I oversleep the next morning. The power came back on sometime in the early hours of the morning, and the flashing light on my alarm clock says itโs three in the morning, but the sun shining through the window says otherwise. In any case, my alarm never went off.
My watch reveals that itโs after eight, so I stumble out of bed in the direction of Victoriaโs room. I peek in on her and sheโs out of bed, which means Adam mustโve gotten her up. The television is on, but her eyes are shut and her head is sagging to the side in her headrest. Sheโs sound asleep.
I go downstairs to make her breakfast, even though I know she wonโt eat it, but I find Adam already down there, washing dishes. He smiles cheerfully at me, with no suggestion to the fact that something really wrong almost happened between us last night.
Reading Victoriaโs diary entry last night about him throwing a fit over the toothpaste revealed another side to Adam I had never seen before. He doesnโt seem like the sort of person who would do something like that. But in a way, it makes me like him more. Like Victoriaโs friend Carol used to say, he seems like Mr. Perfect. Itโs good to know that he has flaws like everyone else. Nobody likes a person whoโs too perfect.
Itโs also good to see he made up with his parents. Whatever animosity he had towards them seems to be long gone. Maybe Victoriaโs accident had something to do with that.
โEva couldnโt make it in this morning so I took care of Victoria,โ he says. He puts a plate on the drying rack. โEverything is taken care of.โ
I go for the cabinet with the oatmeal and reach for the box. โIโll fix her some breakfast.โ
โItโs okay. I told you I took care of it.โ
I pause in the middle of opening a packet of oatmeal. โYou fed her?โ
He lifts a shoulder. โI gave her some tube feeds. She was too asleep to eat anyway. She never eats in the morning, does she?โ
I feel a little guilty about that. I always at leastย tryย to give her a chance to eat, but heโs right that she seldom does in the morning. Iโm usually lucky if she takes one bite.
โIf you donโt need anything else,โ Adam says, โIโm going to head upstairs to do some writing. I need to get some work done today.โ
โAre you working on a new book?โ
A smile touches his lips. โYes. But Iโm at the stage where I feel like everything Iโm writing is crap. Yesterday I tore up five pages and tossed them in the trash.โ
I roll my eyes. โIโm sure itโs not crap. All these reviews online say youโre this amazingly brilliant writer. And youโre a number one bestseller.โ
He waves a hand. โNo. Iโm just lucky.โ โBullshit.โ
โItโs true.โ He shrugs. โThere are a ton of talented writers out there. I was lucky enough to land a good agent, who landed me a good publishing deal, and that opened a lot of doors for me. But it couldโve gone another way.โ
I lean against the kitchen counter. โDid you always know you wanted to be a writer?โ
โPretty much.โ His eyes become distant. โIn life, things never go quite the way you want them to. But when youโre creating your own fictional world, you can make everything happen exactly how you want it to. Thatโs what I love about writing.โ
โI know what you mean. I would definitely like to rewrite parts of my life story.โ
โHow about you?โ He raises his eyebrows. โWhat are your career aspirations?โ
They always asked me this in school.ย What do you want to be when you grow up, Sylvia?ย I never had a good answer. My parents were sensible, middle-class folks who thought that I should be a teacher. After all, I sucked at schoolโand donโt they say that those who canโt do teach? But I never had a passion for teaching. I felt like I was just drifting aimlessly through life until I met Freddy. I thought he was my lifeboat until he abandoned me like I was nothing.
โI donโt know.โ I drop my eyes. โThat sounds pathetic, doesnโt it? I mean, Iโm old enough to know what I want to be when I grow up. Since, you know, Iย amย grown-up.โ
Adam laughs. โThatโs okay. You have a lot of time to decide. And in the meantime, we can use you here as long as you want to stay. Itโs nice
having you here.โ
I squeeze my fists together. He seems unwilling to address the elephant in the room. Does he not realize how close we came to kissing last night? Maybe he has the right idea though. Maybe itโs better to just pretend it never happened.
After all, itโs never going to happen again.