Authors: Aditi Khorana
“I'm sorry about your dog.”
“Yeah, well. I'm sorry too,” she said.
I waited for a moment before I awkwardly got to the point
of the conversation. “Listen, Veronica told me about the party at your house.”
“Yeah, are you coming?” she asked. So she did know. Or if she didn't, she was being polite.
“I was planning on it. Ten o'clock, right?”
“Yeah.” She paused for a moment as she lifted her other leg behind her. “Are you driving?” she asked, her brow furrowed.
“I was just going to have my dad drive me.”
She quickly released her foot. “No, that won't do. Your dad's going to want to meet my parents, or he's going to hear all the noise and freak out. Don't you have a car?”
I stiffened. We only had one car, and my father would need it to drive to the restaurant after dropping me off. I opened my mouth, trying to think of how I could explain this to a girl who had a garage full of gleaming vintage cars in her home, a garage built specifically to house them, but thankfully, I didn't have to.
“Just have Nick drive you,” she said, placing her hands on the ground as she leaned down in a lunge.
“Nick?” I asked. I could practically hear the stupidity in my tone. “So should I just ask him?” I looked at her, nervously tugging at the strap of my gym bag.
“I'll let him know. He'll pick you up at nine thirtyish.”
It was only when I reached the pool that I realized Halle hadn't batted an eyelid about offering up Nick as a chauffeur to the party. But then, why would she? I was hardly a threat to her. Nick was smitten with her.
I wondered what it must feel like to be adored like that. Of course, I knew how Halle felt: bored beyond imagination. Bored enough to send Nick on an errand picking me up from my house on a Saturday night, her kitchen scraps the very thing I felt starved for. Something about this made me feel ashamed, even as I couldn't believe that Nick Osterman was my ride to Halle's party.
ELEVEN
“
EXCITED
about your party tonight?” my mother asked, a grin on her face. She was standing in the kitchen, wearing a yellow dress and making a fruit salad. The mere sight of her showered and dressed and not in front of the TV shocked me. She had even gone to the local Asian store to buy starfruit and lychee and guava, my father's favorite fruits. I had mentioned the party to her in passing, uncertain that she was even listening. But she looked different today than she had in more than a weekârelaxed and happy and genuinely enthusiastic for me. She pushed a strand of her long honey-colored hair out of her eyes with her forearm, and her blue-gray eyes twinkled in a way that made her look as though she were the one attending a high school party.
“Yeah . . . how come you're not all in front of the TV right now?”
“I got tired of watching, I guess. Anyway, I was going to walk to the farmers' market to get some eggs. Your father's still asleep. Want to come?”
“I'm in my pajamas,” I said, but the thing was, today
I
actually wanted to sit in front of the TV and watch the latest news. I wanted to know anything I could about that other Tara. Of course, CNN wasn't going to report on this per se, but I could extrapolate, I could take any crumbs that were thrown at me. I wanted nothing more than to play with this puzzle that had been tossed in my lapâin all our laps.
But my mother had other ideas. “Get dressed. It'll be fun,” she insisted. “We haven't had a chance to catch up in so long.” I looked at my mother, her wide eyes watching me with a kind of curiosity I hadn't seen in days, beyond her curiosity about Terra Nova. And it was the first time this week that she was dressed in something other than sweats. I grudgingly agreed to go with her.
A handful of protestors blocked the entrance to the market. There weren't that many, but they looked menacing, holding signs declaring:
GOD CREATED ONLY ONE
EARTH FOR MAN
, and
DON
'
T
BELIEVE NASA
'
S LIES
, and
IT
'
S A GOVERNMENT CO
NSPIRACY
.
“Outside the farmers' market? Really?” my mother asked as she reached for my hand. “What a nuisance!” she whispered to me. “Excuse me,” she said loudly as she pushed through the cluster.
One of them stepped in front of us. “Excuse
me
, miss. Do you believe that Jesus Christ is our savior?”
I tried to sidestep him, but he kept talking. “There's only one God, and he created only one Earth.” His voice was young, and when I turned to look closely at him, I realized he was probably in his twenties, but his skin was leathery and weathered, and he had a long beard and stringy hair tied back in a ponytail. He was wearing all black.
“I'd just like to buy some groceries,” my mother told him.
“Don't believe what NASA tells you, little girl,” he said, getting in my face.
“I'm not a little girl.” I scowled.
I followed my mother into the bustling market, my heart racing. My mother shook her head.
“Idiots,” she said. “They don't get it.” She shrugged. She looked unfazed, but my hands were shaking. Confrontations, especially unexpected ones, always threw me off guard. “I feel sorry for them,” she said.
“Why?” I asked.
She shrugged. “We're all looking for answers, something to hold on to. I get that. But trying to convince someone what you believe? That's just fruitless.”
I found myself silently agreeing with her. I considered telling her what I thought of Terra Novaâhow I couldn't stop thinking about an alternate version of meâbut I was certain that my mother would widen her eyes and agree with everything I felt, and this would somehow diminish the validity of my belief. My mother was the least scientific person I knew, and my father, the opposite. Validation from my mother on
my ideas seemed to mean that there was something flimsy about them. But my father would force me to investigate my thoughts from every angle, to articulate them in the clearest way, to measure and inspect them until there was no magic left. Sort of the way he made me chop onions or potatoes at the restaurant.
“That's not a quarter-inch dice,” he would tell me. “That's more like a half inch.”
“This is the proper way to chop okra.”
“You're putting in too much salt. This is what half a teaspoon looks like.”
Then he would laugh. “All right,” he would say. “I suppose you're just going to do it your way.” But that was the thing. I didn't really know what my way was. It was somewhere between my mother's way and my father's way, and I still hadn't found it.
We wove through the market. Flower vendors sold orange and magenta sunbursts of dahlias, whimsical poufs of hydrangea, sculptural pink and purple lilies; merchants meted out golden samples of honey on tiny wooden spoons; and pyramids of shiny apples and pears, the first of the season, sat before us.
“I absolutely love flowers,” my mother said, pausing to smell them. “They're such a luxury,” she said as she selected a bouquet of hydrangea. “You know, when I first moved to New York, I had no money to buy anything, really. But it was this insanely glamorous city, and I wanted to be a part of it. There was this one day, right at the beginning . . . I walked into this fur shop to try on furs, just for the fun of it, and the owner, this
ninety-year-old guyâHamish was his nameâhe knew I didn't have money, and he didn't want to embarrass me, so he said I could borrow a fur if I went out dancing with him.”
“Eeew.”
“No.” She laughed. “It wasn't like that. He was old; he had just lost his wife. He loved to dance . . . ballroom dancing. And he could tell I was a dancer . . . Anyway, one day he just gave me this fur to keep. My lucky fur, I called it . . . I had so many adventures wearing it out on the town. I still have it. I was wearing it when I met your dad.” Her eyes scanned the market now. She seemed restless again.
“Tell me again . . . how you met.” I had heard it a million times before, but I loved hearing this story.
She paused, tasting a sample of Fujis. “It was at a party on West End Avenue. I snuck in. A duplex that belonged to some famous Columbia professor. It was gorgeous. There was music, and I started teaching people the samba, the calypso. I was chatting everyone up, having fun. Those grad students really needed to lighten up. Anyway, no one seemed to catch on to the fact that I completely didn't belong there, or if they did, they didn't say anything. Your dad was just standing in a corner, this shy grad student, and I went up to him and asked him when he was planning on asking me out to dinner. He was so cute, such a handsome guy. He seemed so . . . proper. He got all tongue-tied. But I was . . . certain.” She sighed. “I was like,
I'm going to end up with this guy, whether he wants to be with me or not.
I was beyond smitten,” she said, fishing some dollar bills out of her purse. “We talked for hours. He was so intense,
so grown-up. He seemed like a real adult to me, even though he was only a few years older than me. Not the type of guy I usually went for, but . . . I was so carefree then. Had nothing to lose. Literally nothing. Just a few dollars in my pocket and a borrowed fur coat,” she said wistfully. “Anyway, tell me what's going on at school.” She quickly changed the subject.
There was something restless in my mother's voice as she relayed the story she had told me so many times. I wondered for a moment if my parents were beginning to fray at the edges, caught in the relentless middle of their time together. They were hemmed in by a past that had begun brilliant and shiny, and a future of . . . what? It was hard to say. Something about the hint of this was upsetting, and I had to turn away and take a deep breath before I answered.
“Ummm . . . I like physics. We're learning about this thing called âseeding,'” I told her.
“What's that?”
“It's like . . . as the solar system moves through the Milky Way, it hits these dust clouds filled with comets. The comets are, like, remnants of other planets, and they're filled with microbes.”
“Mmm hmmm.”
“So when comets hit the Earth and make contact with water, the frozen microbes come back to life.”
“Just like that?”
“Yeah, apparently. Anyway, so the comets actually âseed' the planet, plus, they launch remnants of our planet into space, and so other planets get our microbes. It's like this continuous
cycle. And now scientists are trying to figure out how the seeding process might relate to Terra Nova. I mean, are there exact DNA copies of us up there? Or slightly different? And the big question is, did they derive from the same source? And what is that source to begin with?”
“You're so brilliant. Just like your dad.” She sighed. “I wasn't the best student. Maybe I could have been . . . I don't know,” she said, and her voice trailed off for a minute before she added, “I know high school has been tough for you, but I really think that's going to change with being invited to this party and everything. I like Meg, but it's good you're meeting new friends.” My mother knew how much I hated Brierly, but we rarely talked about it. My time with my mother was always fun. We didn't linger on the bad stuff. “I guess everyone goes through tough spells,” she added. “That's actually what I wanted to talk to you about,” she said, settling on four Pink Lady apples, handing the vendor a couple of dollar bills. “I haven't talked to your father about it yet, but I thought I should share it with you first,” she said, giving me a look like she was about to tell me a secret. I loved it whenever she shared secrets with me. It made me feel privileged, special. She packed the apples into a net bag she pulled out of her purse.
“So . . . I've decided to go away for a little while.”
I stopped, watching her as she carefully counted her change. “What do you mean, âgo away'?”
“It's just a few months, and it's California, babe. Not a big
deal. I think it's time for me to have an adventure.” She didn't look up as she placed the change in her purse.
A jolt ran through my body, a shock that left me shaking, and I felt an impulse to start crying, right then and there, surrounded by strangers. “A few
months
? In California? An
adventure
?” I asked, swallowing hard.
My mother is leaving me
.
“All of this news, it's inspired me. I keep thinking about those people on Terra Novaâthey're alternate versions of us, right? But with slight differences. That picture changed everything for me, Tara. I can't stop thinking about it. I can't shake the thought that maybe my parents are still alive up there. Maybe on Terra Nova, they never died. It's possible, right?”
I stared at my mother, my mouth agape. “And that's why you're leaving home? That doesn't even make sense!”
“I just want to understand. It's this group of people in California, and they . . . they want to make contact with Terra Nova.”