That night, Michael, Faith, and Tucker had all slept together in the bed she and Michael had been on earlier.
Riley had gone into labor the next morning, and less than an hour after Bart got her to the hospital, their third child and second son had been born. Declan Bartholomew Elstad. Faith thought the poor kid would likely be in fourth grade before he could spell his own whole name. He was adorable, fair like his parents and siblings, and born completely bald.
Whatever was going on with the club seemed to have died down right after St. Pat’s—at least as far as Faith could tell. No further violence happened, and the lockdown ended. The Sheriff had released the clubhouse on the morning of the second day, and the Horde had had everything back to rights within two more days—windows and furniture replaced, walls repaired, new booze purchased, the whole place cleaned.
Muse and Double A, the most badly injured of the survivors, had both been both released from the hospital within a week. Neither was riding yet, but they were healing well.
Just in time for the funerals.
Peaches’ parents hadn’t been thrilled with his choice to prospect. They weren’t hostile to the club, but they didn’t want a club funeral. Since he hadn’t earned his patch yet, there was no scandal in his family making the arrangements. Three club girls had also been killed that night. Peaches and all three girls were all buried over two days, and the Horde family attended every service.
P.B. had been a patch for fifteen years. He was buried with full honors, and representatives from friendly clubs across the country came to see him put to rest. Nolan and Double A were still in SoCal from the Missouri charter, but two more members, Tommy and Dom, rode west to join them for the funeral.
Faith had been to many club funerals growing up, but she had never grown jaded. The love and solidarity among men, and women, who lived a club life was never more obvious than when they came together to mourn a brother.
And then, when it was over, life resumed. Within a day, their visitors were back on the road, Virtuoso Cycles had reopened, and everyone had returned to whatever passed for normal in a life like this.
Tommy and Dom headed back to Missouri without Nolan and Double A, neither of whom, for reasons of his own, was ready to return to the Midwest.
Faith was officially moved out of her Venice Beach apartment, and most of her stuff was in storage. She’d moved her art gear, including the pieces in progress, into her mother’s garage, and she was trying to get back to work. She’d been in Madrone a little more than a month, and she felt like she was two months behind on her work. This playground piece had to be finished and ready for install by Memorial Day. It was the beginning of April.
Though it wasn’t fitted out to be a real studio yet, the garage was the only place available to her. Hoosier had offered an open station in the shop, but there was no way she could work among the distractions there—the noise, the guys, Michael. So she was doing the best she could. She stood in the garage, her welding helmet pushed up on her head, scowling at the piece before her. It had been too long since she’d been able to work on it. Not in all the years she’d been away from home had she ever gone so long without working on at least one project. More than a couple of days away from her work made her twitchy, made her fear that whatever it was that made her talent would abandon her.
And maybe she’d been right. Because the snake wasn’t happening.
She couldn’t see it anymore.
That was bullshit. She was getting too much in her head. She didn’t need to see the whole snake; she needed only to see the next piece of the snake. Making a disgusted sound in the back of her throat, she sat down on the concrete floor and dug through a bin of loose parts. She found one she liked and sat fondling it for a few minutes, getting to know its edges, feeling what it wanted to join with. Then she stood and found its place.
She put her gloves on, knocked her helmet back over her face and started her torch. Sometimes, you only had to see what was right in front of you and let the future worry about itself.
~oOo~
Maybe an hour or so later, she looked up from the nearly-complete third segment of her playground sculpture and jumped back a little when she saw Michael in the viewing panel of her welding helmet. He was leaning against the side of the open garage door, smiling at her. She hadn’t heard him ride up. She killed the blowtorch, and he walked over before she could push up her helmet.
He knocked on the side. “This thing freaks me out.”
She pushed it up. “Why?”
“Because it’s a red demon’s face.”
She’d had a friend do a custom airbrush job on her helmet. Lots of welders—artists and commercial welders alike—customized their helmets, like the goalie masks in hockey. They spent a lot of time behind those things, and it was a way not to be obscured by them. Faith had told Jens that she wanted something ‘badass,’ but hadn’t been more specific. What she’d gotten was crimson and macabre, something like a skull covered only by muscle. She’d never thought of it as a demon, but now she set her tools aside, shed her gloves, and took off the helmet to try to see it with Michael’s eyes.
Damn. It really was a demon. “You want me to have it redone?”
“Nah. It’s something, though, to see you look at me when you have it on.” He bent down and kissed her, and the helmet was forgotten.
When he pulled back and smiled down at her, Faith grabbed his kutte and gave him a shake. “Not that I’m not happy to see you every single time, but what are you doing here? I thought we agreed that you and Margot should stay far away from each other.” He knew everything Margot could hurt him with, so that wasn’t a concern any longer. But Faith wanted him away from her toxicity, and away from the chance that Michael’s massively increased hatred of Margot might explode into something that he couldn’t recover from.
“I’m not going in. But I had some time, and I want to talk. How is she today? Your mom?”
Faith shrugged. “She’s been all over the place, erratic as hell. She and Leo have been going at it all day. She’s recognized me twice in the past few days, but the last time, this morning at breakfast, she was totally lucid and threw me out. I’ve been out here since.” Faith led Michael to the cheap bench she’d found in her mother’s mountain of crap and had kept back from storage. “What’s up?”
“My court date is coming up for Tucker in a couple weeks.”
“I know. I’ll be there.”
He smiled. “It’s got me thinking—Finn thinks I’ll win. I don’t want to hope too much, but if he’s right—I need to find a house. We can’t live with Hoosier and Bibi forever, and I don’t want Tucker in that tin can where my mail goes.”
“You want me to help you look?”
“No. Well, yeah. I do. But I want us to look. For our place. I can’t afford much, but I want a place, and I want my whole family with me.” As she sat there, the thought of what he was about to ask filling her with equal parts of happiness and disappointment, he picked up her hand and made circles on her palm with his thumb. “I know you want to take care of your mom. I know it, but I don’t understand it. You know Tuck and I can’t live where she lives. We just can’t. And all the shit she did to you and me? You said your sister would pay for her to go to a home, or have full-time help here. I guess I’m asking you to take her up on it and live with me. We can’t keep doing this thing where we’re together for a couple of hours and all we do is fuck because we don’t have much time. I want a life with you. Don’t let your mother keep us apart anymore.”
“Michael, it’s more complicated than that.”
“It’s not, babe. It’s that simple. We can’t really be together if you’re taking care of her. Your sister will pay to have people around the clock to deal with Margot. Your mother doesn’t deserve you. We deserve a real chance. It’s that simple. And it’s your call.”
Faith knew he was right, and it sucked. She wanted to live with him. She wanted to start a life with him. But it would feel like she
was leaving her mother to the wolves or something. “She’s so young. She’s her normal self sometimes still, and she’ll be locked away with old people. Strangers. She’ll know she’s lost everything.”
Michael looked away, out through the open garage into what passed for a yard at this crappy house. “I can’t say that upsets me much. If she was a man, even in the state she’s in, I’d have killed her already. If she’s lonely and unhappy until she dies, that’d be okay by me.” Turning back to her, he asked, “Why do you want to help her?”
Faith looked down at her knees. “I don’t know. I think about it a lot. Everything you’ve said is right. I don’t love her. Mostly, I hate her. But it makes me feel terrible to think of putting her away.”
He sighed and squeezed her hand. “Okay. I love you. I’ll take you however I can get you. But think about it, okay? It would help if I knew why you’re picking her over us.”
“I’m not!”
“You are, Faith.”
~oOo~
Michael left shortly after that, and Faith stared at her sculpture for a while. Then she stared out the garage door into space for a while. Then she stared at Dante for a while. She’d only just begun to create the magnificence that was her ancient El Camino when she and Michael met. It had been complete for several years now, and she’d done some touching up and refiguring since. The car basically told the story of her life from the time she was sixteen. She and Michael were in there. Her life on her own was there. Margot and Blue and Sera were there. All of it. But nothing from this new life she was trying to start. And no room. She’d have to work over old areas to bring anything new in.
That was what Michael was asking her to do, too. Make room for something new.
She went into the house from the garage and found Leo cleaning up after lunch.
“Hey, sweets. I saw you out there with your man, so I didn’t call you in. But there’s tuna salad in the fridge.”
“Thanks, Leo. How’s—” Faith stopped and looked hard at Leo’s face. “What happened?”
Leo laughed it off. “Your mother and I had a disagreement over her meal. She threw her glass at me. She’s napping now, though, so all’s quiet on the western front.” She touched the large Band-Aid on her forehead. The pad had soaked red.
“I’m so sorry, Leo!”
“It’s nothing much. Even little head wounds bleed like crazy. I think we need to switch to plastic dishes and glasses, though. And talk to her doctor about her meds, will you? She’s been losing a lot of ground the past few days. She knows just enough, just often enough, to be pretty scared. Seems to me, scared with your mom comes out looking like mean.”
“Yeah. She’s always been her nastiest when she’s afraid of something.” She narrowed her eyes and took a good look at Leo’s forehead. There was a lump under the bandage. “Are you sure you’re okay? It looks like she really clocked you.”
Leo rapped her knuckles lightly on the other side of her head. “Made of steel. It’s not the first time a patient has taken their frustrations out on me. It’s part of the gig with dementia care.”
Faith went to the refrigerator and pulled out the plastic container of fresh tuna salad. She grabbed a loaf of sourdough from the breadbox and sat at the table to make herself a sandwich. Michael’s request dovetailed with Leo’s head in her thoughts. After a minute of trying and failing to make order in her brain, she asked, “If you weren’t working with Margot, where would you be?”
Leo dried her hands and poured herself a cup of coffee. Then she sat at the table across from Faith. “Jose and I work for a service. We’d get reassigned, and we’d go into other patient’s homes.” She sipped her coffee. “Can I ask what you’re thinking?”
“I’m wondering how she’d do in a home.”
“Can I be blunt?”
“Sure.” She’d spent a lot of time with Leo since her mother had come home. They weren’t friends, exactly, but it was impossible not to feel close to someone who was going through this with her. She felt close to Jose, too, but in a different way. He was like a brother, somebody she traded shit with. Leo was close to Margot’s age and had a no-nonsense maternal quality that Faith had quickly responded to. She was a lot like Bibi, actually, without the attention to her wardrobe and hair.
Still, Faith girded herself, trying to be ready to hear she was a terrible daughter.
“Your mom is slipping fast. Faster than I usually see. I don’t know why, but she’s losing a lot of herself every single day. In my opinion—and, you know, I’m no doctor, but I’ve been working with these patients for twenty years—looking at what I’ve seen this month or so I’ve been here, I’d be surprised if she had any of her present self by the end of the year.”
“Jesus.”
“Yeah. It’s scary, I know. Don’t worry about me taking a glass to the noggin. It happens. You know, in my job, I have to pay attention to a lot of subtle signs. It gets to be a habit. What’s between you and her—not so subtle. I don’t know what it is, except what your mom’s blurted out, but I know you two have had a rocky road together. That’s plain as day. It’s not my place to tell you what to do. But I will say that she doesn’t know you much right now. I don’t think it’ll be long before she doesn’t know this life at all. That’ll be a blessing for her, not having any more moments of knowing all she’s lost. She won’t remember who she’s hurt, or who hurt her. Her life will get real simple, wherever she is. So if you’re thinking about residential care for her, I think you should make that decision for yourself, not for her.”
“I guess…I guess I want to be a better person than she is. Or was. Or…I don’t know.”
“Gonna be blunt again, Faith. You already are a better person.”
~oOo~
That afternoon, she called Sera in Tokyo. It was the next morning there, and Sera was breathless when she answered. “Hey, Faith. I hope you don’t mind if I walk and talk. I’m just getting to the office.”
“That’s fine. I have a question for you.”
“Shoot.” She moved the phone from her mouth and rattled something off in Japanese. “There a problem?”
“No. I’m just wondering if you can still foot the bill to put mom in a home.”
There was no immediate response, and Faith listened for a few seconds to the noise of morning corporate bustle in Tokyo. “Did something happen?”
A whole lifetime of somethings had happened. “No. She hurt one of her nurses, but that’s apparently not a big deal. It’s me. I’m back with Michael, and we want to start a life.”
Sera had been away at college during all the drama of the time before, but of course she knew about most of it. “Really? That’s going well?”
“It is. But Mom doesn’t fit into the mix. I have to make a choice.”
“Well, thank GOD. Yes, you do! Have a life, for Pete’s sake! Go back to the beach or do whatever you want. Of course I’ll pay. I have all the contact info for the San Gabriel center. It’s…three-thirty there…okay. I’ll set some time aside in the next hour or so and give them a call. Do me a favor, and you call, too. They’ll need a local contact.”
“Yeah, okay. You’re sure this is right?”
“Jesus, Faith. I don’t know why you’re not sure. Hey—we should sell her house. Can you manage that? It would be nice for those proceeds to defray some of the costs.”
“I can handle that. You can set up a trust or whatever it is we should do.”
Her financier sister laughed into the phone. “Yeah, I’ll take care of it. I’m really glad you made this decision, sis. It’s the right one. She’ll get the best care, and you can move on. You left home for a good reason, remember? If you didn’t come back for Dad, I don’t understand why you tried to come back for Mom.”
Faith was still thinking about that question when she ended the call. There wasn’t an easy answer. But when she thought of sending her mother away, she had the same kind of feeling deep in her chest that she’d felt on the night she’d run away. A sense
of something lost, even though it wasn’t something she’d ever really had, even though it wasn’t something she could even identify. That night, the feeling had slowed her limbs and made it physically difficult to leave. The memory of it still hurt, even now.
memory
Faith had parked Dante around the corner and about halfway down the block; its engine was loud and recognizable, and even though she was waiting until the house had been dark and quiet for almost an hour, her father was a light sleeper, and he might hear her start her car.
She wasn’t bringing much. Though she’d been planning this for months, there was very little of her old life she ever wanted to see again. Two duffels and her backpack. And Sly. That was all. Not even any of her art stuff. That was the only thing that was really hard to leave behind, but it was too much to carry light.
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