an oil lamp,” Noemí said with a chuckle. “I’ve never even been camping properly.”
“Even a simpleton can understand the basic principles,” Florence said, and then continued talking, giving Noemí no chance to reply. “The boiler is finicky at times and at any rate young people shouldn’t have very hot showers; a mild bath will do for you. There is no fireplace in this room, but a great large one downstairs. Have I forgotten anything, Francis? No, very well.”
The woman looked at her son, but did not give him any time to reply either. Noemí doubted many people got a chance to utter a word with her around.
“I’d like to speak to Catalina,” Noemí said.
Florence, who must have thought this was the end of their conversation, already had a hand on the doorknob.
“Today?” the woman asked.
“Yes.”
“It’s almost time for her medication. She won’t stay awake after she takes it.”
“I want a few minutes with her.”
“Mother, she’s come so far,” Francis said.
His interjection seemed to have caught the woman off guard. Florence raised an eyebrow at the young man and clasped her hands together.
“Well, I suppose in the city you have a different sense of time, running to and fro,” she said. “If you must meet her forthwith, then you better come with me. Francis, why don’t you go see if Uncle Howard will be joining us for dinner tonight? I don’t want surprises.”
Florence guided Noemí down another long hallway and into a room with another four-poster bed, an ornate dressing table with a three-winged mirror, and an armoire large enough to hold a small army. The wallpaper in here was a diluted blue with a floral pattern. Little landscape paintings decorated the walls, coastal images of great cliffs and lonely beaches, but these were not local views. This was England, most likely, preserved in oils and silver frames.
A chair had been set by a window. Catalina sat in it. She was looking outside and did not stir when the women walked into the room. Her auburn hair was gathered at her nape. Noemí had steeled herself to greet a stranger ravaged by disease, but Catalina did not seem much different from when she’d lived in Mexico City. Her dreamy quality was perhaps amplified by the décor, but this was the sum of the change.
“She is supposed to have her medication in five minutes,” Florence said, consulting her wristwatch.
“Then I’ll take those five minutes.”
The older woman did not seem happy, but she left. Noemí approached her cousin. The younger woman had not glanced at her; she was oddly still.
“Catalina? It’s me, Noemí.”
She placed a hand gently on her cousin’s shoulder, and only then did Catalina look at Noemí. She smiled slowly.
“Noemí, you’ve come.”
She stood in front of Catalina nodding. “Yes. Father has sent me to check up on you. How are you feeling? What’s wrong?”
“I feel awful. I had a fever, Noemí. I’m sick with tuberculosis, but I’m feeling better.”
“You wrote a letter to us, do you remember? You said odd things in it.”
“I don’t quite remember everything I wrote,” Catalina said. “I had such a high temperature.”
Catalina was five years older than Noemí. Not a great age gap, but enough that when they were children, Catalina had taken on a motherly role. Noemí remembered many an afternoon spent with Catalina making crafts, cutting dresses for paper dolls, going to the movies, listening to her spin fairy tales. It felt strange to see her like this, listless, dependent on others when they had all once depended on her. She did not like it at all.
“It made my father awfully nervous,” Noemí said.
“I’m so sorry, darling. I shouldn’t have written. You probably had many things to do in the city. Your friends, your classes, and now you are here because I scribbled nonsense on a piece of paper.”
“Don’t worry about it. I wanted to come and see you. We haven’t seen each other in ages. I had thought you would have come visit us by now, to be frank.”
“Yes,” Catalina said. “Yes, I thought so too. But it’s impossible to get out of this house.”
Catalina was pensive. Her eyes, hazel pools of stagnant water, grew duller, and her mouth opened, as if she were getting ready to speak, except she did not. She drew her breath in instead, held it there, then turned her head and coughed.
“Catalina?”
“Time for your medicine,” Florence said, marching into the room, a glass bottle and a spoon in hand. “Come now.”
Catalina obediently had a spoon