october 2008
Te days aFter sheโd told Emeline and Cecelia her news, Sylvie left the library during her lunch break to buy an ice cream
cone. This was her new habit. Before, sheโd believed pretty firmly that ice cream and donuts were only for children, but when she removed all rules and guilt from food, she realized, to her surprise, that those were two of her favorite things to eat. Now she went into the expensive, delicious-smelling bakery every morning for a donut and bought an ice cream cone for lunch. It was a three-block walk from the ice cream store back to the library, blocks that were so familiar to her that they operated as memories more than sidewalks, streets, and stores. She was sitting beside Cecelia on that curb when she found out that her little sister was pregnant with Izzy. The laundromat on the corner used to be the butcher shop where Rose had bartered: a Greek varietal of squash that Rose grew in her garden in exchange for meat. Sylvie passed her first apartment and tipped her head back to look at the windows. Sheโd loved that apartment, had been naked with a man for the first time there. This memory amused her, because right across the street was a bus stop with an ad for Ernieโs electrician business. It included a photo of Ernie, heavier now, with a mustache, smiling for the camera. She knew Ernie lived nearby with his wife and four sons. The passage of time, and the details that spun some moments into unforgettable
memories and others into thin air, traveled with Sylvieโthe swirling atmosphere of her own lifeโwhile she walked.
When she walked into the library, she saw Emeline standing with her back to her at the front desk, and she thought,ย Oh dear.ย Sylvie was tired, and talking to her sister could only be hard work at the moment. Sylvie braced herself and walked toward Emeline. She hadnโt seen her younger sister in person since sheโd told her the newsโtheyโd only texted and spoken on the phoneโand she hoped Emeline had had enough time to regain her normal equilibrium. But as Sylvie moved closer, a strange feeling filled her. Emeline didnโt wear silky tops like this, and her hair was slightly wrong too.
The woman turned around, and a static charge filled Sylvieโs entire body.
It was Julia.
The sisters stared at each other. Sylvie felt herself wobble slightly on her feet. She had been imagining her sister for so long that it felt like her own reflection had stepped out of a mirror.
โIs it really you?โ she said.
Julia, at forty-eight, looked regal. Her mane of hairโsimilar to Sylvieโs, but denser, so it had more heightโrose away from her face. She was dressed elegantly; Sylvie was dressed for the library, wearing Converse sneakers and a cardigan. The last time sheโd been in the same room as Juliaโif she was actually in the same room as her nowโher sister had been wearing jeans and an old T-shirt. Theyโd stood in the middle of moving boxes, a baby at their feet, while Julia told her sister that she knew she was keeping secrets from her. Julia had handed Sylvie her divorce papers, and Sylvie never saw her again.
โI suppose itโs me,โ Julia said, as if she werenโt sure.
โI didnโt think Iโd ever see you again,โ Sylvie said. โThe twins told you?โ They had promised they wouldnโt, but they must have reconsidered.ย It mustโve been Emeline,ย Sylvie thought.
Julia shook her head. โWilliam did.โ
โWilliam?โ Sylvie said in disbelief. But her voice was faint, and she couldnโt listen for an answer. The static inside her had grown loud. When Sylvie was a child, sheโd watched in amazement when friends, upset about a bad day at school or a slight from a boy they had a crush on, burst into tears at the sight of their mother. Their mother was their safe space, and so, with her, they felt every iota of their feelings. Julia had always been that person for Sylvie. Rose was too volatile, and she seemed to have a bone to pick with Sylvie, even when Sylvie was far too young for that to be likely. Because of this, Sylvie had always run past her mother into her own bedroom, where she threw herself into Juliaโs arms. She had drenched Juliaโs school uniform with tears, vented at her, been hugged by her, too many times to count. If she was ever confused about how she was feeling, her older sisterโs presence provided clarity.
Sylvie had been okay, rational, calm, until now. But now she understood, for the first time, that she was dying. She was losing everything she loved. Everyone she loved. And her sister was here
โwhich was impossible in and of itselfโand because of that, Sylvie felt everything.
She closed her eyes and heard a manโs voice say, โAre you Julia Padavano?โ
โYes?โ Julia said, in a voice that made it clear she had no idea who he was.
โThought so. I lived down the street from your family. Your sister Cecelia slept in my room when she was pregnant and I was in rehab.โ
โOh,โ Julia said. Sylvie opened her eyes to watch her sister remember the teenage Frank Ceccione, who had walked around their neighborhood on Saturday afternoons in his baseball uniform, looking strong and gorgeous, and how Rose had worn Frankโs discarded gear in her garden after he quit the team. Julia said, โWhat a surprise.โ
โYou always zipped around like you knew what you were doing,โ Frank said. โLike a bee who knows where the honey is. And you had that tall boyfriend.โ
Oh Jesus,ย Sylvie thought.ย The tall boyfriend.ย She hoped that Julia wouldnโt leave because heโd said that, having only just arrived. To Sylvieโs surprise, Julia grinned at the old-looking man. Sylvie felt her own face smile in response. She noticed for the first time that her sister looked tired. There were dark circles under Juliaโs eyes.
โWhatโs the joke?โ Frank said, his eyes narrowed.
โNothing,โ Sylvie said to him. โNothing at all.โ She said in a lower voice, to Julia, โCan we go somewhere to talk?โ
โDaddyโs favorite bar,โ Julia said.
The two women didnโt speak while they maneuvered down the sidewalks. Neither of them could believe they were together. Sylvie wondered what this terrain was doing to her sisterโs insides after more than twenty years away. She wondered how William had found the courage to go against her wishes and make a phone call that didnโt serve him at all. They passed Mr. Luisโs flower shop, where the front glass was so crowded with roses that the old man wouldnโt have been able to see, much less recognize, the two sisters. The air was thick with the flowersโ scent.
Sylvie had an interior map of Ceceliaโs murals in the neighborhood and spotted one from the corner of her eye, on a side street. Next to her, Julia looked glassy-eyed and overwhelmed and didnโt appear to see it. The painting was of St. Clare of Assisi. Sylvie had seen the mural so oftenโevery day, almost, since Cecelia had painted itโthat she felt like the woman was real. More real than the sister next to her, who had appeared out of thin air, who had appeared out of her dreams. The saint felt like an old friend, and Sylvie had the urge to gesture at Julia and whisper to St. Clare:ย Look whoโs here!ย But she didnโt; she kept walking, wondering if this moment could be true, while the giant woman stared in the sistersโ direction, as if from the dining room wall of their childhood.