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“You do feel cooler,” she notes.
“I know,” I chirp with only a dash of sarcasm.
My mother’s front teeth peek out from under her top lip in an expression that’s part smile and part grimace. “Try not to faint today.”
I laugh, despite the tension whirring underneath my skin and once my mom and Olivia have gotten into the car and driven off I race back up to my mother’s closet. Overnight I’ve grown more desperate and impatient and I make a mess, pulling things like spare blankets and shoe boxes from their shelves and leaving them abandoned on the carpet. I revisit the filing cabinet—and then the dresser and bedside tables—in case I missed the articles the first time around. But maybe she didn’t keep them in the first place and there’s nothing to find.
Just to be thorough, I search my own room in case I’m the one who kept the articles. With my memory full of holes that’s a distinct possibility. However, there’s no sign of them in my room either and as I’m slamming drawers shut it occurs to me that Olivia would have been just as likely to keep any record of the explosion as I would have. I rush into her bedroom, heading straight for her desk where I find the original December 18, 1984, clipping about my father’s death in the top drawer.
GAS EXPLOSION CLAIMS LIFE OF CANADIAN DIPLOMAT AND LOCAL WOMAN
Daniel Morris
Staff Reporter
A Canadian diplomat and a local employee of the Canadian High Commission were killed in an afternoon gas explosion late yesterday afternoon. Firefighters were called to the house at 37 Coventry Terrace in Howick at approximately 5:30 p.m. after witnesses reported that property had been leveled by a blast and was engulfed in flames.
Marcy Cooper, who lives directly across the street from the destroyed home, said, “The sky lit up and the whole house collapsed in an instant, taking a car that had just pulled into the driveway with it. I couldn’t believe my eyes. It was like something out of a nightmare.”
The incident claimed the lives of Luca Kallas, a senior finance officer with the Canadian High Commission, and Brenda O’Callaghan, one of the owners of the Coventry Terrace home who had been locally employed by the High Commission as a property assistant. Two other residents of the Howick neighborhood were injured by flying glass and debris and were taken to Auckland Hospital for treatment.
Fire officials believe a natural gas leak caused the explosion. Investigators are continuing to probe the cause of the incident.
I slip the article into my biology binder to protect it from the elements and decide to leave two notes on the kitchen table in case I’m not home before Olivia or my mother arrives back at the house. The note to Olivia says I might be a few minutes late again. I apologize and tell her that something came up but that I’ll be home as soon as I can. My mother’s note is more difficult because I know she’ll feel I’m letting her down. If I’m home in time I’ll destroy both notes, but if I’m not my mother will be as angry with me as Garren was when I see her later. With that in mind I jot down:
Mom,
There’s something very important that I had to do after school, which is why I’m not home with Olivia. I’m sorry I can’t tell you more than that I’m helping a friend in trouble but I’ve made a promise. I know I’ll probably be grounded and won’t argue.
Freya
I fold the note into thirds and shove it into one of the envelopes my mother keeps to mail off bills, scrawling “Mom” across the front of it and then sealing it so that Olivia won’t be able to cheat and read my words. Since most of what I’ve written is a lie it wouldn’t really matter whether she reads my mother’s note but if I were telling the truth I’m sure I’d be secretive.
With the notes finished I dart into the family room and pull a 4 × 6 snap of my family (my mother in the center of the frame with her left arm sloped around my father and her right around my grandfather, Olivia and me standing in front of the trio, me hunching down so I don’t block my dad’s face) out of its mantelpiece frame. I hide the empty metallic frame underneath the TV stand and hope that no one will have a chance to notice it missing.
There’s no photograph of my father in the Herald article so technically the family photo doesn’t prove anything but it can’t hurt for Garren to see me with my parents and little sister when he’s been thinking of me as someone who’s toying with him. The blond version of myself in the photograph doesn’t look evil or conniving; she looks happy and loved.
I drop the photo into my binder along with the news clipping and troop out to the nearest bus stop to begin the journey to Toronto. My head’s surprisingly clear but I’m nauseous with nerves that worsen when I reach Garren’s house on Walmer Road and he fails to answer the door. I knew he might not be here—that he likely has school, work or something else to keep him busy—but I also know that I can’t leave without speaking to him a second time.
At first I circle his neighborhood, intermittently ringing the doorbell in case he arrived home while the house was out of my view. After an hour it’s too cold to continue loitering on his street—even for me—and I give in to the bitter arctic wind and walk down to Bloor Street where I dip into a coffee shop and order hot chocolate and a honey-glazed donut. The radio’s playing and the same Simple Minds song I heard yesterday comes on as I’m finishing my donut. The DJ says it’s from a new movie called The Breakfast Club. He sounds excited about it and I wonder if I’ll ever in my life be able to enjoy anything as ordinary as a movie.
It’s only 1:10 in the afternoon but I’m already picturing my mother reading my note. I’d rather she be angry than anxious but I want to beat her home so she won’t be either. If I left now I’d only be a little later than usual. Olivia wouldn’t rat me out and my mother wouldn’t need to know a thing.
But nothing will make me leave the area without speaking to Garren; I’m not going anywhere … except back to Walmer Road. I tuck my binder tightly under my arm as I venture out onto Bloor again. The wind whips at my cheeks, bringing tears to my eyes. I move decisively in the direction of Garren’s house, pretending to myself that I can’t feel anything, like a machine.
From down Garren’s street, I spy a car in his driveway and my legs turn to mushy broccoli stalks underneath me. Someone’s home.
I hurry up the road, telling myself everything will be okay—that I’ll make him listen. My gloved finger is freezing as it taps the doorbell. I already know that when I open my mouth, my voice will crack. Too much depends on this.
The door inches open to reveal a stunning brunette roughly the same age as my mother. She’s rubbing her hands together to combat the blast of cold air she’s allowed inside.
“Yes?” she prompts, staring particularly hard at my eyes, which must be a sloppy mess of smudges that I should’ve thought to clean up before ringing the bell.
“I … Is Garren home?” I stammer.
“He is,” she confirms. “And you are?”
“Freya. Freya Kallas.” My stomach flips over as I stare at the woman standing in the doorway. She’s not as familiar as Garren but she doesn’t look like a stranger either.
The woman motions for me to step inside. Then she retreats to the kitchen. I hear running water in the distance. It stops as Garren’s raised voice peals through the house. I can’t make out many of the words but then I hear his mother advise, in a steely stone, “Be nice about it.”
Garren advances through the hallway towards me wearing the face of someone who has been lied to one too many times. “You,” he says accusingly.
I reach into my binder and shove the article at him. “Just read it. Please.”
He must not want his mother to overhear us because he hasn’t started shouting yet. “This doesn’t mean anything,” he says as he takes the scrap of newspaper from me and begins scanning from the top.
I slide my New Zealand driver’s license out of my wallet and show him that too. “Here, look at the last name—Kallas. The man in the article—the diplomat they talk about—he’s my father.”
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sp; Garren refuses to take the ID but he looks it over as he commands, “Outside.” He jams his feet into a pair of running shoes on the mat beside me, jerks open the door and steps onto the doorstep.
I follow cautiously, afraid it’s a trick and he’ll abandon me outside. But if he thinks that will make me disappear, he’s wrong.
While Garren’s scrutinizing the article a gust of wind catches the photo tucked within my binder, steals it from between the covers and dashes it to the ground. As I bend to snatch it up, Garren’s attention shifts to the image between my fingers.
“What’s that?” he asks, his cheeks already blushing from the cold.
“My dad—and the rest of my family. I thought …” Garren’s holding out his hand for the photo and I don’t bother to finish my sentence.
He takes the photograph from me, suddenly very still and quiet despite the second gust of wind cutting through us on his porch. I squeeze the binder to my chest and say, “Did you tell your mom why I was here?” He must’ve told her something since I heard her warn him to be nice.
Garren glances up from the photo, his green eyes unreadable. “She’s been through enough—and I still don’t know why you’re really here.” He moves closer to me, his thumb tapping my grandfather’s image. “Who’s this?”
“That’s my grandfather on my mother’s side.” I point at my father’s face. “And this is my dad.”
“What’s your grandfather’s name?” Garren asks.
“Henry Newland. Why?”
Garren’s mouth jerks open. “You’re the one who came to me with a story that makes you sound like a paranoid schizophrenic. Don’t you think I should be able to ask you whatever I want?”
“You can. I’m not hiding anything—I was just curious.”
Garren’s head drops. He hands the photograph and newspaper article back to me. “Wait here while I get my coat. It’s fucking freezing.”
He turns to grab the doorknob and I snap, “You can’t ditch me that easily.”
Garren shoots me a look over his shoulder. Something in his face has changed. “I’m coming back. Just give me a second.”
I don’t really have a choice except to trust him. So I wait, and in a moment Garren reappears, wearing the same black coat he was sporting that day outside the museum. “Walk with me,” he says, like it’s not a question but a demand.
We fall into step together as we head away from his house. “Tell me again what makes you think you know me,” Garren says, his eyes on the sidewalk ahead.
I’m glad that he hasn’t turned me away but so far speaking with him hasn’t provided me with a single answer. If I have to go home feeling the same lost, crazy way I’ve been feeling for weeks now, I don’t know what I’ll do. I need Garren to start opening up and tell me what he knows.
“I can’t explain it,” I tell him, my teeth as cold as metal as we walk. “I wish I could. It’s only a feeling but not like a hunch, much stronger than that. Something a part of me knows but that my conscious mind can’t access.” I’m still clutching my binder in front of me, like a shield, and there are tears in my eyes because of the wind but I don’t want Garren to think I’m crying. Just because I need his help doesn’t mean I’ve given up my pride. “I dreamt about you a couple of nights ago,” I confess, blinking back the tears. “We were in a strange, old-fashioned kind of school. We were both a little younger and I already knew who you were.”
Garren shakes his head resolutely as I speak. Once I’m finished he looks at me sideways and says, “I don’t remember you. We’ve never met. I’ve lived in other places most of my life too—Denmark, Japan, Switzerland—but none of the countries you mentioned. We never went to school together, Freya, but”—Garren straightens his back, ripping his gaze from me again—“the man in the photo that you say is your grandfather, he’s my grandfather too.”
I freeze on the sidewalk for a second but Garren hasn’t stopped and I have to rush to catch up to him. “On my mother’s side,” he specifies. “My grandmother died a long time ago, from cancer.”
“Mine too,” I whisper. “I can hardly remember her.” This is not what I expected—that apparently Garren and I are related—and I don’t understand how or why our families would’ve hidden it from us all these years and what the relationship has to do with our father’s deaths. The shock makes me stumble on the sidewalk and Garren automatically reaches out to steady me. “What about your other grandparents?” I ask breathlessly.
“Dead too. In a car accident just a couple months after my parents got married.”
My ears are ringing. The sidewalk rises and falls in front of me, like a series of cement waves. I stop short and sit in a snowbank next to someone’s blue spruce. Then I fold my hands behind my neck and lower my head to my knees so I won’t pass out like I did yesterday.
Garren stops and hunches down next to me, balancing his weight on the balls of his feet. “No,” he says quietly. “Don’t say it. You have to be lying. There’s no way any of this can be true.”
“I don’t know what’s true,” I mumble to the ground. “I only know what I’ve been told.” And I was told exactly what Garren relayed—that my father’s parents died in a car accident before I was born.
My binder’s cradled in my lap and Garren eases it away from me. He gets to his feet again and stares at the article and photograph as he says, “My dad was killed in a train accident in Switzerland on December seventeenth. Two cars derailed and four people died. Thirteen more were injured.”
The same day even. It must not have been an accident—our fathers were murdered. But what about our grandparents? Who has the power to control that many events and why have they done this?
I’ve begun to feel the cold in the back of my legs. It keeps me conscious and, as much as possible, restores a semblance of calm. “Do you remember your life in the other places you lived?” I ask. “I mean, do you remember them in the same vivid way that the present’s happening?”
“Of course I remember.” Garren furrows his eyebrows. “Are you saying you don’t?”
I begin to describe the bizarre feelings and thoughts I’ve had since returning to Canada with my family. I tell him about not being able to remember details from the past that I should know, like my best friend’s favorite band, and about feeling as though my sister and grandfather aren’t my real family.
“Like they’ve been replaced?” Garren asks incredulously.
“I don’t know.” I unlock my hands from around my neck and straighten my back.
Garren slams the binder shut. “How do I know that any of the things you’re saying about your grandparents are true? It would be so easy for you to just say your grandparents died the same way as mine. Can you prove it?”
“Can you?” I fire back, suddenly angry that after everything I’ve said I’m still the one being cast as the potential villain. “I’m the one in the photo with my grandfather. That’s proof of something. How do I know you even know him? And I brought evidence of the accident that they say killed my father. Where’s your evidence about the train accident?” I believe Garren one hundred percent but I’m tired of him doubting me. “And for the record—I was told that a kid without a license was the one who crashed into my grandparents’ car. Some boarding school rich boy who took his father’s car out when he was home one weekend and lost control of it on a patch of black ice. My father said that my grandfather was dead at the scene but my grandmother lived another three hours.”
Garren turns in the street, peering steadily back at his house in the distance as though he’d like to rewind history to a point when his life felt solid, a time before I knocked on his door and made him question everything. The cold has turned his skin a blue-gray that strengthens his resemblance to a statue. I can imagine him frozen that way forever, trapped in a moment of perpetual confusion and denial.
“I don’t understand any of this,” he says. “Who are you?” His expression and tone are stark enough to make me wish I didn’t have to do t
his to him.
I stand up, brushing the snow from the underside of my legs. “I only know what I told you; I don’t know what it means. That’s why I had to come to you. You’re the only one I’ve had this feeling about. I thought … I thought you’d know me.” I can’t keep the disappointment out of my voice.
“I don’t,” Garren says. “I still don’t. But that’s what I was told about my grandparents too, that some kid not old enough for a license smashed into them. Even the part about my grandmother dying in the hospital later that same night—the details match.”
I ask him their names, which are different from my father’s parents. It turns out Henry Newland is the only name we have in common—Garren says his grandmother’s (Henry’s wife’s) name was Irene while my grandmother’s name was Evelyn. I continue to question him about the people closest to him—especially those in Canada who he sees regularly. Garren tells me he has an aunt (on his father’s side) who never married but that aside from her and his grandfather, he and his mother don’t know many people in the area.
“That’s like us,” I say. “My mom has one close friend but really there’s no one else except my grandfather.” I explain how the three of us were really sick with the flu right after we arrived from New Zealand and about the doctor my grandfather set us up with.
Any remaining color drains rapidly from Garren’s face. “We were sick when we got here too. For almost two weeks. My grandfather called his doctor, Doctor Byrne. He came to see us a couple times.”
“Yes, Doctor Byrne!” I cry. “His office is on Yonge Street, near St. Clair. I had to go in and see him again yesterday.”
Garren nods slowly, his mouth a pale slash. Without further warning he crumples into the snowy lawn next to us, like his mind and body can no longer stand the shock.
My binder lands next to him, flipping open and releasing the article and family photo into the wild while my useless biology notes remain safe (thanks to the three metal rings fastened inside). The newspaper clipping and snapshot jolt along the sidewalk, powered by frigid northern air, and for a split second I hesitate, not sure whether to sprint after them or check Garren’s condition.