Milo was balancing a tray with a plate, a mug of tea, a soda bottle with a flower in it and an actual soda bottle. They still had a lot of ginger ale. He cradled it against him with one hand, and tapped on the door with the other.
Sometimes the people you loved needed extra, and you were supposed to pay attention and figure it out without asking. Hyacinth taught him that.
Now, Hyacinth definitely needed extra, but she wouldnât take it if he made it cute like that. Mordecai kept baking cookies and pretending he didnât notice when she stole them, and Ann pretended she didnât feel okay going back to the Black Orchid all by herself. And everyone there really did like messing around with Hyacinth and buying her drinks, but they tried not to bug her about being sad all the time. That was the kind of extra Hyacinth liked.
Calliope was way easier. She didnât lose a big important person like Hyacinth lostâ although she did like Barnaby a lot anyway â but she had a whole bunch of things hit her at once. She didnât get to do her art show like she wanted and it only went sort of okay, and she didnât get to have fun with her family, and the salmon shoes knocked her back hard, and then on top of all that the cool old guy she considered a fellow artist died after trying to take care of her.
Milo wasnât sure how he felt about that himself â Barnaby brought him shoes and a soda and tucked him in bed when he was freaking out from the fever, but on the other hand, there was everything else about Barnaby â but Calliope had it rough. Fortunately, she was willing to admit it. She just didnât like everyone else to see her being sad. She thought it was like an imposition, they had enough to deal with.
She believed him when he said he liked taking care of her!
His hands were busy, so he hummed a little greeting when he nudged open the door. Humming was a Calliope-and-Lucy-only thing, but heâd started back when he hurt his head and he wasnât gonna stop. âHelloâ had a simple melody. He supposed he might go as far as âI donât knowâ with a hum in an emergency, but âI love youâ was way better in sign. You could get, like, gradients out of sign.
For instance, he set the tray at the foot of the bed and gave it to her with both hands: OK? [SLOPPY MUSHYX2] After a momentâs consideration, he made it X3. «hey, howâs it hanginâ, cuddly-wuddly punkin-pie⊠bunny-boo?»
She snickered. Sheâd been lying on top of the covers with a box of tissues and she scooted aside to make room. âCâmere, cute guy. You donât always have to bring me stuff, I like you too.â
He nodded and sat down. He did note that they were still at a more-than-a-couple-sneezes amount of used tissues on the bed, but she didnât seem like she was trying to quit crying right now. He didnât like her to have to stop crying all alone, but he knew sometimes that hurt less. Maybe she was all done hearing the same comforting stuff over and over, but not quite all done being sad. That was okay too.
He offered the plate, but he didnât set it down. If she didnât want to eat, he could put the whole tray by the art table. Or she could eat and talk, or just eat. He was paying attention, this wasnât about him bringing her stuff because it was fun for him to bring her stuff. He hoped she knew that.
âAw, you brought me Nievas.â Heâd plated them for her and left the wrapper next to them on the side, he knew she liked the happy snowman mascot. She sniffled and picked up one of the used tissues to wipe under her nose. âHe really liked sweet stuff, too, but Hyacinth made him eat real food because she didnât want him to die.â
As if in a nightmare, Milo slowly began to pull back the plate of Nievas. He was very concerned that Calliope might think he was trying to kill her with sugar.
She shook her head and picked up one of the puffy mass-produced snack cakes. âYouâd think if anyone was gonna put their foot down about not needing to eat any celery âcos they were gonna die soon, itâd be him. I donât like not knowing if he didnât know he was gonna die, or if he just didnât make Cin feed him cupcakes twenty-four/seven because he wanted to be nice to her. Or something else.
âI wouldâve tried harder to be friends if he said he was gonna die soon, but he didnât like people, so maybe thatâs why he didnât tell me. I donât like thinking maybe he was just putting up with me. Hyacinth knew him best and she seems really sure he was just being mean, but sheâs mad at him right now.â
She sighed and scrubbed the back of her hand across her eyes. âI donât like a person to end. Even a mean one. I know I keep saying that⊠Itâs not âcos Iâm mad you didnât like him, you donât have to like him, itâs just not fair anyone has to end. He spent his whole life trying to learn stuff and all he left about it is the papers, and we donât even understand most of âem. Itâs selfish, but Iâm scared of that happening to me.â
Milo shook his head. He was pretty sure Barnaby didnât leave them papers for them to understand, the papers were like the wrapper you got around a fish. You couldnât do that much fish without collecting a lot of papers. Also, Barnaby hated people understanding him. He tried to sign it for her: YOU ARTIST MACHINE [ATTIC] CRAZY.
She frowned. âItâs called outsider art, Milo. Itâs a thing. But I guess he didnât make it for other people. Itâs more like ephemera. You think heâd mind if I save some of it?â
He shook his head.
âIâll think about it. And donât call him âattic thing.â People arenât things.â She made up a sign, since Milo hadnât been inclined: PAPER, [BB]WALL. Heâd finally killed it before he died â Hyacinth was never going to get all that paint off the walls, it had sentimental value. He deserved recognition. Barnaby Graham, slayer of wallpaper. âBoth hands B or just one, Milo?â She tried it with just one B, experimenting.
Milo signed it with two Bs, firmly. The man loved his symmetry, Milo knew that for sure.
âWallpaperâ with two Bs. BARNABY.
Calliope nodded. She hugged Milo around the middle and picked up the other Nieva for him. âHere, I want us to die at exactly the same time.â
Milo frowned at the snack cake, then shrugged and took a bite. She meant, like, way later. He was okay with that.
She took a bite of hers and touched her tongue to the fakey cream filling inside, resisting the urge to lick any out. The rest of the cake wasnât as good without it. âIâve been thinking about how you screwed up asking to marry me so bad. Like, you thought there wouldnât be any room for me and Lucy unless you pried out all your Ann gears and half the Milo ones. Thatâs really awful. I donât know where you got your idea of âmarried,â but I donât ever want that with you.â
He nodded weakly. Yeah, he really messed that up. You could see how he put it together so wrong when you had it in cuckoo-clock form. Not one of his better ideas. Kind of a shame, sheâd be cute in a fluffy white dress. Or whatever she wanted.
He hid what was almost a snicker with another bite of Nieva. Sheâd like to wear one of her paint shirts and pants and bare feet, like she was already. That was okay, too, but they didnât need the wedding in that case. They could just eat cake and be comfy.
âCan we just, like, stay together forever, have lots of sex, and love each other? Is that cool with you?â
He drew back to stare at her, with chocolate crumbs on his mouth. Wait a minute THAT WAS AN OPTION?
Well, Milo, Lalage and Barbara did it that way, soâŠ
âŠAN OPTION FOR PEOPLE WHO ARE NOT LESBIAN GRANDMAS?
Um. Apparently?
He nodded rapidly and signed all the emphasis he needed to make it extra. I will be lesbian grandmas with you FOREVER, Calliope!
âŠGods, Iâm glad you donât have a sign for âlesbian grandmas.â
He did add: I LOVE YOU! [EXTRA MUSHY]
She hugged him tighter, âI wuv âoo too,â and kissed the corner of his mouth where he had cream filling. âOh, hey.â She stood up. âI keep forgetting. I just remembered âcos weâre probably going to have to do some papers so they let you visit me in the hospital, in case I ever go back. But Mom left some stuff for Ann. Not for the hospital.â She smirked and pawed through the papers on her art table. âItâs just for fun, but nobody was having any fun, so I threw it over here and left it. What do you think?â
Rinswell Soap Flakes-Otis had filled out an adoption certificate in lovely ink handwriting that looked like it had been done with a brush. Stephen and Rinâs signatures were at the bottom â Rin had indeed learned to sign her name like it was on the box of soap flakes. There was an asterisk, and a second page stapled to the back with even more signatures. Someone had also drawn a tortured looking kitty-cat.
Calliope indicated it with a grin. âThatâs from Helix and Sigma. Helix drew the head and Sigma drew the tail. And this is Melpomene, he signed for Thalia, too, she said it was okay over the phone. And Urania and Hitori and Clio, they sent theirs in the mail,â these had been cut out, applied with glue or a charm, and run through a copier that left a faint trace of the edges. âErato, Aileen and Melody, Terpsichore, Polyhymnia and Hector, and Euterpe. And Ojichan and MĂ©mĂšre and Grandpa.â
Milo plucked at the paper with a shaking hand and didnât quite dare take it. There were people on there heâd only seen in photo albums.
The name at the top of the form was Ann Rose-Otis, with a blank space for a middle name.
At the very bottom of the second sheet, Calliopeâs mom had added in her pretty printing: (not legally binding but we all say she can stay!)
Oh, no, Milo. I want to cry!
He sniffled and took off his glasses to wipe under them.
Calliope made an uncertain smile. âOkay?â
He nodded, still dabbing his eyes with his sleeve, and signed a thumbs up.
âYou guys should sign it too.â She smiled and shrugged. âAnd me. Does Ann want a middle name? She missed out at five, but she can pick whatever she wants, like the rest of us.â
Milo nodded rapidly, but he had more to say. He didnât know enough sign yet, it was too complicated. He shooed Calliope gently away from the art table so he could work. She sat down on the bed and drank tea, giving him space.
âWeâre also an Otis Family Franchise,â she added conversationally. âI gotta visit a frame shop sometime. Mom did all her best calligraphy on everything.â
Milo handed her a piece of paper with a large pencil sketch at the top, which made her snicker right away. Heâd drawn a cake topper with three people â Calliope got to stay in her art clothes and Ann wore the dress.
She read his explanation beneath and her smile grew wider. She began to nod. âYeah! I know what that is from Mom and Dad! Itâs the same dress and everything, youâre rightâŠâ She shook her head. âBabe, Glorie and Sam and Maggie were gonna head out after dinner. If we donât do it right now, we gotta wait three more months with everyoneâs Yule stuff in boxes, or do it without them.â
Milo cringed. It was hard enough having that stuff left over this long. They had to throw out the tree already and Erik had cried, but obviously nobody felt okay opening the gifts. He thought itâd be a great excuse, and fun, but he didnât know if they were ready to go right now. Maybe they should justâŠ
Calliope stood. âIf Em is okay doing a cake, I say we go for it, babe. I can help him bake, if you and Ann can watch the baby and get dressed. Ann wants to be pretty, yeah? Even if we donât have a white dress?â
He nodded.
She pointed to her sloppy appearance on the cake topper, âAnd you donât mind me like this? Were you just teasing?â
He shook his head, but he signed, ASK?
Calliope grinned. She took the flower out of the soda bottle on the tray, a daisy Milo had picked from a street planter on the way home. She put it behind her ear. âIâm dressed. What do you think?â
Milo signed, PRETTY [EXTRA]
âââ
Mordecai was in the kitchen, addressing a bag of day-old pitas and half a dozen cans of chickpeas. Heâd had it up to here with the casseroles, but he may have gone a bit overboard at the Farsian market. He had eaten a falafel sandwich with hummus before, but heâd never considered how much of it came from the same place. It seemed a bit mental, the sort of thing heâd come up with during a magic storm. Like saucing a potato dumpling with cream of potato soup.
I shouldâve picked up some of that cucumber-yoghurt sauce⊠Can I sub sour cream? Do we have any sour creamâŠ?
He almost ran into Calliope in the doorway.
âEm,â she said breathlessly, âif I buy us takeout for dinner can you bake a cake?â
He frowned back at the chickpeas and pitas. âHonestly, itâs probably more like whipped cream on a sundae, this just isnât my culture and Iâm used to ordering it premade. I should broaden my horizons⊠Why a cake?â
âAnnâs gonna pick a middle name and be my sister and we thought if we made it like a party, we could open the Yule stuff and not feel too bad. If you donât mind a cake, Iâm going to ask Cin if sheâs okay with it.â
Mordecai winced. âItâs not a bad idea and I donât mind a cake⊠if you donât mind an easy cakeâŠâ
âNope!â
âOkay, but be careful when you talk to Hyacinth. She thought she was going to try cleaning up the attic again and she didnât want to hear anything from me about how she didnât have to.â Sheâd told him to go fuck himself, actually. She hadnât been thrilled with him ever since he didnât know the Queen songs she wanted to hear.
Calliope nodded. âIs she in her room?â
âProbably.â
âââ
Milo had gone upstairs with Lucy in the Lu-ambulator, thinking of nothing more than happiness and potential outfits. Blue chiffon was the dress of the day, but â yet again â the pink dress was the newest and nicest because theyâd ruined the previous model. On the other hand, one of their white nighties might be the closest in colour and style to the look they really wanted. Maybe it wouldnât look too odd with a few petticoats and a sash or somethingâŠ
There was a package wrapped in white tissue on the bed. It had a big pink satin bow and a tag on top.
Milo regarded it with a frown. He didnât recognize this one from the haphazard pile left over from Yule. They wrapped their Yule stuff in newspaper. Someone had gone all out like this was a Twelfth Night thing, but they barely bought any Twelfth Night things. Everything had gone to hell on New Yearâs. Theyâd meant to go out for brunch in SoHo with Calliopeâs family, then come back and do presents in the evening, a good time for slightly delayed fireworks and liquor.
He didnât like people sneaking around in their room to give them expensive stuff. What if it was really great and nobody ever told him who it was from? He wouldnât know who to thank.
Oh, gods, he really hoped it wasnât from Calliope, or her family. Theyâd already done so muchâŠ
Someone had cut the tag out of blue construction paper, a five-pointed star folded down the middle. He unfolded it with trepidation and saw unfamiliar handwriting. Ragged block letters â not big, confident ones like Hyacinth did, but wobbly like Erik used to do when he was relearning how to write. They were all facing the right way, though.
From Barnaby, he read suspiciously. It certainly wasnât Barnabyâs handwriting. Heâd seen that all over the place â jagged cursive with occasional highlights in copperplate, and sometimes a smiley face.
He suspected someone was writing with their off hand so he wouldnât guess who it was, but he didnât think anyone in the house had a sense of humour this weird.
Except maybe Barnaby.
If itâs really from him, it might be to hurt me or scare me.
Milo, that isnât nice. He was kind to you and me, and he hurt himself so badly to help all of us.
Yeah, but if that happened in the middle instead of at the end, he wouldâve messed it up by screaming at me or giving me an exploding box afterwards. He saw things. He couldâve arranged to mess with me whenever he wanted.
Well⊠What if we open it carefully?
After a momentâs hesitation, he parked Lucy in the hall and shut the door first.
âââ
Calliope had already talked her way to the other side of Hyacinthâs door and explained the situation between volleys of sarcasm. She politely ignored the abandoned cleaning supplies and strew of used tissues on the floor. ââŠEm said heâd do a cake, but we donât want to make you sad.â
Hyacinth clicked her tongue. âI am notâŠâ She growled and kicked the pile of tissues. âIs it any wonder I donât have time to clear out the attic? Donât you people ever get sick of being weird?â
âNah.â Calliope plunked down on the bed beside her and put an arm around her.
âDonâtâŠâ Hyacinth sighed. She dropped her head, shaking it at the absurdity, and at the symmetry. Yeah. Now Iâm on the other side of sitting on a bed next to an angry person whoâs really sad but doesnât know how to deal with it. Like a goddamn mirror. Except you didnât divorce me, Barnaby.
But, she reminded herself, at least I donât have to pay you alimony.
âIâm super glad you havenât had time yet, âcos I want to save some of his collages,â Calliope said. âIf you let me help, you donât have to clean a mess and I get to keep being weird. Iâm not mad at him like you, and I donât miss him like you, either, but I liked him. He did some really neat stuff, even if a bunch of it was probably just to be annoying.â
âThereâs⊠thereâsâŠâ She gestured atticwards. âI bet he left traps, or a box full of shaving cream⊠Something. He wouldnât just go like that, even if he was sick of it, you know?â She turned away. âHe wouldnât just leave.â
âI bet youâre right.â
âDonât humour me. You donât humour the paranoid, itâs bad for them.â
âNo, I know how he was. Itâs just, you know, I canât figure if heâd leave something obvious so you find it and feel better, or to give you a false sense of security, or try to drive you crazy making you wait. Itâs like the meanest scavenger hunt ever and you have no idea when itâs gonna start or end.â
Hyacinth snickered. âYeah. Youâre right.â
âI totally get why youâre not ready to have any fun with it yet. If he liked me like he liked you, Iâd be flipping out right now.â
Now Hyacinth laughed. âHe did like you, you know? After a fashion. He just has a funny way of showing it. Had.â
ââHasâ is better, âcos heâs not done yet.â
âGods, youâre not wrong, I guess I was just trying to tell myselfâŠâ
There was a tap on the door, eerily similar to one of Miloâs semi-knocks. Annâs voice said, âCin? Are you there?â
Calliope popped up first to answer it with an excited grin. She let go of the door, only half open, and applauded. âOh, Ann! So pretty! I didnât know you had a white one, itâs perfect!â
âThank you so much, Calliope, sweetheart. But I didnât have this⊠May I speak to Hyacinth?â
Calliope stepped out of the way.
Hyacinth stood up. Her whole head went up and down, regarding Ann. âYou know, itâs bad luck to see you before the wedding.â
The dress was white lace with at least three crinkly pink satin petticoats, and a sash with a huge fake pink rose. There was a set of white lace gloves, and a pink beaded necklace with three flower charms â on a strand of elastic, no metal at all.
(The necklace came care of Hennessyâs toy department, meant for girl children who liked to play dress-up. The charms were from the craft department. The dress was from the bridal department, perfectly tailored to Annâs measurements, but Barnaby had asked what they could do to âtone downâ the white. âTo be perfectly honest, my granddaughter is not entitled to a white one. Kids these days, eh, Philippe?â)
Ann self-consciously adjusted the white lace bonnet, which had come from the sleepwear department. âItâs not a wedding. CinâŠâ She shook her head. âUm. I donât want to upset you, but if this isnât a prank youâre playing, we may have a situation.â She handed over the tag, the wrapping and the box. âThere isnât any magic on it or anything, Milo checked. Itâs safe, butâŠâ
Hyacinth read the tag, and began to grin. âI knew it!â She joyfully crumpled the tag, straightened it to read it again, âI knew it! I knew it!â crumpled it again and cast it aside. âWas it more delivery people? Has he sent me another piano?â
âUm, no.â Ann fidgeted. She hadnât been expecting quite this reaction. âIt was just, ah⊠As soon as Milo went upstairs to change, it was just there, waiting for us. On the bed. Ah, Hyacinth, Milo and I are fairly certain Barnaby has hired someone to break into our house.â
Hyacinth leapt onto the bed and threw the box and the wrapping into the air. âHooray!â
Calliope collected the pink satin bow from the floor. âCool, we can match.â She experimentally wound the ends around her left wrist.
âMm,â Ann said uncomfortably. âCin, there was also this strawberry bon bon? The kind with the gooey centre? There was a little paper star stuck to it and another note in that handwriting⊠It says âI promise time.â Does that make any sense to you?â
Hyacinth was cackling with tears in her eyes. âNo! No idea! Iâm sure itâll make sense at some point⊠Iâm positive!â
âI⊠I donât suppose itâs safe to eat? We sort of like these, but⊠I donât know, maybe weâre being unfair, but⊠it doesnât seem safe to eat.â
Hyacinth grinned at her. âI dare you.â
âNo thank you. I suppose weâll just, uhâŠâ She put it behind her back. âSave it. Yes.â
Calliope was already rapping on the door to Room 202. âHey, you guys! Guess what! Barnaby hired someone to break into our house!â
âNobody has broken into our house,â the Generalâs voice replied faintly.
âSure they did! Come look what they left for Ann!â
The General stood in the doorway, with Maggie and Sanaam peeking out on either side of her.
Ann spun around once, hesitantly, displaying the dress. She made an awkward smile at Maggie and Sam, doing her best to ignore the frowning woman between them.
âSomeone seriously broke in to give you a dress?â Maggie said.
âIt seems so. It was on our bed, so it couldâve been any time while Milo was at work. Unless you had something to do with it?â
Maggie shook her head. âBut weâve been here the whole time and we didnât hear anyone.â
âAre you in on it?â Hyacinth asked. âTotally cool if youâre in on it, donât tell me. But are you in on it?â
âUh-uh,â Maggie said.
Hyacinth winked and gave her a thumbs up.
âNo, seriouslyâŠâ
âAnn, are you getting married?â Sanaam managed.
Ann gave a light laugh and brushed at the dress. âItâs sort of a christening gown. Calliopeâs family is adopting me. Weâre going to be sisters!â
The General rolled her eyes and groaned as if she had just been stabbed by the worldâs most boring knife. âThis absurdity does not require me. I have scheduled this time to pack.â
âAre you doing it right now?â Sanaam said. âCan we help?â
âDo you need decorations?â Maggie asked.
âThat is an awesome idea!â Calliope said. âLetâs see if we can find ErikâŠâ
âSam, do you mind watching Lu?â Ann said, indicating the spider highchair. âI still have to do my hair and makeup⊠And pick a middle name!â
âOh, thatâs no trouble at all!â He tapped the machine, asking it to follow him downstairs.
Calliope waved him on. âCome on, weâre making a cake too!â
âFrosting, Lucy!â Sanaam cried. âYay!â
âYay!â the baby replied.
âââ
Erik was already in the kitchen, sorting ingredients with his bear and elephant observing from chairs on either side of the table. âDonât get me wrong, you guys, I want to help make a cake,â he muttered, âbut theyâre all so frigginâ worried about me trying to fix everything and Iâm supposed to go play like a normal kid, but as soon as we get cake involved, all of a sudden thatâs âage-appropriateâ and âfun.â Like, cake doesnât make all that other stuff go away, and if it did theyâd be telling me I didnât have to do it, but they wouldnât be doing it if it wasnât to help fix things. Iâm telling ya, adults are out of their damnâŠâ
He glanced up, saw everyone in the kitchen doorway and recoiled.
âUh, da⊠dance, dancinâ machineâŠâ He spun around once on the tile, faked snapping his fingers and signed them all a double thumbs up. âWoo.â
âKid,â said Hyacinth, âyou donât ever have to pretend adults arenât out of their damn minds. Not in this house, and not around me. I already know it and Iâm not going to fake like it ainât so to be cute.â
Calliope peeked past her. âHey, Erik, have you been pretending to play just so we wonât be worried? Thatâs notâŠâ
Erik growled and thudded his head on the table, making the sugar bowl jump. âDonât be the help-police, Calliope! If you donât want that, you better pick something else. If you donât give me something to do, I am gonna go mental. I am trying not to be a pain in the ass, okay?â
Calliope padded into the kitchen, barefoot, knelt and hugged him. âItâs okay, hon. Iâm sorry. Thanks.â
Erik sighed. He relaxed slowly and dropped his head on her shoulder.
âIs it okay if everyone else helps make a cake and put up decorations? I kinda think we all want something age-appropriate and fun to do.â
He wiped a hand under his grey eye and leaned back with a smile. âYeah.â He leaned forward again to whisper in her ear, âHide the chickpeas before my uncle gets back with the groceries or weâre gonna have another weird dinner. He has no idea how to make falafel, heâs just mad at casseroles.â
âI think if we help him, it might turn out okay, and if it doesnât, weâve got an excuse to order pizza. Howâs that sound?â
Erik beamed. âMiloâs right about how smart you are. Iâm glad youâre gonna be lesbian grandmas.â
Hyacinth cackled and Maggie joined her. âWhat?â
Calliope considered that for a moment. She nodded and grinned. âYeah. Like at the Black Orchid. Can you make a sign that says that?â
âAlready on my way to the scissors and paper!â Erik said.
âââ
Mordecai returned a half hour later, with cake decorations, chips, dip, and a self-conscious roll of pink crĂȘpe paper that heâd debated for ten minutes. They didnât have to put it up if they didnât want to, he decided.
He found chocolate cake batter already in progress in the kitchen, and an arrangement of cut paper letters on the table that said HAPPY LESBIAN. He couldnât help but laugh, even if that might goad Hyacinth into biting his head off again. âIâm sorry.â He pointed. âDo, do I want to know?â
âWhy shouldnât I be happy?â Hyacinth said, but with a grin.
Sanaam paused with a finger in the cake batter. âOh,â he said. That made sense. He shrugged.
Maggie tugged on his sleeve and said, âWe gotta get her a girlfriend.â
Erik matter-of-factly laid a G on the table and began an R. âYou donât have to get married to love someone forever. You shouldâve been lesbian grandmas with Cathy, just for sex, then you wouldnât have had to be gay.â
âAll right,â Sanaam said, laying down the mixer. âNow that requires an explanation. Please.â
Mordecai cringed. âNow, now, Iâm obviously not⊠Not really⊠I donât mean to be insensitive, a gay person can be like anybody! Itâs not insulting at all! But, I am not one. Itâs⊠Itâs a long story.â
Hyacinth smiled at him with narrowed eyes. âWell, go on and tell it while I open the chickpeas. You can embarrass yourself twice!â
He sighed. âWell, I made a big mistake when I was younger, but Iâve always been much dumber than I think I am⊠Does anyone want chips?â
âââ
There was something for everyone to do, or at least to pretend they were doing when they felt awkward. In between simple activities, they opened presents at random. It seemed easier than sitting down to do them all at once and making a big deal â less pressure.
The General was willing to pause packing to help them devise some magic-based decorations, though she kept her suitcase hovering plausibly over her shoulder as a reminder that she might go back into Room 202 to organize her things at any time.
When Ann came down, too pretty and painted to help in the kitchen, she found a scrambled message in paper letters: GRAPPLEHANDBASINYAMS â which Hyacinth and Calliope had done as a kind of tribute, despite Erikâs annoyance. She collected a pad of paper and began assembling anagrams with Milo, in search of the real message.
In the kitchen, Erik helped put together the cake, Sanaam provided basic falafel advice, and Hyacinth sampled everything in progress while ignoring the dishes.
Calliope interrupted her in the middle of investigating whether cake frosting was any good on potato chips. âHey, Cin?â She offered a sheaf of papers in a folder with a majestic rainbow unicorn on it. âDonât crumple my unicorn. It isnât wrapping paper, âcos the stuff inside isnât a present. You can say no. I just thought you might like it.â
Hyacinth leafed through a series of preliminary sketches for Calliopeâs mixed media portrait, Evil Old Man I Dreamed. Barnaby was wrapped in an obvious bedsheet instead of the dramatic cloak Calliope had made out of it, with an expression of haughty dignity Hyacinth knew he often adopted when he knew very well he was being silly.
Hyacinth saluted Calliope with the folder and a smirk. âI wanted to buy that portrait off you, but Mordecai said I could get all the free art out of you I wantedâŠâ
Mordecai set down the hand mixer, indignant. âMust you be insulting? I didnâtâŠâ
She opened the folder to show him. âYeah, but look, you were right.â She offered Calliope a slightly misty smile. âI love it. Thanks. Iâm gonna hafta get âem all framed.â
âOh,â said Calliope. She held out a hand. âWell, give me back my unicorn and Iâll take âem with me to the frame shop. Iâm going to do Annâs adoption certificate, afterâŠâ
âLesbian Grandmas!â Annâs voice shrieked, from the front room.
Calliope covered a snicker.
A moment later, Ann swept into the kitchen to hug her. âOh, I shouldâve known youâd understand! Youâre the best sister ever! Erik, did you tell her?â
Erik glanced up from the cake and signed them a grave thumbs up. It was as if heâd stuck a polite note on the front door of the little house Ann and Milo shared, for them to puzzle over at their leisure: (I got your back, bro/sis/cuz/fam/canât decide how to say it, embarrassing, sorry.)
Ann sighed internally â theyâd asked him not to do that. Milo just thought it was cute. He pasted it in the scrapbook of other cute Erik memories, next to the one of Erik stealing frosting with a fork when he thought no one was looking.
âDid you pick a middle name yet, or were you too busy?â Calliope said.
âHm?â said Ann.
âFor the form, so I can finish it and get it framed later.â
âOh!â Ann said. âWellâŠâ
This was a little like Erik not knowing a simple way to give their faux-familial association a name-check. Ann was aware of her tendency towards bizarre tangents, but she couldnât think of a shortcut.
âWell, you know that tiara you made us, with the snakes? We like it very much, donât ever get the idea we donât like it, but itâs hard to come up with an occasion to wear it.â
Milo had wanted her to wear it now. Ann had pleaded that the bonnet was more appropriate and eked out a win, with a few bruised feelings.
âSo it stays on the shelf in the closet, and we sort of say hi every once in a while. We thought, what if, instead of trying to come up with reasons to wear a snake hat, I call myself after that old hero who inspired you? Only we canât remember what sheâs called or what she did. Is she like a muse, like your other brothers and sisters?â
âOh, no,â Calliope said, grinning. âMore like a fury. A god cursed her with the snake hair for a totally bullshit reason that wasnât even her fault so she hiked up Mount Belus and popped his head off. She put the head on her shield and she kept the snake hair and ran around killing monsters and married a queen.â
She leaned in and lowered her voice, but not so the whole room couldnât still hear, âThey like to say that was just a political thing, but I donât buy it. Sappho is from Thessalonia and sheâs how come we call it âlesbiansâ anyway, so itâs not like they didnât know, they just didnât think it was polite to say. Her nameâs Medusa.â
âEr,â Ann said. âNot that I disapprove, but I was sort of hoping you had a spare muse. Fashion design, or shoesâŠ? You know. Something cute.â
âThe muse of vengeance!â Calliope cried, clawing the air.
âMy favourite meteor shower falls out of her constellation,â Mordecai noted.
âIf youâre gonna kill monsters, you hafta be really careful you donât hurt real people,â Erik said. âWe have a book you can use.â
âNot to be insulting,â Sanaam put in, âbut my old encyclopedia â which is riddled with errors, just ask my wife and daughter â tried to explain the queen thing by saying she was really a boy. Or, she defiled the temple by dressing as a girl. Or a boy killed her and put her headâŠâ
Hyacinth rolled her eyes. âGods, history is sexist. Canât I have a definite vengeance lesbian to represent me? I know itâs not your fault, SanaamâŠâ
âDo you want that name, Ann?â Calliope asked gently. âYou donât have to. Anything could be a muse. I made one called Jeffrey, but I sold him.â
Ann smiled. Milo had gleefully produced a list of all the people they loved who had something to do with Medusa, and she couldâve been a boy in a dress! âOh, well, yes. I think itâs rather a nice-sounding name. Itâs muse-adjacent. Ann Medusa Rose-Otis. What do you think, sis?â
Calliope strode towards the doorway, âLetâs get everyone together and finish the papers right now!â
âAmmie?â Lucy piped up, from her highchair at the table. She signed, MORE.
Ann obligingly gave her a few more potato chips. âAnn-Mommy likes that name very much too,â she replied.
âââ
They did it in the kitchen. The front room had all the decorations, but the kitchen had a big table â which Mordecai insisted on wiping down first, so Annâs nice certificate wouldnât get hummus stains. Ann signed her new name under Calliopeâs for the first time, followed by Miloâs name, and put all three in a big red pencil heart. There was some applause and much hugging. Sanaam took photos.
Everyone decided to have cake in the front room, before or perhaps instead of dinner.
Erik grabbed his uncle by a coattail and dragged him back to the kitchen with the whirled peas. This went unnoticed, as Calliope produced the record player and invited song requests.
Mordecai waited patiently, but Erik only needed a few seconds to sort out his words, âUncle. I need you to be really honest with me, okay? If I ask anybody else theyâre gonna say itâs okay just to make me feel better â also I said something dumb while I was goofing around and you were at the store and they heard me, so I know they feel bad for me. I trust you, so donât⊠donât patronize me, okay?â
âWhat did you say?â
Erik groaned. âCome on!â
âOkay, okay.â His uncle pulled out a chair and sat down. âLet me start being honest right away, then. Ninety-percent of the time, people donât really want to know what you think, they just want you to help them figure out what they think. You are asking a biased person who also wants you to feel better for an opinion you may not even want. Do you want more honesty like that?â
Erik nodded.
Mordecai sat back. âAll right. Then shoot.â
âI wrote a song.â Erik put up a hand for a pause and shook his head. âNot for real, Iâm not that smart. I just made the words about us and I learned how to play it all by myself, so I could surprise everyone. Itâs cute and silly and I know we are not cute and silly right now, weâre just trying super hard and donât want to make anyone upset. I was gonna save it, but I didnât expect us to have a party again this soon. I could play it. But should I, or will it make them sad?â
Mordecai laughed and shook his head. âTo be honest, I already want to hear it because Iâm curious, but I will try to give you a real answer.â
He leaned his elbow on the table and rested his head in his hand with a sigh. âItâs a dice roll, dear one. Not even one die with six sides, a whole big bag like Barnaby had, one for every person out there, and theyâre all going to bang into each other and keep rolling. I know itâs been like that, and itâs always like that a little, but itâs extra iffy right now. Someone might get upset and start crying at any time, but that isnât the same as you making them sad.
âIt hurts to pick up the pieces and move on. It needs doing and weâre doing it right now, but it feels right and wrong all at once. It can go on for a very long time, and sometimes you find a piece you didnât notice and fall apart all over again. It helps to do normal things like listen to music and hug each other, but it stings like when you put iodine on a wound.
âSo Iâve got to ask you to be honest, dear one. If someone starts crying because it stings when you play your song, is that going to hurt you too much, or do you still want to play it? I canât read your mind like you can read mine, so Iâve got to trust you. Donât just say yes because you want to help. There are lots of ways you can help that wonât hurt you as much as sharing something you made to make us happy when it might not make all of us happy. No matter what you decide to do, we will keep helping each other and be okay.â
Erik nodded. âThen I guess Iâll be brave and play it.â
âAh!â said Mordecai. âPeople lie themselves up to do some things they really shouldnât by calling it âbrave.â Just for right now, letâs be real, not brave.â
Erik frowned. âI want to play, thatâs real. I like attention and Iâm a showoff. But if itâs a mistake and I get too upset, will you still hug me and tell me itâs okay?â
Mordecai nodded. âAlways. And it will be okay. Eventually.â
Erik grinned. âOkay. Then Iâll go change my shirt and comb my hair and do it right. Can you cover for me?â
ââWhoâs Erik? Whatâs a violin?ââ Mordecai replied. He turned back at the doorway and added in a stage-whisper, âSneak out through the dining room!â