On friday, weย drove to Daveโs house for the second part of the interview. The first had been so thorough Gus hadnโt planned to have a second, but Dave had called him that morning. After thinking it over, his mother had things to say about New Eden.
The house was a small split-level, probably built in the late sixties, and it smelled like someone had been chain-smoking inside it ever since. Despite that, and its shabby decor, it was extremely tidy: blankets folded on couch arms, potted plants in a neat line by the door, pots hanging from hooks on the wall, and the sink scrubbed to sparkling.
Dave Schmidt had to be right around our age, give or take a few years, but Julie-Ann Schmidt looked a good ten years older than my mother. She was tiny, her face round and soft with wrinkles. I wondered if it was a lifetime of being treated as if she were sweet, because of her figure and face, that had given her the almost toothy handshake she offered.
She lived there with Dave. โI own the house, but he makes the payments.โ She guffawed at that and patted his back. โHeโs a good boy.โ I watched Gusโs eyes narrow, appraising the situation. I thought he might be looking for hints of violence somewhere in their interactions, but Dave was mostly hunched and smiling in embarrassment. โHe was always a good boy. And you should hear him on the piano.โ
โCan I get you anything to drink?โ Dave hurried to ask.
โWater would be great,โ I answered, more to give Dave an excuse to hide than because I was actually thirsty. As he disappeared into the kitchen, I ambled around the living room, studying all the walnut picture frames mounted to the wall. It was like Dave had been frozen at about eight years old, in a V-neck sweater vest and dull green T-shirt. His father was in most of the shots, but even in the ones he didnโt inhabit, it was easy to imagine heโd been behind the camera, snapping the tiny smiling woman and the baby on her hip, the toddler holding her hand, the gawky child sticking his tongue out next to the gorilla exhibit at the zoo.
Daveโs dad had been lanky and brown-haired with bushy eyebrows and a receding chin. Dave looked just like him.
โSo I understand you had more to say,โ Gus began. โThings you thought Dave couldnโt offer.โ
โOf course I do.โ Julie-Ann took a seat on the blue plaid love seat, and Gus and I perched beside each other on the roughly woven tan couch. โIโve got a well-rounded look. Dave only saw what we let him, and then when we left like we didโwell, Iโm afraid his opinion of the place probably swung from one extreme to the other.โ
Gus and I looked at each other. I leaned forward, trying to keep an open, friendly posture to combat her defensive one. โHe seemed pretty fair, actually.โ
Julie-Ann pulled a cigarette pack off the table and lit up, then offered us the box. Gus took one, and I knew it was more to put her at ease than because he truly wanted one, which made me smile. Even though what we wrote and said we believed was so different, Iโd started to feel like I was capable of knowing Gus, reading him, better than anyone else Iโd ever met. Because every day we spent together, this peculiar feeling was growing in me:ย You are like me.
Julie-Ann lit the cigarette for him, then sat back, cross-legged. โThey werenโt bad people,โ she said. โNot most of them. And I couldnโt let you go thinking they were. Sometimesโsometimes good, or at least decent, people do bad things. And sometimes theyย actuallyย believe theyโre doing whatโs right.โ
โAnd you donโt think thatโs just an excuse?โ Gus asked. โYou donโt believe in any kind of internal moral compass.โ
The way he said it made it seem as if he himselfย didย believe in such a thing, which wouldโve surprised me a few weeks ago, but now made perfect
sense.
โMaybe you start out with that,โ she said, โBut if you do, it gets shaped as you age. How are you supposed to believe rightโs right and wrongโs wrong if everyone around you says the opposite? Youโre supposed to think youโre smarter than all of them?โ
Dave returned with three water glasses balanced between his hands and passed them out one by one. Julie-Ann seemed reluctant to go on with her son in the room, but neither she nor Gus suggested he leave. Probably because Dave was approximately thirty years old and paying for the house we were in.
โA lot of these people,โ Julie-Ann went on, โdidnโt have much. I donโt just mean money, although that was true too. There were a lot of orphans. People estranged from their families. People whoโd lost spouses and children. At first, New Eden made me feel like โฆ like the reason everything had gone wrong in my life up to that point was that I hadnโt been living quite right. It was like they had the answers, and everyone seemed so happy, fulfilled. And after a lifetime of wantingโsometimes not even wanting anything specific but justย wanting, feeling like the world wasnโt big enough or bright enoughโwell, I felt like I was finally pushing back the curtain.
โI was getting my answers. It was like this great big scientific equation theyโd solved. And you know what? To an extent, it worked. At least for a while. You followed their rules, did their rituals, wore their clothes, and ate their food and itย wasย like the whole world was starting to light up from within.ย Nothingย felt mundane. There were prayers for everythingโwhile you were going to the bathroom, while you were showering, paying bills.
For the first time, I felt grateful to be alive.
โThatโs what they could do for you. So then when the punishments started, when you began to slip up and fail, it felt like there was a giant hand on the bathtub plug, just waiting to yank it up and rip it all away from you. And my husband โฆ He was aย goodย man. He was a good, lost man.โ Her gaze skittered toward Dave and she took a slow puff.
โHe was going to be an architect. Build sports stadiums and skyscrapers. He loved to draw and he was damn good at it. And then we got pregnant in high school, and he knew all that had to go. We had to be practical. And he never once complained.โ Again her eyes gestured toward her son. โOf course he didnโt. We were lucky. Blessed. But sometimes when life throws
a wrench in your plans โฆ I donโt know how to explain it, but I just had this sense when we were there. Like โฆ like my husband was clinging to whatever he could grab hold of. Like being right mattered less than being
โฆ okay.โ
I thought about my father and Sonya. About my mom staying with him, even knowing what heโd done. Her insistence that sheโd thought it was over.
Well, why did it ever start?ย Iโd demanded in the car before she had taken up her mantra:ย I canโt talk about it; I wonโt talk about it.
But the truth was, I had a good guess right away.
In the seventh grade, my parents had separated. Brieflyโjust a couple of monthsโbut heโd gone as far as to stay with some friends of theirs while he and Mom waited to see if they could work things out. I didnโt know the whole story. Theyโd never gotten to that screaming-match level most of my friendsโ divorced parents had reached, but even at thirteen, I had seen the change in my mother. A sudden wistfulness, a proclivity for staring out windows, escaping to bathrooms and returning with puffy eyes.
The night before Dad moved out, Iโd cracked my bedroom door and listened to their voices carrying up from the kitchen. โI donโt know,โ Mom kept saying tearfully. โI donโt know, I just feel like itโs over.โ
โOur marriage?โ Dad had asked after a long pause.
โMyย life,โ sheโd told him. โIโm nothing but your wife. Januaryโs mother.
Iโm nothing else, and I donโt think you can imagine how that feels. To be forty-two and feel like youโve done everything youโre going to do.โ
I hadnโt been able to wrap my mind around it then, and obviously Dad hadnโt either, because the next morning theyโd explained everything to me while the three of us sat in a row on the edge of my bed and then Iโd watched his car pull away with one suitcase in its back seat.
Iโd believed life as I knew it was over.
Then, suddenly, Dad was back in the house: proof that nothing was unfixable! That love could conquer any challenge, that life would always, always work out. So when he and Mom sat me down to tell me about her diagnosis, and everything else in our lives changed, Iย knewย it wouldnโt be permanent. This was just another plot twist in our story.
After that, the two of them seemed more in love than ever. There was more dancing. More hand-holding. More romantic weekend getaways. More of Dad saying things like, โYour mother has been a lot of people in
the twenty years Iโve known her, and Iโve had a chance to fall in love with every single one of them, Janie. Thatโs the key to marriage. You have to keep falling in love with every new version of each other, and itโs the best feeling in the whole world.โ
Their love, I had thought, had transcended time, midlife crises, cancer, all of it.
But that separationย hadย happened, and when Iโd yelled at my mother that day, Iโd wondered. If those three months were when it had begun. When Dad and Sonya had reconnected. If, when heโd found her, heโd just needed to believe everything could be okay again. If, when Mom had taken him back afterward,ย sheโdย just needed to pretend it alreadyย wasย okay.
Julie-Ann shook her head slightly when her gaze settled on mine.
โDoes that make sense?โ she asked. โI just needed to be okay, and I could do the wrong thing if it had the right end.โ
I thought about Jacques and our determination to have a beautiful life, my desperation to end up with someone Mom had known and loved. I thought about my motherโs diagnosis and my fatherโs infidelity, and the story Iโd been telling myself since age twelve to keep from being terrified about what might really happen. I thought about the romance novels Iโd devoured when the cancer came back and I lost my shot at grad school and thought my life was falling apart again. The nights spent writing until the sun came up and my back hurt from needing to pee but not wanting to stop working because nothing felt more important than the book, than giving these fictional lovers the ending they deserved, giving my readers the endingย theyย deserved.
People clinging to whatever steadfast thing they could find? Yes. Yes, that made sense. It made perfect sense.
When we left that night, I texted my mother, something I hadnโt done much of in months:ย I love you. Even if you can never talk about him again, Iโll always love you, Mom. But I hope you can.
Twenty minutes later she responded:ย Me too, Janie. All of it.
ON SATURDAY WEย walked down to the beach. โItโs not very creative,โ I said as we picked our way over the root-laden path. Gus opened his mouth to reply and I cut him off. โDonโt you dare make a joke about my genre of choice being unoriginal.โ
โI was going to say itโs stupid we havenโt come down here more,โ Gus answered.
โI assumed youโd gotten sick of it, I guess.โ
Gus shook his head. โIโve barely used this beach.โ โSeriously?โ
โRoot,โ he warned as I looked up at him, and I stepped carefully over it. โIโm not the worldโs biggest beach guy.โ
โWell, of course not,โ I said. โIf youย were, youโd be wearing a T-shirt or a hat that advertised that.โ
โExactly,โ he agreed. โAnyway, I actually prefer this beach in winter.โ โReally? Because in winter, Iโd just prefer to be dead.โ
Gusโs laugh rattled in his throat. He stepped off the wooded path onto the sand and offered me a hand as I hopped off the slight ledge. โItโs amazing. Have you ever seen it?โ
I shook my head. โWhen I was at U of M, I pretty much stayed at U of
M. I didnโt do much exploring.โ
Gus nodded. โAfter Pete and Maggie moved here, Iโd visit them for my winter break. Theyโd buy my plane or bus tickets as presents, and Iโd come for the holidays.โ
โIโm guessing your dad didnโt mind.โ A sudden burst of anger at the thought of Gus as a kid, alone, unwanted, had forced the words out of me before I could stop. I glanced cautiously at him. His jaw was clenched a bit, but otherwise his face was impassive.
He shook his head. Weโd fallen into step along the water and he looked sidelong at me, then back to the sand. โYou donโt have to worry about bringing him up. It wasnโt that bad.โ
โGus.โ I stopped and faced him. โJust the fact that you have to sayย it
means it was way worse than it shouldโve been.โ
He hesitated a second, then started walking again. โIt wasnโt like that,โ he said. โAfter my mom died, I couldโve gotten out. Pete wanted me to come live with her and Maggie. She was always trying to get me toโto talk about the fights he and I would get into, so she could get custody, but I chose not to. He had all this heart medication. Daily pills. Heโd only take them if I asked him, like, three times, but God forbid I asked a fourth. Heโd pick a fight. An actual fight. Sometimes I thought โฆโ He trailed off. โIย wonderedย if he wanted me to kill him. Or like, get himself so worked up his heart would give out. I dropped out of school to work so we could afford his
prescriptions, but when I was out, he stopped doingย anythingย for himself. Eating, bathing. I could barely keep him alive. Maybe he thought that would be my punishment.โ
โYour punishment?โ I choked out. โForย what?โ
Gus shrugged. โI donโt know. Maybe being on her side all the time.โ โYour momโs?โ
He nodded. โI think he felt like it was Us against Him. Itย wasย Us against Him. Heโd blame her for everything that went wrongโdumb shit, like, sheโd forget to put gas in the car one night and heโd realize he needed to stop for it on his way to work, so heโd be late. Or sheโd throw away a receipt he wanted to keep, dump leftovers out of the fridge a few hours before he finally decided he wanted them.
โHe was bad with me too, but it was a little more random. If the phone rang and woke him up, heโd hit me, or if he had plans to go out but had to cancel for snow, heโd knock me around to burn off his anger. I was always looking for the secret code, the rules I could follow so he wouldnโt freak out. Thatโs how you keep yourself safe, you know? You pay attention to how the world works. But there was no secret code for him. It was like our actions were entirely detached from his reactions to us. He acted like I was this lazy, selfish brat and like my mom thought she was a queen. Like she treated his money like toilet paper. She was constantly apologizing forย nothing, and then when heโd really hurt her, or me,ย heโdย apologize. Back off for a few days.
โEven with all that, I think losing her broke whatever was left in him. I donโt know.โ He paused, thinking. โMaybe it wasnโt love. Maybe treating her like shit made him feel like he had power. He didnโt have that with me as I got older.โ
โMaking you keep him alive was the only way left to manipulate you,โ I said.
โI donโt know,โ he admitted. โMaybe. But if Iโd left, he wouldโve died sooner.โ
โAnd you think that wouldโve been your fault?โ
โIt doesnโt matter whose fault it wouldโve been. He wouldโve been dead, and I wouldโve known I couldโve stopped it. Plus,ย sheย didnโt leave. How could I, knowing it wasnโt what she would have wanted?โ
โYouย donโtย know that,โ I said. โYou were a kid.โ โPete likes to say I was never a kid.โ
โThatโs the saddest thing Iโve ever heard.โ
โDonโt act like Iโm pitiful,โ he said. โItโs in the past. Itโs over.โ โYou know what your problem is?โ I asked, and this time when I
stopped, he did too.
โIโm aware of several, yes.โ
โYou donโt know the difference between pity and sympathy,โ I said. โIโm not pitying you. It makes me sad to think of you being treated like that. It makes me mad to think you didnโt have the things all kids deserve. And yeah, it makes me mad and sad that a lot of people go through the things you went through, but itโs even more upsetting because itโs you. And I know you and I like you and I want you to have a good life. Thatโs not pity. Thatโs caring about someone.โ
He stared at me intently, then shook his head. โI donโt want you to think about me like that.โ
โLikeย what?โ I asked.
โLike an angry, broken punching bag,โ he said, his face dark and tense. โIย donโt.โ I took a step closer, searching for the right words. โI just think
of you as Gus.โ
He studied me. The corner of his mouth twitched into an unconvincing smile, then faded, leaving him looking burned-out. โI am, though,โ he said quietly. โIย amย angry and messed up, and every time I try to get closer to you, itโs like all these warning bells go off, and I try to act like a normal person, but I canโt.โ
My stomach flip-flopped.ย Closer to you.ย I glanced at the lake while I got my bearings. โI thought you understood that thereโs no such thing as a normal person.โ
โMaybe not,โ Gus said. โBut thereโs still a difference between people like me and people like you, January.โ
โDonโt insult me.โ I looked sharply back at him. โDonโt you think Iโm angry? Donโt you think I feel a little bit broken? Itโs not like my lifeโs been perfect either.โ
โI haveย neverย thought your life was perfect,โ he said. โBullshit. You called me a fairy princess.โ
He coughed out a laugh. โBecauseย youโreย the bright light! Donโt you get it?โ He shook his head. โItโs not about whatโs happened. Itโs about how you cope with things, who you are. Youโve always been this fierce fucking light,
and even when youโre at your worst, when you feel angry and broken, you still know how to be a person. How to tell people youโyou love them.โ
โStop it,โ I said. He started to walk away, but I grabbed him by the elbows and held him in front of me. โYouโre not going to break me, Gus.โ
He stilled, his lips parting and his eyes searching my face for something. His head just slightly tilted and those grooves rose from the inside corners of his brows.
I hoped that what he was understanding right then was that I saw him.
That he didnโt have to do anything special, figure out a mysterious code to unlock the secret parts of him. That he just had to keep being here with me, letting me discover him bit by bit like heโd been doing with me since we met.
โI donโt need you to tell me you care about me,โ I said finally. โTwo nights ago you held me while I sobbed. I think I blew my nose on your shirt. Iโm not asking you for anything except to return the favor in whatever underwhelming and mild equivalent of lap-weeping you need.โ
He let out a long breath and leaned forward, burying his face into the side of my neck like an embarrassed kid even as his hot breath woke something up beneath my skin. My hands skimmed down the curved muscle of his arms and knotted into his rough fingers. The sun was low on the horizon, the thin blankets of clouds streaked a pale tangerine. They looked like melted Dreamsicles floating in a sea of denim blue. Gus lifted his face and looked me in the eye again, the light leaping in great licks through the gaps in the moving clouds to paint him with color.
It was an unabashed moment, a comfortable silence. The kind of thing that, if I had been writing it, I mightโve thought I could skip right over.
But I would be wrong. Because here, in this moment when nothing was happening and weโd finally run out of things to say, I knew how much I liked Gus Everett, how much he was starting to mean to me. Weโd let so much out into the open over the last three days, and I knew more would bubble up over time, but for the first time in a year, I didnโt feel overstuffed with trapped emotions and bitten-back words.
I felt a little empty, a little light.
Happy.ย Not giddy or overjoyed, but that low, steady level of happiness that, in the best periods of life, rides underneath everything else, a buffer between you and the world you are walking over.
I was happy to be here, doing nothing with Gus, and even if it was temporary, it was enough for me to believe that someday Iโd be okay again. Maybe not the exact same brand of it Iโd been before Dad diedโprobablyย notโbut a new kind, nearly as solid and safe.
I could feel the pain too, the low-grade ache Iโd be left with if and when this thing between Gus and me imploded. I could perfectly imagine every sensation, in the pit of my stomach and the palms of my hands, the sharp pulses of loss that would remind me of how good it felt to stand here with him like this, but for once, I didnโt think letting go was the answer.
I wanted to hold on to him, and this moment, for a while.
As if in agreement, Gus squeezed my hands in his. โI do, you know,โ he said. It was almost a whisper, a tender, rugged thing like Gus himself. โCare about you.โ
โI do,โ I told him. โKnow that, I mean.โ
The tangerine light glinted over his teeth when he smiled, deepening the shadows in his rarely seen dimples, and we stayed there, letting nothing happen all around us.