The Art of Disappearing by Ivy Pochoda (popular romance novels .txt) ๐
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- Author: Ivy Pochoda
Read book online ยซThe Art of Disappearing by Ivy Pochoda (popular romance novels .txt) ๐ยป. Author - Ivy Pochoda
Cradling a cup of mulled wine, I listened to the escalating merrymaking. Soon a voice clamored to be heard above the crowd. โThe magician,โ it called. โItโs time for the magician.โ
Others joined in, clapping and calling for Toby.
The lawn was a tumult of cries for magic. People began darting to and fro, peering into the dark for my vanished husband.
I pulled in closer to the brazierโs pole, wanting its heat to melt me. The cries for Toby grew louder, some now tinged with disappointment.
Then a shadow stretched across the brazierโs orange glow. โHeโs gone, isnโt he?โ Leo asked, leaning down and kissing me on the head.
I nodded.
I sat on Leoโs lawn until the last of the lights died out. As I felt the dark rise, I remembered the swell of the ocean after it had taken Max. And although the loss and the sadness were beyond expression, I knew that this time I would not wait for Toby. I would not look or listen for his footsteps. Unlike Toby, I would not attempt to undo what the magician chose for himself.
It has been three days since Toby left, and Iโve been wandering around Leoโs villa between the winter-blooming plants and a soft feather bed made up for me in the room next to Oliviaโs. Often I go into the studio. My fingers guide me through Erikโs fabrics, choosing the ones that will tell of the rest of my adventures in Holland and elsewhere. Their voices had returned the minute I broke through the other side of Tobyโs trick, comforting me in the magicianโs absence. I can make out Pietโs and Oliviaโs voices. Eventually, Iโll come across Leo and maybe even Theo. Maybe one day, Iโll hear Toby again.
Despite the cold, I often walk along the river. I wear one of Leoโs coats and a wool scarf Olivia made for me. The water is marbled brown and gray. I look at its surface, searching for the first crystals of ice, and I remember that I promised myself Iโd be home by the time the Delaware froze. I always imagined that Iโd bring Toby with me, but now Iโll make the trip alone.
One day, I take a thermos of coffee and sit on the dock where I last saw Toby. I comb my fingers through the air, searching for the portal of his escape. Itโs late afternoon, and an early darkness is settling along the riverbank. Here the river is narrower, and despite the fading light, I can still make out the small road on the far side. In all my time at Leoโs, I have never seen a car or a bicycle on this road. So I am surprised when the silence of the falling dark is disturbed by the faint purr of an engine.
I look upstream and watch a car come into view. The engine sounds tired and lugs slightly. When the car is directly opposite the dock, it stops. Even in the failing light, I know itโs a brown minivan. No one gets out. The engine continues to idle. I lower my feet over the river and trace the toe of one boot through the cold water. There is no sound except for the rhythmic swish of my shoe in the water and the irregular drone of the engine on the other bank.
I wonder how cold the water will be if I decide to cross. And if I cross, I wonder if the water will remain water at all, and on what bank I will arrive. I close my eyes and remember how happy I was when I turned around on a deserted Nevada highway and saw the van for the first time. I remember the tingling in my fingers when I tried to brush them over Tobyโs as he put the van in gear. Even without magic, the desert landscape appeared to me to be enchanted.
I have to stop myself from calling his name. The Toby I want cannot be pulled into the world on my side of the river. Soon, the silhouette of the minivan fades into the night. The only way Iโm assured of its presence is the rattle of the engine.
Itโs dark now. The river is indistinguishable from the bank. I can barely make out my boots above the water. As I sit there, trying to feel Tobyโs gaze cutting through the night, I realize that he cannot draw me to his side. And now I smile, confident that he never did so in the first place. I relax, as I let our first meeting replay in my headโa chance encounter in an improbable place. Then I hear the windfall of coins in the remote gas station, and I know that this, too, was not his doing.
I will sit there in the near-presence of my magician until the last moment, but Iโm not going to cross over. I will remain in a world governed by chance and coincidence. I want to call out to Toby to tell him that I was rightโhe has learned to love me more in my absence. And this tells me how truly empty his conjured world is.
It takes me a few minutes to realize that the engine is no longer humming. The van has not driven away. It is simply gone. I stand up and walk back to Leoโs.
The Delaware froze late this year. My mother tells me it was waiting for my return. Together we walk down to the riverbank and slide across the ice. We skid past the spot where Max allowed himself to be stolen by the water for the first time. The bright sun makes the thick ice sparkle.
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