reluctant to leave her cocoon. Goose bumps broke out all over her naked skin in the cool morning air. She threw on jeans and a thick-pile shirt, pale yellow, comfortable and concealing. At thirty-three, she still had it. But she didn’t want her son to see it.
She shuffled to the door and cracked it open. Dylan peeked through.
“Fungus?” she said to her son in a mock-serious tone.
“Among us!” he answered back.
Maggie dressed and made her way down the long hallway, past Yvette’s bedroom (a complete disaster), past Cindy’s land of tie-dye, past Josephine’s ever-so-spotless pale green sanctum, to the heart of the house, the kitchen. She took in the rich smells, the warmth. Along one wall, two ancient refrigerators stood side by side, the right one boasting a hand-painted yellow sun, the left one the multicolored handprints of her housemates. And, of course, there were the elves. The biggest stood in the corner, hand-carved in dark wood and nearly four feet tall. Several smaller ones peered down from the tops of the refrigerators.
When she and Dylan had considered moving to Rivendell five years ago, it was the elves that had closed the deal. “They come in from the forest,” her prospective housemate Justin had told her son, then four years old. Justin was a graduate student in ecology and evolutionary biology, with an unruly dark beard and a shock of blond-brown hair that left the impression that he’d just emerged from the forest himself. “Be a good boy,” Justin had said to Dylan, “and they’ll watch over you, keep you in spices and glitter dust. But act badly—don’t listen to your mom, yell too much, or leave your dishes unwashed—and they’ll go back to the woods with the faeries, never to be seen again.” Justin had finished his degree and moved to Yakima, Washington, a year later. Yvette had replaced him, leaving Dylan as the one and only man of the house.
Almost ten now, her son stood at the stove on top of a milk crate while tending a simmering pot of oatmeal, just big enough to see over the rim of the stainless-steel vessel. He twisted the spoon back and forth, keeping the oats from burning on the bottom. Turtle, their black Lab mix, was asleep at his feet.
Cindy Sharp, one of their housemates, a fifth-year art and architecture undergrad specializing in printmaking, sat at the kitchen table. Her hands were cupped around a large mug of coffee, and she looked as though she needed it. Cindy was twenty-three, still lost in the hedonistic newness of adulthood. She had curly hair, a slight overbite, and an eclectic taste in men that Maggie couldn’t grasp.
“Out late?” Maggie asked.
“Visiting a sick friend,” she said, using their code.
Maggie suppressed a laugh. “I hope he feels better.”
Cindy grinned. “Oh, he does. He certainly does.”
Dylan stirred the pot with greater alacrity. He must have broken their code. Cindy pushed back from the table and wandered over. “That stuff ready yet?” she asked. “I’m famished.”
“Almost,” Dylan answered.
“This boy,” Cindy said, giving him a hug from behind. “So handsome, and he can cook, too.” She looked to Maggie, chin resting on Dylan’s head. “When he’s older, he’s mine.”
“Hands off. There are laws.” She pulled her son away, mussed his hair. Full-on red hair, nothing like his father’s. More like Pop-pop’s when he was younger. She wanted to squeeze him until her chest hurt, but she held off. He was nearing that age when boys begin to pull back from their mothers. She felt it, the way he twisted away when she touched him.
She elbowed her son in the ribs instead. “Fungus?”
“Among us!” he answered back.
THE SNOW OF THE PREVIOUS NIGHT HAD LEFT A WHITE blanket almost an inch thick on the grounds of the sprawling estate. An abandoned farm, it had been purchased for a song in the early seventies by a collection of back-to-the-earth types. They’d cleaned up the house, added more bedrooms,
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