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Chapter no 20

One of Us Is Lying

โ€ŒCooperโ€Œ

Tuesday, October 16, 5:45 p.m.

โ€œPass the milk, would you, Cooperstown?โ€ Pop jerks his chin at me during dinner, his eyes drifting toward the muted television in our living room, where college football scores scroll along the bottom of the screen. โ€œSo whatโ€™d you do with your night off?โ€ He thinks itโ€™s hilarious that Luis posed as me after the gym yesterday.

I hand over the carton and picture myself answering his question honestly.ย Hung out with Kris, the guy Iโ€™m in love with. Yeah, Pop, I said guy. No, Pop, Iโ€™m not kidding. Heโ€™s a premed freshman at UCSD who does modeling on the side. Total catch. Youโ€™d like him.

And then Popโ€™s head explodes. Thatโ€™s how it always ends in my imagination.

โ€œJust drove around for a while,โ€ I say instead.

Iโ€™m not ashamed of Kris. Iโ€™mย not.ย But itโ€™s complicated.

Thing is, I didnโ€™t realize I could feel that way about a guy till I met him. I mean, yeah, Iย suspected.ย Since I was eleven or so. But I buried those thoughts as far down as I could because Iโ€™m a Southern jock shooting for an MLB career and thatโ€™s not how weโ€™re supposed to be wired.

I really did believe that for most of my life. Iโ€™ve always had a girlfriend. But it was never hard to hold off till marriage like I was raised. I only recently understood that was more of an excuse than a deeply held moral belief.

Iโ€™ve been lying to Keely for months, but I did tell her the truth about Kris. I met him through baseball, although he doesnโ€™t play. Heโ€™s friends

with another guy I made the exhibition rounds with, who invited us both to his birthday party. And heย isย German.

I just left out the part about being in love with him.

I canโ€™t admit that to anybody yet. That itโ€™s not a phase, or experimentation, or distraction from pressure. Nonny was right. My stomach does flips when Kris calls or texts me. Every single time. And when Iโ€™m with him I feel like a real person, not the robot Keely called me: programmed to perform as expected.

But Cooper-and-Kris only exists in the bubble of his apartment. Moving it anyplace else scares the hell out of me. For one thing, itโ€™s hard enough making it in baseball when youโ€™re a regular guy. The number of openly gay players who are part of a major league team stands at exactly one. And heโ€™s still in the minors.

For another thing: Pop. My whole brain seizes when I imagine his reaction. Heโ€™s the kind of good old boy who calls gay people โ€œfagsโ€ and thinks we spend all our time hitting on straight guys. The one time we saw a news story about the gay baseball player, he snorted in disgust and said,ย Normal guys shouldnโ€™t have to deal with that crap in the locker room.

If I tell him about Kris and me, seventeen years of being the perfect son would be gone in an instant. Heโ€™d never look at me the same. The way heโ€™s looking at me now, even though Iโ€™m a murder suspect whoโ€™s been accused of using steroids.ย Thatย he can handle.

โ€œTesting tomorrow,โ€ he reminds me. I have to get tested for steroids every damn week now. In the meantime I keep pitching, and no, my fastball hasnโ€™t gotten any slower. Because I havenโ€™t been lying. I didnโ€™t cheat. I strategically improved.

It was Popโ€™s idea. He wanted me to hold back a little junior year, not give my all, so thereโ€™d be more excitement around me during showcase season. And there was. People like Josh Langley noticed me. But now, of course, it looks suspicious.ย Thanks, Pop.

At least he feels guilty about it.

I was sure, when the police got ready to show me the unpublished About That posts last month, that I was going to read something about Kris and me. Iโ€™d barely known Simon, only talked with him one-on-one a few

times. But anytime I got near him Iโ€™d worry about him learning my secret. Last spring at junior prom heโ€™d been drunk off his ass, and when I ran into him in the bathroom he flung an arm around me and pulled me so close I practically had a panic attack. I was sure that Simonโ€”whoโ€™d never had a girlfriend as far as I knewโ€”realized I was gay and was putting the moves on me.

I freaked out so bad, I had Vanessa disinvite him to her after-prom party. And Vanessa, who never passes up a chance to exclude somebody, was happy to do it. I let it stand even after I saw Simon hitting on Keely later with the kind of intensity you canโ€™t fake.

I hadnโ€™t let myself think about that since Simon died; how the last time Iโ€™d talked to him, I acted like a jerk because I couldnโ€™t deal with who I was.

And the worst part is, even after all thisโ€”I still canโ€™t.

Nate

Tuesday, October 16, 6:00 p.m.

When I get to Glennโ€™s Diner half an hour after Iโ€™m supposed to meet my mother, her Kia is parked right out front. Score one for the new and improved version, I guess. I wouldnโ€™t have been at all surprised if she didnโ€™t show.

I thought about doing the same. A lot. But pretending she doesnโ€™t exist hasnโ€™t worked out all that well.

I park my bike a few spaces away from her car, feeling the first drops of rain hit my shoulders before I enter the restaurant. The hostess looks up with a polite, quizzical expression. โ€œIโ€™m meeting somebody. Macauley,โ€ I say.

She nods and points to a corner booth. โ€œRight over there.โ€

I can tell my motherโ€™s already been there for a while. Her sodaโ€™s almost empty and sheโ€™s torn her straw wrapper to shreds. When I slide into the seat across from her, I pick up a menu and scan it carefully to avoid her eyes. โ€œYou order?โ€

โ€œOh, no. I was waiting for you.โ€ I can practically feel her willing me to look up. I wish I werenโ€™t here. โ€œDo you want a hamburger, Nathaniel? You used to love Glennโ€™s hamburgers.โ€

I did, and I do, but now I want to order anything else. โ€œItโ€™s Nate, okay?โ€ I snap my menu shut and stare at the gray drizzle pelting the window. โ€œNobody calls me that anymore.โ€

โ€œNate,โ€ she says, but my name sounds strange coming from her. One of those words you say over and over until it loses meaning. A waitress comes by and I order a Coke and a club sandwich I donโ€™t want. My burner phone buzzes in my pocket and I pull it out to a text from Bronwyn.ย Hope itโ€™s going ok.ย I feel a jolt of warmth, but put the phone back without answering. I donโ€™t have the words to tell Bronwyn what itโ€™s like to have lunch with a ghost.

โ€œNate.โ€ My mother clears her throat around my name. It still sounds wrong. โ€œHow isโ€ฆHow are you doing in school? Do you still like science?โ€

Christ.ย Do you still like science?ย Iโ€™ve been in remedial classes since ninth grade, but how would she know? Progress reports come home, I fake my fatherโ€™s signature, and they go back. Nobody ever questions them. โ€œCan you pay for this?โ€ I ask, gesturing around the table. Like the belligerent asshole Iโ€™ve turned into in the past five minutes. โ€œBecause I canโ€™t. So if youโ€™re expecting that you should tell me before the food comes.โ€

Her face sags, and I feel a pointless stab of triumph. โ€œNathโ€”Nate. I would neverโ€ฆwell. Why should you believe me?โ€ She pulls out a wallet and puts a couple of twenties on the table, and I feel like shit until I think about the bills I keep tossing into the trash instead of paying. Now that Iโ€™m not earning anything, my fatherโ€™s disability check barely covers the mortgage, utilities, and his alcohol.

โ€œHow do you have money when youโ€™ve been in rehab for months?โ€

The waitress returns with a glass of Coke for me, and my mother waits until she leaves to answer. โ€œOne of the doctors at Pine Valleyโ€”thatโ€™s the facility Iโ€™ve been inโ€”connected me with a medical transcription company. I can work anywhere, and itโ€™s very steady.โ€ She brushes her hand against mine and I jerk away. โ€œI can help you and your father out, Nate. I will. I

wanted to ask youโ€”if you have a lawyer, for the investigation? We could look into that.โ€

Somehow, I manage not to laugh. Whatever sheโ€™s making, itโ€™s not enough to pay a lawyer. โ€œIโ€™m good.โ€

She keeps trying, asking about school, Simon, probation, my dad. It almost gets to me, because sheโ€™s different than I remember. Calmer and more even-tempered. But then she asks, โ€œHowโ€™s Bronwyn handling all this?โ€

Nope.ย Every time I think about Bronwyn my body reacts like Iโ€™m back on the couch in her media roomโ€”heart pounding, blood rushing, skin tingling. Iโ€™m not about to turn the one good thing thatโ€™s come out of this mess into yet another awkward conversation with my mother. Which means weโ€™ve pretty much run out of things to say. Thank God the foodโ€™s arrived so we can stop trying to pretend the last three years never happened. Even though my sandwich tastes like nothing, like dust, itโ€™s better than that.

My mother doesnโ€™t take the hint. She keeps bringing up Oregon and her doctors andย Mikhail Powers Investigatesย until I feel as if Iโ€™m about to choke. I pull at the neck of my T-shirt like thatโ€™ll help me breathe, but it doesnโ€™t. I canโ€™t sit here listening to her promises and hoping itโ€™ll all work out. That sheโ€™ll stay sober, stay employed, stay sane. Just stay.

โ€œI have to go,โ€ I say abruptly, dropping my half-eaten sandwich onto my plate. I get up, banging my knee against the edge of the table so hard I wince, and walk out without looking at her. I know she wonโ€™t come after me. Thatโ€™s not how she operates.

When I get outside Iโ€™m confused at first because I canโ€™t see my bike. Itโ€™s wedged between a couple of huge Range Rovers that werenโ€™t there before. I make my way toward it, then suddenly a guy whoโ€™s way overdressed for Glennโ€™s Diner steps in front of me with a blinding smile. I recognize him right away but look through him as if I donโ€™t.

โ€œNate Macauley? Mikhail Powers. Youโ€™re a hard man to find, you know that? Thrilled to make your acquaintance. Weโ€™re working on our follow-up broadcast to the Simon Kelleher investigation and Iโ€™d love your take. How about I buy you a coffee inside and we talk for a few minutes?โ€

I climb onto my bike and strap on my helmet like I didnโ€™t hear him. I get ready to back up, but a couple of producer types block my way. โ€œHow about you tell your people to move?โ€

His smileโ€™s as wide as ever. โ€œIโ€™m not your enemy, Nate. The court of public opinion matters in a case like this. What do you say we get them on your side?โ€

My mother appears in the parking lot, her mouth falling open when she sees whoโ€™s next to me. I slowly reverse my bike until the people in my way move and Iโ€™ve got a clear path. If she wants to help me, she can talk to him.

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