badâŠâ
Milo had stopped walking and was standing a few paces behind him. âDear?â Sean said.
âIâm sorry,â Ann said. âI thought⊠I thought I saw this woman I know who pushes around a bucket in a pram. Did I ever tell you about her?â
âI donât think so, love.â
âOh, do let me! It was dreadful!â
âââ
There were not quite enough chairs for everyone, but Ann was willing to keep Sean company in the nice chairs in the front room. (There was not enough room to drag one of those into the kitchen, there was barely enough room to walk in the kitchen when everyone was sitting down.) Sandwiches were easily consumed without the aid of the table, although Sean had to stop one bite into his.
âAh! Oh, gods! Itâs got curry in it! Ow! Ow! What kind of a deli is this?â
Ann made him a bowl of cereal.
After dinner, the majority of the household gathered in the front room to watch the poor man fall down some more. The General refused to be diverted from her crossword puzzle and Mordecai remained in the kitchen, perusing the entertainment section, because Ann still wasnât exactly fond of him. Erik felt torn, but he decided that out in the front room with Maggie and fun was better than in the kitchen with his uncle and fear. Besides, it seemed like the ice pick man was going to keep coming back to the house, so maybe it was better to get used to him.
Ann had decided to cut out the middleman and go direct to the acrophobic shoes which laced up and had a better chance of staying on. Sean was able to manage them while standing perfectly still, with a somewhat splayed stance, as if he were trying to remain upright while walking between train cars.
His current ensemble was not as overtly ridiculous as Annâs slippers and his best suit, but it was a great deal more surreal, like a gentleman with a fetish whoâd had a bit of an accident in a dark closet. (This was Seanâs second-best suit.)
Ann circled him, critiquing his posture. âShoulders back, dear. Youâve got to look confident in these.â
âSeeming is being!â Sean said bravely. He straightened and squared his shoulders.
âHigh heels are all about sex,â Ann said. âThey change your whole body. They are bad for you,â she added, smiling, âlike chocolates. You are being pushed forward, so you must compensate by leaning back. Tighten your stomach, your core muscles are holding you in this ridiculous position, your legs and ankles have enough to do. The horrible posture should feel natural. Itâs balanced.â
âYou know, you say thatâŠâ Sean said, wobbling.
âThese are up to the knee, so youâve got a bit more support, but if anything below the knee fails, the whole system is going to collapse. Pay attention to your calves and your ankles, Sean.â
âWhat about the broken tile?â
âYes, do give that a notice as well. All right.â She spread her arms and beckoned him forward. âSmall steps. The higher the heel, the smaller the step. Walk, donât stride.â
Jittering like an overfull teacup, Sean managed several tiny steps in Annâs direction before collapsing into her arms. âHey, I did it!â he said.
Maggie and Hyacinth broke into applause, though Hyacinth was a bit sarcastic. Erik joined them. Calliope, who was feeding Lucy in one of the nice chairs, could not, but she offered them an, âAwesomesauce!â
Ann smiled. âThatâs very good, dear.â She set him upright and backed off a few more steps. Ann did not have any difficulty with her own heels or the broken tile. âNow letâs try it from three feet awayâŠâ
âââ
By Thorâs Day, Sean was all out of suits. He had even worn the synthetic one. He considered a departure to khaki trousers and an unmatched sport coat to be politic before cycling back through his nicer clothes again, giving everyone an opportunity to pretend they had forgotten the composition of his wardrobe.
After another disastrous attempt at the staircase, Ann had come up with an intermediate challenge on level ground â dancing!
âPlease pick something slow, sweetheart,â Sean pleaded.
Calliope had brought her record player into the front room and she was in charge of it. Mordecai was looking after Lucy. Ann was not about to ask him to play violin, and Erik was not really that great at it yet.
Ann was more than a bit concerned about Calliopeâs idea of âslow.â Also of âmusic.â She spoke up, âI think weâd better have one of Mi⊠My⊠my⊠Oh, dearâŠâ Sean didnât know, and Calliope didnât know he didnât know, and Ann didnât want either of them to know.
âI like this one,â Erik said, selecting a record. Erik already knew everything, days ago.
Calliope engaged the needle and âKnock Three Timesâ by Tony Orlando and Dawn emerged in glorious mono from the small speaker, without too much popping and crackling.
Someone said, âOh, my gods!â behind the door of 103, presumably Mordecai. Lucyâs voice wouldnât be that deep.
There was brief confusion as to optimal hand positions.
âLet me lead, Sean. Iâm taller. I can see.â Which was approximately true, though she refused to wear Miloâs glasses.
Sean consented to attempt a simple box step backwards and in high heels. âDonât kill me, Annie,â he said. There was an open basement somewhere he couldnât see behind him, and he was looking right at a large terracotta pot with scrap wood burning in it, like a trash can fire for homeless people.
âRelax, darling, I do this for a living,â Ann said.
âTeach cute awkward boys how to be graceful in cruel shoes?â
âMake them happy,â Ann said with a smile. It became strained. âThat is my foot, Sean, dear.â
He stumbled, and one of the stilettos scraped sideways on the floor. âI am so dreadfully sorry. I canât feel my toes.â
âIf some of them should happen to fall off, you can have even tinier shoes!â Ann said.
Calliope graciously and perhaps suicidally asked for the next dance. Sean had improved with practice, plus he got to lead and he was being extra careful and Calliopeâs feet offered much smaller targets.
âYouâre not too bad at this,â she remarked.
âYou should see me in flats!â he said. He lifted her hand and spun her.
Maggie wanted the next one. Sean allowed her to stand on the toes of his shoes, since he couldnât feel them anyway. Then Erik wanted to dance. This required a further adjustment of technique.
âSean, please be very careful,â Ann said. She cast a nervous glance towards Room 103. Any mention of dropping Erik would get Mordecai out of there, fast, while shouting.
âAs if he were my own brother,â Sean said. He executed a slow spin with Erik and then dipped him dramatically. âBesides, Annie, I do have to carry the cat!â
Erik giggled and waved a hand at her, upside-down.
âNot one foot on the stairs, Sean,â Ann said.
âNever!â
âAnn, will you dance with me?â Maggie asked.
Ann laughed. âWell, all right, dear, but both feet on the floor.â Ann was rather fond of her shoes.
Calliope paired up with Hyacinth, and a grin. Hyacinth led.
âTell me, Erik, does Milo like boys?â Sean asked softly.
Erik nodded. âAnd girls,â he replied, quite logically.
Sean laughed and twirled with him. âWell, good for Milo!â
âââ
Sean achieved the full distance of the sweeping staircase, gracefully, while carrying a sack of bottles and tin cans (they didnât have enough potatoes to make up much weight) on Frigâs Day with an hour to spare before Ann had to leave for the club.
âOh, itâs a good thing too,â Ann said. âI couldâve taken you with me, but I wouldnât have had much time for lessons.â
âI would like to come anyway, Annie,â Sean said. He was doing much better with the names now too. Everyone in the house kept correcting him when he slipped up.
âI suppose youâd get quite a lot of attention with those shoes and that suit,â Ann said.
Sean was back in his best suit. He had added a top hat to it, for a touch of whimsy. It went quite nicely with the overcoat, though the snow had a tendency to stain
âDo you need to be up early for your rehearsals tomorrow?â she said.
âOh, not too terribly early,â Sean replied.
âWhen are the shows?â she asked him eagerly.
âAh, I donât think youâd like to come, Annie,â he said. âTheyâre quite late at night, and itâs rather far south.â The farther down you followed South Hollister, the seedier it got. Theatres and galleries and supper clubs at the top end, nightclubs and the Slaughterhouse in the middle, and the end of it was uncomfortably near Candlewood Park.
âSean, dear, the Black Orchid is practically in the ocean,â Ann said. They kept most of their clothes on, but they were still a drag club, which seemed to be extra risquĂ© for some reason. âAnd Iâm not really bothered about getting home late at night on my own. Iâve a very nice hatpin in my purse!â
âI wouldnât like to be responsible, Annie,â he protested. He turned his head aside. âAnd I think Iâd be embarrassed for you to see me.â
Ann frowned and folded her arms across her chest. Sean was not embarrassed for anyone to see anything. âThere isnât a show, is there, Sean?â
âThere is!â he cried. âRoger is doing the electrical for it!â He dropped his head and knotted his hands together. His shoes clicked on the tile floor. âI⊠Iâm just not in it.â
âAnd the shoes?â
âThrift store,â Sean said.
âSean, for godsâ sakes why?â Ann said.
âI was sort of lonesome,â he said. âAnd I remembered you said where you lived at your birthday party.â
âYou fell down our stairs a dozen times! How lonely are you?â
He sat down on the stairs⊠and he undid the laces on the shoes. They were killing him. âI just⊠I had this friend⊠Living with me⊠For over a yearâŠâ He shook his head, looking down. âNow he doesnât anymore.â
Ann sighed and sat down on the stairs as well. âOh, I see.â
âHe said I wasnât serious about it,â Sean said. He still didnât look over. âI mean, I⊠Iâm not old, Annie. He wasnât either.â He shut his eyes. âBut I liked him.â
Ann put a hand on his shoulder. âI suppose I know how it is⊠I donât like to think what he⊠what I⊠what it wouldâve been like after a year.â
Sean lifted his head and looked at her. âRecently?â
âIt still hurts,â Ann said.
Sean put his hand on hers. âIâm sorry. I shouldnât have⊠This was unfair of me. I donât know what⊠Well, I know what I was trying to do, but I wasnât thinking about it.â
âItâs really hard to give someone a chance to say no,â Ann said. Now she was looking away. âI know it hurts to hear. Sean, I⊠I havenât been exactly truthful with you myself. I, um⊠Iâm not Milo. Youâve never met Milo.â
âYou, umâŠâ Sean folded his hands in his lap. âBut⊠Arenât you the same person, Annie?â
Ann flinched, as if she had been expecting a blow. It wasnât as hard a one as it mightâve been, but it could always get worse. âNo. Iâm me, and heâs him. And Iâm the one in the dress.â
âItâs an act,â Sean said.
âNo,â Ann said. âIâm really me. Iâm not Milo at all. This is me. And this isnât him.â
âYouâre twoâŠâ He considered. âPersonalities?â
âYes.â
âLike in a pulp novel?â Sean said weakly. He was thinking of the one where the lady had twelve personalities, one of them a nymphomaniac, and one, as it turned out, a murderer.
âI donât read a lot of pulp novels,â Ann said. She and Milo preferred romances, with very little murdering. âBut Iâm not⊠Weâre notâŠâ She didnât want to say crazy, although that was what she was tiptoeing around. She wasnât sure they werenât crazy, not really. âWeâre not dangerous. Weâre not unstable.â She laughed faintly. âWe function quite well, once you understand how we work. We do make sense.â
âIs it⊠I mean⊠Are you damaged?â The lady in the pulp novel used to get locked in a dirt cellar with rats by her grandmother. âIs this how you cope?â
Ann stiffened and withdrew. âWe are all damaged, Sean. I prefer not to discuss such things.â
Sean could not help picturing Milo⊠Ann⊠or possibly Milo, in a dark cellar with rats. It did not have a horrifying fascination like the novel. It was different with a real person. It was like heâd put his hand on a hot stove. No, I donât want to do that.
âSo, youâre Ann,â he managed, after a pause. âOnly Ann?â
âMilo is here.â She lightly touched the back of her head. âBut he isnât always paying attention.â She smiled. âSometimes heâs thinking about shoes.â He was not doing that at the moment, however. He was quite concerned about Ann potentially losing such a nice friend.
âOh, Milo likes shoes too?â Sean said.
âWeâre not the same person, but that doesnât mean we canât be alike,â Ann said. âWould you like to meet him?â
Milo did not under any circumstances want to meet people. Not even Annâs nice friend. Certainly not right now!
She ignored him.
Sean sat forward, âWould he like to meet me?â
Ann looked pained. âEr⊠I donât know if âlikeâ is exactly the right word we ought to use there. Milo has a hard time with people. He doesnât speak and he doesnât like to be touched or stared at.â She frowned. âOr teased.â
âYouâre fooling,â Sean said.
âNo,â Ann said. âSometimes I hide him or protect him, but Iâd never lie about what he needs to be safe.â
The lady in the pulp novel had one like that! Although Sean thought he recalled it was supposed to be a four-year-old. My gods, I never knew the people who wrote those things actually did research! âHow old is Milo?â
âUm, twenty-three,â Ann said cautiously. What an incredibly weird question. Sean had been at her birthday. âBecause, ahâŠâ She gestured and looked down at herself. âBecause we used to be twenty-two, but weâre not twenty-four⊠yet.â
Well, that made Sean feel rather stupid. âIâm sorry. I guess I donât really know much about either of you.â
âBut thatâs my fault,â Ann said gently. âIâd like⊠Iâd like to be a better friend than that.â
âIâd like to meet Milo,â Sean said. âAnd I wonât tease him.â
Sean waited at the bottom of the stairs and Ann went up them to get changed.
It didnât take long. They had to get on the bus to the club and Milo was aware of the time constraint. If he put on a dress, Ann would just take it off and put on pants, and they couldnât be doing that all night. Sheâd really put him on the spot with this. He was hoping that Sean Addison would accept a wave hello and then go away, but he did a couple of cards just in case that didnât happen.
Ann addressed him from the mirror as he hesitated with his hand on the doorknob, Milo, itâs all right. I think itâs going to be okay.
But we never know, Ann, he thought. He sighed and he opened the door.
Sean beheld a young pale man with glasses who was dressed in dark trousers and a grey shirt, and not smiling.
No makeup, Sean thought, but that wasnât the only thing. No rouge or lipstick was the least of things. If not for the previous conversation, he wouldâve suspected a twin. The whole person was different. The posture, the expression. The gorgeous red hair which had been tied back and hidden somehow.
Itâs not a wig, is it? he wondered. Heâd had both hands in it during the murdering and it certainly didnât feel like a wig. Heâd quite liked Miloâs dark red hair. Evidently, Milo felt differently about it.
âMilo?â he asked, rising. It certainly wasnât Ann. (Although he was not entirely ruling out twelve alternate personalities and one of them a murderer.)
Milo nodded. He tried waving.
âDo you know who I am?â Sean asked.
Milo nodded. He mimed a couple overhanded stabs with an ice pick.
âYou donât speak at all?â Sean said.
Milo handed him a card, one of the usual ones from his shirt pocket.
My Name is Milo Rose
I live at 217 Violena St.
I can hear you, but I cannot speak.
Please do not take me home, I am allowed out.
(Disregard previous if found unconscious.)
âDoes that happen a lot?â Sean asked. âPeople just grab you and try to take you home?â
Milo bobbed a noncommittal nod. It used to. That was why he put it in the cards. Well, home or the police station. Or occasionally a hospital, which he really hated.
âI suppose I might do that if I thought I could get away with it,â Sean said, smiling. Milo was different, but still awfully cute.
Milo shook his head and turned away, holding himself.
âIâm sorry,â Sean said. He reached out, but then he dropped his hand. Ann said no teasing and no touching too. âI donât mean to tease you. I was just trying to be funny. But Iâm not, really, am I?â Nevertheless, he looked hopeful.
Milo made a seesaw gesture with one hand. Sean laughed but Milo didnât.
âDo you⊠like me, Milo?â Sean said.
Milo nodded. Sean had always been very nice to Ann, and it wasnât his fault he messed up their names.
âDoes Ann?â
Milo nodded, but rather a lot faster.
âBut⊠You wouldnât like to come and live with me in a nice furnished room in SoHo with a double bed, would you?â He still looked hopeful, but less so. More sad.
Milo glanced up at him, then he looked away and shook his head, but apologetically.
No wonder sheâs such a good actress, Sean thought. Look what he has to do. I should tape my mouth shut for a few days and try to get by. Itâs cheaper than a workshop!
âIf we split the rent, we could buy lots and lots of pretty shoes,â Sean said, which was not quite teasing.
Milo shook his head again, but Sean thought he detected a half-second of hesitation, and possibly the ghost of a smile.
âHey!â Sean accused, pointing. âYouâre wearing flats! Menâs flats!â
Milo gestured quite eloquently. Half of his mouth twisted, he picked up his pant leg, turned and pointed his shoe, and he flung one hand at it. Sean understood the words as if they were spoken: I mean, come on! These things are just practical!
Sean stepped out of his unlaced stiletto heels. âWell, I shanât have these a second longer. I refuse to suffer alone!â
Milo shrugged and waved dismissively. He brought his heels together and struck a pose, the best approximation he could make of the stilted posture Ann had recommended while standing on his toes. He indicated his increased sex appeal with one hand, especially around the butt area.
âWell, maybe Iâll save them for the club,â Sean allowed, collecting them. âDo you need to get changed again? Do you have enough time?â
Milo shook his head. And he put up his hands, indicating that this was not a problem. They knew him at the club. Not every person knew everything about him, but Cerise understood him, and she was working tonight. Ann had a full wardrobe there for her shows.
He did, however, excuse himself momentarily to grab her purse off the dresser. He wanted the hatpin. He also had occasional need of the hatpin. That this mightâve been because he was a young man wandering around near a drag club in the small hours carrying a purse had yet to occur to him.
Sean also did not consider the purse worth remarking on, not after everything else. He was sitting at the bottom of the stairs and lacing up his less-masochistic shoes, and Milo was attempting to negotiate himself into an overcoat while holding a purse, when Calliope peeked out of Room 103.
She had left them a little while ago to try to catch some sleep while Lucy was doing the same, which had only increased Seanâs desire to get down the stairs properly, without dropping things. âOh, my dear, did we wake you?â he said.
He felt a little bit disingenuous about the âmy dear.â He was aware that he got about seventy-five-percent less precious when he wasnât talking to someone who was also that way, but Calliope had never heard him without Ann in the room, and he didnât want her to think he was putting her on. He just⊠He just instinctively played to his audience, that was all.
(He was pretty sure his brothers had no idea he was in any way odd, but his mother had figured him out somehow. Sean? Yeah, Mom? Youâre gay, arenât you? Um, yeah, Mom. Oh. Well, thatâs all right, then.)
Anyway, Calliope is a dear person, he decided. He did not have time to decide much else because Milo unceremoniously dropped his purse on top of the whimsical silk top hat and put a rather large dent in it. Sean thought that was sort of funny, but Milo had gone somehow paler and looked as if he were about to pass out.
Since it was not permitted to collect Milo, Sean collected the hat and attempted to straighten it, âNo, no, itâs quite all right. Itâs not even a real one. I stole it from wardrobe!â
âIâm sorry,â Calliope said. âI just thought it might be Milo because it was only you talking.â
Milo was looking fixedly down and away, and holding himself.
âAre you going to the club?â Calliope asked him.
Milo nodded.
Calliope smiled weakly. âWill you come say hi when you get back? Iâll probably be up. I havenât seen you in a while.â
Milo nodded.
The smile grew a little warmer. âThanks, Milo.â She offered Sean a small wave, âSee ya, Sean,â and closed the door again.
ââŠThatâs your broken relationship that still hurts, isnât it?â Sean said softly. âNot Annâs. Yours.â
Milo did not nod. But he curled over more tightly and he didnât shake his head either.
Sean put it bluntly: âThat sucks.â
Milo nodded to that.
âIs Lucy yours?â Sean asked, concerned.
Milo shook his head. His expression grew more pained, and he turned away. She couldâve been, but now she wouldnât be ever.
Sean did not consider it prudent to say cheerfully vicious things about Calliope. He wasnât at that stage yet himself. If he heard someone insult Quincy, heâd deck that person, and probably hurt his hand doing it.
âI like my hat now,â Sean said. He put it on. âWhat do you think?â It wasnât dented, but it also lacked the structural integrity to pop back to its previous proud stance. It was slumped sideways like a stack of pancakes.
One corner of Miloâs mouth twitched. He flushed embarrassment, then he managed a shrug.
âI must look like a happy hobo,â Sean said. When you were getting the applause, it was best to stay in the moment. âI need some fingerless gloves and a bottle in a brown paper bag! Shall we ditch Annâs act at the club and go hop trains all night? Weâll be the cutest boys in the boxcar!â
Milo covered his mouth with both hands, which was not really a smile, but at least prevented people from looking at him funny when he wanted to do it and messed it up. He ducked his head and shook it.
âI suppose weâd better make our way to the bus, then,â Sean said. He collected his own overcoat, and the shoes.
Milo considered the cards from his pants pocket, the ones he had done before coming down. He had three. Iâm sorry. You donât ever have to see me again, did not seem appropriate and he shuffled it to the back. He presented Sean with: Do you still want to be friends with Ann?
Sean read the smudged pencil and then smiled. âYes. Can I be friends with you too?â
Milo blinked. A friend for me?
That was being stupid. He had friends. It wasnât like he didnât have friends, but the people at the house knew him and understood him a lot better. He guessed maybe Cerise at the club liked him okay, but she never said anything about being friends, and she was a lot more comfortable with Ann.
He glanced up and Sean was still smiling at him.
He nodded.
âTop drawer!â Sean said. He was still sort of feeling the hobo persona, but he guessed in his best suit heâd be a classy one. Maybe with a monocle. âWe shall depart for the Big Rock Candy Mountain forthwith! Mulligan stew and stiletto heels for the both of us!â
Milo nodded. He was pretty sure this was teasing, and of a friendly sort, but if Sean did not appear to be making for the bus stop when they got out of the yard, he intended to raise an objection.
He paused at the bottom of the porch stairs and tapped Sean on the shoulder. He presented another card.
Did you really not know how to walk in heels
or was that just so Ann
would pay attention to you?
Sean laughed and pocketed the card. He indicated his split lip, which had faded to a thin red scar. âMilo, do you think I would do this to my face on purpose? I am not one of those crazy method people!â
Milo nodded.
âNow I get a question,â Sean said. âWas Ann dancing me backwards around the front room when she really needed glasses to see?â
Milo nodded.
Sean emitted an airy shriek and clapped both hands over his face. âAh! That rotten shallow peacock of a woman! Youâre not like that, are you, Milo?â
Milo frowned and shrugged, then he waggled a hand.
âWell, at least you are honest,â Sean said.
Milo nodded.
The two liars turned left at the plywood gate and headed for the bus.








