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He didn’t find it peculiar to be talking to her severed hands. Her hands had been the essence of her. Nothing else of Elizabeth Lavenza had been worth talking about or to. The hands were her.


CHAPTER 10


the luxe WAS an ornate Deco palace, glamorous in its day, a fit showcase for the movies of William Powell and Myrna Loy, Humphrey Bogart, Ingrid Bergman. Like many a Hollywood face, this glamour had peeled and sagged.


Deucalion accompanied Jelly Biggs down the center aisle, past rows of musty, patched seats.


“Damn DVDs screwed the revival business,” Jelly said. “Ben’s retirement didn’t turn out like he expected.”


“Marquee says you’re still open Thursday through Sunday.”


“Not since Ben died. There’s almost enough thirty-five-millimeter fanatics to make it worthwhile. But some weekends we run up more expenses than receipts. I didn’t want to take responsibility for that since it’s become your property”


Deucalion looked up at the screen. The gold and crimson velvet curtains drooped, heavy with dust and creeping mildew. “So . . . you left the carnival when Ben did?”


“When freak shows took a fade, Ben made me theater manager. I got my own apartment here. I hope that won’t change . . .. assuming you want to keep the place running.”


Deucalion pointed to a quarter on the floor. “Finding money is always a sign.”


“A sign of what?”


Stooping to pick up the quarter, Deucalion said, “Heads, you’re out of a job. Tails, you’re out of a job.”


“Don’t like them odds.”


Deucalion snapped the coin into the air, snatched it in midflight. When he opened his fist, the coin had disappeared.


“Neither heads nor tails. A sign for sure, don’t you think?”


Instead of relief at having kept his job and home, Jelly’s expression was troubled. “I been having a dream about a magician. He’s strangely gifted.”


“Just a simple trick.”


Jelly said, “I’m maybe a little psychic. My dreams sometimes come sorta true.”


Deucalion had much he could have said to that, but he remained silent, waiting.


Jelly looked at the moldering drapes, at the threadbare carpet, at the elaborate ceiling, every-


where but at Deucalion. At last he said, “Ben told me some about you, things that don’t seem they could be real.” He finally met Deucalion’s eyes. “Do you have two hearts?”


Deucalion chose not to reply.


“In the dream,” Jelly said, “the magician had two hearts … and he was stabbed in both.”


A flutter of wings overhead drew Deucalion’s attention.


“Bird got in yesterday,” Jelly said. “A dove, by the look of it. Haven’t been able to chase it out.”


Deucalion tracked the trapped bird’s flight. He knew how it felt.


CHAPTER 11


CARSON LIVED ON A tree-lined street in a house nondescript except for a gingerbread veranda that wrapped three sides.


She parked at the curb because the garage was packed with her parents’ belongings, which she never found time to sort through.


On her way to the kitchen door, she paused under an oak draped with Spanish moss. Her work hardened her, wound her tight. Arnie, her brother, needed a gentle sister. Sometimes she couldn’t decompress during the walk from car to house; she required a moment to herself.


Here in the humid night and the fragrance of jasmine, she found that she couldn’t shift into domestic gear. Her nerves were twisted as tight as dreadlocks, and her mind raced. As never before, the scent of jasmine reminded her of the smell of blood.


The recent killings had been so gruesome and had occurred in such rapid succession that she could not put them aside during her personal time. Under normal circumstances, she was seventy percent cop, thirty percent woman and sister; these days, she was all cop, twenty-four/seven.


When Carson entered the kitchen, Vicky Chou had just loaded the dishwasher and switched it on. “Well, I screwed up.”


“Don’t tell me you put laundry in the dishwasher.”


“Worse. With his brisket of beef, I gave him carrots and peas.”


“Oh, never orange and green on the same plate, Vicky”


Vicky sighed. “He’s got more rules about food than kosher and vegan combined.”


On a cop’s salary, Carson could not have afforded a live-in caregiver to look after her autistic brother. Vicky took the job in return for room and board—and out of gratitude.


When Vicky’s sister, Liane, had been indicted with her boyfriend and two others for conspiracy to commit murder, she seemed helplessly snared in a web of evidence. She’d been innocent. In the process of sending the other three to prison, Carson had cleared Liane.


As a successful medical transcriptionist, Vicky worked flexible hours at home, transcribing micro-cassettes for physicians. If Arnie had been a more demanding autistic, Vicky might not have been able to keep up with her work, but the boy was mostly quiescent.


Widowed at forty, now forty-five, Vicky was an Asian beauty, smart and sweet and lonely. She wouldn’t grieve forever. Someday when she least expected it, a man would come into her life, and the current arrangement would end.


Carson dealt with that possibility the only way that her busy life allowed: She ignored it.


“Other than green and orange together, how was he today?” Carson asked.


“Fixated on the castle. Sometimes it seems to calm him, but at other times . . .” Vicky frowned. “What is he so afraid of?”


“I don’t know. I guess . . . life.”


by removing A wall and combining two of the upstairs bedrooms, Carson had given Arnie the largest room in the house. This seemed only fair because his condition stole from him the rest of the world.


His bed and nightstand were shoved into a corner. A TV occupied a wheeled metal stand. Sometimes he watched cartoons on DVD, the same ones over and over.


The remainder of the room had been devoted to the castle.


Four low sturdy tables formed a twelve-by-eight-foot platform. Upon the tables stood an architectural wonder in Lego blocks.


Few boys of twelve would have been able to create a model castle without a plan, but Arnie had put together a masterpiece: walls and wards, barbi-con and bastions, ramparts and parapets, turreted towers, the barracks, the chapel, the armory, the castle keep with elaborate bulwark and battlements.


He’d been obsessed with the model for weeks, constructing it in an intense silence. Repeatedly he tore down finished sections only to remodel and improve them.


Most of the time he was on his feet while adding to the castle—an access hole in the table arrangement allowed him to build from within the project as well as from every side—but sometimes, like now, he worked while sitting on a wheeled stool. Carson rolled a second stool to the table and sat to watch.


He was a dark-haired, blue-eyed boy whose looks alone would have ensured him a favored place in the world if he’d not been autistic.


At times like this, when his concentration on a task was total, Arnie would not tolerate anyone being too near to him. If Carson drew closer than four or five feet, he would grow agitated.


When enthralled by a project, he might pass days in silence except for wordless reactions to any attempt to interrupt his work or to invade his personal space.


More than eighteen years separated Carson from Arnie. He’d been born the year that she moved out of her parents’ house. Even if he’d been spared from autism, they would not have been as close as many brothers and sisters, for they would have shared so few experiences.


Following the death of their parents four years ago, Carson gained custody of her brother. He had been with her ever since.


For reasons that she could not fully articulate, Carson had come to love this gentle, withdrawn child. She didn’t think she could have loved him more if he had been her son rather than her brother.


She hoped that someday there would be a breakthrough either in the treatment of autism in general or in Arnie’s particular case. But she knew her hope had little chance of being fulfilled.


Now she pondered the most recent changes he had made to the outer curtain wall of the castle compound. He had fortified it with regularly spaced buttresses that doubled as steep flights of stairs by which defenders could reach the walkways behind the battlements.


Recently Arnie had seemed to be more fearful than usual. Carson could not shake the feeling that he sensed some trouble coming and that he was urgently determined to prepare for it. He could not build a real castle, so he took refuge in this fantasy of a fortress home.


CHAPTER 12


RANDAL SIX CROSSES SPHINX with XENOPHOBE, finishing the last crossword puzzle in the book.


Other collections of puzzles await him. But with the completion of this current book, he is armored against the fearsome disorder of the world. He has earned protection.


He will be safe for a while, although not forever. Disorder builds. Chaos presses at the walls. Eventually he will have to fill more patterns of empty boxes with more judiciously chosen letters for the purpose of denying chaos entrance to his private space.


Temporarily safe, he gets up from the worktable, sits on the edge of his bed, and presses a call button on his nightstand. This will summon lunch.


He is not served meals on a regular schedule because he cannot eat when obsessed with crossword puzzles. He will let food grow cold rather than interrupt the important work offending off chaos.


A man in white brings his tray and places it on the worktable. While this attendant is present, Randal Six keeps his head bowed to discourage conversation and to prevent eye contact.


Every word he speaks to another person diminishes the protection that he has earned.


Alone again, Randal Six eats his lunch. Very neatly The food is white and green, as he likes it. Sliced turkey breast in cream sauce, mashed potatoes, white bread, peas, beans. For dessert, vanilla ice cream with creme de menthe.


When he finishes, he dares to open his door and slide the tray into the corridor. He quickly closes the door again, and feels as safe now as he ever does.


He sits on the edge of his bed and opens his nightstand drawer. The drawer contains a few magazines.


Having been educated by direct-to-brain data downloading, Randal Six is encouraged by Father to open himself to the world, to stay abreast of current events by the more ordinary means of reading various periodicals and newspapers.


He cannot tolerate newspapers. They are unwieldy The sections become confused; the pages fallout of order.


Worse, the ink. The ink comes off on his hands, as if it is the dirty disorder of the world.


He can wash the ink away with enough soap and hot water in the bathroom that adjoins this chamber, but surely some of it seeps into his pores and thence into his bloodstream. By this means, a newspaper is an agent of contagion, infecting him with the world’s disorder.


Among the magazines in the drawer, however, is a story that he tore from a local newspaper three months ago. This is his beacon of hope.


The story concerns a local organization raising research funds to find a cure for autism.


By the strictest definition of the affliction, Randal Six might not have autism. But he suffers from something very much like that sad condition.


Because Father has strongly encouraged him to better understand himself as a first step toward a cure, Randal reads books on the subject. They don’t give him the peace he finds in crossword puzzles.


During the first month of his life, when it wasn’t yet clear what might be wrong with him, when he had still been able to tolerate newspapers, he read about the local charity for autism research and at once recognized himself in descriptions of the condition. He then realized that he was not alone.


More important, he has seen a photo of another like himself: a boy of twelve, photographed with his sister, a New Orleans police officer.


In the photo, the boy isn’t looking at the camera but to one side of it. Randal Six recognizes the eva-


sion.


Incredibly, however, the boy is smiling. He looks happy.


Randal Six has never been happy, not in the four months since he has come out of the creation tank as an eighteen-year-old. Not once. Not for a moment. Occasionally he feels sort of safe . . . but never happy Sometimes he sits and stares at the newspaper clipping for hours.


The boy in the photo is Arnie O’Connor. He smiles.


Maybe Arnie is not happy all the time, but he must be happy sometimes.


Arnie has knowledge that Randal needs. Arnie has a secret to happiness. Randal needs it so bad he lies awake at night desperately trying to think of some way to get it.


Arnie is in this city, so near. Yet for all practical purposes, he is beyond reach.


In his four months of life, Randal Six has never been outside the walls of Mercy. Just being taken to another floor in this very building for treatment is traumatic.


Another neighborhood of New Orleans is as unaccessible to him as a crater on the moon. Arnie lives with his secret, untouchable.


If only Randal can get to the boy, he will learn the secret of happiness. Perhaps Arnie will not want to share it. That won’t matter. Randal will get it from him. Randal will get it.


Unlike the vast majority of autistics, Randal Six is capable of extreme violence. His inner rage is almost equal to his fear of the disordered world.


He has hidden this capacity for violence from everyone, even from Father, for he fears that if it is known, something bad will happen to him. He has seen in Father a certain .. . coldness.


He puts the newspaper photo in the drawer once more, under the magazines. In his mind’s eye, he stills sees Arnie, smiling Arnie.


Arnie is out there on the moon in New Orleans, and Randal Six is drawn to him like the sea to lunar tides.


CHAPTER 13


IN THE SMALL dimly lighted projection booth, a sprung sofa slumped against one wall, and stacks of paperbacks stood on every flat surface. Evidently Jelly liked to read while the movie ran.


Pointing to a door different from the one by which they had entered, the fat man said, “My apartment’s through there. Ben left a special box for you.”


While Jelly went to fetch the box, Deucalion was drawn to the old projector, no doubt original to the building. This monstrous piece of machinery featured enormous supply and take-up reels. The 35mm film had to be threaded through a labyrinth of sprockets and guides, into the gap between the high-intensity bulb and the lens.


He studied the adjustment knobs and worked forward until he could peer into the cyclopean eye of the projector. He removed a cover plate to examine the internal gears, wheels, and motors.


Across the balcony, the mezzanine, and the lower seats, this device could cast a bright illusion of life upon the big screen.


Deucalion’s own life, in its first decade, had often seemed like a dark illusion. With time, however, life had become too real, requiring him to retreat into carnivals, into monasteries.