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Chapter no 12

Everything I Never Told You

All the way home, James thinks to himself:ย It is not too late. It is not too late.ย With each mile marker, he repeats it until he is back in Middlewood, the college and then the lake whipping by. When at last he pulls into their driveway, the garage door is open, and Marilynโ€™s car nowhere in sight. Each breath sways him, no matter how hard he tries to keep upright. All these years he has remembered only:ย She ran away.ย He has taken this for granted:ย She came back.ย And:ย She stayed.ย As he reaches for the front doorknob, his legs wobble. It is not too late, he assures himself, but inside, he quavers. He cannot blame her if she has gone away again, this time for good.

In the front hall, a heavy silence greets him, like that of a funeral. Then

he steps into the living room and sees a small figure huddled on the floor. Hannah. Curled in a ball, hugging herself with both arms. Eyes a watery red. He remembers suddenly a long-ago afternoon, two motherless children on a cold doorstep.

โ€œHannah?โ€ he whispers, even as he feels himself collapsing, like an old building grown too weak to stand. His bag drops from his fingers to the floor. Itโ€™s as if heโ€™s breathing through a straw. โ€œWhereโ€™s your mother?โ€

Hannah looks up. โ€œUpstairs. Sleeping.โ€ Thenโ€”and this is what gives James his breath againโ€”โ€œI told her you would come home.โ€ Not smugly, not triumphantly. Just a fact, round and simple as a bead.

James sinks to the carpet beside his small daughter, silenced by gratitude, and Hannah considers whether to say more. For there is more, much more: how she and her mother had curled up together on Lydiaโ€™s bed and cried and cried all afternoon, holding each other so close that their tears mixed, until her mother had fallen asleep. And how, half an hour ago, her brother had arrived home in a police car, rumpled and groggy and stinking to high heaven but strangely serene, and had gone straight up to his room

and into bed. Hannah, peeking from behind the curtain, had seen Officer Fiske at the wheel, and late that night, Marilynโ€™s car will quietly reappear in the driveway, washed, keys set neatly on the driverโ€™s seat. It can wait, she decides. She is used to keeping peopleโ€™s secrets, and there is something more pressing to tell her father.

She tugs at his arm, pointing upward, and James is surprised by how small her hands are, and how strong. โ€œLook.โ€

At first, so overcome with relief, so accustomed to ignoring his youngest, he sees nothing. It is not too late, he thinks, glancing up at the ceiling, clean and bright as a new sheet of paper in the late-afternoon sun. Not yet the end.

โ€œLook,โ€ Hannah insists again, tipping his head with a peremptory hand. She has never dared to be so bossy, and James, startled, looks carefully and sees it at last: a white footprint against the off-white, as if someone has stepped in paint and then onto the ceiling, leaving one faint but perfect track. He has never noticed it before. Hannah catches his eye and the look on her face is serious and proud, as if sheโ€™s discovered a new planet. Itโ€™s ridiculous, really, a footprint on the ceiling. Unexplainable and pointless and magical.

Hannah giggles, and to James it sounds like the tinkling of a bell. A good sound. He laughs too, for the first time in weeks, and Hannah, suddenly bold, nestles close to her father. It feels familiar, the way she melts into him. It reminds him of something heโ€™s forgotten.

โ€œYou know what Iโ€™d do with your sister sometimes?โ€ he says slowly. โ€œWhen she was small, really small, even smaller than you. You know what Iโ€™d do?โ€ He lets Hannah climb onto his back. Then he stands and turns side to side, feeling her weight shift against him. โ€œWhereโ€™s Lydia?โ€ he says. โ€œWhereโ€™s Lydia?โ€

Heโ€™d say this, over and over, while she nestled her face in his hair and giggled. He could feel her hot little breath on his scalp, on the back of his ears. Heโ€™d wander the living room, peering behind furniture and around doorways. โ€œI can hear her,โ€ heโ€™d say. โ€œI can see her foot.โ€ Heโ€™d squeeze her ankle, clutched tight in his hand. โ€œWhere is she? Whereโ€™s Lydia? Where could she be?โ€ He would twist his head and sheโ€™d duck, squealing, while he pretended not to notice her hair dangling over his shoulder. โ€œThere she is!

Thereโ€™s Lydia!โ€ Heโ€™d spin faster and faster, Lydia clinging tighter and tighter, until he collapsed on the rug, letting her roll, laughing, off his back.

She never got tired of it. Found and lost and found again, lost in plain sight, pressed to his back, her feet clasped in his hands. What made something precious? Losing it and finding it. All those times heโ€™d pretended to lose her. He sinks down on the carpet, dizzy with loss.

Then he feels small arms curling round his neck, the warmth of a small body leaning against him.

โ€œDaddy?โ€ Hannah whispers. โ€œWill you do that again?โ€

And he feels himself rising, pushing himself back up to his knees.

โ€ข โ€ข โ€ข

 

 

There is so much more to do, so much yet to be mended. But for now, he thinks only of this, his daughter, here in his arms. He had forgotten what it was like to hold a childโ€”to hold anyoneโ€”like that. How their weight sank into you, how they clung instinctively. How they trusted you. It is a long time before he is ready to let her go.

And when Marilyn wakes and comes downstairs, just as the light is fading, this is what she finds: her husband cradling their youngest in a circle of lamplight, a tender look of calm on his face.

โ€œYouโ€™re home,โ€ Marilyn says. All of them know it is a question.

โ€œIโ€™m home,โ€ James says, and Hannah rises on tiptoes, edging toward the door. She can feel the room is poised on the edgeโ€”of what, sheโ€™s not sure, but she does not want to destroy this beautiful, sensitive balance.

Accustomed to being overlooked, she sidles toward her mother, ready to slip by unnoticed. Then Marilyn touches a gentle hand to her shoulder, and Hannahโ€™s heels land on the floor with a surprised thump.

โ€œItโ€™s all right,โ€ Marilyn says. โ€œYour father and I just need to talk.โ€ Then

โ€”and Hannah flushes with delightโ€”she kisses her on the head, right where the hair parts, and says, โ€œWeโ€™ll see you in the morning.โ€

Halfway up the steps, Hannah pauses. From downstairs, she hears only a low murmur of voices, but for once she does not creep back down to listen.ย Weโ€™ll see you in the morning,ย her mother had said, and she takes this as a promise. She tiptoes across the landingโ€”past Nathโ€™s room, where behind the closed door her brother lies in a dreamless sleep, the remnants of the whiskey slowly steaming from his pores; past Lydiaโ€™s room, which looks, in the dark, like nothing has changed, though nothing could be further from the truth; all the way up to her own room, where through the

windows the lawn outside is just beginning to turn from inky blue to black. Her glow-in-the-dark clock reads just past eight, but it feels later, like the middle of the night, the darkness quiet and thick as a down comforter. She wraps that feeling around her. From up here, she canโ€™t hear her parents talking. But itโ€™s enough to know that theyโ€™re there.

โ€ข โ€ข โ€ข

 

 

Downstairs, Marilyn lingers in the doorway, one hand on the jamb. James tries to swallow, but something hard and sharp lodges in his throat, like a fishbone. Once he had been able to read his wifeโ€™s mood even from her back. By the tilt of her shoulders, by the shifting of her weight from left foot to right, he would have known what she was

thinking. But itโ€™s been a long time since he looked at her carefully, and now, even face-to-face, all he can see are the faint wrinkles at the corners of her eyes, the faint wrinkles where her blouse has been crushed, then straightened.

โ€œI thought youโ€™d gone,โ€ she says at last.

When Jamesโ€™s voice squeezes around the sharp thing in his throat, it comes out thin and scratched. โ€œI thought you had.โ€

And for the moment, this is everything they need to say.

Some things they will never discuss: James will never talk to Louisa again, and he will be ashamed of this for as long as he lives. Later, slowly, they will piece together other things that have never been said. He will show her the coronerโ€™s report; she will press the cookbook into his hands. How long it will be before he speaks to his son without flint in his voice; how long it will be before Nath no longer flinches when his father speaks. For the rest of the summer, and for years after that, they will grope for the words that say what they mean: to Nath, to Hannah, to each other. There is so much they need to say.

In this moment of silence, something touches Jamesโ€™s hand, so light he

can barely feel it. A moth, he thinks. The sleeve of his shirt. But when he looks down, he sees Marilynโ€™s fingers curled over his, the merest curve as they squeeze. He has almost forgotten what it felt like, to touch her. To be forgiven even just this much. He bows his head and rests it on the back of her hand, overwhelmed with gratitude at having one more day.

In bed, they touch each other gently, as if itโ€™s the first time theyโ€™ve ever been together: his hand sliding carefully across the small of her back, her fingers careful and deliberate as she undoes the buttons of his shirt. Their bodies are older now; he can feel his shoulders sagging, he can see the silver scars from childbirth crisscrossing just below her waistline. In the dark they are careful of each other, as if they know they are fragile, as if they know they can break.

โ€ข โ€ข โ€ข

 

 

In the night, Marilyn wakes and feels her husbandโ€™s warmth beside her, smells the sweet scent of him, like toast, mellowed and organic and bittersweet. How lovely it would be to stay curled here against him, to feel his chest rising and falling against her, as if it were her own breath. Right now, though, there is something else she must do.

At the doorway to Lydiaโ€™s room, she pauses with her hand on the knob and rests her head against the frame, remembering that last evening together: how a glint of light had caught Lydiaโ€™s water glass and sheโ€™d looked at her daughter across the table and smiled. Spinning out her daughterโ€™s future, brimming with confidence, sheโ€™d never imagined even for a second that it might not happen. That she might be wrong about anything.

That evening, that sureness, feels ancient now, like something grown small with the distance of years. Something sheโ€™d experienced before her children, before marrying, while she was still a child herself. She understands. There is nowhere to go but on. Still, part of her longs to go back for one instantโ€”not to change anything, not even to speak to Lydia, not to tell her anything at all. Just to open the door and see her daughter there, asleep, one more time, and know all was well.

And when at last she opens the door, this is what she sees. The shape of her daughter there in the bed, one long lock of hair stretched across the pillow. If she looks hard, she can even see the rise and fall of the flowered comforter with each breath. She knows sheโ€™s been granted a vision, and she tries not to blink, to absorb this moment, this last beautiful image of her daughter sleeping.

Someday, when sheโ€™s ready, sheโ€™ll pull the curtains, gather the clothing from the bureau, stack the books from the floor and pack them away. Sheโ€™ll

wash the sheets, open desk drawers, empty the pockets of Lydiaโ€™s jeans. When she does, sheโ€™ll find only fragments of her daughterโ€™s life: coins, unsent postcards, pages torn from magazines. Sheโ€™ll pause over a peppermint, still twisted in cellophane, and wonder if itโ€™s significant, if it had meant something to Lydia, if it was just overlooked and discarded. She knows sheโ€™ll find no answers. For now, she watches the figure in the bed, and her eyes fill with tears. Itโ€™s enough.

โ€ข โ€ข โ€ข

 

 

When Hannah comes downstairs, just as the sun is rising, she counts carefully: two cars in the driveway. Two rings of keys on the hall table. Five sets of shoesโ€”one Lydiaโ€™sโ€”by the door. Though this last causes a sting, just between the collarbones, these sums bring her comfort. Now, peeking through the front window, she sees the Wolffsโ€™

door open and Jack and his dog emerge. Things will never be the same again; she knows this. But the sight of Jack and his dog, heading for the lake, brings her comfort, too. As if the universe is slowly returning to normal.

For Nath, though, at his window upstairs, the opposite is true. Awaking from his deep and drunken sleep, the whiskey purged from his body, everything seems new: the outlines of his furniture, the sunbeams slicing across the carpet, his hands before his face. Even the pain in his stomachโ€” he hasnโ€™t eaten since yesterdayโ€™s breakfast, and that, like the whiskey, is long goneโ€”feels bright and clean and sharp. And now, across the lawn, he spots what heโ€™s sought every day for so long. Jack.

He does not bother to change his clothes, or to grab his keys, or to think at all. He simply pulls on his tennis shoes and barrels down the stairs. The universe has given him this chance, and he refuses to squander it. As he yanks open the front door, Hannah is merely a startled blur in the front hall. For her part, she does not even bother to put on shoes. Barefoot, she darts after him, the asphalt still cool and damp against her feet.

โ€œNath,โ€ she calls. โ€œNath, itโ€™s not his fault.โ€ Nath doesnโ€™t stop. Heโ€™s not running, just marching with a fierce and angry stride toward the corner, where Jack has just disappeared. He looks like the cowboys in their fatherโ€™s movies, determined and tense-jawed and unshakable in the middle of the deserted street. โ€œNath.โ€ Hannah grabs his arm, but he keeps walking,

unmoved, and she scurries to keep up. Theyโ€™re at the corner now, and both of them see Jack at the same moment, sitting on the dock, arms wrapped around his knees, the dog lying beside him. Nath pauses to let a car go by and Hannah tugs his hand, hard.

โ€œPlease,โ€ she says. โ€œPlease.โ€ The car passes and Nath hesitates, but heโ€™s been waiting for answers so long. Now or never, he thinks, and he jerks himself free and crosses the street.

If Jack hears them coming, he doesnโ€™t show it. He stays there, looking out over the water, until Nath is standing right over him.

โ€œDid you think I wouldnโ€™t see you?โ€ Nath says. Jack doesnโ€™t reply.

Slowly, he gets to his feet, facing Nath with his hands tucked in the back pockets of his jeans. As if, Nath thinks, heโ€™s not even worth fighting. โ€œYou canโ€™t hide forever.โ€

โ€œI know it,โ€ Jack says. At his feet, the dog utters a low, moaning whine. โ€œNath,โ€ Hannah whispers. โ€œLetโ€™s go home. Please.โ€

Nath ignores her. โ€œI hope you were thinking about how sorry you are,โ€ he says.

โ€œI am so sorry,โ€ Jack says. โ€œAbout what happened to Lydia.โ€ A faint tremor shakes his voice. โ€œAbout everything.โ€ Jackโ€™s dog backs away, huddling against Hannahโ€™s legs, and sheโ€™s sure now that Nathโ€™s hands will unclench, that heโ€™ll turn around and leave Jack alone and walk away. Except he doesnโ€™t. For a second he seems confusedโ€”then being confused makes him angrier.

โ€œDo you think that changes anything? It doesnโ€™t.โ€ The knuckles of his fists have gone white. โ€œTell me the truth. Now. I want to know. What happened between you two. What made her go out on that lake that night.โ€

Jack half shakes his head, as if he doesnโ€™t understand the question. โ€œI thought Lydia told youโ€”โ€ His arm twitches, as if heโ€™s about to take Nath by the shoulder, or the hand. โ€œI should have told you myself,โ€ he says. โ€œI should have said, a long time agoโ€”โ€

Nath takes a half-step closer. He is so close now, so close to understanding, that it makes him dizzy. โ€œWhat?โ€ he says, almost whispering, so quiet now that Hannah can hardly hear him. โ€œThat itโ€™s your fault?โ€

In the second before Jackโ€™s head moves, she understands whatโ€™s going to happen: Nath needs a target, somewhere to point his anger and guilt, or heโ€™ll crumble. Jack knows this; she can see it in his face, in the way he

squares his shoulders, bracing himself. Nath leans closer, and for the first time in a long time, he looks Jack right in the eye, brown on blue.

Demanding. Begging.ย Tell me. Please.ย And Jack nods his head.ย Yes.

Then his fist smashes into Jack and Jack doubles over. Nath has never hit anyone before, and heโ€™d thought it would feel goodโ€”powerfulโ€”his arm uncoiling like a piston. It doesnโ€™t. It feels like punching a piece of meat, something dense and heavy, something that does not resist. It makes him feel a little sick. And heโ€™d expected aย pow,ย like in the movies, but thereโ€™s hardly any noise at all. Just a thump, like a heavy bag falling to the floor, a faint little gasp, and that makes him feel sick, too. Nath readies himself, waiting, but Jack doesnโ€™t hit back. He straightens up, slowly, one hand on his stomach, his eyes watching Nath. He doesnโ€™t even make a fist, and this makes Nath feel sickest of all.

He had thought that when he found Jack, when his fist hit Jackโ€™s smug face, heโ€™d feel better. That everything would change, that the hard glob of anger that has grown inside him would crumble like sand. But nothing happens. He can still feel it there, a lump of concrete inside, scraping him raw from the inside out. And Jackโ€™s face isnโ€™t smug, either. Heโ€™d expected at least defensiveness, maybe fear, but in Jackโ€™s eyes he sees nothing of that. Instead Jack looks at him almost tenderly, as if heโ€™s sorry for him. As if he wants to reach out and put his arms around him.

โ€œCome on,โ€ Nath shouts. โ€œAre you too ashamed to hit back?โ€

He grabs Jack by the shoulder and swings again and Hannah looks away just before his fist meets Jackโ€™s face. This time, a trickle of red drips from Jackโ€™s nose. He doesnโ€™t wipe it away, just lets it drip, from nostril to lip to chin.

โ€œStop it,โ€ she screams, and only when she hears her own voice does she realize sheโ€™s crying, that her cheeks and her neck and even the collar of her T-shirt are sticky with tears. Nath and Jack hear it too. They both stare, Nathโ€™s fist still cocked, Jackโ€™s face and that tender look now turned on her. โ€œStop,โ€ she screams again, stomach churning, and she rushes between them, trying to shield Jack, battering her brother with her palms, shoving him away.

And Nath doesnโ€™t resist. He lets her push him, feels himself teetering, feet slipping on the worn-smooth wood, lets himself fall off the dock and into the water.

โ€ข โ€ข โ€ข

 

 

So this is what itโ€™s like, he thinks as the water closes over his head. He doesnโ€™t fight it. He holds his breath, stills his arms and legs, keeps his eyes open as he plummets. This is what it looks like. He imagines Lydia sinking, the sunlight above the water growing dimmer as he sinks farther, too. Soon heโ€™ll be at the bottom, legs and arms and the

small of his back pressed to the sandy lake floor. Heโ€™ll stay there until he canโ€™t hold his breath any longer, until the water rushes in to snuff out his mind like a candle. His eyes sting, but he forces them open. This is what itโ€™s like, he tells himself. Notice this. Notice everything. Remember it.

But heโ€™s too familiar with the water. His body already knows what to do, the way it knows to duck at the corner of the staircase at home, where the ceiling is low. His muscles stretch and flail. On its own, his body rights itself, his arms claw at the water. His legs kick until his head breaks the surface and he coughs out a mouthful of silt, breathes cool air into his lungs. Itโ€™s too late. Heโ€™s already learned how not to drown.

He floats faceup, eyes closed, letting the water hold his weary limbs. He canโ€™t know what it was like, not the first time, not the last. He can guess, but he wonโ€™t ever know, not really. What it was like, what she was thinking, everything sheโ€™d never told him. Whether she thought heโ€™d failed her, or whether she wanted him to let her go. This, more than anything, makes him feel that she is gone.

โ€œNath?โ€ Hannah calls, and then sheโ€™s peering over the side of the dock, her face small and pale. Then another head appearsโ€”Jackโ€™sโ€”and a hand stretches down toward him. He knows itโ€™s Jackโ€™s, and that when he gets there, heโ€™ll take it anyway.

And after he takes it, what will happen? Heโ€™ll struggle home, dripping wet, muddy, knuckles raw from Jackโ€™s teeth. Beside him, Jack will be bruised and swollen, the front of his shirt a Rorschach of dark brown.

Hannah will obviously have been crying; it will show in the streaks under her eyes, in the damp thwack of lashes against her cheek. Despite this, they will be strangely aglow, all of them, as if theyโ€™ve been scoured. It will take a long time to sort things out. Today they will have to deal with their parents, Jackโ€™s mother, too, all the questions:ย Why were you fighting? What happened?ย It will take a long time, because they wonโ€™t be able to explain, and parents, they know, need explanations. They will change into dry

clothing, Jack wearing one of Nathโ€™s old T-shirts. They will dab mercurochrome on Jackโ€™s cheek, on Nathโ€™s knuckles, making them look bloodier, like their wounds are reopened, even though in reality they are beginning to close.

And tomorrow, next month, next year? It will take a long time. Years from now, they will still be arranging the pieces they know, puzzling over her features, redrawing her outlines in their minds. Sure that theyโ€™ve got her right this time, positive in this moment that they understand her completely, at last. They will think of her often: when Marilyn opens the curtains in Lydiaโ€™s room, opens the closet, and begins to take the clothing from the shelves. When their father, one day, enters a party and for the first time does not glance, quickly, at all the blond heads in the room. When Hannah begins to stand a little straighter, when she begins to speak a bit clearer, when one day she flicks her hair behind her ear in a familiar gesture and wonders, for a moment, where she got it. And Nath. When at school people ask if he has siblings:ย two sisters, but one died;ย when, one day, he looks at the small bump that will always mar the bridge of Jackโ€™s nose and wants to trace it, gently, with his finger. When, a long, long time later, he stares down at the silent blue marble of the earth and thinks of his sister, as he will at every important moment of his life. He doesnโ€™t know this yet, but he senses it deep down in his core. So much will happen, he thinks, that I would want to tell you.

For now, when he opens his eyes at last, he focuses on the dock, on Jackโ€™s hand, on Hannah. From where he floats, her upside-down face is right-side up, and he dog-paddles toward her. He doesnโ€™t want to dive underwater and lose sight of her face.

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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