34
THE WHOLE DRIVE back to the bungalow, Iโm fighting tears, trying to make some kind of plan and coming up against all the same walls every
time.
I canโt tell Hayden the truth.
I canโt lie to him.
My phone is full of messages from my friends, checking how the pitch went, asking for updates. I silence it and drive to the beach. Donโt even get out of my car, just sit there with the front bumper pressed up against a dune, sobbing.
Iโm not even totally sure why Iโm so emotional.
Iโm sad about losing the job, sure.
Iโm heartbroken for Margaret. For the decision she made, and the love behind it, and how all that love congealed into a hard shell around her,
keeping everyone out.
And Iโm devastated for Hayden. For me.
When Iโm all cried out, I drive home. I leave my laptop bag in the car and go inside, immediately start packing my stuff, ignoring the crying jags that start and stop at random.
I can figure out flights later. I just know Iโm not staying here.
Around two oโclock thereโs a knock on the door. I go to open it, and the pain I feel at finding Hayden on my doorstep, another bottle of champagne in hand, is physical, a perforated edge down the middle of my heart. โI know we said youโd buy the champagne tonight,โ he begins.
โIโm not taking the job,โ I choke out before he can go any further.
His mouth drops open. โWhat?โ
I swallow the jagged tangle in my throat. โIโm not taking it.โ
โI donโt understand,โ he says.
โYou should,โ I say. โYou passed on it too.โ
Slowly, his face slackens. โWait, are you mad about that?โ
โYouโre the one who wanted me to โknow I earned it,โ โ I say, paraphrasing him, like it matters at all. Like any of this matters. Iโm not angry with him, but Iโm angry, and itโs seeping into everything else, poisoning it. โAnd then you just withdraw yourself at the last minute. So which is it, do I deserve it, or did you think I didnโt have a chance?โ
He gapes at me. โFuck, Alice. Of course I thought you had a chance. I also thought youโd do a better job than I would, andโand I didnโt want this dumb shit to come between us.โ
โYou didnโt trust me not to resent you,โ I clarify.
His mouth jams shut. โI didnโt want to put you in the position where you had to even consider it. And I didnโt want the job that badly.โ
โAnd now I donโt want it either,โ I say, tears burning in the back of my nose. Not now, not at the cost of the truth. Not at the cost of him. โIs that so hard to understand?โ
โYes,โ he says, vehement. โThis is your dream job.โ
โExactly! It was just a dream,โ I force out. โThe reality isnโt what I thought.โ
โYouโre lying to me, Alice.โ His voice strains with hurt. โWhatโs going on?โ
I shake my head, backing away from him as he moves closer, guarding that distance between us like it can do anything to protect my breaking heart. โI canโt,โ I grind out.
โAlice, what is this?โ he pleads. โTell me. Tell me whatโs going on. If I did something to hurt you, then tell me how to fix it, and Iโll do it, okay?
Anything.โ
I jerk back from him as he reaches for me, trembling from the effort of not breaking into sobs. โI canโt,โ I say more harshly. โAsk Margaret.โ
โI donโt want to ask Margaret,โ he fires back. โMargaretโs not important. You are.โ
โIโm sorry,โ I say, and then again, like Iโm a skipping record, โIโm sorry. I canโt give you any more than that. I canโtโI canโt make this make sense for you.โ
Not just because of the NDA, but because of Margaret. Because, no matter how furious I am with her, this is her story to tell. Thatโs what I promised her before I knew the truth, and itโs still what I believe.
โAll you have to do is be honest,โ he says helplessly. โJust talk to me.โ
โPlease donโt ask me again,โ I whimper. โI donโt have anything to say.โ
He stares at me, his disbelief curdling into a frustrated resignation. โSo thatโs it?โ
I want to tell him to stay. To beg him to.
But I already know it wonโt work. That he wonโt be able to let this go.
That even if he could, for a night or two, this secret would eat away at this thing between us. Margaret will go back into hiding, and then, someday, sheโll be gone, and if I did finally tell him myself then, how could he forgive me for lying to him for so long?
โPlease go,โ I whisper.
He stares at me for a long beat, his dark eyes glazing with tears.
โGoodbye, Alice,โ he finally chokes out, then turns and walks back down the path, away from me, while I try not to break.
Try not to call after him.
Try not to tell him now, in the worst possible moment, when all I can do is wound, that I love him like Iโve never loved anyone.
When heโs gone, I shut the door and slump onto the floor, letting a fresh torrent of tears overtake me. Iโm not sure how long it goes onโminutes or hoursโbut when I catch my breath and my hiccups settle, I pull my phone out and text my mom.
Would it be okay if I came home for a while?
Iโm not doing well right now.
The dots appear to indicate sheโs typing back. She says what she always says.
Sure.
โข โข โข UNDER THE HIDEOUS neon-green quilt in my childhood bedroom, I half- heartedly search for other jobs. Aging celebrities who might want to tell their stories, dating trends that could become articles for The Scratch, and restaurants back in Los Angeles that might need servers. Because if Iโm being honest, right now the last thing I want to do is my current job.
I told my friends the bare-bones detailsโthat Iโm not moving forward with Margaret, that Iโm spending a few days with my momโbut since then, Iโve been more or less ignoring their texts.
I think about calling Hayden, but what else can I say? I could assure him that I want to be with him, beg him to let this one secret sit, but if he ever found out, could he forgive me for knowing something this huge and keeping it from him?
Could he even take being in a relationship with someone he knows, in essence, is lying to him, every single day, the same way that Margaret was?
I play mental games with myself: If he calls me right now, Iโll tell him everything.
I debate whether Margaret would ever forgive me, like itโs a game of he loves me, he loves me not, and if I just happen to pluck a flower petal at the right moment, all my problems could go away.
After three days of moping, Mom walks into my room, flips on the lights, and grunts, โIf youโre going to be here, you might as well work.โ
I donโt have a good argument for that.
I get dressed and meet her in the garden. I kneel beside her in the dirt, and without looking at me, she takes Dadโs hat off her head and holds it out
to me, one hand still digging with a spade.
My heart pings at the gesture, at the familiarity of it, the quiet care. I put
it on and get to work.
For the next two days, we plant.
Irish potatoes and squash, more cucumbers, and snap beans. We prepare the soil for the upcoming cool season planting, clearing out the empty beds, turning the dirt with fertilizer. We take the broccoli seeds she started inside last month and plant them, along with collards and onions.
I feed the chickens, and I collect their eggs. I pick the ripe fruit from the stand of trees, and I manage the compost toilet.
I take short, scalding hot showers, and I help cook every meal.
My limbs ache, but my mind, finally, goes quiet.
On my fifth night there, we sit down to eat in near silence, the same way weโve eaten every meal since I got here.
Across from me, at the far end of the old wooden table, Mom picks up her fork, then sets it down again. โAre you going to tell me whatโs going on,
kid?โ
โDo you want me to?โ I ask, surprised.
She sits back in her chair, mismatched from mine, all of them found in trash heaps on curbs or at thrift stores and lovingly restored by her and Dad.
โWhat the hell kind of a question is that?โ she demands.
โSorry,โ I say quickly, searching for a way to backtrack.
โDear god, Alice,โ she says. โI know Iโm not winning Mother of the Year anytime soon, but do you really think Iโm that awful? That Iโd see my
kid in pain and not care?โ
โThatโs not it at all,โ I say.
โIf something happened,โ she replies, โyou can tell me. If you lost your job, just say it.โ
โSorry to disappoint you,โ I murmur, looking down at my full plate.
โBut no, I didnโt lose my job.โ
โSorry to disappoint me?โ she says, aghast. โYou think I want you to get fired?โ
This just keeps getting worse and worse. I want to rush to smack a Band-Aid on it, to take back or explain away that little comment.
But the truth is, now that my mind is clear enough to think, the memory of what Margaret said keeps surfacing: What good does it do anyone? He doesnโt like meโฆI canโt change who I am, and Iโm not going to change him either.
I push back from my plate and, with a shuddering breath, force the words past the thickness in my throat. โYouโve never respected my job. You donโt respect me for doing it. You think itโs stupid and shallow and a waste of time, and Iโm sorryโIโm sorry Iโm not like Audrey. Iโm sorry Iโm not saving the world, and Iโm not living a perfectly carbon-neutral life, and I spend money onโon unnecessary things like manicures and candles and romance novels. But this is who I am, and even if you donโt understand it, couldnโt you just pretend for a few days a year that you respect me? That you like me? Because I canโt figure out how to be anyone else, and itโs lonely, itโs so fucking lonely being the person who doesnโt belong in this
family.โ
She stares at me, agog, blank faced.
My chest heaves as I try to even out my breathing. My eyes, I realize, are glossed with tears, and Iโm gripping my fork like a lifeline.
One second ticks by. Another. I wonder if sheโll just pick up her fork and go back to eating, pretend this never happened.
I wonder if sheโll scream. If sheโll let me have it the way I just did to
her.
Finally, she cracks: โOh, honey.โ
Her chair scrapes back from the table and she comes around toward me, crouching to wrap me in her arms. The simple contact, the tight hug with no casual backslapping, no rush to pull away, makes me start to cry in earnest.
โYou belong,โ she murmurs, kissing the top of my head. โNever doubt that.โ
โI donโt,โ I argue, my voice wrenching upward.
My mom grips my shoulders in her hands, kneeling beside me. โAlice,โ she says calmly. โI respect you. I love you. I like you. But I donโt
understand you.โ
I blink away the tears, and her elfin features come back into focus.
โYour dadโฆโ She shakes her head and tries again. โWhen you were a tiny little girl, you were always glued to my side. All day, every day. Audrey was more independent, but you were my shadow.โ
I sniff, wipe my eyes. โI was?โ
She nods. โAnd as you grew up, grew into yourselfโฆI donโt know how to explain this in a way that wonโt make me seem like an asshole, so Iโll just say it. The first few years as a mom, it felt like you and your sister were pieces of my heart walking around outside my body. You were your own people, but you were also mine. It feels like a miracle, because it is. You had your fatherโs DNA and you had mine, and somehow that made a whole new person who was both of us and neither.
โAnd then you started growing up, and you found new things to like.
Things Iโd never even really considered. Pieces of yourself that were all you. And you didnโt need me anymore. It was amazingโitโs whatโs supposed to happen. But it was terrifying too. To let you grow past me.
Suddenly there were all these locked doors that used to be wide-open hallways.โ
โMom, I didnโt need you because I didnโt let myself. Because Audrey was sick, and I thought thatโs what everyone wanted from me. For me to justโฆbe okay. Happy. And I was. I figured it out.โ
โI know,โ she says. โAnd that breaks my heart. Because I wish I couldโve been there more. Not just when Audrey was sick, but since then too. Your dad wouldโveโฆโ
She chokes up again, but she forces herself onward. โYour dad understood you.โ Her voice squeaks, and her shoulders lift in a slight shrug.
โHe understood the things you love. He understood your sense of humor.
He had access to pieces of you I couldnโt get to, and I was okay with that, mostly. But when he diedโgod, Alice, I havenโt been able to figure out how to be what you need. He always knew the right thing to say to you. He always knew how to cheer you up, or how to talk you down.
โAnd I want to be a good parent to you, but I canโt be him.โ
โI donโt need you to be him,โ I promise tearily.
โYou deserve to have him,โ she says. โYou donโt know how many times Iโve wished it had been me instead.โ
โMom.โ My heart cracks, shatters. I wrap my arms around her again.
โDonโt say that.โ
Her voice shivers out of her, wispy and ragged: โI miss him so much.โ
I shut my eyes, the tears still managing to pour through my lashes. โMe too,โ I squeak. โI should have asked him more. I should have written it all down. I shouldโve recorded every stupid joke and every piece of advice. I should have taken videos of him singing in the kitchen while you cooked. I should have tried to know all of him while I had the time. Before it was too late.โ
My momโs embrace loosens and she sits back on her heels, swiping her own tears away. โBaby girl,โ she says. โItโs not too late. What do you want to know?โ
โข โข โข WE PROP MY phone up on the table with a stack of old books, set to video.
I place my recorder next to it, both angled toward where Mom sits with a stack of old photo albums. I hit record on each, then go join her at the
table.
โWhere should we start?โ she asks me.
โThe beginning,โ I say.
She opens album after album until she finds the book sheโs looking for.
โOur commune days,โ she says, smiling affectionately at the first Polaroid of them, out in the sun, each in overalls, both skinnier and younger. He has his arm slung around her. Heโs wearing a different though not dissimilar wide-brimmed hat.
โYou said he was ridiculous?โ I ask her, and her smile widens.
โThe most ridiculous,โ she says.
โTell me everything,โ I say.
โOnly if youโll do the same,โ she says.
I hold out my hand. We shake on it.
Then we take turns sharing our stories.
โข โข โข THE NEXT MORNING, I sit down at the desk in Audreyโs room and start to write a letter.
After speaking with Mom, I know what I need to say. I canโt control how it will be received, but I have to try.
Iโve just finished when I hear the pounding at the front door, followed by Momโs footsteps, and then a few overlapping voices.
The back of my neck tingles as I stand and make my way through the small house toward the laughter and conversation. In the entryway, I stop short at the sight of them, kicking off their shoes.
โAlice!โ Priya squeals and bounds toward me, wrapping me in a hug.
โWhat are you doing here?โ I say, flabbergasted, as Priya releases me.
โYour mom invited us,โ Cillian says, hugging me next.
I look over his shoulder toward my mom. โDid you go through my phone?โ I say, more confused than upset.
โOf course not,โ Mom replies, seemingly a bit offended by the accusation.
โWe exchanged numbers last time I was here,โ Bianca says, sidling up to hug me next. I hold on for a long moment, so grateful for these people who show up for me even when I donโt ask them to.
โIโm glad youโre here,โ I get out.
โReally?โ Priya says. โThen why, pray tell, havenโt you been texting us
back?โ
โItโs a long story,โ I say.
โWould anyone like some tea or coffee?โ Mom asks.
โI, for one, would love some, Angie,โ Cillian says, following my mom down the hallway, gawking at everything he passes and quickly throwing a look over his shoulder at me as he says, โItโs so nice to finally be invited here.โ
โHeโs never going to let it go, that he was the last one to visit here, is he?โ I say.
โIf you die first,โ Bianca says, threading an arm through mine and turning me to follow him, โheโll mention it in his eulogy.โ





