a sweater atop her bureau. âJust in her way.â
Jet got into bed and pulled up the covers.
âOh, no you donât,â Franny said, getting into bed beside her. âTell all.â
âMother hates Levi and she doesnât even know him. I think she hates me, too.â
âWe donât have to listen to her,â Franny said. âOr be like her. She definitely would have chosen caution.â
Jet closed her eyes. âI wonât listen to her.â
They lay there side by side, defiant, convinced that, if there were curses, then there must also be cures for every mortal plight.
In November, April Owens came to New York, having told her exasperated parents that sheâd been invited to visit her cousins, which was far from true. She had already spent what should have been her first freshman semester of college working in a coffee shop in the North End. She had been accepted to MIT, delighting her stupefied parents, who had no idea she was so intelligent, but had deferred because she felt she had other things to attend to. It was too exciting a time to be tied down to school. On the eighth of the month, Senator Kennedy from Massachusetts had won in the closest presidential election since 1916. Hatless and handsome, he had given people faith in the future when he gave his acceptance speech. I can assure you that every degree of mind and spirit that I possess will be devoted to the long-range interests of the United States and of the cause of freedom around the world.
April came directly to the Owensesâ town house. She had a packet of lavender in her pocket, for luck.
âLook whoâs here!â Susanna Owens tried to sound cheerful when she opened the door, but her pose was a flop. In fact, she looked panic-stricken at the mere sight of her niece. She most certainly didnât want the responsibility of overseeing this difficult girl, whose influence might lead her children to the brink.
As for April, she was unreadable as she slipped inside the house, a Cheshire cat who had arrived with a single suitcase. She looked younger than she had in the summer, her white-blond hair pulled into one long braid, her face free from makeup. She was dressed in black, with knee high lace-up boots.
âSurprise, surprise,â April said. She turned to Jet, whom she considered a pal. âAlthough Iâll bet you knew Iâd be here.â
The family turned to Jet. âWhat is that supposed to mean?âDr. Burke-Owens said, always looking for a neurosis to pin down. âAre you and April in cahoots?â
âIt doesnât mean a thing,â Jet said, doing her best to skirt the issue. When she and April exchanged glances, she was glad sheâd said nothing and was stunned to read her cousinâs thoughts. April did have something of a cluttered mind. Certainly, it couldnât be this.
âYou can read me like a book,â April assured her cousin. âYou know why Iâm here.â
âJet?â Susanna said with alarm. Since the incident with that boy, she had taken to checking her daughtersâ room every night, and she made sure to pick up the extension should Jet receive a phone callâwhich only caused Jet to be very adept at quickly hanging up.
Now Jet gazed at the floor and refused to respond. She never divulged privileged information, hers or anyone elseâs, though she knew why April had come. If their cousin wished to make a scene, so be it.
âItâs silence, is it?â Susanna said. âWell, then April can stay the night but sheâll leave in the morning.â
âYouâre kicking me out? Just like that?â April shook her head in disbelief.
âYour parents will want you to come home,â Susanna said. âIâll phone them.â
âIf anyone understands wanting to escape Boston it should be you. From what Iâve heard, weâre two peas in a pod. Difficult to control. I heard you were
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