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Chapter no 10

Verity by Colleen Hoover

โ€ŒI donโ€™t know why Iโ€™m surprised when I set the manuscript back in the drawer. The contents of the drawer rattle as I slam it shut angrily.ย Why am I angry?ย This isnโ€™t my life or my family. Iโ€™d trolled Verityโ€™s reviews before coming here, and in nine out of ten of them, the reviewer referenced wanting to throw their Kindles or books across the room.โ€Œ

I kind of want to do the same with her autobiography. I was hoping sheโ€™d have seen the light with the birth of the girls, but she didnโ€™t. She only saw more darkness.

She seems so cold and hard, but Iโ€™m not a mother. Do a lot of mothers feel this way about their children at first? If so, they certainly arenโ€™t honest about it. Itโ€™s probably similar to when a mother claims she doesnโ€™t have a favorite child, but they probably do. Itโ€™s an unspoken thing between mothers. One I suppose you donโ€™t become aware of until you are one.

Or maybe Verity just didnโ€™t deserve to be a mother. I think about having children sometimes. Iโ€™ll be thirty-two soon and Iโ€™d be lying if I said I didnโ€™t worry the opportunity might never present itself. But if I ever do find myself in a relationship with a man Iโ€™d want to father my child, it would be someone like Jeremy. Rather than appreciate the wonderful father he seemed to be, Verity resented him.

Jeremyโ€™s love for his girls seemed genuine from the very beginning. It still seems genuine. And it hasnโ€™t been that long since he lost them. I keep losing sight of that. Heโ€™s still probably moving through the stages of grief, while dealing with Verity and being there for Crew and ensuring the income theyโ€™ve gotten used to as a family doesnโ€™t come to a complete halt. Just a fraction of what heโ€™s been through would be too much for some people. But heโ€™s dealing with all of it at once.

I found boxes of pictures in Verityโ€™s office closet this week as I was rummaging through her things. I pulled a box down, but havenโ€™t gone

through the pictures yet. It seems like another invasion of privacy on my part. This family, at least Jeremy, has entrusted me to finish this series, and I keep getting sidetracked by my obsession with Verity.

But if Verity is putting so much of herself into her series, I really do need to get to know her as well as possible. This really isnโ€™t snooping. Itโ€™s research. There you go. Justification complete.

I take the box of pictures to the kitchen table, pry open the lid, and then pull a handful of the pictures out, wondering who had them developed. People donโ€™t really have a lot of physical pictures on hand nowadays, thanks to the invention of smartphones. But there are so many pictures of the kids in here. Someone went through the trouble of making sure every picture they took was in physical form. My bet is on Jeremy.

I pick up a picture of Chastin. A close-up. I stare at her scar for a moment. I couldnโ€™t stop thinking about it yesterday, so I Googled to find out if attempted abortions could actually cause damage in utero.

Thatโ€™s something Iโ€™ll never Google again. Sadly, a lot of babies survive the attempts and are born disfigured in much worse ways than just a small scar. Chastin was really lucky. She and Harper both were.

Well…until they werenโ€™t.

Jeremyโ€™s footsteps approach the stairs. I donโ€™t try to hide the pictures, because Iโ€™m not sure he would mind that Iโ€™m down here looking at them.

When he walks into the kitchen, I smile at him and continue sorting through them. He hesitates on his way to the refrigerator, his eyes falling to the box on the table.

โ€œI feel like getting to know her helps put me in her headspace,โ€ I explain. โ€œHelps with the writing.โ€ I look away from him, down at a picture of Harper, the one who rarely smiles in pictures.

Jeremy takes a seat next to me and picks up one of the pictures of Chastin.

โ€œWhy did Harper never smile?โ€

Jeremy leans over, taking the picture of Harper from my hand. โ€œShe was diagnosed with Aspergerโ€™s when she was three. She wasnโ€™t very expressive.โ€

He runs a finger over her picture and then puts it aside, pulling another from the box. This one is of Verity and the girls. He hands it to me. The three of them are dressed alike, in matching pajamas. If Verity didnโ€™t love the girls in this photo, she was certainly good at faking it.

โ€œOur last Christmas before Crew was born,โ€ he says, explaining the photo. He pulls a handful out and begins flipping through them. He pauses every now and then on pictures of the girls, but flips past pictures of Verity.

โ€œHere,โ€ he says, pulling one out of the stack. โ€œThis is my favorite picture of them. A rare smile from Harper. She was obsessed with animals, so we had a zoo come in and set up in the backyard for their fifth birthday.โ€

I smile down at the picture. But mostly because Jeremy is in the photo with a rare look of joy spread across his face. โ€œWhat were they like?โ€

โ€œChastin was a protector. A little spitfire. Even when they were young, she could sense Harper was different from her. She mothered her. Sheโ€™d try to tell me and Verity how to parent. And God, when Crew came along, we thought we were going to have to hand him over to her. She was obsessed.โ€ He puts a picture of Chastin in the pile of pictures heโ€™s already looked at. โ€œShe would have made a great mother someday.โ€

He picks up a picture of Harper. โ€œHarper was special to me. Sometimes Iโ€™m not sure Verity understood her like I did, but itโ€™s almost as if I could sense her needs, you know? She had trouble expressing her emotions, but I knew what made her tick, what made her happy, what made her sad, even when she didnโ€™t quite know how to reveal that to the world. She was mostly happy. She didnโ€™t have an immediate interest in Crew, though. Not until he turned three or four and could actually play with her. Before that, he might as well have been another piece of furniture.โ€ He picks up a picture of the three of them. โ€œHe hasnโ€™t asked about them. Not even once. Hasnโ€™t even mentioned their names.โ€

โ€œDoes that worry you?โ€

He looks at me. โ€œI donโ€™t know if I should be relieved or worried.โ€ โ€œProbably both,โ€ I admit.

He picks up a picture of Verity and Crew, right after Crewโ€™s birth. โ€œHe went to therapy for a few months. But I was scared it was just a weekly reminder of the tragedies, so I pulled him out. If he shows signs that he needs it when heโ€™s older, Iโ€™ll take him back. Make sure heโ€™s okay.โ€

โ€œAnd you?โ€

He looks at me again. โ€œWhat about me?โ€ โ€œHow areย you?โ€

He doesnโ€™t break eye contact. Doesnโ€™t skip a beat. โ€œMy world was turned upside down when Chastin died. And then when Harper died, it

ended completely.โ€ He looks back down at the box of pictures. โ€œWhen I got the call about Verityโ€ฆthe only thing left in me to feel was anger.โ€

โ€œToward who? God?โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ Jeremy says, his voice quiet. โ€œI was angry at Verity.โ€

He looks back at me, and he doesnโ€™t even have to say why he was angry at her.ย He thinks she hit the tree on purpose.

Itโ€™s quiet in the roomโ€ฆin the house. Heโ€™s not even breathing.

Eventually, he scoots back in his chair and stands. I stand up with him because I feel like thatโ€™s the first time heโ€™s ever admitted this to anyone. Maybe even to himself. I can tell he doesnโ€™t want me to see what heโ€™s thinking, because he turns away from me and clasps his hands behind his head. I place my hand on his shoulder, and then I move so that Iโ€™m standing in front of him, whether he wants me to or not. I slip my arms around his waist and press my face against his chest and I hug him. His arms clasp around my back with a heavy sigh. He squeezes me, tight, and I can tell itโ€™s a hug heโ€™s needed for no telling how long.

We stand like this longer than a hug should last, until itโ€™s obvious to us both that we shouldnโ€™t still be clinging to each other. The strength in his hug eases, and at some point, weโ€™re no longer hugging. Weโ€™re holding each other. Feeling the weight of how long itโ€™s been since either of us has probably felt this. Itโ€™s quiet in the house, so I hear it when he tries to hold his breath. I feel all of his hesitation as his hand moves slowly up to the back of my head.

My eyes are closed, but I open them because I want to look at him. Thereโ€™s a pull in me, tilting my head back into his hand as I lift my face from his chest.

Heโ€™s looking down at me now, and I have no idea if heโ€™s about to kiss me or pull away, but either way, itโ€™s too late. I feel everything heโ€™s been trying not to say in the way he holds me. In the way heโ€™s stopped inhaling.

I can feel him bringing me closer to his mouth. But then his eyes flicker up and his hand falls.

โ€œHey, buddy,โ€ Jeremy says, looking over my shoulder. Jeremy steps back. Releases me. I grip the back of the chair, feeling as if I weigh twice as much now that heโ€™s let go of me.

I glance at the doorway, and Crew is staring at us. No expression. He looks a lot like Harper right now. His eyes fall to the box of pictures on the table and he rushes toward them.ย Lunges, almost.

I step back in a hurry, shocked by his movements. Heโ€™s picking up the pictures, angrily slamming them back into the box.

โ€œCrew,โ€ Jeremy says, his voice gentle. He tries to grab his sonโ€™s wrist, but Crew pulls away from him. โ€œHey,โ€ Jeremy says, leaning down closer to him. I can hear the confusion in Jeremyโ€™s voice, as if this is a side of Crew heโ€™s never seen before.

Crew starts crying as heโ€™s slamming all the pictures back inside the box. โ€œCrew,โ€ Jeremy says, unable to hide his concern now. โ€œWeโ€™re just looking at pictures.โ€ He tries to pull Crew to him, but Crew rips himself out

of Jeremyโ€™s arms. Jeremy grabs Crew again, pulling him to his chest. โ€œPut them back!โ€ Crew yells toward me. โ€œI donโ€™t want to see them!โ€

I grab the rest of the pictures and shove them into the box. I put the lid on it and pick it up, clutching it to my chest as Crew tries to wrangle himself from Jeremyโ€™s grip. Jeremy picks him up and rushes out of the kitchen with him. They go upstairs, and Iโ€™m left standing in the kitchen, shaken, concerned.

What was that?

Itโ€™s quiet upstairs for several minutes. I donโ€™t hear Crew putting up a fight or yelling, so I think thatโ€™s a good sign. But my knees feel weak and my head feels heavy. I need to lie down. Maybe I shouldnโ€™t have taken two Xanax tonight. Or maybe I shouldnโ€™t have brought family pictures out and put them on display in front of a family who still hasnโ€™t recovered from their loss. Or maybe I shouldnโ€™t have almost kissed a married man. I rub at my forehead, suddenly feeling the urge to boltโ€”fleeโ€”and never come back to this house of sadness.

What am I still doing here?

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