Cathy played through the night. Brahmsâ intermezzos on piano in the parlor gave way to Bachâs partitas on violin in the garden.
She thought over Sugarâs fury while she played. What had made her so angry? She knew Sugar disliked Brennanâhe had a habit of lashing out at people and he genuinely seemed to enjoy the misery of others.
But weâre none of us perfect, Cathy thought. We all have our complicated patterns and our foibles and follies, and to love someone even knowing their limitations, that was something, wasnât it?
But Cathy suspected there was more to it than that. She herself suspected Brennanâs true originsâshe was never taken in by his backstory, though he still believed it without hesitation.
âIâm from New Orleans,â he was fond of saying, and every time he said it, Cathy smelled rose-water and sulfur.
When onezero woke, Cathy sought her out.
âDo you think thereâs reason to worry?â she asked her friend. âWas Sugar right in her first response, and did I do something wrong and irresponsible in getting pregnant?â
onezero wrapped her in a big hug.
âWhen we combine two to make one,â said onezero, âthe result is something entirely extraordinary! Itâs not the mother, itâs not the father. You are bringing in something new, and thatâs always something to celebrate.â
They sat in the garden while the sun rose.
Cathy had to admit that, if she tuned in to how she felt, everything felt so very right. Sometimes, life steps up and asks you to follow, thatâs how she feltâand here she was, following as best she could.
âAfter all,â she said to onezero, âthis just happened! It wasnât something I planned. Itâs not something that could be expected.â
âExactly,â said onezero from the easel at the edge of the porch. âLike when my dad was taken by the thousand. Who would expect that? Thatâs not anything that could be planned or expected.â
âAnd look how that turned out!â said Cathy, with a smile. âYouâre the best surprise there ever was!â
onezero left after she finished her painting, a portrait of a Madonna which they hung upstairs. âCall me when itâs time,â onezero said. âIâll come in a jiffy!â
Cathy spent the late morning painting a childlike drawing of a tiny beingâhalf fairy, half bird. The innocence of the painting charmed her.
This might be my last time alone for a while, she thought, savoring the solitude and the quiet. We make our peace, she thought, hoping to remember this during the busy days that would be sure to follow the babyâs delivery.
In the afternoon, while she was relaxing with a computer game, the contractions came.
I can do this, she thought, remembering to breathe.
But the second contraction came with such fierceness, as if she were tearing inside, and she wasnât sure she could do it. She couldnât get ahold of Jaclyn. She called onezero.
onezero arrived with sadness. Cathy couldnât ask what was the matterâevery ounce of concentration was spent breathing through the pain.
âI knew it wouldnât be an easy birth,â onezero said. âI could feel it. Are you all aright?â
âI wish Jaclyn were here,â onezero said.
They made their way back to the nursery.
âOh! Itâs going to be all right!â onezero said. âI just felt a shift. Thereâs nothing to worry about! You can push now!â
In fact, she was doubly right. Two babies were born, a son and a daughter, and both were healthy, each one with ten fingers and ten toes, and two eyes, and one nose.
âTheyâre lovely. What will you call them?â onezero asked.
âYou name them,â said Cathy. âYouâre their godmother.â
âMe and Jaclyn,â said onezero. She closed her eyes for a moment. âJaclyn says that the little boy should be called something⌠something that you had in your sandwich. Fireflies? Something sparkly.â
âSparkroot?â Cathy asked.
âExactly!â said onezero. âSparkroot and Florinda.â
onezero took out her cellphone. âWe need to remember today,â she said, snapping a photo of the two of them. âI mean, of course weâll always remember, but this will help us commemorate, too.â
When onezero left, Cathy spent time with each baby, feeling that warm weight rest in the crook of her arm, as if her body had been built for this.
Sparkroot had eyes the shape of his daddyâs, but they twinkled with a spark all his own.
After sheâd nursed the twins and tucked them into bed she called Brennan.
âWe had two,â she said. âDo you want to come meet them?â
âItâs really something,â he said. âAre they exactly alike?â
âWell, oneâs a girl and oneâs a boy, and one has lighter skin and one darker, and their eyes and smiles are shaped differently, but theyâre exactly alike in that theyâre both ours.â
Brennan felt proud and surprised. They werenât much to look atâthey both looked the same to him, sort of like little peanuts, and there wasnât much of them, and they couldnât really talk yet, could they, but theyâd grow into something. Theyâd grow into actual people, his children, and that was something.
âIâm a dad,â he said.
He wrapped his wife in a hug. âWe really did it!â he said.
She held him, and to her, with his beating heart and hot skin, he felt in her arms like a little boy whoâd come home from school with a first prize in the science fair, bursting with excitement and pride.
She went into the kitchen to prepare a late-night snack for them, and when she finished, she found him at the computer, posting onto the Forums, âI am the proud papa of twins. Who says a poor boy from New Orleans canât hit a home run, twice?â
New World Symphony:Â Delivery Cathy played through the night. Brahms' intermezzos on piano in the parlor gave way to Bach's partitas on violin in the garden.