Chapter
48: And Wilderness is Paradise Enow [60]
Catherine
smiled at her husband. As they walked closer to the access tunnel
which would take them to their basement entrance, his strides were
long and loose-limbed. He was…relaxed. And very happy, the
excitement fairly bursting from him like a child at Christmas. “Have
you seen the interior since you all finished cleaning out the tunnel
entrance?”
“No,”
Vincent said. “Matthew said there were some…security features he
wanted to show us first.”
“An
alarm?”
“Perhaps,”
Vincent replied, “but I don’t believe that’s what he meant.”
“Well,
I suppose we’ll find out soon enough,” Catherine said, lacing her
arm through his.
“Yes.
And here we are.”
Her
mouth fell open at the sight of the widened corridor. She’d seen it
many times during its excavation but nothing had quite prepared her
for what it looked like when it was finally cleared of all the rubble
and detritus. The rocks of the corridor were cleaned of the dust and
cobwebs, the floor smooth and sandy, and there was a shine along the
upper wall: new pipes. “Vincent?” she asked. “Why the new
pipes?”
“The
old ones were rusted through in places; they would never have carried
a message clearly,” he replied. “Matthew…donated them.”
“You
don’t sound convinced.”
Vincent
smiled. “No. Matthew…well, he and Mouse are two of a kind. In
Matthew’s case, he haunts a good many architectural salvage stores,
looking for materials to rehab the homes he works on. There are a few
of his finds which have made it below because he ‘had no place’
to use them.”
“That’s
kind of him.”
“It
is,” Vincent agreed. “But he’d be mortified if we let on that
we knew of his secret. I’m not even entirely sure Father knows.”
At
the end of the corridor, there was a large rock panel---a false wall,
Catherine realized after studying it closely. The wall must have been
largely the result of Kanin’s talented touch; a cursory
glance---even a second or third look---would never reveal to the
casual visitor that this was anything other than a dead end. “How
does this work?”
“It
pivots,” Vincent replied. “But only if you push on it in exactly
the right place. Otherwise, it won’t budge.” He took her hand,
guided it towards what seemed to be a depression in between the
stone, much like all the others. “Feel that?”
His
hand was very warm as it covered hers. “What’s this bump here?”
“Sea
glass,” Vincent replied. “Kanin fitted it into the wall. It’s
small enough to escape any real attention but large enough to be felt
with your hand if you know where to look for it. Now push.”
Catherine
was startled to feel the wall give way and turn on its pivot---how
carefully must the wall have been calibrated to open with just the
right amount of force. “And you say you’re all just talented
amateurs,” she said, marveling. “I can’t imagine a professional
would have done better.”
“It
was mostly Kanin's work,” he replied. “There are many such false
walls scattered throughout our world---some of them predate even our
settlement of these tunnels.” He pushed the opening still wider so
they could both walk through. “Shall we?”
***
The
heavy wooden door leading from the basement into their home---their
home!---creaked
loudly in the stillness. Vincent was not surprised to feel an
answering pull on the other side of the door; Matthew had obviously
been waiting. “Vincent, Catherine! Come on in!”
He
stepped through the doorway and stopped. The scents of rotting wood,
of mildew and mold and asbestos were gone. It was not yet livable,
not yet theirs…but
it would be. It
would be.
“Ah, here’s the light,” Matthew said, pulling on the chain on
the ceiling bulb. “We don't have the electricity turned on in the
rest of the place, not yet---this is all done with a generator since
the electrical guys haven’t been in yet. But it should be enough to
see and if it's not, I brought flashlights.”
Catherine
glanced towards the wall opposite the brownstone’s door and gasped.
“Matthew....what…how…?”
Matthew
folded his arms. “Yeah, I saw the windows were all boarded up. I
thought if you all were going to live here---really live---you might
need some…additional security.”
Vincent
followed her gaze. When they’d last seen the interior of the
brownstone, the glass windows on either side of the door had been
destroyed, covered by plywood, blocking all light from the street.
The intricate stained glass panels leaning against the wall were
clearly intended as their replacements. He opened his mouth, and
closed it, the engulfing rush of possibility, of hope so long denied,
too strong for words. I
could stand here in the sunlight and not be seen. I could be safe.
Catherine’s
hand sought his, clenched hard in her storm of emotion. “I
don’t...know quite what to say.”
“A
real first, I’m sure,” the older man said, teasing. “And before
you ask, I asked an old friend of mine to make the windows for you.
He makes them from recycled glass and you'll see that while he used
clear glass for some of the panels, they're patterned in such a way
that no one looking in will be able to see inside clearly. Consider
it a wedding gift from Annie and me.”
“Thank
you,” Vincent managed through the knot in his throat, though the
words hardly seemed enough. “For the windows, for....” The
eventuality of
Catherine
and me in the sunlight...no longer just in Connecticut.
“You’re
welcome,” Matthew replied, walking with his limping steps towards
the center of what would be their living room. He gestured towards a
blueprint pinned to a chunk of drywall resting against a sawhorse.
“Annie made a copy of her designs; if you want to go ahead and
refresh your memory before you go exploring, the prints are over
there.”
“What
about the upstairs?” Catherine asked.
“The
staircase is sturdy---not much to look at right now, but I had a
couple of my guys come in here and make it safe. If you want to go
upstairs, at least you won’t fall through,” Matthew answered.
“Annie wanted to come and give you guys the grand tour but my
grandson's sick with the flu.”
“I’m
sorry Jason’s sick. Does she want Father to take a look?” Vincent
asked.
Matthew
shook his head. “Nah, probably just a stomach thing but I'll pass
it on, thanks. Likely she’s already sent Mary a message but if you
wouldn’t mind letting Mary know Jason won’t be below tomorrow,
that’d be great.”
Vincent
nodded. “Of course. I hope he feels better soon.” He studied the
plans carefully, noting again the window that would one day look out
onto the vacant land where the house next door had stood. “Matthew,
what’s the timeframe on the house next door being razed?”
“We’ve
got the permits for it,” Matthew answered. “Probably in a week or
so. Why?”
“There’s
something you should know,” Vincent replied. “When Mouse had
his…accident…he says someone pushed him out of the way.”
“A
homeless guy? Someone living there in the wreckage?”
“No,”
Vincent replied, deciding to brazen it out. “A ghost.”
Matthew
sat down hard on the steps at the bottom of the staircase. “You
don’t mean….really?”
Catherine
nodded. “And this isn’t one of Mouse’s stories. He’s telling
the truth. He says he saw a ‘big guy’ there who pushed him out of
the way, then disappeared.”
Matthew
whistled. “Well, I’ll be. It’s not the first time I’ve heard
of ghosts being attached to old homes and there have been some things
I've seen...” His voice trailed off. “I’ll put the word
out---the guys will think I’m crazy, but they already think that,
what’s a few more rumors?” He folded his hands. “Anyway, once
the building is razed and the rubble hauled off---which shouldn’t
take long, since it’s halfway to the dump already---then I’ll
have the masons in to build a wall around the property. Have you
given any thought to what kind of wall you’d want?”
Memories
assailed him: he and Devin as boys, pouring over old maps and
historical accounts of castles, of moats and curtain walls and
baileys and enceinte…fortifications which were totally impractical
now but some part of him, the boy he'd one been, thrilled at the
question. Vincent glanced at Catherine, felt rather than saw her
small nod. “Something which matches the cemetery walls, to the
extent it's possible. I...we...would
like it to look as if it was always there.”
“I'll
let Annie’s know; she's the architect and if I know her, she's
already made sketches of the other walls.” He chuckled. “I don’t
mind telling you both I’m looking forward to this project.” He
made a shooing motion with his hands. “Now off with you two---go
look around.”
***
“So
the plumbers will be working starting in January, and then the
electricians and once they're done, then the drywall will come up?”
Catherine asked sometime later.
Matthew
nodded. “That's about right, yeah. The only workers who aren't
helpers are the plumbers; the electricians are part of Simon
Kowalski’s crew and they’ll be safe for you all to work around.”
“How
long do you think the process will take?”
Matthew
rubbed his chin, considering. “The kind of electrical and plumbing
work this house needs---new everything---a few months at the outside.
You're lucky it's winter and there's not a huge demand for remodeling
in late December. And you're also fortunate your roof is in good
condition.” He gazed at them both, dark eyes serious. “Now, I'm
going to give you my standard speech: I know we discussed having this
project done by the end of the summer, and I think---right
now---we're on schedule. But things happen, things no one can
predict, and you need to be prepared for that. It could very well be
habitable by summer's end, but you might still have a lot of small
projects left to finish before it’s finally done. Is that all
right?”
Catherine
nodded. “We knew when bought this house it was going to take a
while.”
“Well,
it’s still going to take less time than it would have if you’d
been insistent on living here during renovation, say, or if you’d
wanted to turn this home back into apartments,” Matthew said. “But
the winter always means a construction slump. So things will happen a
bit faster because there’s a shortage of other jobs.” He turned
to Vincent. “How many do you think will be helping?”
“I
have to talk with Father, but I know Kanin, Cullen, Mouse and Warren
have already volunteered.”
“They
have?” Catherine asked.
Vincent
chuckled. “Yes. Well, Mouse will likely be more interested in the
gizmos than anything else, but he did
volunteer.”
“Of
course,” Matthew agreed with a smile. “But you’ll have a good
crew, and a dependable one. In this business, that’s nothing to
sneeze at.”
***
“Have
I met Jason?” Catherine asked as they walked back to their chamber.
“Probably,”
Vincent replied, his mouth quirking in a fond smile as it always did
when he spoke of the children. “Small boy, curly hair, green eyes?
Never stops talking?”
“Oh,
yes!” Catherine said. “I remember him now from the reading group.
I just didn't realize he was Annie's son.”
“Yes.
Jason attends preschool with the other children. Annie...wanted him
to know this world, to know us.”
There
was a subtle undercurrent to his voice, something distant and pained,
like a warning of a far-off storm. “What is it?” she asked,
tugging on his hand to get him to stop walking.
She
was never able to say after how he did it, but it was almost as if
he’d withdrawn his physical presence, shying away from the
discussion he knew was coming. “Don’t shut me out, Vincent,”
she said fiercely. “Not now.”
“No,”
Vincent said. He looked down at the ground, then back at her. “When
the…outsiders came below,” he began.
“Yes?”
Catherine asked, keeping a firm hold on his hand to still his
instinctive retreat.
“Annie
was married at the time to a man named Spencer; he was an investment
banker. When our security was…breached, Father asked Annie to come
below and help us design some better defenses for the perimeter as I
was in no state to help.”
“No,
you weren’t,” Catherine answered, remembering as if it had been
only yesterday the dangerous bullet wound high on his left shoulder
and the emotional turmoil and depression which had followed. “What
has this to do with Annie and Spencer?”
“Jason
was only a few months old at the time; she brought him with her to
stay below during the day while she worked. It took weeks of work and
they went home each night, but Spencer…became mistrustful and
accused Annie of having an affair. She couldn’t tell him where she
and Jason had been, of course.”
“Oh,
no,” Catherine said. “How awful.”
“Yes,”
Vincent agreed. “Annie, Sean and Matthew have been helpers for
years; to see her marriage failing because of the promises she’d
made to keep our world safe was very hard. The council ultimately
decided to allow Spencer some knowledge of us, but Annie said no.”
His voice became very soft. “She said…if he wouldn’t trust her
word, if he didn’t trust her, how could she believe he would keep
our secret? They decided to separate and eventually divorced.”
Catherine
thought she knew what she would feel from him: an overriding guilt
that his injuries and the tunnels’ needs had inadvertently caused
the demise of Annie’s marriage. And while there was the slightest
tinge of guilt and regret, the larger emotions were a sense of
acknowledgement and respect for Annie’s choice, sad though it had
been. “I never fully realized until then,” he went on, touching
her face gently, “how difficult being a helper can be, how great
the demands our secret makes on our helpers. Can we all be…worth so
much?”
“Annie
thought so,” Catherine replied. “For myself…yes. Always, yes.
Without this place, I’d have died in the park. Or if by some
fortune I’d survived, I wouldn’t be…who I am. Or met you. I owe
this place…you…so
much more than I could ever repay. A few awkward social interactions
aren’t anything compared to that.”
“You’re
a master of understatement, my wife,” Vincent murmured lightly. “
‘Awkward social interactions’? When half your office believes
you’ve married a secret agent and the other half thinks…I don’t
know what they think. It seems…so great a sacrifice.”
For
me,
Catherine heard implied in his words. She knew his insecurities,
accrued over a lifetime, were a deep and healing wound, so she made
her words gentle even as she felt the frustration at contending yet
again with the most stubborn of his ghosts. “Oh, love. Don’t you
understand? Calling it a sacrifice makes it sound like we’ve
received nothing in return. Annie grew up here, didn’t she?”
“Yes,”
Vincent said. “Her mother, Elise, and Mary were close friends; I
remember playing with both Annie and Sean when we were children.”
“Then
why are you surprised Annie chose to keep you all safe in the only
way she could?” She reached up to cup his chin. “It’s not a
sacrifice, love, not for those of us who have been blessed to know
you and your world. Yes, it makes life…complicated at times---”
“Another
understatement,” Vincent put in wryly, turning his head to kiss her
palm.
“Hush,
you,” Catherine replied, smiling. “Stop questioning. Accept.”
***
The
return to their chamber brought their usual bedtime ritual: Catherine
laid out her work clothes for the next day (she’d discovered that
doing so brought her an extra few minutes of sleep the next morning)
and undressed as Vincent refueled the brazier and blew out all the
candles but one. She climbed under the covers, into the encircling
comfort of Vincent’s arm and was surprised when she heard his voice
out of the utter stillness. “I was thinking…”
“Were
you?” she murmured and was rewarded with Vincent’s soft chuckle.
“Yes,
I was. I was remembering you…upstairs.”
“Oh,”
Catherine said. She had stood in one of the three bedrooms, hand on
the windowsill, and had nearly been overcome by a deep and savage
wave of longing. The emotion had brought Vincent in from his
inspection of the master bedroom, concerned, and he had gathered her
into his arms until the storm of emotion had passed. “Do you want
to talk about it?”
Vincent
brushed back the hair from her face. “Do you?”
“It…surprised
me,” Catherine replied. “I love children---always have. But the
yearning to have one of my own…I didn’t expect to feel it as
strongly as I did tonight.”
“Yet
you are still conflicted,” he said quietly.
She
turned to face him, not wanting him to misunderstand. His eyes
glittered faintly in the dimness, reflecting the light from the lone
candle. “About having a child right now? Yes. But not about having
a child. Never that. However one comes to us---through birth, through
adoption---we are
going to have a family. I think we both know, though, that now would
not be a good time.”
He
nodded. “You must see this trial through…and I’d very much like
to have the renovations on the brownstone done.”
Left
unspoken, she knew, were all the unknown risks, the fears lying in
wait, ready to reappear. He hadn’t mentioned Paracelsus’ lies,
but they’d left such deep scars---how could he not still be
affected? “Then we’ll wait,” Catherine said.
“Yes.
But not forever.”
“No,”
she agreed. “One
day.”
Click here for Chapter 49...
_________________
[60] “Quatrain
XI,” from The
Rubiyat of Omar Khayyam,
translated by Edward Fitzgerald
4 comments:
"I could stand here in the sunlight and not be seen. I could be safe."
I think all BATB fans live and breathe to read about opportunities for Vincent to have and experience things he never dreamed would be possible. Standing safely in the sunlight seems like such a small thing, but it is enormous for Vincent. This gives me delightful shivers.
I also greatly appreciated the way you used Annie's story to depict the sacrifices Helpers make to keep the secret of the Tunnel society. It is also good to see Vincent trying to move away from taking on the guilt that such sacrifices are "all his fault." They are NOT! The secret is for the Tunnel society as a whole, and not just Vincent. He MUST learn to accept with grace the choices that Catherine makes out of love for him and out of joy over the promise of their future together. Continuing to hold onto his guilt will only poison their relationship. It will take time, but it's so good to see him actively grappling with this issue.
As always -- MORE!
Regards, Lindariel
Hi Lindariel,
I was just able to respond to your comment today---thank you so much. :)
It always seemed to me the helpers get short-shift on screen. We see Peter, Lou (poor Lou!) Dr. Wong and Lin, and the nameless helpers at Winterfest, but we don't really know them as well as we should (which is one of the reasons why the Secret-Keeper stories for WFOL were so much fun to take part in. :) But they too must have made sacrifices---again, most of them we never hear about.
Ah, I like writing a growing Vincent (and Catherine) too. :D
Thank you again, so much, for your comments :)
-Krista :)
I think that we all, in some ways, keep a part of our private lives secret from others. That's why it's called private. It's exciting to watch their future home grow little by little. I agree about the helpers. Those who do so much behind the scenes don't get, or want, a lot of notice. All the same, the gratitude is still there.
Hi R1!
It's good to see you around here again :) I very much like the idea of all the private lives lived Below..and Above..and how they all intersect, sometimes not easily. :)
Thanks so much for your comments :)
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