Emma helped give Chelsea a bath, then changed her Band-Aid afterward. It was just a Band-Aid, but watching how gentle and sweet Emma was with my sister made me smile.
After that we moved to the living room and sat on the sofa to watchย Frozen, me at one end and Emma at the other because Chelsea wanted to be in the middle curled up against me. Brad jumped into my lap and I was officially buried.
Emma smiled at me from the other end of the couch. โYouโre like a docking station for small vulnerable dependents.โ
โWell, we all need a job.โ She laughed.
When Chelsea fell asleep, I carried her up to bed. When I came down, I sat back in my corner. I didnโt want to assume Emma wanted me closer.
She looked at me, amused. โAll the way over there?โ
โWell, I donโt want to crowd you. Though the docking station is available if youโd like to give it a try.โ
She made a show of thinking about it. โYou know, Iย wouldย like to give it a try. See what all the fuss is about.โ
I grinned and made a come-here motion with my hand and she scooted over and let me put an arm around her. The highlight of my entire week, hands down.
โSo what do you want to watch?โ I asked, hoping she couldnโt feel my heart racing, though I was pretty sure she could.
She tilted her head up and her mouth wasย veryย close to mine. โWhatever you want.โ
โOkay.ย Hellraiserย it is.โ โHa.โ
I picked up the remote and started scrolling. โHow aboutย The Sopranos?โ
โSure. But from the beginning though. Itโs been a few years.โ
โGot it.โ I was scrolling down to season one when my phone pinged on the coffee table. โSorry, I leave the ringer up when Iโm babysitting,โ I said.
I looked at my screen and cracked up. โLook what Brad just sent me.โ
It was a picture of a shirt with the Toilet King on it and a text that said, โYour birthday gift motherfucker.โ
She laughed. โWhen is your birthday?โ she asked. โNot until next year. Whenโs your birthday?โ
โIn a few weeks, actually.โ
โOh. Well, do you have plans? Can I take you out?โ I asked. โItโll be after my contractโs up.โ
Her way of saying she wouldnโt be here for it. I only got to feel disappointed for a second before my phone pinged again.
โSorry,โ I said, looking at it. โItโs my mom. I have to reply to this.โ
I took my arm away from Emma and typed a short message about Sarah being home and Chelsea being in bed.
โWhat time does she get home?โ Emma asked. โI donโt know. Midnight?โ
She must have heard the tone in my voice. โWhat?โ she asked.
โNothing.โ I hit send and put my phone away. But when I went to put my arm back around her, she didnโt scoot in.
โIt doesnโt feel like nothing,โ she said.
I looked away from her. โSheโs dealing with some pretty serious legal issues at the moment.โ
โFor what?โ
I paused, not sure how much I wanted to share. I decided on all of it. Emma was going to be here when it all hit the fan anyway, so there was no point in keeping her in the dark.
โSheโs going to prison.โ I stopped because the next part was hard to say out loud. In fact, I had never done it with anyone besides Brad and Benny. โShe embezzled money. A lot of money.โ
Emma just stared at me.
โShe wrote herself fake checks. She was doing it for the better part of a year. She got caught.โ
โHad she ever done anything like that before?โ she asked.
โNo. Never. She didnโt have any priors, not even a speeding ticket,โ I said. โWe hoped for a slap on the wrist, probation, restitution. Even her old boss asked for leniency.โ I shook my head. โShe didnโt get it. She worked for a nonprofit and almost put it out of business. It pissed off the judge. He gave her some time to get her affairs in order, then she has to turn herself in. She got six years.โ
โOh my God,โ Emma breathed. โHow much did she take?โ
โA lot. Flew the kids to Disneyland. Redid the landscaping. Stupid shit. Shit that wasnโt worth it. I donโt even know why she did it. To be honest I donโt even think she knows.โ
โAnd whoโs taking the kids?โ Emma asked. I paused. โI am.โ
I couldnโt read the expression on her face. โOh.โ
โIโm sorry I didnโt tell you. It only became official a few days before I met you. It was hard to talk about,โ I said. โMomโs best friend Leigh agreed to take them, but theyโd have to move twenty miles away to live with her. Leighโs got horses and she canโt board them. Alex and Sarah were having a really hard time with it. I didnโt want them to have to change schools. Plus if I move in here, I can keep paying the mortgage so Mom wonโt lose the house. She already had to liquidate her 401(k) and all the college funds to pay back the money she took. I couldnโt let the house end up sold after all that.โ
โWhen does she leave?โ โNext week.โ
The words hung there.
Today I was single. I had my own place, my own life. And next week Iโd be the legal guardian of three children.
I still couldnโt believe it. No matter how fast it was coming or how many emails Mom sent with instructions and the names of pediatricians and dentists they had to see and sports I had to sign them up for in the fall, I still couldnโt accept this was real.
We sat there for a moment in silence and I stared at a photo on the
mantel, the last one we took with Dad before he died. The one-eighty our lives had taken since then was truly unbelievable. Some alternate universe. A hellscape.
โShe wonโt be able to chaperone Chelseaโs field trips,โ I said, almost absently.
When she got out, she wouldnโt pass the schoolโs background check. All the memories I had of Mom on the bus, on our way to Como Park or Long LakeโChelsea wouldnโt have that. She wouldnโt have her dad and sheโd lost parts of her mom now too. Alex would be in his twenties when she got out. She was going to miss his graduation. Sarahโs too. Chelsea would be ten, a sixth grader. Iโd be thirty-five. Maybe Iโd be married. Maybe Alex would. Sheโd miss the weddings. Sheโd miss ourย lives.
And I was angry.
Iโd been angry for years. I was angry when Dad died, and then I slid right into being angry at Mom and angry at what was happening to my life and I justโฆ I couldnโt stop. I couldnโt forgive it. I couldnโt understand it and I couldnโt forgive it. And now everyone would pay for it. Alex, Sarah, and Chelsea.ย Me.
Emma watched me quietly.
โIโm trying really hard to not hold on to it,โ I said. โItโs just a lot to accept. It was right after my dad died.โ I shook my head. โIt was so out of character for her, I donโt get it.โ
โBe glad you donโt get it. It means your life has been a lot gentler than hers.โ
I stopped and looked at her.
โHow old was Chelsea when your dad died?โ she asked. I wrinkled my forehead. โFive months.โ
โWhen did she do this?โ
I paused. โThat same year.โ
โShe could have been dealing with postpartum depression, PTSD, complicated grief. Any of those things can make you impulsive and reckless. She might have been self-medicating to deal with it, taking things you didnโt know about. Trauma changes you.โ
I set my lips into a line. โSo you think she got so depressed she decided to steal two hundred thousand dollars?โ
โJustin, people get so depressed they kill themselves.โ
I blinked at her.
โYou have a lot of ice in Minnesota, right?โ she asked. โYesโฆโ
โWhat happens when water gets into a crack and it freezes?โ โIt expands,โ I said. โMakes the crack bigger.โ
โUnhealed trauma is a crack. And all the little hard things that trickle into it that would have rolled off someone else, settle. Then when life gets cold, that crack gets bigger, longer, deeper. It makes new breaks. You donโt know how broken she was or what she was trying to do to fill those cracks. Being broken is not an excuse for bad behavior, you still have to make good choices and do the right thing. But itย canย be the reason. And sometimes understanding the reason can be what helpsย youย heal.โ
โIโveโฆ Iโve never thought of it that way,โ I admitted.
Emma tucked her leg under her. โI think the thing that always got me through the stuff with my mom was knowing that she didnโtย wantย to be the way she was. Nobody wants to be the villain, Justin. If you start there, itโs easier to get how people end up who they are and where they are. My mom put me through a lot. She hurt me. A lot. But sheโs full of more cracks than I can ever comprehend.โ
โSo how do you reconcile that?โ I asked. โHow do you learn to forgive her?โ
She shrugged. โYou donโt have to forgive her. You really donโt. You can still love someone that youโve decided not to speak to anymore. You can still wish them well and hope for the best for them. Choosing a life without them doesnโt mean you stop caring about them. It just means that you canโt allow them to harm you anymore. But if you donโt think your life would be better without them in it, then accept that they have cracks. Try to understand how they got them and help fill them with something that isnโt ice.โ She peered at me. โIf you can choose anger or empathy, always choose empathy, Justin. Itโs so much healthier than anger. For both of you.โ
I wanted to respond, but I didnโt even know what to say.
It was weird but it had never occurred to me that maybe Mom had been changed because of what happened with Dad. I mean, she always seemed to keep it together. She didnโt miss work, she didnโt stay in bed for days at a time or lose a bunch of weight or stop brushing her hair.
But maybe sheย didย fall apart. Maybe she just didnโt let us see it. Maybe
that was her way of protectingย usย from more cracks.
I felt a small lump form in my throat. Because when I reframed it this way, I started to wonder if Iโd failed her. If I hadnโt felt like someone safe that she could be honest with and lean on. I hadnโt met her where she was.
Emma was right. My lifeย hadย been gentler than hers.
I studied the woman sitting next to me. Imagine someone who went through what she did, turning out the way she had. Able to give grace to someone whoโd let her down so badly. Emma was a better person than I was. And my life had been gentler than hers too.
The front door opened and my sweaty, slightly sunburnt teenage brother came in. I was glad for the interruption.
I leaned to look over the back of the couch. โHey, how was it?โ
Alex dropped a gift shop bag on the floor. โIt was epic! Mitch barfed on the Corkscrew, we were making fun of him the whole time.โ
โNice.โ I nodded at Emma. โAlex, this is my girlfriend, Emma.โ She smiled. โHi.โ
โHey.โ My brother froze and beamed like heโd never seen a woman before. โSo whatโre you guys doing?โ he asked, looking back and forth between us.
I hadnโt brought anyone home in years, not since the streak started. This was exciting for everyone apparently.
โWeโre getting out of here, actually.โ I looked at my watch, then at her. โReady to go?โ
โReady.โ She stood.
I gave Alex the rundown on his sisters. Then I collected Brad and we got in the car.
I wanted to ask her if sheโd like to go do something else. Dessert somewhere maybe? But it was already almost 11:00 and she had work in the morning. I figured Iโd save myself the letdown of being told no and Iโd just drop her off. But I was not ready to end the night, by any stretch.
Something told me I wouldnโt be ready for her contract to end either.