Rules for Moving (ARC)

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Rules for Moving (ARC) Page 42

by Nancy Star


  And then you…” She turned to Marshall.

  “What did I do now?”

  “You told Henry he mustn’t tell, no matter what. You

  told him his mother couldn’t take it if one more thing

  happened. You made him promise. You said a promise

  has to stick or else. Then you just…” She mimed the rest,

  closed her mouth, locked her mouth, threw away the key.

  Shelley nodded. “That’s exactly what Henry told me.

  He made a promise that he wouldn’t talk. And a promise

  has to stick or else. He’s been worrying a lot about the

  or else part. He’s not sure what that means, but he knows it isn’t good.”

  Lane took it all in. “But he did speak. He never stopped

  speaking to me.”

  “I know,” Shelley said. “He tried. But it didn’t work.

  He could stay quiet with everyone but you. So he made a

  deal with himself. He just wouldn’t talk to you about the

  part where Grandpa got mad and Grandma fell down.”

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  “He got it all mixed up,” Sylvie said. “I saw that in his

  drawing. It was the other way around. I hit your father.

  Not hard. It wasn’t a real fall.”

  “She caught me off guard,” Marshall said. “I didn’t

  expect her to shove me.”

  “It’s because it’s been so hard.” Sylvie patted Marshall’s arm. “For such a long time.”

  Marshall’s eyes went from one daughter to the other

  and then stopped at Lane. “He’s a good boy, your son. I

  didn’t mean to frighten him. I regret that. I regret a lot of things. But I regret that most of all. I’m tired.” He

  sighed. “So very tired.”

  They heard it at the same time: Henry, who’d been

  sitting on the bottom step listening, was now running

  up the stairs. He came back a moment later, with a pil-

  low and a blanket, which he handed to his grandfather.

  “You should take a nap. Then you won’t be tired. You

  can sleep on the couch. Or you can take a nap in my bed.

  We don’t have rules about that anymore.”

   h h

   h  h

  Later, after Henry was in bed and her parents were down-

  stairs waiting for their taxi, Lane and Shelley went to put fresh sheets on the bed in the room in which her mother

  had been sleeping.

  Shelley jammed a pillow into a case and asked, “When

  did you tell Henry about Ivy?”

  The question was not unexpected. “It’s because I put

  up window guards. In the house in New Jersey. And

  he wanted to know why. So I told him. Not all of it.”

  She sat down on the freshly made bed. “Why are they

  so uncomfortable around me?” Shelley shrugged. Lane

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  went on. “Mom’s been here the whole summer and she

  still gets all fluttery if she thinks I’m going to ask her a question. She gets fluttery and then she leaves the room.

  Dad won’t even risk hearing a question; he avoids being

  alone with me altogether. You do the same thing on the

  phone.”

  “You’re right.” She placed the pillow on the bed. “This

  is the conversation I was talking about. The one we need

  to have. You must know what it is that everyone’s avoid-

  ing.” She studied Lane’s face. “You don’t know.” She sat

  down next to her. “Do you remember what it was like

  in the house, after Ivy’s accident?”

  “Yes. Mom and Dad fought all the time. When they

  weren’t fighting, either Mom or Uncle Albie was crying.”

  “It was everything at once,” Shelley said. “Mom and

  Dad would be yelling and Mom and Uncle Albie would

  be sobbing. Remember what you did?” Lane shook her

  head. She had no idea. “You stopped talking. You marched

  into the living room one night and announced, ‘I’m never

  going to speak again until you stop.’ It was like you went on strike. You wouldn’t even talk to me. It lasted about

  a week. You were totally silent. Mealtime. Bedtime. At

  school. And it worked. Mom and Dad pulled themselves

  together and they shut everything down. There were no

  more fights. There was no more crying. Dad must have

  read the riot act to Uncle Albie because after that is when he started taking his meals in his room. The next time

  we sat down for dinner, you said something, ‘Please pass

  the chicken’ or ‘Can I have some salt?’ and that was that.

  We were back to normal. Meckler normal. You don’t

  remember?”

  Lane didn’t remember, but she knew what Shelley

  said was right. She could feel the truth of it. And more

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  truth: from that day till now her family had withdrawn

  from her.

  A thought occurred to her. If Henry did something

  by accident, something awful, she would never with-

  draw from him. She would hold him tight and love him

  harder. Because he was only a child. She’d been only a

  child. “How could they blame a child for an accident?”

  “Oh, Lanie. No one blamed you. It wasn’t your fault.”

  Shelley lay down on the bed and patted the pillow next

  to her so Lane would lie down too. “Remember when

  I came to Florida, when Henry was a wee little thing?”

  Lane nodded. “Didn’t you wonder why?” Lane told her

  she did. “I came because it was eating at me, what you

  thought. I wanted to talk to you about it. But Dad kept

  following me around the house like an old dog. I think

  he knew. He knew what I wanted to say and he didn’t

  want me to say it.”

  “What did you want to say?”

  Shelley took a breath and stared at the ceiling. “It was

  hate at first sight with you and Ivy. But that doesn’t mean what happened was your fault.”

  “I was so jealous. I didn’t even know what jealous was

  then, but I felt it. I couldn’t bear for you to go out on the roof with her. I got so mad. So I—”

  “No. You’ve got it wrong. You remember it wrong.

  I didn’t go out on the roof. The roof had a skin of ice; I wasn’t stupid. But Ivy didn’t care about the ice. She was

  pushing me to go out. She was getting on my nerves.”

  They lay in silence for a moment and then Shelley turned

  to Lane. “I wasn’t there when it happened. After I told

  Ivy I wasn’t going to go out and she asked you to go, I

  left. I ran downstairs and asked Mom if it was okay for

  Ivy to go out on the roof. I knew what Mom would do.

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  And she did it. She raced upstairs and—” She stopped.

  “It wasn’t your fault.”

  Lane closed her eyes. What was she missing? Her

  memory was clear to a point and then it stopped. “You

  just said you weren’t there. You don’t know.”

  “I know because you told me. Before you went on

  strike. Right after it happened. Right after Uncle Albie

  started wailing about how he couldn’t call Aunt Beadie and Mom said, okay, she’d make the call. And Dad walked in

  with his suitcase, from a business trip. Talk about timing.”

  Lane remembered that. “Then the ambulance came.


  And they went to the hospital.”

  “And we stayed home. And I went to the basement to

  find something to do. And I came back with Operation.

  I guess I thought that was a good idea. That it would

  make us feel like we were at the hospital with them if

  we played Operation. Only you were no good at it. You

  were shaking too much. You couldn’t remove a single

  organ without the buzzer going off.”

  Lane could hear it. The buzzer going off again and

  again. “And then they came back and told us Ivy didn’t

  make it. I don’t remember who told us.”

  Shelley did. “It was Dad. And then Uncle Albie made

  that sound.”

  Their mother’s voice cut through their reverie. “Turtle?

  Shelley? The taxi’s going to be here in a minute.”

  Shelley went downstairs, but Lane didn’t move. She

  was hearing it now, as if Uncle Albie were there with

  her, keening in despair. “What happened?” she asked the

  empty room.

  She closed her eyes as images flickered by. Ivy climb-

  ing up onto the sill. The roof glistening with its sheen of 418

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  ice. Ivy asking Lane to get her pinhole box so they could

  watch the eclipse without going blind.

  It was Shelley who noticed there was no hole in the

  box. “It won’t work,” she told Lane. “You made a no-hole

  pinhole box. It doesn’t matter. We’re not going out there.”

  Then Lane said she could fix it. And Ivy asked if she

  would come out on the roof with her. And Lane nod-

  ded. And Ivy said, “See. Lane’s not a scaredy-cat.” And

  Shelley ran downstairs.

  Lane remembered how that felt, everything switch-

  ing, Ivy suddenly deciding Lane was who she wanted

  to be with. Ivy urging her to hurry. Lane grabbing a

  thumbtack from her bulletin board. The box resisted. It

  was too thick.

  “It’s happening,” Ivy called to her. “The eclipse is

  happening. Hurry. Give me the box.”

  Lane could see it, Ivy with one hand on the win-

  dowsill, lowering herself out so that she was half in, half out, waiting, impatiently, for Lane to make the hole in

  the box. She could feel it, how the pushpin resisted and

  then all of a sudden, went through. She stood up and

  took a step toward Ivy but before she could give her the

  box there were hands on her back, her mother’s hands,

  pushing her out of the way so she could get to where Ivy

  was and pull her back inside.

  Except when her mother pushed her out of the way,

  Lane’s body went limp at her touch and her limp body flew

  forward and the box she was handing to Ivy flew forward

  and Ivy, on the other side of the box, flew forward, and

  out and down, sliding down the roof. The incline was

  gentle, but primed with ice it was angled enough to act

  like a giant slick slide.

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  “Turtle. Lane.” Her mother stood in the threshold of

  the guest room of the pond house. She met Lane’s eyes.

  “It was not your fault. It was my fault. All of it. Lanie, I’m sorry.”

  She flew into her mother’s arms and they held each

  other tight, tears commingling.

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  PART FOUR

  HOME

  Summer 2018

  CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE

  From Global Guild International, this is Problem Child with Lane Meckler.

  Phone call recording, Cody: My name is Cody. I’m ten years old and I live in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. My mom

  took me to hear your talk when you came to my school.

  Lane Meckler: It happens more than you’d think. I’m only able to do a few school events a year but when I do

  them, there are always kids with questions, waiting at the end. At some point the facilitator moves to shut things

  down, so I tell the kids, the Problem Child podcast is for grown-ups but if you have a question and your parents

  give permission, you’re welcome to call in to the show.

  Phone call recording, Cody: My parents don’t live together anymore. I live in my mom’s house for one part of the

  week, and in my dad’s house for the other part. Which

  is okay most of the time. But sometimes I want to switch

  houses, because my friends in the neighborhood where

  I’m not are doing something fun. My babysitter doesn’t

  drive. Last time it happened, I asked my mom if I could

  switch houses for a day and she cried and said, Ask your dad. When I asked my dad, he didn’t answer because he was busy being mad that my mom cried. That night I got

  a stomachache and forgot to do my homework. The next

  day, when my teacher walked around the room to collect

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  homework, I told her I didn’t do it and I told her why.

  She said I should ask my mom if I could tell my problem

  to Lane Meckler. Which is what I’m doing. What do you

  think I should do?

  Lane Meckler: The first person I spoke to when I got the call was my son. He just turned seven. Here’s what

  he had to say about Cody’s problem.

  Lane Meckler’s son: I think Cody should ask his mom and dad if they could both move closer. Maybe on the

  same block or around the block. That way Cody could be

  with his friends any day he wants and his mom’s feelings

  wouldn’t get hurt and his dad wouldn’t get mad about it.

  Living in two places sounds hard. Also, I think Cody’s dad should try not to care when Cody’s mom cries. Sometimes

  people have to cry so they don’t get their feelings stopped up. Maybe his dad could do something to help him be

  less mad. Maybe take a walk. Also the babysitter should

  learn to drive.

  Lane Meckler: There you have it. The wisdom of kids.

  Today on Problem Child, we’re going to talk about the difficulty of coparenting after divorce with a woman

  who’s spent her career listening to kids. Mary Arthur,

  student assistant counselor at the Lanapi School, welcome

  to Problem Child.

  Mary Arthur: Thank you, Lane. It’s great to talk to you again.

   h h

   h  h

  Lane told Henry he could pick anything he wanted to

  celebrate their move back into the pond house. They’d

  both enjoyed their winter rental house in Vineyard Haven.

  They liked being able to walk to the bookstore and the

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  library, and to sit by the sea and watch the ferries come

  and go. But they visited the pond house often, sometimes

  several times in a week after Henry got out of school.

  The crew putting in the new heating system—the

  old one was fine for a summer place but was not made

  for winter use—had adopted Henry. When they stopped

  by the house, there was always a special snack waiting—

  peanut-butter fudge from Murdick’s, or a couple of apple

  fritters from Back Door Donuts—and they always invited

  him to help, either by passing them tools or holding a

  flashlight to shine on hard-to-see spaces.

  Nathan was usually there, too, busy outfitting the

  spare bedroom with the recording studio equipment

  he’d brought over from his New Jersey house
for Lane to

  use for the podcast. Sam had been quick to approve the

  idea of Lane doing the podcast remotely, probably, Lane

  thought, because he was not only relieved she agreed

  to do a podcast, but happy that she’d come up with an

  idea that was simultaneously on-brand for her and also

  something new.

  Summer took the news that she was not going to be

  Lane’s cohost surprisingly well. While the gossip Hugo

  had shared was correct—Summer was directed by Bert to

  pass along a purloined letter to Lane—she’d never followed through. And Alyssa wasn’t the only one she told. Upon

  Sam’s return, Summer shared the details of everything

  Bert had been up to. She was very young—twenty-two,

  as Lane learned—but her sense of justice was as strong as

  her positive attitude.

  It was Sam’s idea to put Summer’s positive attitude to

  use in the new Guild position of chief happiness officer.

  Summer’s first project was already underway. A Wall of

  Win was now up in the reception area. On it were framed

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  Guild and Guild-Plus reader emails that praised employ-

  ees who’d been especially helpful, along with variety of

  framed awards in categories Summer had created for staff

  members to earn.

  Lane suspected that Hugo was going to be happily

  surprised when he saw the wall, upon his return from his

  leave of absence. It was just a summer leave, which he’d

  arranged immediately after learning that his play—the one

  he’d been writing on his phone, a musical about an abu-

  sive boss—had won first prize in a first-time playwright’s contest. The prize, which included a small monetary

  award, meant that his play would be workshopped at the

  Williamstown Theater in Massachusetts.

  Bert would not have liked the Wall of Win. There was

  not a single place to click on it. But Bert was no longer at the Guild. Last Lane heard, he was now CFO of a new

  digital addiction center in Arizona.

  As for the Problem Child, Lane assumed the appetite for podcasts would go away, just as everything else did,

  replaced by something no one had thought of yet. But in

  the meantime, she was relieved to have stumbled upon

  the idea for it. The best part was that she had filed away enough Roxie letters from children over the years, letters tucked away in the Never folder since Roxie never

  answered letters from children, that she was able to get a quick start. And to her great surprise, doing the Problem Child podcast turned out to be a joy.

 

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