We lived in a three-bedroom, one-washroom bungalow in the South Keys area of Ottawa, a typical middle-class neighborhood, and my parents' bedroom was just down the hall from mine. Sometimes I blame my parents for the fact that I'm an outsider. They must have known I was going to be weird when I was bornâotherwise, why would they have named me Indigo? Yes, my real name is Indigo Russell. I'm named after a color. And the color is something in between blue and violet so in my book, it isn't even a true color. What parents name their kid after a color?
“Can I come in?” she asked.
“I'm in bed. Got a test in the morning.”
“I think Sheena and Sasha want to sleep with you.”
I sat up. “Let them in.”
Mom opened the door, and our golden Lab, Sheena, and our black Lab, Sasha, came bounding into the room. Cedar snubbed her nose at them as if to say, “Ha ha, you get the floor,” and sank further into my bed.
After I made a fuss over the dogs, they plopped down at the foot of my bed. Once my mom had shut my door and I heard her footsteps padding down the hallway, I curled under my covers, leaving a tiny opening for my nose. Just a peephole so I could breathe. Warm mist circulated around my nose, heating my face but not my body. I didn't want any white or gray or black visitors in my room, floating around, interrupting my sleep ⦠making me quiver.
Sometimes, dead people appeared in my room uninvited. Just like my visions appeared in my mind. The only dead visitor I liked was my grandfather, who I called Papa. He died when I was seven, but he often came to visit me when I needed him. I curled into a tighter ball, hugging my knees.
I heard Sasha sigh and shudder before closing her eyes. Sheena snorted and stilled as well, and Cedar didn't move from her curled position in the crook of my legs. My animals gave me comfort, protection from the other spirits who liked to lurk. I curled into the tiniest ball possible, wrapping my arms around my body and closing my eyes to the world around me.
Then I said my prayer:
Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John,
Bless the bed I lie upon.
Four corners to my bed,
Four angels around my head,
One to sing,
One to pray,
And two to watch until the day.
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“Indigo Russell,” my mom yelled, “get a move on. You're going to miss the bus.”
“Yeah, yeah,” I grumbled. I sat up and looked around. I'd had no visitors from the other side, and for that I was grateful. Sasha, Sheena, and Cedar were gone. Brian must have let them out so they could take their middle-of-the-night stroll to his bedroom. Although Brian and I were as different as night and day, we had one thing in common: we both loved our pets.
Eight minutes later, I gave myself one last glance in the mirror. “Freak,” I said. “Weirdo. Stupid idiot.”
Then I slammed my bedroom door and trudged to the kitchen.
“I have a twelve-hour shift today,” Mom said. She was wearing her nurse's uniformâblue scrubs and white sneakersâand drinking her morning coffee. “There's chili in the fridge for dinner.” She glanced at her watch and dumped the remains of her coffee into the sink. Then she looked directly at me. “Is that a new blouse?”
She had recently cut her light brown hair short, and it looked great. I wished I looked more like her; even in her scrubs, she looked so thin and pretty. All my friends thought I had the best mom.
But she could sniff out a problem from a mile off.
“No,” I replied. “And it's called a T-shirt.”
She smiled, ignoring my snippy attitude. “It looks nice on you.”
I eyed her. She had that compassionate look in her eyes that said, “I'm sorry I birthed an abnormal child, and I sense something disturbing has just happened to you, so I'm saying something nice to distract you and make you feel good about yourself.”
My mother was always worried about me, like, 24â7. I hated that she had to stress about me and my problems all the time. Looking at her now, I felt sad. She was worried about me again. She intuitively knew something was wrong. I couldn't tell her I'd had another vision, because that would worry her even more. As a teenage girl, I was supposed to hate my mom, like so many of my friends, but I didn't at all. And here she was again, trying to make me feel good about myself.
“Thanks for the vote on the top,” I said softly.
With orange juice sloshing around in my stomach, making me nauseated, I headed outside to walk to my bus stop on Bank Street, which is this really long street in Ottawa and one of the main streets that connect different parts of the city. Indian summer had hit; the air was warm, and the sky was a beautiful shade of sapphire blue. My jean jacket flapped open as I sauntered, not in any real rush to get to school. Maple trees lined my street, and because of their maturity, their branches almost touched in the middle, making me feel as though I were walking through a big tunnel poked with holes to let the sun shine through. The little beads of sun shimmered on the sidewalk, and I almost felt cocooned. I strolled by the ranch-style and bungalow homes that made up my neighborhood; most were blue, green, or tan with perfect white trim and white gutters that were cleaned every year. Of course, in typical Ottawa style, there were also red-bricked homes mixed in with the stucco and aluminum-sided ones. Brick houses are standard in Ottawa, because it is one of the oldest cities in Canada, and the coldest.
I think my neighborhood was built sometime in the â70s; I knew our house was around 20 years old, because my parents always complained about the upgrades they needed. Last summer they had put on a new roof, which meant I would have to wait forever to get a carâeven a used car.
A few petunias and red geraniums still bloomed in front yard gardens and in clay pots, but some were starting to wilt and die off. One good frost, and they'd all be deadâthat usually occurred sometime in early October, a few weeks away yet, although sometimes it hit earlier. My parents, along with most neighbors on the street, had spent the weekend in their yards, tidying up flower beds, pruning bushes to clean up for when the cold weather hit. Most of the rosebushes had been covered in burlap already, in preparation for winter, and I missed the wonderful summer aroma of the roses. Green garbage bags full of clippings sat in driveways.
The leaves had started to turn color already, and some had fallen to the ground because of a nasty wind. I used to love raking the leaves into piles and jumping on them. I looked at my watch and, although reluctant, picked up my pace. Those fun days were done. Sometimes I wished I could go back to when I didn't know that I was weird. I had kind of figured out something was wrong with me after my papa died, when I realized that not everyone saw dead people.
Funeral homes were strange places for me and made me really freak out. My parents had taken me for my first time to see my papa. Why was I thinking about him this morning?
Lots of my family and Mommy and Daddy's friends were milling around a really quiet room, and there were framed pictures of Papa on a table. Everyone was staring at him and crying and wiping their eyes with white tissues from boxes that sat all around the room. I wanted to see him, too, so I stepped up to the long box and looked inside at the man who lay in blue, shiny fabric that was the color of the sky on a warm summer day. His mouth didn't move and he didn't smile at me and his eyes were closed and his skin seemed old and wrinkly. But he didn't seem as sad as everyone else in the room. And I wasn't sad, because he wasn't sad. His hands were clasped together over his tummy, and I reached out to touch his skin. Poor Papa. His hands were so cold they felt like mine did when I went outside in the snow without my mittens.
That night I crawled under my Strawberry Shortcake comforter and had just closed my eyes when I heard Papa's voice calling my name. I sat up. He stood at the end of my bed. He didn't look as old and wrinkly as he had that afternoon, and he smiled at me, like he was happy. I smiled back. I knew he wasn't sad.
“Tell Mommy and Daddy that I'm happy. And tell them not to be sad. I'm okay. I'm where I should be.”
The next morning, I skipped into the kitchen. “Papa said to tell you he was happy.”
“Indie, what on earth are you talking about?” Daddy said sounding irritated.
“Papa came to see me last night.”
“I'm sure you didn't see him, Indie,” said Daddy. “You must have been dreaming.”
I frowned. Why would he say that?
Everyone always thought I was dreaming: parents, school teachers, Sunday school teachers. But even back then, I had known I wasn't.
I shook my head. Geez, I so wished it had been a dream. Then I wouldn't have had to hide this stuff from all the kids in my high school and pretend I was normal when really I was a teenager who
still
saw dead people and had
visions.
Like the one with Amber and Burke.
Ridgemont High wasn't within walking distance, so I had to catch the OC Transpo, or as I preferred to call it, the red and white limo. Although we lived in a nice middle-class neighborhood and there was a decent high school pretty close by, I had to attend Ridgemont High School because we lived on the other side of the train tracks, and they were the defining line. Literally, we lived on the wrong side of the tracks. It was kind of a drag, but now that I was in my last year of high school, it didn't bug me anymore.
Once I hit Bank Street, I made a left turn. My tunnel of trees was now gone, and I was on the section of Bank that had offices and businesses, like insurance companies and vacuum stores, nothing interesting. The sun was perched like a big, yellow ball in a cloudless sky, and it was shedding the perfect autumn heat that should have made me sing. But I felt only the weight of that big ball.
What am I going to do when I see Lacey? What can I say?
We told each other everything.
I shoved my hands in my pockets, lowered my head, and plodded forward, my feet feeling as if they had 20 pounds of mud caked on the bottom. I walked over the few dead leaves that had fallen, kicking them, and they crunched beneath my feet. Sometimes my visions were so confusing, and I had no idea what to do with them.