“Why am I still walking with you?” I laugh.
“Hey, I know we haven’t really been getting together as often as we were going to and all that, but I was wondering if you’d still be all right handling most of those interviews,” he says. “With the competition coming up and everything—”
“No,” I interrupt. “I’m not going to let you capitalize on how weird our situation is by making me do your work for you. How about you do about half and I’ll do about half?”
“It’s just, this competition’s different, you know,” he says. “There’s a lot more on the line. I mean, you enter any amateur competition, there’s always a chance someone’s in the crows that can do something for your career, but they’re flat out offering a killer sponsorship here. That could be the boost I need to push me into pro status.”
“I know that’s a big deal and everything, but you’re acting like this is your last shot,” I tell him. “Why not skip this competition and wait for one that’s not going to make you do vert in order to get what you want?”
“I don’t know how much time I have,” he blurts. Before I can respond or even fully process the statement, though, he’s on his board and skating off ahead of me.
The park’s still about half a mile from here, but I just keep walking after him.
I told my dad about Ian and I breaking up. He was so thrilled that he took me out for a nice, fancy dinner at the local fast food establishment.
There’s no good reason for me to keep walking after Ian—he’s not turning around—but I just keep going.
I didn’t tell my dad that I cried the night I broke it off with Ian.
Maybe it should change things that his dad pulled the trigger and cut him off, but I’ve got to believe there’s some way for the two of them to mend fences. Yeah, his dad’s a prick, but he’s still family. That’s how it goes.
About ten minutes pass in the cool evening air, and I can hear the sound of Ian’s wheels on cement before the skate park comes into view.
Ian’s there, doing grab tricks down the six-stair set, and I just watch him as I come closer, trying to organize things in my head enough to at least be able to say something when I get over to him.
He’s rolling back up to the stair set when I get close.
“You left me there,” I tell him.
“Yeah,” he says. “Sorry about that. I just—I have a lot on my mind right now.”
“Well, what’s going on?” I ask.
He glares at me before a smirk creeps up one side of his face. “You’re really something, you know that?” he asks.
“What?”
“It’s all about the back and forth with you,” he says. “As soon as I’m convinced you want nothing to do with me, you start acting all sweet and caring and then when I invariably let my guard down and something starts to happen with us, all of the sudden you don’t want to have anything to do with me again. I think I’ve already been on this particular rollercoaster.”
“Something’s obviously bothering you,” I tell him, “and I don’t think it’s just that you’re pissed at me.”
“Why do you care?” he asks. “Seriously, I want to know. That’s not an idle question or just my attempt at making you feel shitty. I really want to know why you care.”
“Because I do,” I tell him, my voice wavering. He looks away, but I continue. “I never said I didn’t want to be your friend. I just don’t want you to blow up your life because you’re with me.”
“We’ve already been over this,” he says. “Besides, it wasn’t even you that got me kicked out, it was the work Rob did on my face. The old man was not pleased.”
I try to explain, saying, “We’ve been over this, but I don’t think we’ve taken the complications as seriously as—”
“Is there any way we can just drop it?” he asks. “It doesn’t look like either of us has any new information to share or a new position to take, so why don’t we just call it a day?”
“If you want me to go, I’ll go,” I tell him. “I just want to make sure you’re okay.”
“I’m fine,” he says.
“Then why is this competition so important?” I jump back in. I know what button to press, it’s just a matter of pressing it. “Why are you willing to risk humiliating yourself in front of a live television audience just for an outside shot at a sponsorship? Why does it have to be this competition?”
“Because she’s getting worse,” he says.
“What?” I ask, blinking.
He puts his hand to his forehead like he’s going to run it through his hair, but the hand comes back down a moment later.
“Don’t worry about it,” he says. “It’s not your problem and it’s not your responsibility.”
“I’d like to help if I could,” I tell him.
“Okay, seriously,” he says. “You’ve got to stop bouncing between accusations and comforting. It’s making it even more difficult to know where we actually stand, and it’s really starting to bug the shit out of me.”
“I’m sorry,” I tell him. “I don’t know what you want me to do.”’
“Just pick a personality and stick with it,” he snaps.
I bite the inside of my cheek and shake my head. “You know, sometimes people can feel more than one way about something,” I tell him, letting that tone from the fro-yo shop return to my voice. “You make me very angry sometimes,” I tell him, “but at the same time, I still care about you. You can be really thick-headed, but that doesn’t mean that I want to stop trying to get through to you.”
“We’re not together,” he says. “I think I got that one loud and clear.”
I look at the ground and sigh.
“It doesn’t have to be like this,” I tell him. “We can be friends if you want to be.”
“I’ve got a lot of friends,” he says and drops his board back to the ground. “Now, I’ve really got to get some practice time in, so…”
“Like I said, I’ll leave if you want me to leave,” I tell him.
“Why do you keep saying that?” he asks.
“I think I’ve only said it twice,” I answer, hoping to break at least some of the tension. “If you’d rather I wasn’t here, if I’m distracting you or otherwise impeding your ability to do what you need to do, just say the word and I’ll be on my way.”
“I don’t,” he says. “I don’t want you to go, but can we just drop the relationship talk? It’s only going to end in an argument where we’re both repeating a few of our favorite points over and over again and neither one of us is really going to be listening to the other, and I just don’t see the point in doing it if we can avoid it, so can we avoid it?” he asks, throwing on a condescending, “Please?” just for good measure.
“The competition isn’t about our relationship,” I say. Hey, if we’re not going to be able to get our personal issues worked out, the least he can do is answer the question I’ve been asking. “What’s the story?”
Ian closes his eyes, takes a deep breath and his foot off of his board. He walks the few feet over to the top of the six-stair set and sits.
It takes me a couple of beats to realize he’s waiting for me to sit next to him. I make my way over and take a seat.
“It’s my mom,” he says. “Dad, he—I don’t know, he doesn’t mistreat her or anything like that, but he doesn’t give her the kind of interaction that’s going to help her make the most of the time she has left.”
“May I ask what’s—”
“She has early-onset Alzheimer’s,” he interrupts.
“Oh,” I say. “I’m sorry.”
“Dad’s got the money,” he says, “so he hired a home health worker to take care of mom, but she needs more than that. When I’m not there, I just know he’s not giving her the kind of attention that she needs. That’s why I really need to do something in two weeks. Maybe I’ll end up doing an abridged reenactment of Evelyn McHale’s most famous act and end up a laughing stock in the skating world that everyo
ne forgets about after a few hours, but I’ve got to try.”
“I’m not sure I understand,” I tell him. “How does winning the competition, you know, change any of that?”
“There’s a place here in town, it’s kind of like a nursing home, but it’s a day thing. I can’t always be there for her physically, but I’ve gone by the place a few times, and they’re fully staffed with psychiatrists and medical doctors and therapists and counselors and nurses and other people for mom to socialize with,” he says. “They said that keeping an active social life can help prevent the degeneration of memory. I know she’s got Alzheimer’s and nothing’s going to make that magically better, but when I can’t be there with her, it would just be nice to know that she’s got more than a glorified maid watching out for her. Then, whenever I’m back from whatever, I can pick her up and bring her back home, so when she does have a clear moment, she’s not so far away that we can’t make the most out of it. Those moments are getting fewer and farther,” he says. “If there’s anything that might slow the progression, or at least bring her back a little more often—I know it’s a pipe dream, but it’s got to be better than being left in her own little wing of the house with only me and Jackie for her to talk to.”
I look off into the darkness. “I had no idea,” I tell him. “I’m sorry.”
“It is what it is,” he says. “It sucks. It sucks really, really bad, but all I can do about it now is try to make sure that whatever time she has left is as easy and pleasant as possible for her.”
“You didn’t answer my question, though,” I say in a small voice, feeling a little bad about persisting. “How does this competition figure in to all of that? Why not just tell your dad that your mom would be better taken care of if she was—”
“I tried that,” Ian says. “He says he can’t justify the expense. He says that when people say ‘you have to spend money to make money,’ they’re talking about investments. God, sometimes I hate that son of a bitch.”
“Wow,” I say and lean back, my hands on the ground behind me for support.
“Yeah,” he says. “If I can make the money on my own, we’re all good—and it’s not really that much in the grand scheme of things, only mom’s insurance won’t cover it. Apparently, social interaction in a day program like they have at the center is an experimental medical procedure.”
“That’s fucked up,” I say.
He smiles. “You know, it just tickles me to hear you say that word,” he says.
“What word?” I ask.
“Right,” he says. “A sponsorship doesn’t mean I’m a millionaire or that I’m going to start getting royalties from skating games or anything, but it’s the last big step between me and actually being able to give something to my mom that might be really good for her. Maybe it won’t do anything for her condition, maybe it will, but I have to think that she’d be happier spending some time with people who know what she’s dealing with and can help her when she needs help and encourage her when she needs improvement—god! This is so stupid.”
“What’s stupid?” I ask. “I think what you’re doing is very sweet.”
“Yeah, I’ll try not to take that the way it came out,” he says vaguely. “I worked my ass off to get good so I could give her the best chance to get out from under dad’s roof, at least for a little while each day, but as usual I missed that one little thing that’s going to make all the difference.”
For a minute, we just sit and listen to each other breathe.
A bit of a breeze is trying to kick start itself into consistency, but so far it’s only succeeding in infrequent bursts of cooler air.
“Maybe you haven’t missed it,” I tell him and get to my feet. “Come on,” I tell him and start walking down the stairs and in the direction of the vert drop.
“I don’t think I’m really in a headspace where I can—”
“Shh,” I say, only turning around enough so he can see my index finger pressing against my bottom lip. “Come on,” I repeat and I turn back and continue on my way.
After a few more seconds, I hear the sound of his board on the cement and he’s quickly at my side.
I climb up the metal rungs of the ladder that’s never seemed to be quite to code—if there is a code applicable to skate parks, that is—and wait for Ian at the top of the wall.
He gets to the top and we don’t really look at each other.
“What if you’re right?” he asks. “What if there’s just no chance and all I’m doing is killing my career before it’s started? If there’s any chance, I really think I need to take it, but if I’m just pissing in the wind…” he trails off.
“You said that you never really felt comfortable on your board,” I say, finally looking over at him. “How long have you been skating?”
“A long time,” he says. “Probably since I was like seven, eight, somewhere in there.”
“I mean, when did you start skating seriously?” I ask. “When did it become more than a hobby?”
He doesn’t answer, but he doesn’t have to, either. I think I’m starting to understand now.
“Is she proud of you?” I ask.
“I don’t know,” he says. “Lately, she’s been—”
“When she’s lucid,” I interrupt. “Is she proud of you when she knows who you are?”
God, I’m really hoping the answer to this question is “yes,” otherwise, I may have just screwed up in a monumental way.
“Yeah,” he says. “She is.”
“All right,” I tell him. “That’s all you need to have in your head. You’re doing this for her, right? Well, she’s already proud of you.”
“Okay,” he says and looks down at the park below.
He places the tail of the board on the lip like so many times before. I’m expecting something to be different in his approach, although I have no idea what it could possibly be, but everything looks the same as it always has.
He takes his front foot and puts it on the board, and he just stays like that for a few seconds, all of his weight on his back foot. Then, he just goes.
Ian rolls down, makes the curve and rolls out like he’s been doing it for years.
I can actually see the moment when he realizes that he’s actually done it because he jumps off his board, throws his hands in the air and lets out an impressively loud, “Woo!”
I’m climbing down the ladder as quickly as possible, and as soon as my feet hit the ground, I’m running toward him, cheering in my own, much quieter way.
He runs over to me and when we meet, he picks me up in a big embrace and swings me around, my legs flying behind me and I can’t stop laughing.
“You know,” he says, “there’s an exhibition next week. I wasn’t going to go because the street comp is going to be fucking amateur hour and the rest is all vert, but if I can do this, will you go with me, cheer me on while I try to get good at the last possible opportunity?”
“Let’s just focus on one thing at a time,” I tell him, not sure adding to his vert commitments is such a smart idea.
“Yeah,” he says. “Probably wouldn’t be worth it. I mean, it’d be good to practice on an actual, full ramp instead of this thing, but you’re right. It’s probably not where my mind should be.”
He sets his board down and skates back over to the ladder. He climbs it and gets into position. This time, without hesitation, he drops in.
It’s smooth.
This time he stays on his board and rides over to me.
“So,” he says, “are you sure you don’t want to go to the demo with me?”
PART FOUR
Chapter Fourteen
Second Thoughts
Ian
I wake up to a ceiling suspiciously painted a different color than my own.
Mia sighs in her sleep next to me, and I’m content just to lie here for a little while and watch her beautiful body rise and fall with every breath.
It’s been about a week since that night at the skate park, an
d we haven’t broken up again, yet. Technically, we never said the words, “Let’s get back together,” either, but given the fact that we’re both naked in her bed, in her dad’s house right now, I’d say that’s pretty much where we are.
Mia takes a deep breath and her eyes flutter open.
“Good morning,” I say and kiss her forehead. “Are we still dating?”
“I’ve never liked that term,” she says. “Can’t we just say we’re two people who like each other enough to stay naked a lot?”
I chuckle, saying, “That’s fine by me.”
“Today’s the big day,” I say. “Well, not the big day so much as the public preview of how the big day is likely to go.”
“Yeah,” she moans and turns over onto her front, propping her head up with one of her arms as she looks at me. “Are you stressed about it?” she asks.
“I wouldn’t say I’m stressed so much as I’m terrified,” I answer, “but at least I’ll know whether it’s going to be worth the humiliation to go to the Midwest Competition.”
“You’re still thinking of backing out of it?” she asks.
“Not really,” I tell her. “I think just knowing that I can drop in is enough, you know. Once I actually did it, I don’t even know what the problem was.”
“You’d convinced yourself you couldn’t do it,” she says. “I just helped convince you otherwise.”
“You’re really going to take credit for everything on this one, aren’t you?” I ask.
She purses her lips and looks up, saying, “Yeah, I think I’ve pretty well earned it. After all, I’m the one that got you to stop trying to kill the concrete with your face.”
“That’s good,” I snicker, “that’s a good one, really. I’m sure it had nothing to do with the hours I spent on top of that stupid wall going in time after time, knowing there was a good possibility that I’d end up scraped, bruised, bloody or all of the above. It was all you.”
“I’m glad you’re finally coming to realize that,” she says and grins wide as she lifts herself to her hands and knees and kisses my mouth.
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