be let alone.â
âThen she should have gone to a religious college,â opined Bettiann. âOr some girlâs school.â
âMy â¦Â my scholarship was to this place!â cried Sophy, tested past endurance. âI didnât have a choice!â
There was a metallic quality to her voice, rather like a hammer striking an anvil to make first a clang, then a lingering reverberation that faded slowly into silence, an inhuman hardness coupled with an all-too-human desperation, as though two people â¦Â two creatures spoke at once. Faye stopped pacing; Ophy stopped grinning; Carolynâs stroking hand stilled. Even the lazy cat looked up, suddenly alert to a tension, a presence in the room that had not been there a moment ago. They all ceased breathing as they searched Sophyâs tear-streaked face staring at them from the mirror, surprised to see only her face when that Gorgonâs voice should have come from another, more terrible creature.
In later years Carolyn occasionally wakened from a sound sleep or turned from a present task, thinking she had heard the clang of that voice, like the door of a distant vault being closed, shutting something in, or out, a ringing adamant, weighty as fate itself. Yet, so she told herself, the sound was not unnatural. It had force, like the roaring of cataracts or the spume of a geyser, and it was earthly, not alien. So she felt when they heard that voice for the first time, when Sophy cried woe into the mirror:
âI donât want men to ask me out. I donât want them to think of me that way. I can feel their thoughts. Itâs like being raped inside their heads, little pieces of me ripped off and taken into them, used up. I want them not to think of me, not to discuss me, not to make bets with each other, can they get me to go out with them, can they kiss me, can they take me to bed!â
A silence came while the reverberations stilled. Then Bettiann said:
âItâs only words and thoughts, Sophy. Words canât hurt you.â
âWords canât hurt?â Sophy cried. âWhy do you believe they canât? Words have hurt all of us! Itâs your motherâs words that make you throw up your dinner almost every night, Bettiann. Words made you believe youâre unattractive, Aggie! Words may make you marry a man you donât love, Carolyn!Words are as powerful as weapons, as useful as tools. They can injure like a flung stone, cut like a knife, batter like a club. They can open heaven or they can ruin and destroy!â
âShh, now,â Carolyn cried in sudden inexplicable terror, afraid to let silence settle upon that outcry, afraid to let it go on to another word, phrase, sentence. That voice, that particular voice of Sophyâs, had to be stilled, quieted, put at rest, or it could destroy them. âYou donât need to fight with us, Sophy. Weâre with you. Just explain what you mean.â
Sophy wiped the tears angrily, using the back of her hand. âI â¦Â look at the lives of those who are greatly desired. I see pretty girls who burn hot, with sunny faces, their bodies like flame. They sing. They dance. They appear on the covers of magazines. I ask myself if it is merely coincidence that so many of them have such great troubles, so many die so young. It is as if they are eaten up alive, their souls nibbled away by all those who have fantasized about them, leered at them, used words and thoughts on them. In my peopleâs stories maidens lean against the dragonâs great scaled side under the shelter of a wing and learn secrets. In your stories maidens are chained to a stake for the dragon to burn or devour! The maiden may be mythical and the dragon invisible, but there is still truth in that. I donât want your dragons devouring me.â
Agnes, lost, ventured, âLike â¦Â when someone takes a picture of a primitive person? Theyâre stealing the