The Last Night

1632 Words
I am flying when my world ends. Thirty five feet above the ground, the crowd below me holding their breath, the fly bar warm in my chalked hands, and I am alive in the specific way I am only ever completely alive up here. My name is Ivy Calloway. I was born into a circus and I grew up in the air and this is the only life I have ever wanted. Tonight is the last performance of the season. Full house. Eight hundred people packed into the midnight blue big top that my father built with his hands and his stubbornness and twenty two years of refusing to quit. The air smells like sawdust and chalk and the specific electricity of a crowd that has given itself over completely to something happening above them. I love this. I love every single thing about this. Marcus is on the catch bar across the tent. My partner. My boyfriend. Six years of his hands finding me at the top of every arc and four years of him finding me everywhere else too. He is good at this. The best young catcher I have ever seen. When he looks at you from thirty five feet up with his arms open and his chalk white hands ready you believe completely that falling is not falling at all. That it is simply the fastest way to get to him. The first pass lands clean. The second is better. The crowd is with us completely and I can feel it the way you feel weather. In the air before it arrives. Eight hundred people breathing in the same rhythm and I am flying and Marcus is catching and the big top is doing what my father built it to do. Being extraordinary. In the wings on the left side of the tent my father is watching. He is always watching. Thomas Calloway. Forty eight years old. Lion tamer. The man who started this circus with nothing and built it into something and who has stood in the wings of every single performance I have ever given since I was six years old. Before I grab the bar for the third pass I find him. He is in his performance jacket. The one with the gold trim that my mother has mended four times because he refuses to replace something that has never let him down. He is looking at me with the expression he always has when I am about to release. Like he is checking something underneath the surface. Something only he can see. He gives me the nod. The smallest nod in the world. I see you. I am here. I grab the bar. The third pass is the passing leap. Our signature. The most technically demanding element in the programme. Two bodies crossing mid-air at full speed and the timing so precise that a fraction of a second in either direction means a miss. We have run it four hundred and twelve times. Marcus counts. He says knowing the number makes each one feel like something you have already survived. I force out. Build the beat. Feel the apex arriving. At the top of the arc in the half second before I release I feel something. Wrong. It moves through the suspension cables above me and into my palms before my brain has finished the sentence. A vibration. A wrongness. The specific quality of a thing that has been failing quietly for a long time and has chosen this moment to stop failing quietly. My gut says stop. I release anyway. I have been overriding my gut my whole life. The rotation happens. I come out of it clean. Marcus's hands find my wrists and for one perfect half second the catch holds and I think I was wrong. I think everything is fine. Then the catch bar moves. Violently. Wrong. The rigging above Marcus shifts and his body lurches with it and his grip goes from certain to nothing in the space between one heartbeat and the next and the momentum is carrying me in the wrong direction and there is nothing between me and the platform support structure below and my body understands before my mind does. I am not going to reach the net. Everything slows down. The way everything slows when something catastrophic is arriving and your brain refuses to process it at normal speed because normal speed is too fast for something this size. I see the support structure. I see the net. Too far. I see Marcus on the catch bar above me. His face. I will spend months trying to name the expression on Marcus Vane's face in the moment his grip failed and I was falling. The closest I will ever get is this: Calculation. Not horror. Not devastation. Calculation. Something moves in my peripheral vision. Fast. Certain. From the direction of the wings. My father. He comes out of the wings like he was already moving before I started falling. Like the part of him that has been watching me fly for fourteen years felt the wrongness in the ropes before I did and was already in motion when I released. He crosses the space in seconds. He gets below me. He catches me. He takes everything I have. My full weight and my momentum and the force of thirty five feet and his body absorbs what mine cannot and we go down together and on the way to the ground he hits the support strut and the sound that makes is the sound that ends my life as I have known it. Not a crash. Not something I have a word for. A sound I will hear every day for the rest of my life. In the space between sleeping and waking. In the half second before I release a bar. In quiet rooms when I am not expecting it. That sound. We land. I am on top of him and my shoulder is destroyed and my wrist is folded wrong and I feel none of it because I am already turning and my father is on the ground and his eyes are open and he is looking at the midnight blue ceiling of the big top he built and his expression is the most specific thing I have ever seen on a human face. Not pain. Not fear. Peace. The absolute specific peace of a man who made a decision in half a second and has no regrets about it whatsoever. He chose me. He did not hesitate for a single second. He chose me. The tent is doing something I have never heard a tent do. Eight hundred people making a sound that has no name. That lives in the space between horror and silence. The working lights are still running because nobody has called the cue and the fly bar above us is still swinging in its patient indifferent arc. Like nothing happened. Like everything did not just shatter. I take my father's hand. His fingers close around mine. Warm. These hands. That lifted me onto my first training bar when I was six years old. That fed Augustus and mended rigging and held my mother through twenty two years of this impossible beautiful life. That have been in the wings of every single performance I have ever given. He turns his head. He looks at my face. He does the thing. The checking. The looking for something underneath the surface that only he can see. He says my name. Just my name. Ivy. The way only he says it. Like it is the most important word he knows. Like it is worth saying carefully. I hold his hand in both of mine and I say I'm here Dad. I've got you. I'm right here. I say it like if I say it enough times it will do something. I know it will not do something. I say it anyway because it is all I have. He looks at me for one more moment. Then he closes his eyes. Marcus is still on the catch bar. I know this without looking up. I know it the way I know the sound that is already living inside me permanently. The way I know the wrongness I felt in the ropes. The way I know the expression I saw on his face when his grip went from certain to nothing. Calculation. I do not look up. I hold my father's hand. He dies two hours later. He says my name once more in the hospital corridor. Just once. Quietly. Like he is checking one last time that I am there. I am there. I am holding his hand and I am there and then he is gone and my mother is on the other side of him and the three of us are still in this configuration because none of us has learned yet how to be in any other one. Eventually a nurse comes. Eventually my mother makes a sound I will never unhear. Eventually I let go. Not because I am ready. Because he is gone and I am still here and there is a circus full of eighty people and a mother who is breaking and a season that opens in six weeks and a rigging report that is going to say satisfactory and questions that nobody is going to want to answer and a cold thing arriving in my chest that has not yet found its full shape but is getting there. He moved toward the falling thing without hesitating. He always moved toward the falling thing. I let go of his hand. I stand up. I am Thomas Calloway's daughter. I know what to do with falling things.
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