“You don’t want to make Annie my legal guardian? Maybe I should have asked her to adopt me instead of marry me.”
He doesn’t even smirk. It’s like I’m not talking. “Moving on,” he says. “Basketball camp.”
A sudden lump in my throat can’t be swallowed. “What about it?”
“You’re not going.”
“What?”
“You’re getting a job.”
“But—”
“Save it. You decided you were an adult. You got married. Now you’re getting a job so you can contribute financially. Summer camp is for children.”
I stare at my hands and nod. Why can’t I argue? Is it because he’s right? Everything’s sinking, though. My stomach, my heart, my brain. I drag a chair out from the table and sit down.
“As for your banking . . .” He pauses to pull several thick folders from the portable file box at his feet and careens headfirst into a fiscal responsibility lecture, hitting all the essentials: checking, savings, debit, credit, interest, record keeping, various PINs, and on and on. He doesn’t just go through it once, though. Several times he cycles through the same material, and unless this is his first and only Alzheimer’s symptom, he thinks he’s doing this for my benefit. Not only does he believe he can purchase me some financial savvy by repeating himself again and again, apparently he’s reverted to twenty years ago, back to a time before all my banking could be taken care of by him via the internet, all the way from, say, the Middle East. “—and are you even listening?”
“Yes.”
He shakes his head, shoves the folders back into the file box, but one doesn’t want to fit.
“I’m listening. I am.”
He wrestles the one offending file into submission, snaps the lid shut.
“But I can call you, right?” I ask. “Or email you. I mean, if I forget my debit card PIN or my Blue Cross Blue Shield number, or if I have some kind of emergency. It’s not like I can’t ever talk to you again.”
The moment I’ve said it, I realize I should have just shut up and kept on nodding. His face is raw with unguarded disappointment, and I see what he’s really saying through this never-ending, outward-spiraling lecture after lecture. If I can’t handle this, I’ve failed him. No, I’m evidence of his own failure, which is worse. I’m supposed to be the finished product right now, what he’s worked my whole life for me to be, and we both know I’m not. Maybe won’t ever be.
“I’m listening,” I try again lamely.
He sighs, takes out the folder labeled CAMRY, and starts talking about insurance premiums and mileage till I schedule my next oil tune-up. But it’s clear. He doesn’t really believe I can handle this, and I have this sudden uncontrollable desire for the hot, chewy fried naan that my mother will never again make for me. And I’m not going to basketball camp. If he wasn’t staring right at me while he talked, I’d be tempted to slump to the kitchen floor, put my head in my hands, and cry.
* * *
Friday comes.
And then Friday goes, sweeping my entire life along with it. My family. I didn’t realize, I mean I knew, I knew they were going and I was staying, but it isn’t until I wake up to Friday Friday that I feel it: this swelling of every second. And I know that every moment is going to feel more, hurt more. And they all do. Every second balloons to near bursting, until they aren’t units of time but tiny eternities.
The worst is saying good-bye to Sarina.
Dad doesn’t want me to take them to the airport at all, but then they run out of trunk space in the taxi and need to stuff the Camry with the last-minute carry-on purchases Mom and Sarina made. But it’s understood: I’m not to come in. Mom can’t take it. As it is she’s sobbing, has been since we pulled out of the driveway, and doesn’t stop the whole way to Louisville. Her dramatics are going to rob us all of our good-byes. I know it, but I can’t do anything except feel sick and wait for the bloated seconds to wash through me.
I’m almost right. The moment we pull the last of the bags from the trunk, Dad lets Mom cling to me, pouring years of tears into my shirt for a few panicky seconds, then ushers her inside. Away from me. Like I’m damaging her. He doesn’t have the time to do more than grip me and tell me to work hard, and then in a moment of unanticipated generosity he turns to Sarina and says, “We’ll wait for you inside. Take your time.”
She’s wearing her glasses.
“What’s with the four eyes?”
She pushes the saucer-sized frames up with the back of her hand. “Shut up. I’m going to be on planes for the next nineteen hours.”
But her eyes are bloodshot. And when she hugs me it isn’t with that same clinging desperation that Mom had, but something weaker. She isn’t trying to pull a part of me with her. She’s given up.
“It’s not fair,” she mumbles and pulls back. “It’s not fair that you get to stay.”
Finally. It’s what I wanted her to feel all along, except now it feels so much worse than her denial. “I’m sorry,” I say.
“Yeah, but so what?”
“So I wish you weren’t going back.”
“But not as badly as you want to stay.”
I don’t fight with her. She’s right. Not that it has anything to do with anything, but I do want to stay more than anything else in the world, even more than I want her to stay. Maybe that makes me the most selfish bastard in the entire world, but it’s not like I could change anything anyway.
“Take good care of Duchess,” she says.
“Maybe. I really hate that cat.”
“Mo.”
“Of course I’ll take care of her.”
I should say something inspiring, but I’m drawing a blank. Seems like I should be able to reproduce one of Coach’s game-day pep talks—one of the really transformative ones he saves for when we’re about to get our asses handed to us—but I’ve got nothing. “Uh, good luck.”
For a second, half of her mouth pulls up into a smile that looks nothing like an actual smile. “Good luck? That’s the best you can do? You suck.”
“I know.”
She rushes at me for one more hug. I don’t think about the fact that this is the end of an era, and I hug her back. At first I’m exactly how Dad would want me to be: unfazed, patient, dignified. But then she shudders and I feel those stupid Coke-bottle glasses pressing into my chest, and the truth of what’s happening to us is suddenly so absolute I want to shove her back into the car and speed off.
These are the seconds that feel like swollen bubbles, caught in my throat, choking me.
In the end, I’m not the dignified one. She steps back and hoists her backpack onto her shoulder, but I’m already back in the car before she can even get her other arm through the strap. I’m driving away before she can see that I’m crying too.
* * *
I’m used to seeing Annie almost every day, but since we entered into our slightly-less-than-holy matrimony, we’ve barely even talked. So this is wedded bliss. It’s not a big deal—she understands that this week has been about moving my stuff into Wisper Pines and spending every last second with my increasingly hysterical mother.
But suddenly I need Annie’s calm, her unsinkable sweetness. I didn’t think it would feel like this, saying good-bye to them, because honestly, on a day-to-day basis, I don’t need them. They mostly just piss me off, actually. But driving home from the airport, I realize this is going to hurt and I did nothing to prepare for the injury. It’s worse than broken bones, deeper than an amputation. I’ve lost organs here. I’m the victim in that bogus story Bryce told me once about the guy who goes to Vegas and gets roofied and wakes up in an ice-packed bathtub missing a lung and a kidney. I’ve been gutted.
And I need Annie, but of course, she’s chosen this evening, of all evenings, to turn off her phone.
Chapter 17
Annie
You don’t have to turn off your phone,” Reed says. He’s standing next to the stove, a paring knife in one hand, pomegranate in the other.
At least I think it’s a pomegranate. It’s slightly mottled pink, the size of a fat orange, and has a spiky, protruding navel.
“What makes you think I was turning it off ?” I ask, and slip my phone into my purse.
“Were you?”
“Maybe.”
He holds the fruit to the cutting board, flexing his fingers to anchor it in place. “Won’t your parents worry when they can’t get ahold of you?”
I shrug like I don’t care if they do, but I’m pretty sure he doesn’t buy it. It’s better than telling him the truth, that I told my parents I was going to the movies with Mo, so they won’t be expecting me to be reachable anyway. At some point, Reed’s going to start wondering why I won’t tell them about him. At some point I’m going to have to answer that question for myself.
He pulls the blade across the skin and turns the fruit, then again, and again, scoring the flesh into perfect quarters. Bloodred juice seeps from where it’s been pierced, and I stare, mesmerized, as he puts down the knife and breaks open the fruit with muscular hands. Its insides glow. Rows of seeds glisten like rubies.
“You like pomegranate?” he asks.
“Um, I don’t know. I don’t think I’ve ever had it. I should probably be embarrassed by that, right?”
“No. I probably didn’t see the inside of one until we moved to California and I started hanging out at my aunt’s restaurant.”
“Is that how you got interested in cooking?”
“Sort of. The menu at Burgers and Burgers wasn’t all that inspiring, but the kitchen was where I met people who love to cook. So I guess you could say that.”
I approach him from his left side, and lean over the bowl to watch. His fingers are focused, nearly mechanical as he loosens the seeds and picks them one by one from the white web of skin that separates sections. Juice has stained his hands scarlet.
“So, what are you making?” I ask.
“Nope.”
“Oh, come on. Tell me. I can smell it—is it pork? I’m starving.” I leave the counter to peer through the glass door of the oven, but he’s faster, blocking my way with his body, pomegranate hands held up in front of him.
I narrow my eyes. I may be able to squeeze past him, but probably not without staining my new top. My new white top.
He shakes his head. “Don’t even try it.”
The whole week has been brimming with this kind of bliss. Just being near Reed, telling him things, taking his teasing, listening to how deep and soft his voice gets when he is close to me—it washes everything in gold. Even watching him do menial tasks like making change and carrying buckets makes me feel like I’m sneaking something delicious.
It’s nothing like that constant anxiousness of being with Chris Dorsey, the feeling of being on show and trying to prove that I like it.
But the week has been busy too. There were only a few times that Reed and I found ourselves alone, and we were almost too surprised by it to know what to do. Until we were touching, and then we knew exactly what to do. It happened once when Flora was out back taking a cigarette break and a second time when she sent the two of us to take the garbage to the Dumpster. We never had more than a minute or two, but that was enough to relearn exactly what his lips taste like, and how his hands press on the small of my back when he wants me to come closer, and what happens to him when I accidentally sigh into his mouth.
“You don’t really want to ruin the surprise, do you?” he asks, taking a step toward me and away from the oven.
“You aren’t really going to stop me, are you?”
Reed takes a moment to consider it, then reaches out quickly, and before I can duck away, grips my upper arms. His hands are warm and strong, and I don’t even try to wiggle free, just stare at him with my mouth open in mock surprise. I think he might kiss me. He’s squeezing my arms and pulling me in, but at the moment of sinking into him and closing my eyes, the oven timer begins to buzz. It’s one of those old-fashioned dial timers that goes tztztztztztztztz and makes you desperate for it to stop. Reed grumbles something and moves me back to my spot at the counter so he can turn around and silence it.
I look down at my arms. Hot-pink juice handprints circle each biceps. “Unbelievable,” I say, because mock annoyance seems like the best route to get what I want. “Well, now I’m definitely looking in the oven.”
He turns off the timer and sighs. “Fine. Ruin the surprise, and if they look done can you pull them out?” He tosses me a hot pad and goes back to his short stretch of avocado-colored countertop to finish deseeding while I wrench open the heaviest oven door I’ve ever encountered. The hinge squeals like an injured animal.
“Wow,” I mutter.
“Yeah, welcome to the kitchen that time forgot. According to my grandma, these are the same appliances that they put in here in the seventies when they finished the apartment, so it’s kind of miraculous that they still function.”
The kitchen is more like a kitchenette really, just a tiny strip to the side of the main room, but it’s clean, and I almost feel like I’ve stepped into a time machine and come out in my parents’ childhood. Reed’s over-the-garage apartment has shiny shag carpet in burnt orange, a faded velvet chair in the same avocado green as the kitchenette countertops and appliances, a bookshelf with a sagging middle, and a twin bed pushed up against the far wall.
Once the oven door is open it’s hard to tell what I’m looking at. I close it and turn to Reed. “What is it?”
“Stuffed peppers. It’s Mexican, and you were right—the filling is shredded pork. That”—he points to the saucepan on the glowing far burner—“is walnut sauce to go with it, along with the pomegranate seeds. Do they look done?”
“I don’t know what stuffed peppers look like when they’re done.”
He comes back to the oven and inspects them. “Like that. It’s called chiles en nogada.”
“I don’t even know if I believe this is Mexican food,” I say. “I’m an expert on the stench of Taco Bell, and this smells nothing like it.”
“That’s an interesting area of expertise.”
“Just the smell. Mo has to have a Gordita Supreme at least every other day. But this smells . . .” I take a full breath and my head fills with the aroma, rich and warm and exotic. “Like the most delicious thing I’ve ever eaten.”
He transfers the sizzling chiles to our plates. “You haven’t eaten it yet.”
“The most delicious thing I’m about to eat. You lied. You told me you only made French sauces at culinary school.”
“I think I’m being misquoted. But I learned to make this before I came back to Kentucky. One of the perks of living in California is access to authentic Mexican food.”
“You’re telling me Taco Bell isn’t authentic?”
He laughs and tosses the last deseeded pomegranate husk in the trash. “A couple of my aunt’s kitchen guys were really talented chefs back in Mexico, before they came to the States. I used to beg them to show me how to cook real food. This one poor guy was a chef in a four-star restaurant before and stuck flipping frozen patties all day at Burgers and Burgers, practically losing his mind.”
“I can imagine.”
“Plight of the artist, right? Half of those guys were illegal, but my aunt didn’t care as long as she could get away with paying them minimum wage. And they were just happy to be getting a paycheck.”
Reed drizzles the creamy walnut sauce over the peppers and scatters a handful of pomegranate seeds on each of our plates. It’s stunning, the scarlet seeds over white sauce, but I’m not even seeing the food anymore.
Illegal. My mind twists and trips over the word. My palms are instantly clammy. I know this conversation has nothing to do with Mo or me or his status or what we did. Obviously. I know that. But that whole jumble of worries that I’ve been pretending doesn’t exist comes so quickly to life that I nearly stumble over my own thoughts. I can’t even think of a response.
“I felt bad for them,” he says.
I bite my
lip. He felt bad for them. That’s good. That means he’s decent, human, even compassionate, but feeling bad for illegals isn’t the same as marrying someone so they don’t get deported. It’s not the same as being okay with your girlfriend, or whatever I am, marrying one.
He puts the saucepan back on the oven and takes both plates over to the card table, where he’s put utensils, napkins, even a little cluster of wildflowers in a jelly jar. I don’t think anyone has ever put this much effort into anything for me.
I didn’t think I’d felt guilty about marrying Mo. I don’t. Uneasy, maybe, because I don’t know how illegal what we’re doing really is, but I do know that I love Mo. Nobody can prove otherwise. So if I do feel the smallest twinge of guilt, maybe it’s for not being able to tell Reed.
“You’re quiet all of a sudden.”
I take a deep breath and force the thoughts back down. “This looks amazing. Can we eat?”
He nods, takes a deep breath, and picks up his fork, but he doesn’t start. I can feel him watching me as I cut into the pepper and scoop the filling onto my fork. Of course. He’s nervous. I’ve been so self-absorbed, but this is his mural, and now I see the worry in his eyes. Maybe he’s been nervous all along and I just haven’t noticed. His gaze is fixed on my face as I chew.
I have to close my eyes as the flavors burst in my mouth—gentle heat from the pepper, salty tang of the pork, sweetness of pomegranate, the velvety-rich walnut sauce. He’s waiting, but I don’t know what to say. I love you; can I have your babies might scare him, but it’s my most sincere thought. Instead I open my eyes.
He’s waiting.
“Reed, this is art.”
He smiles. “Not too spicy for you?”
I shake my head. The fire in my mouth isn’t the kind that deadens taste buds. It’s the kind that makes all the other flavors come alive. “I’ve never tasted anything like this.”
“Good.” He finally takes a bite.
We eat in silence for a minute. I don’t want to speak or blink or do anything to take away from the flood of sensations, or make him think I’m not appreciating it. I need to taste every flavor. They’re mine, created for me, and it’s odd, but I love the selfishness of it. When I look up he’s watching me again.
The Vow Page 15