A Measure of Happiness

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A Measure of Happiness Page 23

by Lorrie Thomson


  Merde.

  Could Celeste be pregnant?

  “I should put these in water and check the roast.” Katherine tried to remember whether Celeste had worn that sweater before, whether she normally preferred loose-fitting clothing. “Can I get you something to drink?” she asked Celeste and Zach, but the query was meant for Celeste. “Beer? A glass of wine?”

  “Nothing for me, I’m saving myself for the roast. It smells delicious.” Celeste’s face twitched—a slight tic that she covered with a cough. “Besides, I’m not sure wine and beer go with Halloween candy,” she added, a strange statement, even for Celeste.

  “Where I come from, beer goes with everything,” Zach told Celeste.

  Katherine held a breath, imagining, for a moment, that Zach was referring to his biological, rather than his adoptive, family.

  “Seriously. I thought the planet Krypton was a dry planet,” Celeste said, explaining the reason she’d made Zach wear a cape. Secretly sweet Celeste likened Zach to Superman.

  “Nah. That’s just in the movie version. I’ll have a beer. Need any help in the kitchen?”

  Barry ran a carrot stick through Katherine’s buttermilk-and-dill dip and snapped it between his teeth.

  “Thank you, Zach. I was hoping Celeste could help me. . . . But by all means, you and Barry make yourselves at home and dig in.”

  Barry grinned at her. Because he was unable to wink, his attempt approximated a grimace.

  Katherine imagined taking Celeste aside and straight-out asking her whether she was pregnant, whether the sweater and her eating habits and her sudden return to Hidden Harbor—the only home she’d ever known—were indications that she was having a baby. Katherine also imagined this line of questioning particularly objectionable to someone who’d once—and perhaps again—wrestled with an eating disorder.

  May Celeste be well. May Celeste be free from harm. May Celeste be at peace.

  Katherine took a Heineken from the fridge, cracked it open, and angled a beer glass.

  Celeste turned in a circle. “Cute kitchen. I love the black-and-white floor.”

  “The flooring was here when I moved in. The cabinets I repainted to freshen.” Katherine had also smudged the kitchen and every room of the house. She’d walked through waving a burning bunch of dried sage to drive out any darkness or lingering negativity. Unfortunately, she’d yet to find a remedy to drive out her internal demons.

  Katherine slid a loaf of sourdough into the oven to warm and checked on the meat thermometer. One hundred and sixty degrees. Done to medium roast perfection. She set the roasting pan on a trivet, closed the oven with her foot, stabbed a crispy potato, and waved the fork in the air. “Want a taste?”

  “Oh, yeah, baby. Come to Mama,” Celeste said, not what an unexpectedly expectant mother would say. Was it? Celeste blew on the nugget and popped it into her mouth. “Ooh, ah, hot.” She grinned and sighed. “But oh so good.”

  Katherine nodded. She peeled off her black-and-white checkered oven mitts and set them on the counter. “I want to ask you a question. And I’d appreciate it if you’d give me a straightforward answer. Okay?”

  Celeste chewed slowly, carefully. “Depends what the question is.”

  Katherine sighed, regretted telegraphing the inquiry. She gave Celeste a look she hoped conveyed seriousness, concern, and—no matter what—acceptance. “The reason you came back so suddenly to Hidden Harbor . . .”

  Celeste stopped chewing.

  “Did it have something, anything, to do with a man?”

  Celeste’s eyes watered, but she didn’t look away. She sniffed, continued chewing, swallowed hard. She took a deep breath through her mouth. She blew out.

  Sadness, like radio waves, emanated from Celeste. Katherine absorbed the feeling. The insides of Katherine’s ears moistened, as though she might cry. “Because if there’s anything I can do—”

  Celeste tilted her head to the side.

  “Some way I can help you—”

  Celeste mouthed, No, and a wave of despair rolled from Katherine’s stomach to her throat.

  Celeste breathed in through her nose, out through her mouth, a halting, seemingly deliberate—

  “Sweet child,” Katherine said, a term she’d never used before with anyone, let alone Celeste, but Katherine felt it. She felt it in her soul. She’d walk through fire to save Celeste. She’d never leave her behind.

  Katherine opened her hands to Celeste, a bounty, an offering. “Maybe you’d feel better if you told me.”

  Celeste pressed a fisted hand to her mouth, and her eyes narrowed. She blinked at Katherine.

  “Sweet—”

  Celeste launched herself into Katherine’s arms.

  Katherine had yet to experience a hot flash, but she imagined this was what it would feel like, a sudden wall of heat. Celeste hid her face in Katherine’s shoulder, and Katherine gentled a hand to Celeste’s head. Beneath Katherine’s hand, Celeste’s breathing hitched.

  The sound of Zach’s and Barry’s voices filtered from the front of the house. Barry laughed, that he-he-he of delight Katherine loved to inspire. She stifled the urge to mirror Celeste’s erratic breathing until Celeste’s breathing mirrored hers.

  Dear lord, what had happened? Had someone—a man—hurt Celeste? Had some man—

  Celeste raised her head and dropped a featherlight kiss onto Katherine’s cheek, two reactions she’d never seen from Celeste before in one night. She bent to Katherine’s ear, as though she might tell her a secret. “I’m so sorry,” Celeste said.

  Katherine held her breath. She steadied her body, as though she were about to take a picture, a snapshot of this moment.

  In that moment, Celeste pulled away.

  Celeste’s face was pale. Her eyes were dry. Her tone was adult, serious, and entirely straightforward. “I can’t tell you,” she said. “If I told you what I did, I’d only feel worse.”

  CHAPTER 15

  Shame marinated you in toxins, saturated your soul, and informed all your choices. Ever since Katherine had been old enough to understand that other fathers spoke nicely to their daughters, shame had told Katherine she was unlovable.

  Intellectually, she’d understood this connection for years. But she hadn’t really believed the cause and effect emotionally until she’d seen the bright and beautiful Celeste unmasked to reveal the face of shame. Then Celeste had scooped root vegetables into Katherine’s oversized serving bowl and mumbled something about a direct connection between potatoes and her ass, the mask snapped back into place.

  Katherine carried first a warm, cloth-covered loaf of sourdough bread and butter and then the sliced roast into the dining room. “Dinner,” Katherine called into the front of the house.

  Barry and Zach bustled into the dining room, grinning like naughty boys and looking as though they’d shared more than crudités. “Something going on here I should know about?” Katherine asked. “Have you toilet papered my tree? Egged my house?” Revealed my secrets?

  Katherine’s gaze gravitated to Zach’s clenched fist, a glossy brown wrapper peeking between his pointer and middle fingers. “Eaten all my Halloween candy?”

  “Guilty, ma’am,” Zach said, and he slipped the wrapper into his pocket.

  “Barry?” Katherine asked.

  “Nope, I don’t feel guilty at all,” he said, and Celeste laughed.

  “Shoot,” Katherine said. “I forgot Zach’s beer. And Celeste’s water. I’ll be right back.”

  At the kitchen counter, Katherine snapped up the beer and water.

  “Don’t serve family-style,” Barry said.

  Katherine jostled, and beer splashed her décolleté. Droplets ran down the center of her bra. She turned slowly, careful not to spill any more beer. Any beer leaving the glass now would be destined for either Zach’s stomach or Barry’s face.

  “You scared the cra—”

  Barry tapped a finger against his lips. “Shh.” He cut his gaze to the curtain and the dining area beyond. H
e closed the space between them. Beneath the sink’s fluorescent light, his eyes shone a serious blue. “Serve everyone from the head of the table, say it’s easier that way. Give Celeste a reasonable amount. More than she’s been eating recently, but less than your usual offering so she doesn’t feel overwhelmed.”

  “You have a complaint about my usual offering?”

  “You tend to be . . . generous. I’m not saying that’s a bad thing. I know cooking and baking is how you show love.” Barry stroked her hair. A quick gesture, as though he were smoothing down a stray.

  She turned toward his hand, the way you paused and angled your head in the middle of a crowd when you thought you’d heard your name.

  Barry pressed a fisted hand to the counter. “If you let her serve herself, she’s going to give herself less. Just give her a little bit of everything.”

  Katherine imagined Celeste’s preferred portions—a few nontouching carrots and potatoes and a scrap of meat, rattling around first on her plate and then in her stomach. “What if she complains?”

  “Even if she complains”—Barry took a balled dish towel from Katherine’s counter and dried the beer from her chest—“she’ll be grateful for the favor.” He dropped the cloth on the counter and held aside the bead curtain.

  Katherine delivered the drinks and swiped the root vegetables Zach was eyeing. “I serve from the head of the table.”

  Zach held his hands up. “Whatever you say, boss.”

  In Katherine’s long-ago home, on the nights when her father passed out before dinner, her mother let her and her sister serve themselves, quickly and quietly, so as not to wake the sleeping giant on the couch. Katherine would sit on her un-made bed, back up against the wall, plate warming her lap, and flip through the glossy pages of the library’s outdated Seventeen magazine. She’d lose herself in the fantasy of pretty faces, clear skin, and perfect bodies. The day she discovered the models were airbrushed? One of the happiest days of her life.

  Celeste got up from her seat. “I don’t like when people serve me.”

  Zach’s and Barry’s gazes zoomed in on Celeste.

  Celeste looked from Barry to Zach to Katherine. “Sorry. That was rude,” she said, and sat back down, a hint of the shame on her face Katherine had witnessed in the kitchen.

  Zach put his hand on the back of Celeste’s chair, a degree of separation from Celeste.

  Barry was right about Celeste. He was usually right. Dang it all. Katherine’s lips tingled. “No apology necessary. Eat whatever you want, leave whatever you don’t.” No pressure. Katherine glanced at Barry, looking for a sign she hadn’t screwed up. Should she have even mentioned leaving food on the plate? Should she have given Celeste an out? Should she have been that transparent?

  Barry gave her half a grin and rocked in his seat.

  Katherine piled vegetables on Celeste’s plate, caught Celeste’s unblinking gaze, and shoved a few potatoes back into the bowl. Celeste followed Katherine’s serving fork as it hovered over the meat, and Katherine selected a medium-sized slice.

  Barry flicked his gaze to the sourdough bread, and Katherine plucked a slice from the middle.

  Then, to alleviate the empty feeling in her gut, Katherine piled love—food—onto Zach’s and Barry’s plates. For herself? The usual generous offering.

  Kind of explained her post-divorce weight gain.

  Katherine raised her glass for a toast.

  “To friends, old and new!” Barry said, beating her to it.

  “To friends,” Katherine echoed, and she made a point of catching Barry’s gaze.

  Barry made a point of looking at her breasts.

  They clinked glasses all around and started eating. Courtesy of Barry, the conversation meandered into the discussion of where Zach was from, his education, his plans for the future, and how well he liked Hidden Harbor.

  Zach hunched over his plate, as though someone—Katherine—might swoop in and swipe it away from him. Seemingly undeterred by having to use his nondominant hand, he inhaled his meal like any other young guy. Feverishly. Quickly. Noisily. And enjoying every bite without apology.

  Celeste could take a lesson from Zach.

  Celeste pushed her food around on her plate. She ate slowly and deliberately. Was she selecting the tastiest-looking morsels? Trying to assume the semblance of eating?

  Wasn’t she hungry?

  Barry chewed, and dimples popped up on either side of his mouth, sweet indentations Katherine longed to kiss. He sliced through the meat, his fork and knife held at a forty-five-degree angle, as though he sought to control the shape of every bite.

  Katherine ate the last potato on her plate. Barry chewed his remaining piece of roast and washed it down with a sip of wine, the two of them finishing together. Just like when they used to have sex.

  Barry glanced between their plates, waggled his brows.

  Had Barry deliberately paced himself, with dinner?

  “Another great dinner, honey,” Barry said.

  Had Barry meant to call her honey?

  “Oh, sorry, Katherine. Force of habit,” Barry told Katherine. “When we were married, I used to tell her that—‘great dinner, honey’—every night after dinner.” He chuckled. “Even if I made the dinner.”

  “That,” Katherine said, “was a long time ago.”

  “Not so long ago. In fact, I bet . . .” Barry picked up his fork, scraped it across the empty plate.

  Katherine cringed.

  “. . . that sound still annoys you.” Barry set his fork on the plate. “People don’t change.”

  “This coming from a shrink,” Katherine said.

  Barry pointed with either hand, his orchestra conductor move. “People don’t often change.”

  Katherine grinned.

  “Unless,” Barry said, “something monumental drives them to it.”

  “Or they’re driven to your office,” Celeste said.

  “Good one.” Barry tried for a wink, or was that a deliberate wince? “I’d wager, Katherine still reads the tarot every night after dinner. She probably keeps a deck somewhere in the dining area or the kitchen. Correct?”

  “Possibly,” Katherine said.

  Barry followed Katherine’s traitorous gaze to the sideboard, and the drawer left slightly ajar from last night’s reading. “And a deck in your bedside table?” he asked.

  “Maybe.”

  “Yup. We’re all pretty much the same inside as when we were twelve years old.”

  Katherine had been twelve when big sister Lexi had given Katherine her first tarot cards and shown her how to read them. The larger-than-life robed characters and the exotic scenes depicted on the twenty-two cards of the major arcana. The down-to-earth symbolism of the fifty-six minor arcana.

  Whether major or minor, each card represented a chest of secrets.

  Katherine and Lexi had sat on the floor between their beds, and Lexi laid out horseshoe and Celtic cross spreads. Whimsical illustrations of suns and moons, magicians and priestesses, had sympathized with Katherine’s predicaments and foretold the story of her life.

  “In fact,” Barry said, “I’d wager, at twelve we’re our best, most authentic selves.”

  Zach sipped his beer, and moved his mouth as if he was savoring the flavors. “Then the world steps in to throw a few punches or show you the door, and it all goes downhill from there.”

  Zach glanced at Katherine, and she translated the world to adoptive parents. “Sometimes the world, as in other people, has its—their—reasons for showing you the door. Sometimes the world isn’t perfect and it has nothing to do with us. Sometimes parents are doing the best they can.”

  Parents? Barry mouthed.

  “My parents are perfect,” Celeste said. “My mother sent my father off to work with a brown-bag lunch every morning and had dinner on the table every night for him and the four spawns promptly at six. Dad worked for the same insurance company for thirty years. Mom raised the kids. Neither of them ever complained. I don’t thi
nk they know the meaning of the word complain.” Celeste leaned back in her seat, as though the notion of those thirty steadfast years exhausted her.

  “With respect to your parents,” Katherine said, “nobody is perfect.” If Celeste’s parents had been perfect, they might’ve stayed a few more years in Hidden Harbor. They might’ve given Celeste a few more years to grow up before abandoning her. Even college kids returned home for the long Thanksgiving weekend and an extended winter break, so they could sleep till noon and let their moms do the wash. Or so Katherine had heard. No matter your age, everyone needed someone to treat them as though they were small and precious and deserving of protection.

  Katherine thought of herself as neither small nor in need of protection.

  And yet every night she slept curled in a ball around her blanket or pillow or, in the middle of summer, herself. Somewhat embarrassing, and also the reason why she never let men stay the night. But nothing she could control. Whenever she’d accidentally fallen asleep on her back, a paperback splayed across her chest, nightmares would wake her, leaving her with a dark and cloying sensation of doom.

  “I’ll clear the table!” Celeste jumped to standing.

  “Thanks, Celeste, I—”

  Celeste gathered up the plates and silverware and dashed into the kitchen, but not before Katherine caught sight of Celeste’s plate. She’d left half the roast, picked at her bread, and, with the exception of the beloved potatoes, forsaken the vegetables.

  Katherine remembered the hollow stomachache from being sent to bed without dinner, the stab of nausea, the trickle of sadness. Why would Celeste want to cause herself discomfort?

  Katherine carried the serving platters into the kitchen. “Are you saving yourself for dessert?” Katherine asked, and her voice sounded winded, panicked. “There’s a devil’s food cake. I thought I’d wait a bit before serving it, but if you’re hungry, I’ll take it out now. Or you could indulge in the Halloween candy. I was only teasing Zach and Barry. To be honest with you, I always buy too much.” Katherine cringed. “In fact, I have another two-pound bag stashed in the cabinet. You’d be doing me a huge favor if you brought some home. Why don’t you—”

 

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