THURSDAY, AUGUST 1ST
1 6 DAYS UNTIL THE READ- A -THON
MY GUT INSTINCTย is to step back into the hallway, close the door, and try again. See if anything else greets me.
Dad yanks me right into a hug, thwacking my back so heartily it makes
me cough.
โYou sick, kid?โ He draws back, gripping my shoulders as his sparkling green eyes give me a quick survey.
โA little,โ I say, because suddenly Iย doย feel feverish.
โCome on in, come on in,โ he says, like this isnโtย myย home. He spins me toward the kitchen. โYou finally get to meet Starfire.โ
A wordless squeal emanates from behind him. He sidesteps, presenting with a full-arm flourish the woman who opened my apartment door.
Several feet behind her, Miles hovers in the entryway, looking as flustered as Iโve seen him. Which is to say, technically not very. But forย Miles, every bit like a man who was just forced to let two strangers into his apartment.
I barely have time to register Starfireโs bubblegum-pink lip gloss before sheโs wrapping me in a bone-crunching hug that smells like the inside of a Bath & Body Works minutes after a gaggle of preteens rolled through hyped up on Frappuccinos.
โYou. Are. Just. So. Cute!โ She rocks me hard back and forth in time with her pronouncement.
โOh,โ I say. โThanks.โ
When she releases me, she keeps one of my hands in hers, her long, baby-blue fingernails slightly clawing into me. โFinally,โ she says tearily. โAt first I thought you were the tall one.โ She jerks her head over her shoulder toward Julia, whose face plainly projects:ย I have already been through what you are currently experiencing.
My eyes flick toward Dad, trying to communicate that I have no idea who this woman is.
But my father and I never had the time to develop anything resembling an unspoken language.
He just beams. โYou have no idea what it means to me to see my two girls together.โ
For one second, I genuinely wonder whetherย Starfireย is a half sister I never knew existed.
But whereas all Dadโs previous girlfriends easilyย couldย have fit that bill, Starfire has to be within a decade of Dadโs own ageโthough with the kind of filler and Botox that make it impossible to tell whether sheโs ten years younger or ten years older than him.
โShould we go into the living room,โ Miles pipes up, already guiding Dad down the hallway. โDaphne and I will grab some wine and snacks.โ
โSounds great!โ Julia chimes in, dutifully looping an arm through Starfireโs.
Starfire, for her part, makes another wordless baby-talk coo in the back of her throat, and squeezes my cheek before sheโs dragged off, a huge grin turned over her shoulder all the way, so that she keeps bumping into Julia and almost toppling over in her four-inch blue spike heels.
Miles ushers me into the kitchen, whispering, โThey just showed up.โ โAnd you let themย in,โ I whisper back.
โHe said he was your dad!โ he hisses. โAnd that you were expecting him! I didnโt know what to do.โ
โI mean, in the loosest interpretation of the word,โ I say, โthatโs my father, but Iโmย neverย expecting him.โ
โAnd Starfire?โ he asks.
โThe missing sixth member of the Spice Girls,โ I say.
โYouโve never met her,โ he guesses. โNever even heard of her,โ I say.
Miles sighs and turns to open the wine cabinet. I grab a couple of glasses from the other cabinet. When I turn back, heโs laughing to himself, shaking his head. โShould we take bets on who shows up next?โ
โAt this rate,โ I say, โI wonโt be surprised if my dead great-aunt Mildred climbs through the window tonight.โ
โNot even about the window part?โ he says. โWas she a contortionist?โ โIโm just assuming ghosts have the Santa Claus effect, where they can
turn into Jell-O and shimmy through tight spaces.โ
โYou ready for this?โ he asks, and while I havenโt told him a ton about my dad, heโs clearly picked up on enough in the last three minutes.
โNo,โ I say. โBut once I make it through the first bottle of wine, Iโll be better.โ
He sniffs the air. โAm I . . . smelling . . .โ
I nod. โThatโs my dad. Hotboxing in our apartment.โ
He winces. โWant me to ask him to stick his head out the window?โ
โBe my guest,โ I say. โIn fifteen minutes, heโll forget and light up again while heโs midsentence and you feel like you canโt interrupt him. The sentence will last twenty minutes.โ
He touches my elbow. โJust text me if you need an out.โ My brow lifts. โYouโll cause a diversion?โ
โIf I have to.โ
I turn toward the hall. โHe never stays long. This is probably a thirty- minute interlude on their way somewhere better. Weโll get it over with. Or I willโyouโre not obligated toโโ
โIโll stay,โ he says. โUnless you donโt want me to?โ
โNo, I definitely want you to,โ I admit. โItโs just that I absolutely do not expect you to endure this.โ
He runs a hand over my elbow, and I do my best not to shiver: โSomeone once told me Iโmย veryย good with strangers. Come on.โ
As we walk into the living room, Dad blows out a puff of smoke. Juliaโs stuff has all been moved into a tower in the corner, the air mattress three-
quarters deflated and balled up at the bottom, so that our guests can sit on the couch, two pairs of intensely white teeth floating against sun-bronzed skin.
โThere she is!โ Dad says, followed by a hacking cough.
โHere I am!โ I set the wineglasses on the coffee table before perching on the very edge of the chair perpendicular to the couch. โAnd you. And Starfire.โ
Starfire beams at me. Dad beams at Starfire. Miles and Julia exchange a bewildered glance.
โThese are for you,โ Dad says, scooting forward. He balances his joint on the corner of the coffee table and produces anโadmittedly beautifulโ bouquet from down on the rug. โWe thought they looked just like you.โ
โYour aura, of course,โ Starfire puts in. โItโs hard to judge in pictures, but JayJay was drawn to these, and we compared them to the picture he keeps in his wallet.โ
At my blank stare, Dad chimes in, โYour old senior photo!โ
News to me that Dad has a copy of that. Iโm pretty sure Mom and I agreed they were so bad it wasnโt worth getting any printed, and just sent the file for theย leastย awkward one to my school to use.
โThanks,โ I say stiffly, leaning over to accept the bouquet.
โThatโs something I loved about him right away,โ Starfire says dreamily, looking up at Dad as if a halo floats above his head. Iโve seen that look on plenty of Girlfriends Past. โHe never shows up empty-handed.โ
As a kid, I loved that about him too.
Until I realized his gifts were consolation prizes:ย Yes, I canceled our spring break visit, but my buddy gave us tickets to an amusement park!
I missed your choir concert, but isnโt this candy my chocolatier girlfriend makes amazing?
I set the bouquet on the coffee table, and Julia jumps up. โIโll put that in water,โ she says, and flees the scene.
Miles, genius that he is, starts filling the wineglasses and asks, โSo, howโd you two meet?โ He sits back onto the other chair, mimicking my ready-to-run posture.
โStarfire is my life coach,โ Dad says, after a gulp.
Starfire nods, a smile still stretched tight across her lips. โBut we actually knew each other before that.โ
โApparently, we were married in a past life,โ Dad says, like,ย Can you believe that coincidence?
Starfire nods. โSeveral times.โ
โOh,โ Miles says. โWell. Congratulations.โ
โI was an heiress on theย Titanic,โ Starfire explains. โAnd Jason was a handsome artist, but he was so, so poor. My social circles never would have approved. But we had a torrid affair, and he saved myย life.โ She goes back to nodding, a very earnest bobblehead.
Miles and I make eye contact. He looks like heโs trying so hard not to laugh he might throw up instead.
โSo just,โ I say, โexactly the plot of the movie, then.โ Starfireโs head cocks to one side. โWhat movie?โ
โWhat brings you into town?โ Miles, with the assist. โYou live in California, right?โ
โThatโs right.โ Dad relights his joint. โBut weโre on ourโโ
โExcuse me,โ Miles cuts in, smiling pleasantly. โWould you mind waiting to smoke until youโre outside?โ He says it so warmly and naturally. He really does have a superpower.
Just as unflappably affable, Dad says, โOh, sure! Of course,โ and tucks the joint back in his T-shirt pocket.
โSo, California?โ Miles says.
โRight,โ Dad says. โBut weโre driving across the country to celebrate.โ โCelebrate what?โ I ask.
โOh,ย Daffy,โ Starfire says, officially the first adult to ever abbreviate my two-syllable name that way. โOur union.โ
Dad frowns, a vague look of hurt around his eyes. โDidnโt you get the card?โ
โWhat card?โ I say.
โThe birthday card,โ he says. โWhere I told you we got married!โ โYou told me in a birthday card?โ I say.
โYou didnโt see it?โ he says again, still the injured party. โWhen was your birthday?โ Miles asks, brow furrowing. โEnd of April,โ I say.
He frowns at that, no doubt doing the math, realizing I was already living with him.
โI mustโve misplaced the card,โ I tell Dad.
Actually, since his birthday cards rarely contain anything other than my name and his signature, when they come at all, Iโd opted to put it exactly where I put the murder-house beanie heโd mailed me last year: in the trash.
The last thing I needed was another halfhearted gesture from a man who
sort ofย loved me.
The other last thing I needed was a reminder that I was turning thirty- three and had no one at all to celebrate it with.
Starfire is still smiling like if she lets even the corners of her lips touch, the apocalypse might be triggered.
And after everything she endured on theย Titanic, who can blame her for being so cautious?
โSo youโre passing through,โ I say. โHeaded somewhere fun?โ
โWell, eventually,โ Dad says, โweโre going to Starfireโs family in Vermont. But we figured weโd stick around here until Monday, if you could stand to have us that long.โ
My skin prickles. My blood runs cold. I wonder if this is how animals feel when a tornado is brewing.
Iโd braced for this to be an offensively short pit stop. Now I realize itโs so much worse. Weโre a free place to stay while they break up their transcontinental drive:ย Here are some beautiful flowers that reminded me of you; can I sleep on your couch?
This apartment is quickly becoming the set for a terrible sitcom.
Dadโs still talking, but Iโm hearing his voice as the warble of Charlie Brownโs teacher.
โIโm sorry,โ I finally get out. โWhat did you say?โ
โWeโre on no set schedule,โ Starfire says. โSo we can stay as long as you want!โ
Out of the corner of my eye, I see Julia walking into the room, with the flowers in a vase. She, very smartly, turns and heads right back into the kitchen.
Dad says, โWeโre so happy to be here, kid. Starfireโs cousin Sandra says we have to go see the dunes while weโre here.โ
โSheโs a psychic too,โ Starfire tells me, nodding enthusiastically. โWho?โ I say.
โSandra,โ she says. โSheโs got the gift.โ
Too bad she didnโt warn them there was no space for them in our apartment.
โIโve got a bit myself,โ Starfire goes on. โMy therapist says Iโm an
expath.โ
โYou mean empath?โ I ask, momentarily distracted from my overall goal.
She shakes her head. โNo, mineโs the other kind. I projectย powerful
emotions.โ
I take a beat to retrace my steps to where this conversation went off the rails. โWe donโt have a guest room,โ I tell Dad. โWe donโt even really have a couch right now. Juliaโs staying with us.โ I wave feebly toward the tower of clothes, pillows, and bedding.
Dadโs dark blond brows knit together, a look of confusion, probably at being denied something he hasnโt even fully bothered to ask for yet. Then he lets out a laugh. โOh, no,โ he says, shaking his head. โWe wouldnโt dream of imposing.โ
Since when?
โNo, no, I got us a motel room,โ he says. โItโs a ways outside of town, but we donโt mind ferrying back and forth.โ
This is a surprise indeed.
โWait a second.โ Starfireโs eyes widen. โI thought there were two bedrooms in here.โ
โThere . . . are?โ Milesโs eyes narrow, like if he focuses, he might be able to see her logic drifting through the room.
โAnd you donโt use one as a guest room?โ she asks.
โThere are two of us,โ I point out.
โYou two donโt share a room?โ Dad says, dismayed.
For the first time, Starfireโs smile falters. โOh no.โ She almost sounds like sheโs going to cry. She looks between Miles and me. โDo you want to talk about it? We can be, like, your mentors. Yourย loveย mentors.โ
โWhat,โ I say, as Miles says, โLove?โ
Starfire drops her voice to a whisper, like somehow that will keep the rest of us from hearing, and leans over to pat Milesโs knee. โYou two will get through this.โ
โGet through what?โ Miles shakes his head, squinting again. Unfortunately, Iโm not as lost as he is. โWeโre not together.โ He flinches when understanding hits.
โOhย no,โ Starfire cries. โYou brokeย up?โ Her shoulders hitch. I genuinely think this woman Iโve never met is about to cry for a relationship that never happened.
โWeโre friends!โ Miles clarifies, a littleย tooย frantically. โJust friends.
Separate rooms.โ
โOh, phew!โ Dad eyes me and jerks a thumb at Miles. โI like this guy. Glad I donโt have toย dislike him now. Especially after what happened with the last guy! So is anyone hungry? Would love to have a little belated birthday, kiddo.โ
โOf course we donโt want to intrude.โ Starfire drapes a manicured hand over the crook of Dadโs elbow. โSince you werenโt expecting us.โ
โDefinitely,โ Dad says. โWeโll work around your schedule, take whatever time you can spare for a couple of old coots.โ
Starfire scoffs and swats his arm. โOh, you take that back, JayJay.
Youโre only as old as you feel.โ
โThis one feels about twenty-two most of the time,โ Dad tells me, adoration sparkling in his eyes.
It triggers a confusing flurry of emotions in my chest.
A softening toward this new incarnation of him, the one with an age- appropriate partner and the foresight to book a motel room.
But also, a reawakening of the old hurt. The reminder that my father never found a person he couldnโt love more than heโd ever loved me or Mom, a place he didnโt want to be more than he wanted to be at home.
โWhat do you say, kid?โ he asks. โYou got time to play tour guide for your dad and stepmom?โ
Miles shoots me a look, brow raised, waiting for me to signal,ย Leap over the coffee table and light something on fire while I climb out the window!
And maybe I shouldโmaybe Dadโs just setting a box of cupcakes atop a trou-de-loup booby trap.
But heโsย here. With aย wife, and a room already booked, and for the first time I can remember, heโsย askingย whether Iโm free, rather than assuming Iโll drop everything because heโs deigned to show up.
โIs there room for two more in our plans?โ I ask Miles.
His head cocks. I can tell heโs waiting for more of a signal than that, so I add, โWe could probably make it work, right?โ
He holds my gaze for a second, giving me a chance to change my mind, to scream โRyan Reynolds!โ at the top of my lungs.
I donโt.
He turns a tamped-down version of his impishly charming smile toward them. โYou all bring bathing suits?โ
Julia pokes her head back into the room without a hint of shame that sheโs obviously been eavesdropping from one foot out of sight. โI knew it! Weโre going on the boat, arenโt we?โ





