“Do you knoweverythingabout glass?” Holly asked, and Lucy laughed.
“I know a lot, but I’m learning new things all the time.”
“Can I watch you make something out of glass?”
“Of course. When I get better, you can visit my studio and we’ll make something together. A little suncatcher, maybe.”
“Yes, yes, I want to do that,” Holly exclaimed.
“We can start right now—the first step in the process is to create a design. Do you have crayons and paper?”
Holly flew to her art cabinet, pulled out some supplies, and hurried back to Lucy. “Can I draw anything I want?”
“Anything. We might have to simplify it later, to make sure the pieces are the right shape and size for cutting… but for now, set your imagination free.”
Holly knelt beside the coffee table and set out a pad of paper. Carefully she pushed aside an apothecary jar terrarium, filled with moss, button ferns, and white miniorchids. “Did you always want to be a glass artist?” she asked, sorting through crayons.
“Ever since I was your age.” Gently Lucy tugged the pink baseball cap from Holly’s head and flipped it backward to make it easier for her to see. “What do you want to be when you grow up?”
“A ballerina or a zookeeper.”
As she watched Holly concentrate on her drawing, her small hands gripping the crayons, Lucy was suffused with a feeling of satisfaction. How natural it was for children to express themselves through art. It occurred to Lucy that she could start an art class for children at her studio. Was there a way to honor her craft more than to share it with a child? She could start with just a few students, and see how it went.
Considering the idea, daydreaming, Lucy played with the empty Ruby Red juice glass, rubbing her thumb over the hobnail pattern. Without warning, her fingers turned hot, and the glass began to change shape in her hand. Startled, Lucy moved to set the glass down, but in the next instant it had disappeared, and a small, living form bolted away from her palm. With a loud buzz, it zipped across the room.
Holly let out a shriek and jumped onto the sofa, causing Lucy to flinch in pain. “What is it?”
Stunned, Lucy wrapped her arms around the girl. “It’s okay, sweetie, it’s just… it’s a hummingbird.”
Nothing like this had ever happened in front of someone before. How could she explain it to Holly? The tiny red bird batted against the closed windows in its efforts to escape, the impact of its delicate bones and beak making audible taps.
Gritting her teeth with effort, Lucy leaned to grip the window frame and tried to push it upward. “Holly, can you help me?”
Together they struggled with the window, but the frame was stuck. The hummingbird flew back and forth, striking the glass again.
Holly let out another cry. “I’ll get Uncle Sam.”
“Wait… Holly…” But the little girl had gone in a flash.
***
A cry from downstairs caused Sam to drop a garbage bag filled with debris. It was Holly. His hearing had become attuned so that he could instantly tell the differences among Holly’s screams, whether they were happy, fearful, or angry. “It’s like I know dolphin language,” he had once told Mark.
This shriek was a startled one. Had something happened to Lucy? Sam went for the stairs, taking them two and three at a time.
“Uncle Sam!” he heard Holly shout. She met him at the bottom of the stairs, bouncing anxiously on her toes. “Come and help us!”
“What is it? Are you okay? Is Lucy—” As he followed into the living room, something buzzed by his ear, something like a bee the size of a golf ball. Sam barely restrained himself from swatting at it. Thankfully he hadn’t, because as it went to a corner of the ceiling and batted against the wall, he saw that it was a hummingbird. It made tiny cheeping noises, its wings a blur.
Lucy was on the sofa, struggling with the window.
“Stop,” Sam said curtly, reaching her in three strides. “You’re going to hurt yourself.”
“He keeps slamming against the walls and windows,” Lucy said breathlessly. “I can’t open this stupid thing—”
“Humidity. It swells the wood frame.” Sam pushed the window upward, leaving an open space for the hummingbird to fly through.
But the miniature bird hovered, darted, and batted against the wall. Sam wondered how they could guide it to the window without damaging a wing. At this rate it was going to die of stress or exhaustion.