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Seven Lies (ARC)

Page 11

by Elizabeth Kay


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  nauseating— I thought that he’d talk about the unparalleled force of his

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  love, the strength of his attachment, the way that marriage would bol-

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  ster their bond— but he didn’t and it wasn’t. He said that he’d never

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  met anyone so determined, so creative, so unafraid. He said that he’d

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  known immediately, the moment he’d seen her, that she was somehow

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  different, special, unlike anyone else. He said things about her that I

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  knew to be true, and I found myself nodding in spite of myself.

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  I didn’t sit down until after midnight, when most of the guests had

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  left and the band was packing up their instruments and the two brides-

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  maids were pressing the too- drunk guests into their taxis home. The

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  caterer was organizing the leftover bottles of wine and beer back into

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  their boxes and the manager of the venue was stacking chairs in the

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  dining room. The doors of the conservatory were open, and the air was

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  still warm and fresh with pollen. The fairy lights twinkled overhead,

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  and I knew that I was a little drunk because the brightness was fuzzy,

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  as though the light had been smeared beyond the glass baubles, yellow

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  bleeding into the darkness.

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  Charles sat down beside me, and he thanked me for my contribution—

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  those were the words he used— and I almost felt like he was being sin-

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  cere. His waistcoat was undone, slipping from his shoulders, and he’d

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  abandoned his navy bow tie. We watched Marnie floating across the

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  dance floor. Her dress was almost black at the bottom, the grime and

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  dirt of the day sullying the white silk. Her cheeks were pink and some

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  of her ringlets had fallen from their clips, hanging around her face and

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  damp with sweat.

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  “Quite something, isn’t she?” said Charles.

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  I nodded.

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  S E V E N L I E S

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  I’m not now sure— the passing of time has blurred the edges of my

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  memory— if what happened next really happened. It may have been

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  simply a figment of my hatred, an illusion, the result of too much cham-

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  pagne and too much anger. But I don’t think so.

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  Charles sat back, leaning against the glass wall of the conservatory,

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  his hands reaching up behind his head, and then he sighed.

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  “Really quite something,” he said again.

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  He lowered his arms and one fell behind my head, slithering down

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  the back of my neck. He pulled me toward him and he kissed my fore-

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  head. His lips were wet, glazed with saliva, and the moisture burned

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  cold on my skin when he withdrew.

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  “We’re a lucky pair,” he said.

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  He was slurring. I’d drunk too much, certainly, but he was defi-

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  nitely too far gone, different somehow, sloppier than I’d seen him be-

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  fore. His left hand crawled over my shoulder, toward my collarbone,

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  sweeping past my armpit. I held my breath. I fixed my ribs. I didn’t

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  want to inhale, to expand, to force my chest toward his palm. His hand

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  swung there, inches from my breast, shackling me to the bench. I

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  couldn’t move without moving into him, making him touch me, mo-

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  lesting myself against him.

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  He laughed, a coarse and ugly chuckle.

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  He said, “Oh, Jane,” and then his fingertips grazed my nipple through

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  the yellow silk of my bridesmaid dress. I lowered my chin, choked by

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  the compulsion to look down at my chest. He pressed his palm into me

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  and, as he withdrew, he quickly pressed my nipple between his thumb

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  and index finger.

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  I wish I could tell you that I did something or said something. I wish

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  I’d challenged him. Perhaps he’d have been shocked— I might have rec-

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  ognized genuine astonishment— and I would have known then that

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  what I thought might be happening wasn’t happening at all.

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  But I did nothing, so there’s no way to know now.

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  “I can’t believe it’s nearly over,” said Marnie, sitting down beside us

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  E L I Z A B E T H K AY

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  and resting her head on his shoulder. “What a day,” she said. “It’s been, 02

  just hasn’t it been, just the best?”

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  Charles slowly pulled his arm away. I felt it slipping across the back

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  of my neck, my shoulders, retreating carefully, until we were no longer

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  touching. I felt the space between us, that sliver of fresh air, cold and 06

  welcome, like a fault line splitting enemy states. My nipple ached, a

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  shadow pain.

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  “Is everything okay?” she asked, smiling. “What’s happening here?”

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  Charles looked at me and if you believe that I was sober enough to

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  read a look right then, know this: it was a look that demanded silence.

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  “Nothing’s happening,” I said, sliding a few inches farther away, far-

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  ther down the bench, a little bit farther from them and their love.

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  “Nothing at all.”

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  That was the second lie I told Marnie.

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  You see, don’t you, that I didn’t have a choice? What could I have

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  said? If I had been honest, she might have felt forced to choose. And,

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  anyway, I was all in, at all costs. And, back then, I thought that meant

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  maneuvering the truth in order to make her happy, to keep her happy,

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  to protect our roots.

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  Here is an absolute truth. That day didn’t change my feelings toward 23

  Charles. I had hated him for years and that day changed nothing.

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  Is it cruel to say that their love was the most offensive, unrelenting,

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  repulsive love I have ever known? It is, I know. But their love disgusted 26

  me. I hated his face, the smirk that lurked at the tip of his lips, the exag-27

  gerated expansi
on of his chest as he inhaled, the way he drummed his

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  fingers against the table as if to say, You bore me. I hated feeling his fin-29

  gers on my skin through that flimsy fabric, but no more than I hated

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  every other facet of his existence.

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  I would have liked to erase him from my life. I need to be careful

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  S E V E N L I E S

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  that I wish our stories shared no chapters, that the ink of his life wasn’t 01

  there on the pages of mine, that our lives had existed concurrently, yes, 02

  but had never overlapped.

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  But do I regret his death? No. I don’t.

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  I’m not sorry at all.

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  01

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  The

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  Third Lie

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  01

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  Chapter Ten

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  k

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  I

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  told her that it was nothing, that nothing had happened.

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  And today, more than ever, that feels relevant, an important

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  part of the story, an important part of your story. I’m not talking about 14

  a motive— please don’t try to misinterpret what I’m saying— but when

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  something happens, something unexpected, something frightening,

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  the steps that led to that moment are cast in a different die.

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  There was one other person, one other and now you, who knew that

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  something had happened that evening. I told her the day afterward,

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  long before I was afraid to say that there had ever been anything other

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  than “nothing” between Charles and me.

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  The morning after the wedding, I was lying in bed, pretending that I 24

  didn’t have a headache, that I wasn’t desperate for a glass of water,

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  that I didn’t urgently need the bathroom, that I was fine, when my

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  doorbell rang.

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  My blinds were down but the sun was leaching in around the edges,

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  thin white lines of light speckled by flecks of dust. I ought to vacuum,

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  perhaps mop the floor, I thought, and yet I knew that I’d do neither.

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  The place was untidy— littered with books and magazines— but I was

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  too hungover, too tired to care. My wardrobe doors hung open and

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  E L I Z A B E T H K AY

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  clothes fell from between them and onto the floor, endless pairs of jeans 02

  and shorts and sweaters. A rickety wooden chair stood by the window

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  stacked high with piles of clean clothing and bedding and, there on the

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  top, my corseted nude knockers from the night before. My bridesmaid

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  dress was hanging on the back of my bedroom door, dark patches stain-

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  ing the underarms, a few lighter splotches— champagne, perhaps—

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  discoloring the skirt. The air in the room was thick and musty, heavy

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  with the stench of sleep and sweat. It ought to have been disgusting,

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  insufferable, and yet it felt like a familiar space, a familiar mess, a fa-10

  miliar smell.

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  I stayed still, as though the noise of rustling sheets might leak

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  through my bedroom door, down the small hallway, and into the cor-

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  ridor beyond my flat.

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  The bell rang again.

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  There was a thumping— three times— and the door flinched within

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  its frame, shaking on its hinges.

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  “Jane?”

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  I recognized the voice immediately. It was Emma, my sister, younger

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  by a few years and even more my reverse than Marnie. If I am very

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  much dark and Marnie is very much light, then Emma was very much

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  both. She not only had the fairest skin and the darkest hair, but she was 22

  also the highest of highs and the lowest of lows, the most vulnerable

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  and yet invincible, afraid and still brave, broken in so many ways but

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  unyielding at the same time.

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  The doorbell rang a third time. She depressed the buzzer for several

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  seconds, so that the drilling darted through the entire flat.

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  “I know you’re in there!” she shouted.

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  I stayed tucked beneath my quilt, refusing to move.

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  “I have breakfast,” she called.

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  Her voice lifted at the end of the sentence and she sang the word

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  “breakfast.” She knew that she was playing her best hand, her ace of

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  spades, and she knew that I knew it, too.

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  S E V E N L I E S

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  On weekdays, my breakfast of choice was a bowl of cereal. I tended

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  to opt for oaty flakes that looked and tasted like recycled cardboard

 
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  floating in thick full- fat milk with the consistency of cream. Curiously, 03

  it was less sugary than the semi- skimmed alternative. I had first tried it 04

  a few years earlier, just after my husband’s death, when I was on a no-

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  sugar diet, trying to become very thin, as small as humanly possible.

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  Which had been a mistake. Because no small decisions made in the

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  aftermath of an almighty loss are good decisions. And so the other

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  compromises— brown rice, and no fruit juice, and brownies made from

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  beetroots— were quickly forgotten.

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  On weekends, I always wanted something sweeter.

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  “Can you smell the croissants?” Emma called. “From the bakery less

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  than ten minutes ago. Yum- mee.”

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  She paused, listening for my footsteps. I pictured her standing on

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  the worn taupe carpet, under the bright yellow lights, shifting her

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  weight between her feet, impatient as ever, frustrated at being ignored.

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  “Come on, Jane!” she shouted. “I haven’t got all day.”

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  I sat up and flung my feet over the side of the mattress and into my

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  slippers. I loved her— I really did— but there were never any boundar-

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  ies. She didn’t think it was at all abnormal to stand at my door in the

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  morning, without warning, and to hound me with her knocking and

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  her banging and her shouting. Because our lives had always flooded to-

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  gether: the challenges, the struggles, the minutiae of the day- to- day.

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  Although that isn’t quite right. It is more accurate to say that her life 24

  streamed constantly into mine. I was the vessel for her anxiety. I was

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  the ear into which she confessed, the shoulder on which she felt sup-

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  ported, the hand for her to hold. She bled her burdens into me until she

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  felt a little better. And then I would carry and nurture her fears instead.

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  It had always been that way. I was loved too little and she was loved

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  too much, and it might surprise you to know that both are equally un-

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  bearable. She was often seeking space, suffocated by being the favorite.

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  I became her ally, her safe place.

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  E L I Z A B E T H K AY

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  She needed me. I didn’t know then that I needed her, too.

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  “Get a move on, will you?” she shouted. “It’s not like I’m going to

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  eat them.”

 

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