Grace wept for all the things she had lost: her innocence, her self-respect, her old life, and her parents. In spite of the bitter words and the months of silence, Grace still ached to feel her mother’s arms around her, and having experienced firsthand how strong a mother’s love was for her child, she felt the pain of losing Betsy’s love that much more acutely.
Charlie tenderly kissed Grace’s forehead. It was finally time to start over. Molly was safely in the arms of her new family, and Grace was once again just Grace. Practically since the day he had met her, Charlie had been waiting for this moment.
Not sure what was the right thing to do, Charlie climbed onto the bed and enfolded her quaking body in his own. A few hours ago Grace had said goodbye to her baby. There were no words to comfort her after such a loss, especially when his entire frame of reference consisted of watching a couple of seasons of 16 and Pregnant and Teen Mom on Netflix, so he just whispered shushing noises in her ear, as if she were a baby herself. There were so many things Charlie wanted to tell her, about how strong and special she was, but Grace was in no condition to listen. What a shame that Mr. and Mrs. Warren weren’t here to witness how extraordinary their daughter was. But as Helen said, there would be plenty of time after the big event to help put this jigsaw puzzle of a family back together.
Finally Grace’s breathing slowed, and she whispered, “Thank you. I’m okay now.” Charlie reluctantly sat up and handed her a box of tissues.
“How do you feel?” That was a stupid question.
“Physically? I feel pretty good, considering. I still don’t know how she fit.”
Charlie couldn’t help cringing at the thought of the actual giving birth part. At his age, he still thought that part of a girl’s body was for recreation, not procreation. “Are you in a lot of pain?”
“Not at all. Since I’m not nursing, they drugged me up. By tomorrow I’ll be sore, but I’m glad I feel numb all over right now.” Grace took a sip of water and leaned back against the pillow. “As hard as it was to give her up, it would have been much worse if my brain weren’t so fuzzy from the pain medication.”
“Do you wish you’d kept her?” Even as he said it, he realized that it was none of his business. But he was curious. The baby had been a part of Grace for so long that no matter how sure she was that adoption was the right thing to do, she must feel as if she were giving a part of herself away to strangers. Charlie had wondered if there was a chance Grace would change her mind and keep the baby, and what that would mean for him. Without a second’s hesitation he knew he would love Grace whether or not she had given up this baby for adoption, and he would love the baby too, as hard as that might be at first.
“No,” she said, without hesitation. “How could I compound my stupidity by putting my emotions before my daughter’s well-being? Molly didn’t do anything wrong, and even though I love her, so much, that’s just not enough. She deserves two parents to love her and care for her, and now she has that.”
“You’re the bravest person I’ve ever met, besides Aunt Helen.” Charlie really meant it. At seventeen, Grace had been through more than many people in their entire lives. “Your parents may have made a lot of mistakes along the way, but they must have done something right for you to turn out the way you did.”
“I think you’re kind of biased,” Grace said, her pale cheeks turning pink.
“Maybe a little bit. Are the Millers going to call her Molly?”
“I didn’t tell them about my private name for her. Maybe I’ll tell her about her womb name if I ever meet her. Mrs. Olson told me they’re calling her Cady, C-A-D-Y. In French cadeau means gift, and they said that’s what she is. I think it’s perfect.”
Having said goodbye, maybe forever, to her first child, Grace could feel her sense of normalcy slowly returning, even though she knew her life could never go back to the way it was. With the baby out of the picture, it was time to pick up the pieces of her life, but Grace couldn’t believe that she would simply be able to stroll back into the classroom, as if she’d been out for a couple of months with mono.
“It’s a beautiful name.” And you’re beautiful, Charlie wanted to say, but as desperate as he was to get close to her and tell her how he really felt, he realized that declaring his undying love, effectively hitting on her a few hours postpartum, was probably bad form. “Can I get you anything? Are you hungry? Thirsty? Do you want something to read?” Helen had said to be there for Grace, however she needed him, and he was determined to
do that.
“I’m fine. You look so worried. I’m really fine. The doctor said I can go home tomorrow,” Grace said, thinking again how lucky she was to have met this astonishing boy. All by himself, he had managed to restore her faith in the entire male gender.
“What about your parents? Are you going to call them now that things are almost back to normal?” Charlie selfishly didn’t want Grace to make up with her parents right away, because that meant she would move out of Helen’s house. However, if that was what she wanted, what she needed, he would do anything he could to make it happen.
“I don’t know what to do, so I’m not doing anything right now.”
“Sounds reasonable. Do you know what the date is today?” Charlie was beyond excited, but he didn’t want to show it, just in case Grace’s news wasn’t as good as his had been.
“It’s April first. I may be loaded with painkillers, but I know the date. What perfect irony that I gave birth on April Fools’ Day.” Would Molly Cady think that was funny when she was older?
“That’s not what I was talking about. Besides being April Fools’ Day, April first is also the day colleges send out their letters.”
“Oh, shit.” Between contractions and handing her baby over to a couple of strangers, the last thing Grace had been thinking about was where she would be going to school the following year.
“I got into ….” Charlie started to say.
Grace cut him off. “Don’t tell me. I don’t want to know. We applied to some of the same schools, and I don’t think we should tell each other where we got in or where we plan on accepting. We don’t want to make a decision for the wrong reasons, do we?”
When she and Charlie were comparing their college lists months earlier, Grace had fantasized about going to the same college, but after they ended up applying to almost all the same places, she started to worry that she might want to follow him because he made her feel safe, and he might want to follow her because she needed taking care of and he was clearly someone who, like his aunt, had a habit of taking care of people, and it all started to feel incredibly co-dependent and psychiatric, rather than heartfelt and romantic, all before a single acceptance letter had been sent. Her greatest fear was that Charlie would come to resent her for compelling him to stay by her side because she was emotionally destitute, a virtual orphan, and not because they were madly in love with each other.
Shutting him out was exactly the opposite of what Charlie had thought Grace would do. Apparently the vibes he thought she’d been sending, especially after that night in her bedroom, were merely his own desperate longings reverberating back onto himself. Whatever had passed between them while she was pregnant must have been nothing more than a happy collision of hormones and romantic lighting. But it had felt like so much more. He would have bet anything that she still cared about him.
Stifling his overwhelming disappointment, Charlie said flatly, “Okay, whatever you want. I brought my laptop if you want to check.”
“Thanks.”
Surprised and disappointed that Charlie didn’t protest her plan to keep it private — if he had put up any fight at all, she would have given in. If Charlie really cared about her, was truly in love with her, as she hoped, wouldn’t he insist on knowing what her plans were and sharing his own? Grace needed him to show her how much he wanted to be with her, that he would push and shove his way into her life, even if she seemed determined to keep him at arm’s length. It was a test, and tests were s
tupid, because sometimes people failed them, like now, and Grace was left with information that didn’t suit her purposes or expectations. Clearly he wasn’t that into her. But it wasn’t as if she hadn’t misread boy signals before. It was nine short months ago that she actually thought that the coolest kid in school had fallen in love with the co-captain of the math team. Talk about missing the boat. Her people sense had clearly not improved during her pregnancy.
Clicking on each e-mail, Grace bit her lip so that her face wouldn’t betray her emotions, which would have been elation, as all six schools had accepted her. Looking up at Charlie, who had been watching her intently, as if he was trying to read the screen’s reflection in her eyes, she said, “Okay then.”
“That’s it?”
“Yeah.”
“So you’re really not going to tell me what happened?” Still not ready to believe, not wanting to believe, that Grace was pulling away so suddenly and completely, Charlie asked, “And I’m not allowed to tell you where I got in?”
“No. After we send back our acceptances, then we’ll tell each other, but don’t you think you should decide where to go based on what you want, not what I’m doing?” Grace wished Charlie would beg her to tell him where she’d gotten in. She wanted him to tell her that he loved her and needed her and couldn’t imagine being away from her. She wanted him to be the person she thought he was the moment she met him.
“That’s what I’d planned on doing. Did you think I was just going to follow you wherever you went, like a dog?” In truth, he would follow her to the South Pole, in a heartbeat, but that was a revelation better saved for when they’d already been married a few years.
“No, of course not, but you might without even realizing it. I know it would affect my decision process if I knew a close friend was going to one of the schools I was considering.” As long as she was testing him, she might as well go all the way. If her instincts were right, he was three seconds from throwing his arms around her and shouting out where he was going
to college.
Flinching at the word friend, Charlie replied, “Well, I’m not like that. I haven’t worked so hard for so long to pick a school just because my friend is going there.”
He could give as good as he got, even though he knew he was being childish, and if he were a real man, he would just tell her how he felt. Well, maybe not everything, but at least the part about wanting to be more than just a supportive friend, now that Grace could go back to being a teenager again. But pride makes people stupid and shortsighted, and Charlie Glass was no exception. This conversation was not going well at all, but he lacked the maturity and nerve to try and steer it out of the ditch it was fast approaching.
“Hey, chica!” Without even knocking, Jennifer bounced into the room, nearly hidden by an enormous vase of flowers. “Sorry I’m late, but I wanted to give you two kids a little time alone together,” she said, giving Charlie the evil eye. “So, how’s everything?”
Still not certain she had heard what Charlie said, or more to the point, what he hadn’t said, Grace turned to Jennifer. “I’m good. Thank you so much for being here. You were a huge help.”
“That’s what best friends are for, right? Holding your foot so you can push a baby out of your encyclopedia. Truthfully, it was the most amazing experience I’ve ever had. I should be thanking you for letting me be there.” Turning to Charlie, she said, “You don’t know what you missed, Chuckles. Next time, maybe she’ll let you hold her foot.”
Turning three shades of crimson, Charlie said nothing, just cleared his throat. His passion for Grace was apparently obvious to everyone but Grace.
Jennifer laughed at Charlie, who was blushing like a virgin bride. “I still don’t know how she fit, even though I saw it happen. You must be pretty sore.”
“Not so bad. Lots of good drugs.” There was a continuous echo inside her head as Grace tried to carry on a conversation with Jennifer while trying to sort out what had just happened with Charlie.
“I never would have believed the human body was so … stretchy.” Jennifer made a face.
“I don’t really need to know all the details,” said Grace.
“So the bean’s really gone?” Despite seven months of smartass comments, Jennifer understood how traumatic this day had been for Grace.
“Yeah, she’s gone. It’s hard to believe.” Perfect pink Molly, with a tiny dimple in her chin, just like Grace, was on her way to a new life in Philadelphia.
“You’re incredibly calm. I’d be freaking out right now,” Jennifer said.
“I’ve done enough freaking out for a lifetime in the last nine months. I’m too tired to get upset.” Exhausted in mind and body, Grace was desperate to sleep, but every time she closed her eyes, she could see Molly’s rosebud lips and her heart started to race. Sleep would not be easy.
“I’m going to go now,” Charlie said casually, putting his laptop in his backpack. The girls were ignoring him anyway. It was clear to him that he wasn’t wanted there. “I’ll see you tomorrow.”
After Charlie left, Jennifer asked, “What’s with him?”
“I think I screwed up,” Grace replied.
“What are you talking about? There’s nothing you could do or say that could change how he feels about you.” Not that Jennifer was an expert in matters of the heart, but the way Charlie never stopped staring at Grace, he was either in love with her, or there was something wrong with his eyes.
“I’m not so sure. I didn’t tell him where I got in to school, and I wouldn’t let him tell me where he got in. I think he was insulted.”
“Why would you do that? That was dumb. So where did you get in? Am I allowed to know?” Jennifer asked.
“I got in everywhere. Apparently getting knocked up your senior year is just the kind of extracurricular activity they’re looking for.” Grace wondered whether her situation had really helped her, like having an off-the-wall hobby — underwater basketweaving, or skydiving. All that mattered now was that she had so completely misinterpreted Charlie’s feelings for her, and she didn’t know how she was going to get over him.
“Congrats. That’s amazing. And Mrs. T. is footing the bill. It sounds pretty perfect. Not that you care, but I’m going to NYU Stern. They offered me a sweet scholarship,” Jennifer said.
“That’s a great place for you. I think I’m going to accept at Dartmouth.”
“Well, duh. But what about your future husband? Why are you shutting him out? He applied to Dartmouth, too. You could room together.”
Grace scowled. “I don’t want either of us to decide on a college based on what the other one is doing. What happens if we don’t work out in the end?”
Jennifer shook her head. “Full of yourself a little? You’re sure he would follow you wherever you went?”
“Maybe,” Grace said, realizing the hubris of assuming Charlie’s feelings were as intense as hers. Maybe their kisses hadn’t meant as much to him as they had to her, or his feelings had faded. When they had been together, it had felt like she was dreaming. Now she wondered if it had all really happened as she remembered it, or was it all just a figment of her desperate imagination?
“And you would follow him?”
“I’m afraid I might, and I kind of thought he would follow me, but I think I was wrong, from how he acted when he was just here. He didn’t seem to care where I got in. He didn’t even try to convince me to tell him where I was going,” Grace said, her pride bruised by the ease with which Charlie had given up.
“Haven’t you ever heard of the male ego? Of course he’s going to pretend he doesn’t care. Begging you to tell him would be like handing you his balls on a silver platter.”
“And she’s back. I thought the miracle of childbirth might have cleaned up your language.” Grace laughed, relieved that Jennifer was still Jennifer.
“No such luck. Anyway, what are you going to do now?”
“I don’t know. Why don’t you tell me what to do? I’m too tired to think
anymore, and you always have all the answers.”
“If I were you, I’d tell him I loved him. But it’s none of my business. And it’s not like I have any personal experience to work off of.”
In Jennifer’s world, everything was blissfully simple and straightforward if you were paying attention. Finding someone who could love you no matter how crappy you looked or how stupid you acted was like finding the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow. As risky as it might seem to tell a guy you were in love with him, the payoff was so huge, it was definitely worth taking the chance those feelings might not be reciprocated. If Grace didn’t jump on this, she was a moron, but Jennifer had vowed to keep her nose out of this one. Helping her best friend through her pregnancy was one thing, but managing her mixed-up love life was another thing altogether.
“No way, not after the conversation we just had. It’s not how I thought it was between us, and now I just have to move on.” Besides, now was the time for Grace to work on Grace. Boys, even one as perfect as Charlie, were merely distractions. Determined to rationalize what had happened, Grace had to paint Charlie as the enemy — otherwise she feared sinking into a wicked postpartum depression.
“Fine, do what you want. Hopefully, you two mules can work it out. You know, you’re more like your parents than you think,” Jennifer said.
“I’m nothing like them,” Grace protested. Betsy and Brad were cruel and heartless and unforgiving. The last thing in the world Grace wanted was to be compared to them.
“You’re not crazy and spiteful like they are, but you’re stubborn like them, that’s for sure,” Jennifer said. “Remember, like Dr. Phil says, you can be right or you can be happy, but it’s hard to be both.”
“What does that even mean?” Grace asked.
“Just look at your mom and dad. They think they’re right about you being a bad seed. They won’t even try to understand your point of view. But what good does it do them? Do you really think they’re happy being right about everything … and alone?”
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