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Chapter no 5

You, with a View

T

 

.ย โ€™ย .

eyeballs hurt from the strain of not looking.

Paul picked up sandwiches from one of the best spots in Marin County. The homemade bread is crusty perfection, and at least half of it ends up in my lap, little sourdough snowflakes drifting from my mouth every time I take a bite. It takes everything in me not to pick up each fleck with my finger after Iโ€™ve demolished my sandwich.

Our conversation flows smoothly thanks to Paul, who asks about my job (I continue the lie and say itโ€™s great), what I do in my free time (I wing it, sinceย hikeย andย doomscrollย arenโ€™t legitimate answers), and how I got into photography.

Here I can be honest and tell him how when I was twelve, I picked up an old camera of Gramโ€™s, which was collecting dust on her bookshelf.

Thomas tried to fight me for it, but I came out of our wrestling match victorious, albeit bruised like a peach. I started using it constantly so Thomas wouldnโ€™t have access, but it turned into a genuine love. An obsessive one.

Paul smiles at this. โ€œIโ€™m familiar with the feeling. Now that youโ€™re done with your meal, should I go grab what I wanted to show you today?โ€

โ€œYes,โ€ I say enthusiastically. Theo lets out a soft huff. Not a laugh.

Something rustier.

Paul disappears into the house, and the silence stretches between us.

โ€œSo why arenโ€™t you doing your photography thing full time?โ€ Theo asks finally.

I eye him, and the flake of bread caught in his chest hair. Disgusting. I want to pick that one up with my finger the most.

โ€œBecause you canโ€™t justย do things,โ€ I say. โ€œItโ€™s not that easy.โ€

One eyebrow raises slowly, like a bridge lifting for a ship. โ€œIf anyone can justย do things, itโ€™s you, Shepard. Youโ€™ve been justย doing thingsย as long as Iโ€™ve known you.โ€

โ€œYou sound like an unhinged Nike ad.โ€ I lean back in my seat, tilting my face to soak up the sunโ€™s warmth. โ€œItโ€™s easy to invest time in something you love when you have the money for it.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™d be surprised.โ€ I look over at him, indeed surprised by the bitter edge in his voice. He runs a hand over his chest, dislodging the crumb in the process (RIP), and shifts in his seat. โ€œYou specifically can do anything you put your mind to, is what I mean. You were always like that in high school. Singularly focused, especially with photography. Good at everything you tried. Not as good asย me,ย butโ€”โ€

I snort, my chest tight. I want to be that version of Noelle, but Iโ€™m so far away from her, she feels like a different person.

โ€œI can tell you love it still, is all,โ€ he finishes.

I try to deaden my curiosity, but thatโ€™s like asking me not to breathe. โ€œHowโ€™s that?โ€

โ€œThe deranged look in your eyes when you talk about it.โ€ โ€œItโ€™s just . . . not for me. I learned that lesson a while ago.โ€

Theoโ€™s gaze turns sharp. I avert my eyes from his attention, that face and those shoulders, the skin, which upon closer inspection, is quietly freckled. I take in the backyard instead, needing space from his wordless probing. Itโ€™s small, immaculate. There are several raised beds along the perimeter of the pine fence, several bags of soil open and sagging against them.

โ€œYour granddadโ€™s house is beautiful.โ€ I focus on a hummingbird flitting around a tall plant with tubular red flowers. Wish I knew their name. โ€œHow long has he been here?โ€

Theo removes his hat and tosses it onto the table, running a hand through his hair. His temples are damp. That shouldnโ€™t be so hot. โ€œSince February. He was in LA, but my grandma died last fall. He was getting lonely, so I moved him up here.โ€

My heart sinks so fast the world tilts. Paulโ€™s gold band flashes in my mind. โ€œIโ€™mโ€”Iโ€™m sorry. About your grandma.โ€

Theo shifts, uncomfortable. โ€œThanks. Itโ€™s not the same as what youโ€™re going through. I mean, it was very sad, obviously, but she married my granddad when I was a kid, long after he and my dadโ€™s mom divorced. Both of my biological grandmothers are still alive, but Iโ€™m not close to them. Not like I am with Granddad, anyway.โ€

โ€œGrief is grief. You donโ€™t have to qualify it.โ€

โ€œSome grief is different, though,โ€ he says, looking out at the yard. โ€œYou can be sad but be okay. If my granddad dies, you knowโ€”โ€

He stops, like itโ€™s too painful to think about. Thatย ifย a stand-in for the other word he canโ€™t say out loud:ย when. I sense the same connection between him and Paul as what I had with Gram. That soulmate thing, the string connecting two people, longer than death, further than forever.

I want Theo to sketch out his family tree for me. Iโ€™m getting crumbs of so many different things, like the flakes still littering my lap, and it makes me hungrier. I know Theo is an only child, that his dad pulled him aside after every tennis and soccer match he attended, talking to him in low, intense tones while his mom watched. That he never looked happy with his son, nor with his wife when she intervened. Remembering that makes it hard to believe he came from Paul. Is that Theoโ€™s grandmaโ€™s influence, the sternness Theo seems to have inherited, too?

I hate being curious about him. Iโ€™ve fought against it since the beginning. But Iโ€™m me and I need toย knowย things, so I open my mouth to ask more questions. I barely inhale when he shakes his head, his expression shifting from melancholy to wry.

โ€œDonโ€™t make this earnest and uncomfortable.โ€

โ€œNo, totally. Emotions, right?โ€ I pretend to gag. โ€œDisgusting.โ€

He doesnโ€™t respond, and a tiny, microscopic, very small part of me is disappointed. My blood runs faster in my veins when we talk. But surely thatโ€™s just irritation.

Theo stands, swiping a t-shirt from the chair at the head of the table. He eases it over his head, making it look like porn somehow. My body pulls tight.

One thing is certain: Iโ€™ll never figure him out. I donโ€™t want to, and heโ€™d never let me anyway. So I busy myself with brushing the crumbs from my lap, letting them fall to the ground. The birds can have them.

 

 

,ย โ€™

arms.

โ€œWow.โ€ย I gape as he lowers the box onto the table. โ€œWeโ€™re going to be here for a while, huh?โ€

To my right, Theo sighs. I give him a droll look over my shoulder, where heโ€™s parked himself against the railing, but heโ€™s not looking. Heโ€™s been ignoring me since our near-brush with human emotion, grimly tapping out messages on his phone.

Paul takes Theoโ€™s seat next to me. โ€œSome of this is your grandmotherโ€™s. We saw each other once after we separatedโ€”before I sent the letter you foundโ€”and she gave me things for safekeeping.โ€

โ€œWhat do you mean, for safekeeping?โ€

He sits back in his seat with a hum. Birds sing around us, tucked into trees. Somewhere nearby, a lawn mower buzzes.

Finally he says, โ€œItโ€™s no surprise you have so many questions, or that you donโ€™t know much about your grandmotherโ€™s life prior to her marriage to your grandfather. Our relationship was not well received by her family, and when she left school, she didnโ€™t leave with many reminders of our time together.โ€

โ€œSo you kept all this for her?โ€

โ€œFor us,โ€ he corrects gently. โ€œWhen our relationship ended, it wasnโ€™t acrimonious. We wanted to make sure itโ€™d always be a lovely memory.โ€

โ€œBut she made it a secret,โ€ I say, watching as he begins pulling items from the box.

โ€œNo.โ€ Again he corrects me. Itโ€™s still soft, but thereโ€™s steel behind it. โ€œWhatever life she and I wanted, planned, or talked about was never going to be. Kathleen keeping a box of reminders of how sheโ€™d defied her parents wouldโ€™ve prolonged her grief. Her parents and brother knew the whole story once it was over. I imagine it was initially too painful for her to recount further, and by the time you came into the world, well . . .โ€ He smiles. โ€œLife goes on.โ€

I look for pain or anger on Paulโ€™s face, but all I see is nostalgia mixed with affection, softened with time.

โ€œYour letter to her mentioned an elopement,โ€ I venture. โ€œYes, we did make plans to elope.โ€

โ€œBut it never happened. Because of her parents?โ€

โ€œIt was . . .โ€ He pauses thoughtfully, his gaze going to the sky. โ€œNot just that issue, but her parents were certainly the biggest hurdle to overcome.โ€

โ€œWhy didnโ€™t her parents like you?โ€

He laughs. โ€œWhere to begin? We had one mess of a dinner with our families where everyone made it clear where they stood on a variety of subjects, including whether Kat and I should be together.โ€

โ€œWhat were the other subjects?โ€ Theo asks.

โ€œWell, over appetizers, my mother got going on women taking a more prominent place in the workforce, which Katโ€™s homemaker mother thought was shocking. She already wasnโ€™t thrilled that her daughter was at college. She wanted her to get her MRS degree.โ€ Paul eyes us. โ€œDo you know that phrase?โ€

I nod. โ€œThey wanted her to find a husband.โ€

โ€œRight you are. I just wasnโ€™t the one she was supposed to find,โ€ he says with a little smile. โ€œThe most insurmountable thing, though, was that my father and I were outspoken about the US military taking action internationally. I even went so far as to say Iโ€™d be a conscientious objector if

things in Vietnam ramped up. It wasnโ€™t something her career-military father or her brother, whoโ€™d gotten a Purple Heart in Korea, wanted to hear.โ€ He shakes his head. โ€œIn hindsight I shouldโ€™ve bitten my tongue when the subject came up. Kat had prepped me not to bring up anything political in nature, but my temper got the best of me. That night was enough to set the path to disaster, though Kat and I didnโ€™t give up afterward.โ€

โ€œI see.โ€

And I do. My memories of my great-grandparents are fuzzy. I was young when they died. But I do remember my great-grandfather was an old- school, solemn man whoโ€™d shoot puzzled looks at my wild hair and Thomasโ€™s pink T-shirts, even as he let us crawl all over him during Thanksgiving dinner. My tenderhearted, progressively minded dad had a complicated relationship with his grandfather. Gram did, too. But she loved him deeply, and he doted on her, even though itโ€™s clearer to me now that his love could be destructive. One of my most vivid childhood memories was Gram crying at his funeral while I clutched her hand.

My thoughts go to Paulโ€™s letter, his acknowledgment of their permanent separation. With this new context, it breaks my heart even more for both of them. โ€œYou said in that letter you would love her your entire life.โ€

He nods. โ€œI did, and I will.โ€ He places a stack of pictures in front of me, but I donโ€™t pick them up yet. โ€œShe was my first great love. I was hers, as well. But your grandfather was her last.โ€

โ€œWho was your last great love?โ€

โ€œMy wife, Vera. She passed last fall, but we had twenty-three wonderful years together.โ€

I put my hand over his. โ€œIโ€™m so sorry for your loss.โ€

He pats my hand, his blue eyes watery. โ€œI appreciate that.โ€

My curiosity over Theoโ€™s other grandmaโ€”his biological oneโ€”is gnawing at me. But, given that she and Paul divorced, Iโ€™m going to assume itโ€™s a story I donโ€™t have a right to ask about.

Theo takes the seat across from us. His hat is back on his head, shading his eyes and any emotion lurking there. But I notice a distinct lack of surprise.

โ€œDo you know all of this?โ€ I ask. โ€œA lot of it,โ€ he says.

โ€œThe marriage stuff, too?โ€

Theo says again, stoically, โ€œA lot of it, I think.โ€ โ€œHow?โ€

His gaze darts to Paul before he squints off into the distance. โ€œKathleen wasnโ€™t ever a secret in my family.โ€

I chew at my lip, wanting to ask more, but sensing Iโ€™m somehow pressing up against a bruise of Theoโ€™s. His shoulders are tense, like heโ€™s waiting for my next question. Like itโ€™ll hurt to hear it.

I could push until he gives me answers or tells me to fuck off. God knows I want to know everything. But for reasons I donโ€™t want to examine too closely, I let it go instead. โ€œLetโ€™s see whatโ€™s in this box, huh?โ€

โ€œDig in, kids,โ€ Paul says, giving me a warm smile, as if Iโ€™ve passed a test I didnโ€™t even know I was taking.

I start flipping through the stack of photos Paul handed me as Theo takes another. My attention splits between the images in my hand and the way Theoโ€™s eyes scan each picture before he lays it carefully on the table and moves on. Occasionally his mouth will pick up in a half smile, and heโ€™ll flip the picture so Paul and I can see it. Most of them are goofy photos of Paul, but some of them are gorgeous shots of Los Angeles, the UCLA campus, or the group of friends that start to become familiar as I move through my stack.

Paul notices that I linger over a photo of Gram standing in front of a fraternity house. She has one leg crossed in front of the other at the ankle and wears a mischievous smile. It could be me in the picture; our legs are long and lean, our smiles equally wide, a little crooked. Her bottom lip is even snagged a little on her left canine, like mine does. In this picture, sheโ€™s wearingย myย best-day smile. I know, deep in my bones, that when this picture was taken, she was happy.

Itโ€™s the power of photography. To capture it and let it live past the subjectโ€™s lifetime. To allow someone to look at it years later and smile along with them.

I press my thumb against the glossy paper, working against the moisture in my eyes and the lump in my throat.

โ€œYou look so much like Kat,โ€ Paul says. I blink over at him, pulled out of my memories and hers. He nods his chin at the picture. โ€œItโ€™s almost uncanny.โ€

Across the table, Theoโ€™s eyes trace my face.

โ€œYou and Theo do, too,โ€ I say. โ€œI actually canโ€™t believe I didnโ€™t notice the resemblance when I found the pictures. I spent so much time looking at them while I made that video.โ€

At this, Theoโ€™s eyebrow quirks up. Even after years apart, I know hisย Iโ€™m about to be an assholeย tell. โ€œWas my face fresh in your memory, Shep? Been staring at my LinkedIn profile picture every night?โ€

โ€œPlease donโ€™t project your fantasies onto me.โ€

Paul chuckles and even Theo grins, his damn dimple popping. Ugh. Even when he doesnโ€™t win, he wins.

I half stand and peek into the box, needing a distraction. There are more photos, ticket stubs, and envelopes yellowed with age. But my gaze snags on something even more interesting. Itโ€™s a map, folded up carefully and perched on top of a yearbook.

I take it out like itโ€™s a precious artifact. Which, really, all of this is. โ€œWhatโ€™s this?โ€

โ€œTake a shot every time Shepard asks a question,โ€ Theo mutters across the table.

I shoot him my most innocent smile. โ€œOh, Iโ€™dย loveย to see you play that game. We both know your tolerance is laughable.โ€

Iโ€™m immensely gratified by the way his cheeks turn pink. One night we were at a partyโ€”not together, but . . . existing in the same space at the same timeโ€”and he puked Mikeโ€™s Hard Lemonade all over his dateโ€™s shoes. I had to help her shower it off because they were both too wasted to get the job done.

He recovers quickly, his voice dipping. โ€œMy stamina has improved significantly since high school.โ€

I make a noncommittal sound. I donโ€™t want to think about his stamina now.

God knows Theo and I could go for days like this, but my attention is diverted. As I unfold the map, the writing looped over top of Washington, Idaho, and Montana stops me short.

Pauย anย Kaย โ€™ย Honeymooย Roaย Tri

Enjoy a fast, distraction-free reading experience. 'Request a Book' and other cool features are coming soon,

Enjoy a fast, distraction-free reading experience. 'Request a Book' and other cool features are coming soon.

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