The Great Believers - Rebecca Makkai Page 0,183

that she was wrong, that self-hatred was the worst kind—but Elena’s pregnant silence stretched too long to be good.

Fiona said, “Hello?”

Elena’s hand was frozen near her cheek. She was gone.

* * *

It was still dark on Wednesday morning when Fiona’s phone rang, and she thought at first it must be someone calling from the States. It was Claire.

She said, “So, I want to let you know I’m safe. There’s stuff going on like five blocks away, I don’t know. But we’re fine.”

“What’s happening?” Fiona was on her feet.

“It’s a police thing, not another attack. But there’s some gunfire.”

“Oh! Wait, are you—thank you for calling, sweetie. Thank you. You’re inside?”

“Yeah, this officer came around. We’re basically on lockdown.” Claire sounded preternaturally calm. Fiona almost would have believed her steady voice if she hadn’t known that Nicolette must have been sleeping there beside her—and what mother could possibly be calm in a moment like that? She wanted to fly across the city.

“You’re not near a window, are you?”

“Well, it’s a small place.”

“Can you move a shelf in front of the window?”

Claire was quiet and Fiona worried she’d offended her. “Yeah, maybe.”

“Are the doors locked?”

“Of course.”

“And you have enough food? Are you on Twitter? Richard’s boyfriend was getting his news from Twitter.” Because she wasn’t yet awake enough to stop herself, she said, “This is a sign, Claire. That you should come back to Chicago.”

And she was sure, then, that this had done it, that Claire would hang up.

Claire laughed. “Everyone here is terrified of Chicago. They can’t believe I made it out alive.”

“Or we’ll get you a safer place in Paris. In a better neighborhood. Your father and I could chip in.”

She was literally trying to buy her daughter’s affection. Well, her safety first, and then her affection. At five in the morning, with a shoot-out in the background.

“Mom,” Claire said, “just go back to sleep, okay?”

“Will you call again later?”

“Sure. I—just don’t panic if you don’t hear from me, okay?”

“I will panic, sweetie. But you could email your dad again, if you don’t want to call, and he could pass the message on. He appreciated hearing from you.”

Fiona turned on the TV in the living room—on mute, because she couldn’t understand the rapid-fire French anyway—and she logged onto Richard’s computer to find CNN.

* * *

By noon, she hadn’t heard from Claire, but she’d learned from the news that they’d caught and killed the last suspect. No reports of any civilian deaths five blocks away.

It occurred to her to check if her phone had saved Claire’s number when she called. “Blocked Caller,” it said.

* * *

She ate lunch, and then she called Jake and asked if she could see him again. He, too, was staying here at least until Richard’s opening; his story wouldn’t be complete otherwise, and his friend was (against what Fiona assumed must have been this woman’s better judgment) continuing to let him crash. He asked Fiona if she wanted to go for a walk, and she said no, she’d very much like to fuck him again if he could figure out where that might happen.

He called her back with an address, a place that turned out to be a small office building in Saint-Germain, and he led her up to a small, empty office with a window, a desk, a chair, some architectural prints on the walls.

“I’m sorry,” he said. “I thought there might be a couch at least.” It belonged to his friend’s roommate’s boyfriend, a guy who’d apparently understood instantly and handed over the key. Maybe everyone in France understood things like that.

“This is perfect,” she said. She sat him in the chair and unbuttoned his shirt, straddled his lap. It was, fortunately, an armless chair. They got it cornered between the desk and the wall so it wouldn’t roll around. She lifted her dress, slid her panties to the side, lowered herself onto him. He groaned and tugged her bra down, and very soon, alarmingly soon, they were both done. The whole thing had been a shudder, a sneeze, some quick and involuntary trick of the body. He wrapped the used condom in a sheet of printer paper.

“Don’t throw that in the trash here,” she said. “Walk it down to the street.” She was lying on the floor, stretching out her back. Jake put the paper wad on the chair and lay next to her.

He said, “Are you okay?”

“I just have strange ways of dealing with nerves.”

“Hey,” he said. He ran a finger down her

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