The wooden stairs creak as I walk up to them, much worse now than when I was a kid. Iโd have a hell of a time sneaking out these days.
I glance back at Dad as I go. Heโs in the kitchen, taking a breath so big I can see his shoulders rise with the effort. My presence makes many people uncomfortable, but none more so than my own father.
I think about Nathan, standing in the corner of his bedroom yesterday, rambling about work as he watched me pack. I could feel the nerves rolling off him.
Fuck, he reminds me of my father. Wonderful. My therapist is going to love this.
The master bedroom door is cracked and I can hear the sound of a humidifier coming from inside. I press my hand to the wood, nudging it open.
Mom sits on the bed, back propped up with pillows, legs stretched out in front of her, one in a giant white cast. Her blond (fake, sheโs brunette like me) hair is pulled up in a ponytail, and sheโs wearing a full face of makeup. Iโve rarely seen Mom without makeup. Plumpton is the sort of town where people drop by unexpectedly.
She spots me creeping at the door and smiles. โLucy! I thought I heard you down there. Come here, hon.โ
I step inside. The master bedroom used to have an elaborate gallery wall over the bed of me growing upโat least a dozen pictures of me being cute as hell throughout the yearsโbut thereโs a large blue and white quilt there now. It was probably handmade by Mom, but Iโm still a little salty about being replaced by a blanket.
โHi, Mom.โ
โCome here and give me a hug. I know I look dreadful, but donโt worry, Iโm fine.โ
She does not look dreadful. She does look older, though. Maybe that was what she meant byย dreadful. My mom, like her mom, is blessed with smooth, beautiful skin that has always made her look a good ten years younger than she really is. Now, at fifty-five, sheโs starting to actually look like sheโs in her fifties.
I inherited this great skin, but I look twenty-nine. I might look well into my thirties, on a bad day. Being accused of murder has aged me prematurely.
I walk to the bed and give her a quick hug. She smells like perfume. Probably expensive, but I wouldnโt know. All perfume smells like flowery garbage to me.
โIโm so glad you came,โ she says. โYour grandmother is being impossible about this party. The woman wonโt even let us take her out to dinner for most of her birthdays and now she suddenly wants a huge shindig with the entire family? And she tells meย two weeksย beforehand? I think sheโs trying to kill me just so she can brag about outliving her daughter.โ
I donโt argue, because that does sound like Grandma.
I perch on the edge of her bed. โHowโs the leg? Did they give you some good pain meds?โ
โI donโt need pain medication.โ She waves her hand dismissively. Mom has more of a Texas accent than Dad or I do, and it makes everything she says sound friendly. She grew up here, in Plumpton, but Dad didnโt move to Texas until college. I lost what little accent I had after a couple of years away. Iโm not sad about it.
โHowโd you even get up here?โ
โI just used my crutches.โ She flexes her biceps. โThe doctor said it would be difficult, but it was a breeze. All those sessions with the personal trainer are paying off.โ
โWhen did you become a gym rat?โ
She wrinkles her nose. โI donโt believe I like that term. But exercise is very important for older women. Do you still spend all those hours on the treadmill?โ
โYes.โ Running until I canโt think is the only way I stay sane, most days.
Well, relatively sane.
โMaybe theyโll let you use my pass while Iโm injured. Iโll remind them that Iโm not suing.โ
โVery big of you.โ
She pats my hand. โNow, I want you to feel free to go wherever while youโre in town. I told several people that youโre coming so that no one will be surprised. Iโm sure itโs spread all around town by now.โ
โIโm sure.โ
โI do hope youโll go out and see folks.โ Her hand is still on mine, and she looks at me anxiously.
โNo one wants to see me, Mom.โ
โSure they do. And I think itโs best if you donโt hide. You donโt have anything to be ashamed of, do you?โ
Itโs a genuine question, one that requires my response. Mom asks me constantly, in a million different ways, whether I murdered Savvy. Maybe she thinks that if she asks enough, Iโll eventually let it slip that I did indeed bash my friendโs brains in. I have to admire her persistence.
โNo, I donโt have anything to be ashamed of,โ I lie.
โThatโs right, dear.โ Thatโs what she always says when she thinks Iโm lying.
And my momย definitelyย thinks Iโm lying about not remembering the night that Savvy died. She tried for years to get me to confess.
She pestered me to come back home after I left for L.A.โโIf youโre back here, you might remember something. Or you might feel compelled to share something new. Have you seen the memorial they did for Savvy?โ
She tried the god approachโโYou need to confess and atone for your sins here if you want to be forgiven in the next life.โ
She gave logic a whirlโโYou were the only one with Savvy that night, so I think that itโs time to face facts.โ
She went for guilt (by far her favorite)โโDo you know what that family is going through? They need an explanation.โ
There is nothing my mother wants more than for me to confess to killing Savvy. Not just because she thinks itโs the right thing to do, but because she would excel as the mother of a murderer.
Sheโd be a star at church. Sheโd give long speeches about forgiveness. Sheโd write a book about overcoming the guilt she felt at raising a murderer. Sometimes I think that sheโs angrier about me depriving her of this than she is about me actually (maybe) murdering someone. Mom enjoys being the best at everything, and Iโve denied her the opportunity to be the best mother of a murderer. You canโt be the best mother of a womanย suspected ofย murder. That just doesnโt have the same ring to it.
I stand, and her hand slips off mine. โDo you need anything?โ
โNo, Iโm fine, hon.โ She smiles up at me, and I head to the door. โBy the way, I donโt know if anyone told you, but that podcaster is back in town. Might want to keep an eye out.โ
Listen for the Lie Podcast with Ben Owens
EPISODE ONEโโTHE SWEETEST GIRL YOU EVER METโ
Savannahโs mother, Ivy Harper, invites me to her home shortly after I arrive in Plumpton. Itโs the first of several conversations.
Ben:ย Hi, Mrs. Harper?
Ivy: Ben! Itโs so nice to meet you, finally. Come in, come in. And please call me Ivy.
Ivy is a small woman, just barely over five feet tall, with blond hair that is neatly braided every time I see her. Savannah took after her mom, which I mention when I see the pictures of her hanging on the wall.
Ben:ย Wow, how old is she here? She looks just like you.
Ivy: Thatโs tenth grade, so about fifteen. We took these after services on Easter Sunday.
The Harper home is the same one that Savannah grew up in. Itโs a large, four-bedroom house thatโs sparsely furnished, making it seem even bigger. There are pictures of Savannah everywhereโon the walls, in picture frames on the tables, in the slideshow playing on the television.
Ivy and I sit at the round table in the breakfast nook, a bright room just off the kitchen, and she tells me about Savannah. Or Savvy, as everyone in her life called her.
Ivy: Savvy was so happy. Her whole life. Even as a teenager! She was the worst baby, just crying all the time, constantly, but about age two she just became as cheerful as could be, and that never let up. She had her days, I guess, but for the most part she was just a really joyful woman. Maybeย tooย joyful.
Ben:ย How do you mean?
Ivy: Well, I used to tell her to calm down, to think things through. Sheโd just get so excited about something and want to do it immediately. She was so excited to experience new things, sometimes it was like she wanted to do everything all at once. I wanted her to slow down. Iโd tell her she had her whole life. But I guess she knew that wasnโt going to be long.
Ben:ย Can you give me an example?
Ivy: When she was tenโor maybe elevenโand we were still living in New Orleans, she decided she wanted to try out for this local production ofย Romeo and Juliet. For the role of Juliet. And I said to her, โSavvy, that role isnโt for a child. Only adults can audition for that role. Maybe a teenager could, but not a ten-year-old.โ She wasย soย mad at me. She begged me and begged me to go audition, and I said no, so she just hopped on a city bus after school one day, marched over there, and auditioned all by herself.
Ben:ย Did she get it?
Ivy: No, but they gave her another small role. But, of course, she didnโt want that one, she wanted Juliet. So she didnโt do it. She did play Juliet eventually, when Plumpton High did a production. She was fifteen then. It was a big commotion when the role went to a sophomore.
Ben:ย When did you move to Plumpton? You said you were in New Orleans when Savvy was ten.
Ivy: When she was twelve. Keatonโmy oldestโwas about to start high school, and Jerome and I had always planned to move back to Texas. I grew up in San Antonio, and we both love it here. They were building all these new homes back then for a really good price, so we jumped on it.
Ben:ย Did Lucy and Savannah know each other in school?
Ivy: Oh, sure, of course. Itโs a pretty small town. All the kids knew each other, especially if they were the same age.
Ben:ย But they werenโt friends?
Ivy: No. They didnโt have anything in common. Savvy was a cheerleader, she was on student council, she was homecoming queen. Lucy was โฆ not โฆ any of those things.
Ben:ย When did they become friends?
Ivy: After Lucy moved back to town. Savvy was already here โฆ well, you know. Sheโd been back in Plumpton for a couple years, after college didnโt work out. She came over for Sunday dinner and she said, โMom, you remember Lucy Chase?โ I didnโt, actually. Sheโd had to remind me. That girl who once got suspended for punching a boy. Thatโs how Lucy was known back then.
So, she says, โYeah, she got married to a guy she met at UTโโthatโs the University of Texas in Austin, honโโand they just moved back to town. We got to talking when she came by the Charles.โ The Charles is this fancy restaurant downtownโSavvy used to bartend there.
Ben:ย So they hit it off then?
Ivy: Yeah. Savvy said it was a little weird at first. Lucy immediately asks how Savvy had liked Tulane, and of course Savvy had to tell her that she left after her freshman year. She was โฆ [long sigh]. Savvy was doing this thing then, where she was making light of it and sort of poking fun at herself. Making the joke before someone else can and all that. I didnโt like it.
Ben:ย What would she say?
Ivy: She would tell people things like, โI majored in partying,โ or โI was a terrible college student, but a truly excellent sorority girl.โ It just made her sound dumb, and she wasnโt dumb. Sheโd gotten a scholarship to Tulane. She was her high school salutatorian, for godโs sake! She was just too young. I know plenty of eighteen-year- olds do just fine leaving home, but she didnโt. She was a sweet girl who just wasnโt ready to be on her own. She was finally starting to get her feet under her again when Lucy moved back to town.
Ben:ย And you said it was awkward at first? Because of the college thing?
Ivy: Savvy said that Lucy looked really uncomfortable at first, and Matt had to jump in and save her. Matt was always doing that. Heโs a real charmer. No idea what he saw in Lucy. But I guess Lucy and Savvy got to talking, and they decided to meet up for drinks the next day. I was turned off by the whole thing right away, honestly.
Ben:ย Why?
Ivy: It just sounded like Lucy was taking pity on Savvy. Lucy had moved back to town with her rich, handsome husband, theyโd bought this gorgeous old house, and she was helping her husband open this fancy brewery restaurant thing. And then she comes
across the former homecoming queen, who has dropped out of college and is now a bartender? Please. It was so obvious that Lucy liked how the tables had turned.
Ben:ย Did Savvy get that impression from Lucy?
Ivy: No. Not that she said, anyway. But that girl had blinders on when it came to Lucy. She didnโt see the real woman. Not until it was too late.