CHAPTER 8
WREN
The generator dies at two in the morning on the third night, and that’s how Lazarus Frost ends up inside my fence with a newborn goat against his chest, and that’s the night I stop being able to lie to myself about how this ends.
I don’t mean to need him. That’s the part that’s important to me, the not-meaning-to.
I have a system; I always have a system.
But the storm that’s been circling Hartsend for days finally sits down on top of us that night, and the wind takes a limb off the old oak, and the limb takes the line to the barn, and the backup generator that I service myself every autumn chooses that exact hour to seize, and I wake to my phone screaming the low-temp alarm from the sanctuary and I know, before I’m even dressed, that I am one woman against a barn full of fragile things in a killing cold, and that some of them are not going to make it to morning.
The bottle calf. The three bummer lambs.
A clutch of half-feathered chickens somebody dumped in a box at my gate last week because the world is full of people who decide a living thing is no longer convenient.
And the goat, a doe I wasn’t expecting to kid for another month, gone into early hard labor in the cold, the way bodies do when the temperature drops and they decide to get the dying over with.
I can’t call Eli. I sent Eli away to keep him alive, and I meant it.
I can’t call anyone, because at two in the morning in a closing storm there’s no one in eleven minutes’ reach, and the truth, the truth I’ve been outrunning for three days, is that there’s exactly one person on this earth who is awake right now, who is always awake, who is six hundred and forty feet up a hill listening for my light, and who would walk through this storm barefoot if I asked.
I don’t ask. I just turn on every light I have and I let him read it.
He’s at the fence in four minutes. Coat half-buttoned, snow in his hair, and he stops at the line, the actual line, five hundred feet, I watch him stop at it in the dark with the wind screaming, this enormous man holding himself at the edge of a rule I drew, because even now, even with my barn dying behind me, he will not cross it unless I say so.
He stands in the storm and waits for me to decide.
“It’s my sanctuary,” I shout over the wind.
“My land. I’m inviting you onto it. That’s, that’s allowed, that’s me choosing, you’re not breaking anything —” I’m crying, a little, from the cold and the alarm and the impossible arithmetic of one body and a barn full of the doomed.
“Lazarus. The generator’s dead and everything in there is going to freeze and the goat’s in trouble and I can’t.
I can’t do all of it, I can’t be everywhere, I need —”
He’s over the fence before I finish the sentence. Not through the gate. Over the fence, one hand, like the five hundred feet was a held breath he’d been waiting six years to let out.
And then the most dangerous man I have ever known rolls up his sleeves in my freezing barn and gets to work saving the lives of things that everyone else threw away.
I will never forget it as long as I live.
I’ve tried to describe it to myself a hundred times and I always fail, because it shouldn’t fit together, the size of him, the church-cold, the hands that did what they did in an east wing and would do worse before this story ended, and the way those same hands cupped a half-frozen chick and breathed on it, slow and careful, to start its heart going again.
He found the dead generator and had it apart and diagnosed in minutes, because of course he did, he wanted to build bridges, he understands how things refuse to let the gap win, and when it couldn’t be saved he didn’t waste a breath mourning it; he just pivoted, hauled every heat lamp and space heater I owned onto one circuit, walled off the smallest pen with straw bales, and made one warm room in a dying barn the way he’d once made one warm room in a dying house.
A windup gramophone. A candle. One warm place at the end of the world.
He’s been doing it his whole life. It’s the only thing he ever wanted to be, underneath the wall, a man who makes one warm place and stands at the door of it.
The goat was the bad one. She’d been at it too long and the kid was turned wrong, and I got my hand in and I couldn’t find the angle, and I’m good, I’m the best in the county at exactly this, and I still couldn’t, and I felt the doe start to give up under my hands the way the lamb gave up the night this all started, that surrender, that shift from holding on to just weight, and I said, out loud, to no one, “no, no, not you too, not tonight” —
— and Lazarus knelt down in the straw beside me, this man, this murderer, this love of my whole ruined life, and he put his enormous careful hands over my smaller ones, not taking over, just steadying, lending me the thing I’d run out of, and he said low and even, the hallway voice, the voice that turned his father’s footsteps around: “You’re not alone in it.
Breathe. You find the angle. I’ve got the rest. Nothing dies tonight that we can stop from dying.
” And with his hands warm and certain over mine I found the angle I couldn’t find alone, and we turned the kid together, and it came in a rush into the straw and the lamplight, slick and impossible and alive, and it shook its ridiculous ears and bawled, and the doe lifted her head and started to clean it, and it lived. It lived.
I sat back on my heels in the straw, shaking, covered in the evidence of a life that didn’t end, and I looked at Lazarus Frost in the light of my one warm room, blood and birth fluid to the elbows, snow melting in his dark hair, holding a chick he’d warmed back to life in one hand and steadying a newborn goat with the other, and the thing I’d been outrunning for three days finally caught me and sat down on my chest with the whole weight of the storm.
I love him. Not the memory of him, not the boy on the staircase, not the wall through the plaster.
Him. This. The man who comes over the fence the second I let him, who saves the throwaway things, who makes the one warm room, who lends you his hands when yours run out and doesn’t take the moment from you, who said nothing dies tonight that we can stop from dying like it was a vow, like it was the truest religion he had.
I made this man into a monster on a witness stand.
And he came over a fence in a blizzard to keep my orphans alive, and asked for nothing, and that’s the moment I understood I was never going to be able to keep meeting him in the dark and pretending it wasn’t already over.
That the only honest thing left to do was choose him in the light, where the whole town could see, where there was nothing to hide in, the way I’d been too much of a coward to do for twelve years.
“Thank you,” I said. It came out wrecked.
He looked at me across the warm pen, across the saved and breathing things, and he didn’t say you’re welcome, and he didn’t say I love you, though it was in every line of him.
He said the thing that decided it, even if I’d make myself wait a few more cowardly nights, and one more climb up a hill, before I’d admit the date:
“This is what I wanted,” he said quietly.
“The whole six years. Not even you, in the end. Just, to be let back inside the fence. To be allowed to help keep your small things alive.” A breath.
“You don’t have to give me anything else, Wren.
You let me over the fence tonight. That’s already more than I let myself dream about in there. ”
And I thought: no.
No, that’s not nearly enough, and you deserve so much more than a fence, and I am done being the coward who keeps the only good man in three counties out in the cold to protect him from a debt.
I’m going to turn the light on.
Not in the dark. In front of God and Hartsend and everyone.
I’m going to choose him where it counts.
I just wasn’t brave enough to do it that night, or the next one.
There was still a name clawing at me, the sealed one, the ghost, the thing he kept swallowing to spare me, and the not-knowing has always been the one thing that can drive me anywhere, even up a hill in the snow to a wolf’s door.
So that came first. Of course it did. I turn every photograph around.
But the deciding was already done, there in the straw, with a goat that lived because he lent me his hands. The lamb had chosen the wolf. I just hadn’t told the dark yet.