Suspension
Silas spent in the basement of the natural history wing and he worked with things that were dead but still had to look alive. He was a restorer of taxidermy and his world was made of fine brushes and tiny needles and a very specific kind of silence.
He told me once that the hardest part of his job was not the sewing of the hides or the setting of the glass eyes but it was the management of the air. If a single speck of skin dander or a bit of old plaster landed on a preserved hawk it would act like a magnet for moisture and then the rot would start all over again even though the bird had been gone for a century.
He wore a mask that looked like something a pilot would wear and he moved with a slow grace so he did not kick up the ghosts of the floor. He knew that the things we do not see are the things that actually own the room and he treated every cubic inch of space like it was a minefield of invisible weight.
The Warmth of a New Beginning
Rachel did not have the training of Silas and she did not have his mask or his slow grace. She had a new house and she had a