December
Iย LIMP INTOย the apartment after my study group, an hour late and feeling guilty about it. I call out an apology to Tucker as I swing inside, myย arms full of books and a small bag of groceries, which contains only half the items I was supposed to bring home an hour ago. โIโm soย soย sorry. I had my phone turned off andโโ
The rest of my excuse dies in my throat when I find Tuckerโs mother in my kitchen.
She turns a death glare in my direction and speaks up from her spot behind the counter. โJohn went to pick up some things from the store. He tried to text you to see if youโd pick up the items on your way home, but you never answered.โ
Her words are colder than the winter winds off the bay. I shiver under my down coat.
โI thought you werenโt getting in until Friday,โ I stammer.
โThe wedding I was supposed to style was postponed, so I decided to take advantage and come early. That way I get to spend extra time with my granddaughter.โ
โOh. Cool. Thatโsโฆcool.โ
Iโve turned into an idiot. I canโt help it, though. Tuckerโs mother is so damn intimidating. I havenโt seen her since that disastrous visit over the summer, and even though Tucker texts her daily and arranges for video chats between her and Jamie, she hasnโt once asked to speak to me.
โWhy were you late?โ Itโs an accusation and we both know it. I gulp. โI was in a study group. Finals are coming up.โ
She nods toward the living room. โI suppose thatโs why the place isnโt as clean as youโd like.โ
I follow her gaze with deepening dismay. This week had gotten away from me, and the apartment shows every bit of my distraction. The kitchen cupboards are embarrassingly bare. Dishesโclean at leastโare stacked on the counter. I was going to put them away tonight after Jamie was fed. In the living room, textbooks and outlines and supplemental study guides take up every available surface. Jamieโs bathroomโthe one Mrs. Tucker will be usingโlooks like a hurricane. Everything is terrible because I thought I had two more days to fix it.
Which is what I say to her. โI planned on tidying up before you arrived.โ
Her arched eyebrow conveys that my excuse is embarrassing. โYouโre trying your hardest, arenโt you?โ
The dagger strikes deep. My hardest isnโt good enough in Mrs. Tuckerโs eyes.
Breath tight in my chest, I slowly toe off my boots and make the short trek across the open-concept room toward the kitchen, dragging my stocking-covered feet with each step. The apartment is bigger than my childhood home, and on most days Iโm giddy over the space, but Mrs. Tucker has a way of vacuuming up all the air in the room.
Silently, I put away the milk, eggs, and butter. The convenience store was over-priced, but it was close by and I was feeling a little desperate. Now? Iโm feeling small and incompetent.
โIs Jamie with Tucker?โ I ask. The apartmentโs as quiet as a study carrel at Harvard.
โSheโs in her crib sleeping,โ Mrs. Tucker says tersely, not glancing up from the onions sheโs chopping.
I make an attempt to smile. โDid you enjoy seeing her in person for the first time?โ
โWhat kind of question is that? Of course I did. Sheโs my only grandchild.โ
My half-hearted smile fades. I gulp again. Oh God, this visit is going to be brutal.
โIโm going to run in and check on her.โ I shove a carton of juice in the fridge before fleeing the kitchen.
In the nursery, the unmade bed Tucker and Fitzy had hauled up here last weekend taunts me. The sheets stacked on one end only serve to highlight
my ineptness as a mother and a housekeeper. If those are traits that Mrs. Tucker values in a daughter-in-law, then Iโm failing miserably.
Jamieโs sleeping blissfully in her crib, wrapped up tight in her blanket. I resist the urge to pick her up, despite knowing that holding her sweet, nonjudgmental body will make me feel so much better. But she needs to sleep and I have shit to get done.
As quietly as possible, I make the bed and then creep out to join Mrs.
Tucker in the kitchen.
โCan I get you something to drink?โ I offer. She has the onions in a pan, and the apartment is filling with the fragrant smell of sweet herbs and tangy garlic.
โNo. Iโm fine.โ
โCan I help you make yourโฆโ I wave my hand toward the stove. โChili?โ she fills in. โNo.โ
Okay then. I lick my lips and consider my options. My first preference is to hide in the bedroom until Tucker comes home, but as my gaze falls on the mound of dishes, I decide that tidying up should come first. Even if I have to make conversation with someone who clearly thinks Iโm about as low as a slug.
โHas Tucker shown you the bar yet?โ I ask, stacking the bowls first. โHeโs done a great job and itโs already making decent money.โ Tuckerโs Bar has been full since it opened its doors.
โItโs early yet. Most bars fail after a couple of years. Itโs not what I wouldโve wanted for him to spend his fatherโs insurance money on.โ Her lips pinch. โI wouldโve told him that if heโd asked me.โ
Good thing he hadnโt. Tucker is clearly in love with his bar. Heโs already talking about buying another one since his estimated cash flow from year one would allow him enough profit to invest in another business. Heโs a businessman, not a bartender, as anyone who listens to him for five minutes can attest to. He talks about leveraging risk, returns on investments, profit margins, and hidden opportunities.
โI think itโs going to be a big success,โ I declare confidently.
โYou would think that.โ She huffs. โTucker couldโve bought the realty business back home. He should be in an office, not working in a bar.โ
She saysย barย like someone else might sayย whorehouse.
โAnd now heโs living over it.โ She heaves another huge, disappointed sigh. โThis isnโt what his daddy wouldโve wanted.โ
I donโt know how to respond, so I turn the conversation to Jamie because surely she couldnโt be critical of Jamie.
โWas Jamie awake when you got home? Sheโs so smart. Weโve been reading to her every day. I found an article that says if you read to your infant at least two hours a day, sheโll be an advanced reader.โ
Jeez. Iโm beginning to sound like Nana, spouting off pseudo-facts that are presented in click bait articles as if theyโre gospel.
Tuckerโs mother ignores my remarks. โTuck says youโre breastfeeding and that sheโs only in the fifth percentile for weight. That sounds dangerously underweight. In my day, we all used formula. It filled those tummies up and helped them grow.โ
I resign myself to the fact that thereโs not a thing associated with me that Mrs. Tucker wonโt find fault with.
Grabbing for the threads of my fraying patience, I say, โMost doctors really push for breastfeeding these days. The motherโs milk is calibrated to match the infantโs needs, and there are studiesโโ
โThere are studies that prove anything,โ she says disdainfully. She flicks the burner to low and moves toward the sink, where she begins to wash her hands vigorously. โI heard there was a study that said kids who are around alcohol tend to grow up to have a lot of problems. I hope that isnโt the case with Jamie.โ
I place one foot over the other and stomp down, hoping the pain will serve as a distraction since grinding my molars isnโt doing the trick. I remind myself that Mrs. Tucker loves her son and that all her criticism, some of it founded, comes from a place of love. Not for me, but for her son. I should respect that.
โWe arenโt going to live here forever,โ I say with false cheerfulness.
I finish up with the dishes and then swing into the living room. Maybe the distance will keep me from saying something stupid out of anger. That would only cause more damage to the already difficult relationship I have with Tuckerโs mom.
If Iโm going to stay with Tucker, I need to make this thing with her work.
โLaw school is going well. I got in with a great study group. Theyโre super important because we all help each other see the bigger picture. When I first started, I thought I wasnโt going to make any friends, but it was early day jitters for all of us.โ Iโm rambling as I tidy up my coursework. โThereโs this one guy in my groupโSimonโwhoโs a genius. He has a photographic memory plus this keen ability to really narrow in on the important issues. I get bogged down in the details too much.โ
โSimon? You study with other men?โ I jerk upright at her suspicious tone.
โYes, there are men in my class,โ I answer carefully.
โDoes John know about this?โ She crosses her arms over her chest, looking at me as if Iโd just confessed to boning another student in front of her son.
โYes. Heโs met Simon. Weโve studied here.โ Well, actually at the bar.
My study group loves to come here.
She shakes her head, the red-gold strands highlighted by the kitchen light behind her. โThis isโฆโ Another head shake. โExactly what I expected,โ she finishes.
A frown puckers my mouth. โWhat do you mean?โ
โI mean that you take advantage of my son and have been doing it since the day you two met.โ
I suck in a breath. โW-what?โ
โHow soon after you learned about his inheritance did you decide to trap him, Sabrina?โ Her expression is colder than ice. โItโs pretty convenient how he pays for everything while you go offย studyingย with another man.โ
Are. You. Fucking. Kidding. Me.
I straighten fully, indignation injecting into my bloodstream. Itโs one thing for her to criticize my housekeeping. I suck at it.
I can handle her objection to the breastfeeding. Iโm concerned about Jamieโs weight too, even though the doctor assures me itโs perfectly normal for breastfed babies to be underweight.
I donโt care if she derides my parenting, housekeeping or mothering skills from one side of Boston to the other.
But I wonโtโI fuckingย wonโtโstand for her whispering awful and unfounded suspicions in Tuckerโs ear.
I can survive on my own. I donโt need TuckerโIย wantย him. I want him so much that Iโd give everything up to have him and Jamie.
With as much dignity as I have, I face Mrs. Tucker.
โI have so much respect for you. Iโve only been doing this mothering sh
โstuff for four months and Iโve screwed up probably a thousand times. Itโs hard, and I have Tucker, your amazing son, helping me every inch of the way. I canโt imagine how you did it on your own. But Iโm not going to let you insult everything I do in this place. This is my home. Yes, Iโm not perfect, but Iโm trying. I love Jamie and I love Tucker and if, at any time, Harvard or work or anything threatens their happiness in any way, I would give it all up in a minute.โ
Her brown eyes widen.
But Iโm not done. โHe and Jamie are the most important things in my life,โ I say fiercely. โAnd everything Iโm doing right now is to make sure that I keep them in my life, to make sure I can contribute to our family and give Jamie a better childhood than the one I had to deal with, even if it means studying with aย man. Who, by the way, is happily married and has two kids of his own.โ
Thereโs a rustling noise behind Mrs. Tucker, and the blot behind her head slowly comes into focus. It takes a second for me to realize itโs Tucker. Heโs standing at the front door.
He leans an arm on the doorframe, a smile slanting across his face. โYou love me, huh?โ