tell myself.
But then comes the sound of a key jiggling in the lock.
It’s only been a few minutes since Will and I hung up the phone. No more than ten or fifteen. He would have scarcely reached the mainland by now, much less waited for passengers to disembark and then board the boat. He wouldn’t have had time to make the twenty-minute commute back across the bay, or drive home from the ferry dock.
It’s not Will.
Someone else is here.
I inch myself away from the door, searching for a place to hide. But before I’ve gone a step or two, the door presses violently open. It ricochets off the rubber stopper on the other side.
There, standing in the foyer, is Otto. His backpack is slung across a shoulder. His hair is covered with snow. It’s white with it. His cheeks are rosy and red from the cold outside. The tip of his nose is also red. Everything else is pallid.
Otto slams the door shut.
“Otto,” I breathe out midstride, pressing my hand to my chest. “What are you doing here?” I ask, and he says, “I’m sick.” He does look peaked to me, yes. But I’m not certain he looks sick.
“The school didn’t call,” I tell him because this is the way it’s supposed to happen. The school nurse is supposed to call and tell me my son is sick and then I go to the school and pick him up. But this isn’t what happened.
“The nurse just sent you home?” I ask, feeling cross at her for allowing a child to walk off campus in the middle of the school day, but also scared. Because the look on Otto’s face is alarming. He shouldn’t be here. Why is he here?
His reply is offhand. He takes a step into the room. “I didn’t ask,” he says. “I just left.”
“I see,” I say, feeling my feet inch backward.
“What’s that supposed to mean?” he asks. “I told you I was sick. You don’t believe me?” It isn’t like Otto to be antagonistic with me.
Otto stares at me with his jaw clenched, chin forward. He runs his fingers through his hair, then jams them into the pockets of his jeans.
“What doesn’t feel good?” I ask, a lump forming in the pit of my stomach.
Otto moves another step closer and says, “My throat,” though his voice isn’t raspy. He doesn’t clutch a hand to his throat as one does when it hurts.
But it’s conceivable, of course. His throat could hurt. He could be telling the truth. Strep throat is going around, as is the flu.
“Your father is on his way home,” I force out, though I don’t know why.
“No, he’s not,” he says, voice chillingly composed. “Dad’s at work.”
“He canceled his classes,” I say, shambling backward. “He’s coming home. He should be here soon.”
“Why?” Otto asks as, in my subtle retreat, I bump softly into the fireplace mantel.
I lie, telling Otto that Will also didn’t feel well. “He was turning around just as soon as his ferry reached the mainland.” I glance at the clock and say, “Any minute, he should be home.”
“No, he won’t,” Otto says again. It’s irrefutable the way that he says it.
I suck in a breath, release it slowly. “What do you mean?” I ask.
“Ferries are delayed ’cause of the storm,” he tells me, thrusting that hair of his back again with a hand.
“How’d you get home?” I ask.
“Mine was the last to leave.”
“Oh,” I say, thinking of Otto and me trapped together in this house until ferry traffic resumes. How long will that take? I wonder why Will hasn’t called to tell me about the ferries, though my phone is in the other room. I wouldn’t have heard it if he did.
A gust of wind rattles the house just then, making the whole thing shake. As it does, the lamp on the end table flickers. I hold my breath, waiting for the room to go dark. There’s a meager amount of light coming through the windows, but as they fill with snow it gets harder to see. The world outside turns a charcoal gray. The dogs bark.
“Do you want me to look at your throat?” I ask Otto. When he doesn’t reply, I retrieve my penlight from my bag in the foyer and go to him. Standing beside Otto, I see how he’s surpassed me in height nearly overnight. He looks down on me now. He isn’t heavily built. Rather, he’s lanky. He smells of teenage boy: all those hormones they