“It was. Mara and I did a couple feedings each day, but we had school and homework, so it was mostly my parents. They hardly slept for two months.” I smiled at the memory of Dad sitting on the floor of their walk-in closet, where Juno had insisted on having her kittens. He’d still be in his dress shirt and tie, my tattered old crib blanket in his lap, feeding these mouse-size creatures their formula, one drop at a time. Both hands would be occupied, so his tears would go unwiped.


This was during the Fog Year, when it was okay to feel sad and raw. I hadn’t seen him weep since then. Maybe he couldn’t admit that there are some holes even God can’t fill.


Bailey started caressing Juno’s belly with more confidence. The cat squeezed her eyes shut in bliss-out mode. Her tiny paws opened and closed like she was kneading the air.


Bailey laughed. “She looks like Joe Cocker when he sang ‘With a Little Help from My Friends’ at Woodstock.”


“Who?”


“He got so into it, he started doing this spastic air guitar.” She lifted her hands near her chest and mimed singing, wrists bent at odd angles, jerking like an epileptic praying mantis. “Whaaaaat would you doooo if I sang out of tune?”


Juno jumped to her feet, ready to run. Bailey dropped the act. “Ooh, sorry, kitty. Didn’t mean to scare you.” She petted the cat soothingly. “Pull the video up on my tablet. I’m sure it’s online.”


We watched it together, and I knew I would always remember that moment, when my cat’s paws made Bailey think of an ancient song. It was the moment I realized how amazing her mind was. Not to mention her fingers.


When the video had thirty seconds left, I kissed Bailey. She must have taken her hand off the cat, because both were on my face, then in my hair. Then one in my hair and the other on my shoulder—not the outside part, but the top, the heel of her hand resting on my collarbone, her thumb curving up my neck, almost to my ear.


Even though we’d been eating pretzels, she tasted like sugar.


The music faded and Bailey pulled away a little. “We should probably get back to derivatives,” she whispered.


My heart turned to lead, like I was a victim of an alchemist’s prank. Is this a blow off? Am I a bad kisser? Why would she kiss me for thirty seconds if it was so awful?


I knew I should say, “Okay,” and meekly follow her back to the table, hoping that maybe one day she’d give me another chance.


Instead I kissed her again, swift and soft, just a brush, a tease.


Bailey let out a gasp. “But let’s not.”

Bailey went home a couple hours later for dinner. I spent the rest of the evening attempting to do homework but mostly reenacting our make-out session in my mind. I was creating an extended 3-D director’s-cut version when the front door opened downstairs. My parents were home.


I checked the clock on my nightstand. Eleven thirty? What had

Mom and Dad been doing to keep themselves out so late? Not that they weren’t allowed to have a life. If anything, I wished they’d go out more, just the two of them, like they used to when my father had a job. Maybe money can’t buy happiness, but it can buy happy-making situations, like Mom and Dad’s date nights. (Or a new MLB 2K or Madden game. I was still playing three versions ago and had to go to Kane’s to play the upgrades.)

Curious, and hungry for a bedtime snack, I went downstairs. Mara was in the kitchen pouring cereal, generic cornflakes mixed with generic corn puffs.

Mom swept off her purple silk scarf and laid it over the back of a kitchen chair. She looked exhilarated. “Guess what, kids? Family meeting, living room, ten minutes.”

Weird. What was so urgent it couldn’t wait until tomorrow? The last family meeting had been called to announce that Mom was going back to work, but that had taken place right after dinner.

“I’ll make chamomile tea,” Mom added.


Weirder. She only gave us that when we had insomnia. I sat on the couch with Mara, trying not to think of what I’d been doing in the same spot with Bailey six hours before. No X-rated acts, just endless kissing, hands in each other’s hair, sometimes me pressing her down, sometimes her pressing me down.

I rested my hand on the empty cushion beside me, remembering the imprint our bodies had made. Dad cleared his throat. I stopped reminiscing and put my hand back in my lap as he murmured something about “bathe all his flesh in water, and be unclean until the evening.” Mara was trying not to laugh.

Then my mom entered and proudly announced where they’d been that night and who they’d been with.


Mara stopped laughing, but I started. It had to be a joke.

It was not a joke.


“We have you to thank, David.” Mom set her empty mug on the end table and beamed at me. I hadn’t touched my own tea during the ten-minute explanation—I’d seen enough spy movies to know you don’t drink anything that crazy people give you. “You were the one who told us about Sophia Visser.”


“And you thought she was a con artist,” I reminded her. “But that night, after you went to bed, we looked into her ministry. It’s as pure as they come. As you said, she doesn’t ask for money, just faith.”


“But—” Frustrated, I turned to my dad. “You were the one who said it was sinful to predict the Rapture date. Didn’t Jesus say something like, even he and the angels didn’t know, only God?” “That was then, this is now,” my mother explained. “In New Testament days, they thought the Lord would return during their lifetimes.


Since then, people have developed ways to calculate these events.” “Wait.” I sat forward, putting out both my hands. “You’re always telling us that every word of the Bible is just as true today as it was


when it was written. Now you’re saying times have changed because what, we have better math?”


My father’s voice boomed forth. “That servant, who knew his lord’s will, and didn’t prepare, nor do what he wanted, will be beaten with many stripes.”


He better be speaking metaphorically. I looked at Mara to see if she was as troubled as I was. She was quiet but chewing her nails like crazy.


“He who doubts is condemned,” Dad continued. “Whatever is not of faith is sin.”


No further questions allowed, in other words.


Then we were dismissed. Sent to bed. Like children. I left my untouched tea and went upstairs, Mara on my heels.


We stopped at the thresholds of our respective bedrooms. It had been years since we’d been in each other’s rooms. Mara even had a no dorky little brothers allowed sign on her door, yellowed with age but still enforced and obeyed.


Mara twisted the ends of her hair around her finger, looking stunned. The left lens of her glasses was smudged. Usually she cleaned them obsessively so they never held so much as an oversize piece of dust.


All I could say was “Um.”


“Yeah. Um.” Then she went into her room and shut the door softly.


Ten minutes later, after I’d brushed my teeth and gotten into bed, my phone buzzed with a text from Mara: Is this real? Me: I hope it’s a joke. Is there such a September Fools Day? Mara: It’s your birthday now. Maybe you’re the Sept Fool. Me: Ha freaking ha.


Mara: Srsly, make them stop. This was your idea.


Me: I’ll come up with something. Don’t be scared.


I waited for her to text back a protest. Accusing her of fear normally got me a punch in the arm and a half whine, half bellow, “I’m not scared!”


But this time, nothing. Maybe she’d fallen asleep, or was planning a witty retort, or was finding it as hard as I was to put this feeling of dread into words. I set my phone back on my nightstand. Just as I turned out the light, another text from Mara came through.


Thanks.+ Happy Birthday.

Mara and I left early for our community-college English class the next morning to avoid further Rush lectures. As we pulled out of the driveway, I saw my father standing on the front porch, gazing up at the puffy clouds in the sharp blue sky, then down at a pair of starlings hopping over the front lawn. He waved to us, wearing a serene smile. He reminded me of Sophia Visser’s photo on her home page.

“Dad looks different today,” I told Mara. “He looks happy.” “That makes one of us.”


I frowned. Nothing had made Dad truly happy since John died.

Our faith gave us comfort in our sorrow, but it couldn’t take that sorrow away. Maybe this Rush obsession would, at least for my parents, and at least for a while.

There were still mornings when I would get up, walk into the kitchen, and realize that that day would be another day without John. If I didn’t obliterate that thought with music or a hard workout or homework, it would be followed by the hardest reality of all, that every day from now until the end of my life would be a Day Without John. No phone call or email, much less a catch-and-throw partner or a Three Stooges marathon companion.So I could see how the end of the world, a world that insisted on being a World Without John, would be hard to resist.

“They’re insane,” Mara said as we drove away down the street. “Not go to school in the spring? What about graduation? What about college? I’m halfway through my applications! I have SATs next Saturday!” She was nearly hyperventilating. “What am I going to do?”

“Take the SATs. And just humor Mom and Dad. By January they’ll have changed their minds.”


“You’d better be right, or I will kill you for telling them about this Sophia Visser chick.”


“If you kill me, I’ll just rise again on Rush night.” I lifted my arms like a zombie and let a little drool trickle out of the corner of my mouth. “Mara has tasty bwaaaaains!”


“Stop it,” she said, but she was laughing a little. “Can I ask you a serious question?”


“I don’t know, can you?”


This time she didn’t laugh. “Do you believe in the Rapture? I don’t mean on May eleventh or whatever. I mean in general, that Jesus is coming back for us one day before the apocalypse and Armageddon.”


“That’s what Pastor Ed says. That’s what Mom and Dad—okay, forget what Mom and Dad say.” They were quickly losing status as reliable authorities. “It’s in the Bible, right?”


“Is it?”


“Somewhere in Revelation, I think. I’ll look it up. In youth group they told us the Rapture could happen today, so we can’t wait for tomorrow to get right with the Lord.”


“Yeah, it could happen today because all the prophecies have been fulfilled, or so they say.” Mara waved her hand at our surroundings, the tree-lined road and the big old houses. “Doesn’t it bother you, though? The thought of all this wiped out?”


“The world’s a crappy place, and it’s getting worse. Wars, global warming, the economy . . .”


“But there’s lots of good stuff too.”


Like kissing Bailey. “Christians aren’t supposed to focus on this world. It’s temporary, right? We’re supposed to focus on the next world, which is forever.”


“What if the Rapture happened tonight, before your birthday dinner?”


“In theory, that would suck. But that heavenly banquet is probably even better than IHOP.”


“This isn’t funny, David.”


“Yes, it is.” It has to be, or I will go crazy. “You will not kill my birthday buzz.”


“What about everyone left behind?” She stopped at the intersection with the main road and peered at the convex mirror on the tree across the street, checking for cars coming around the sharp curve to our left. “You think they deserve to suffer?”


“I don’t decide who deserves what. But no, I don’t want everyone to suffer. I don’t want anyone to suffer.” I gestured to a dead raccoon lying on the shoulder of the road. “That’s the whole point of the end of the world. No more suffering.”


Mara pulled onto the main road with a squeal of tires. “And no more joy.”


My cell phone rang. Mom.


“Happy birthday!” Background traffic noise told me she was in the car. “I’m sorry I missed you this morning. I wanted to ask if you’d like to bring a friend along for your birthday dinner tonight.”