Read Everything We Ever Wanted Online
Authors: Sarah S.
“Aww, that’s you,” Joanna said, pointing to the bear.
Scott winced. But his face was still open. He hadn’t shut down, amazingly.
“Does it help you sleep?” Joanna pressed.
“Maybe.”
“Do you have trouble sleeping?”
“Only when I’m thinking about you.”
Joanna flushed and looked away. But when she glanced at him again, he was chuckling. It was a joke. Of course it was a joke.
The automatic doors wheezed open again. Cold wind blew in, and as Scott raised his eyes, his face went gray. Joanna turned around to see what he was looking at. A few people had stopped to gather baskets or carts: a guy talking on his cell phone, a college-age couple, a fortysomething woman in a tan trench coat and gray pants.
“What?” Joanna asked as Scott’s face tightened.
“I think I know that bitch.”
“Which one? In the trench coat?” Joanna wondered how often Scott went around calling people bitches.
Scott nodded and shrank against the wall. “She won’t recognize me or anything. She never came to the matches.”
Joanna struggled to understand. “Her son wrestled?”
“I saw her picking him up a few times. She never came to watch, though, just waited outside in her car. And even if the kid had had the shit kicked out of him, she never helped him with his bags or anything.”
Joanna glanced at the woman again. She had short, no-nonsense sandy hair and wore pearl earrings. A white oxford collar peeked over the neckline of her sweater. She smiled at the elderly woman handing out toothpicked samples of Gruyere.
“What about the father?” Joanna asked in a low voice. “Did he come to the matches?”
Scott shrugged. “Never saw him.”
Joanna raised an eyebrow.
“That mother, though. She’d wait at the curb, talking on her cell phone the whole time. She wouldn’t even say hello to the kid when he threw his stuff into the car, just look at him like he was this huge burden. This one time she was pissed because his shoes were dirty—we’d been running laps on the track outside, and it was muddy—and she was worried it would get all over her precious car floor mats. I heard her screaming at him.”
They both watched the boy’s mother, who was now perusing the baked goods. After a moment, she cocked her head and reached into her jacket pocket. Her cell phone blinked, silently ringing. They watched as she cradled it between her ear and her shoulder.
“I used to tell them to visualize things,” Scott murmured. “Like, reasons to fight, I guess. People’s faces, Satan, Jesus, I didn’t really care. I never asked any of them what they visualized, but I wondered sometimes, with a few of them. If I were that woman’s kid, I would’ve visualized her.”
Joanna remained very still. It felt as though she was close to finding something out about Scott, but she had no idea how to forge the rest of the way there.
Scott leaned back, put his arms behind his head, and whistled through his teeth. “This place. Sometimes I wonder why I’m still here. It’s so fucking stifling, don’t you think? I’ve thought about getting the hell away.”
“Where would you go?”
“I don’t know. Drive across the country. Settle in … who knows … New Mexico? Arizona? I could, like, be a rancher.” He glanced at her. “Would you miss me?”
She startled, jostling her coffee cup. “I …”
“Maybe a little?”
Her mouth felt gummy. “Sure. We all would.”
“Charles wouldn’t.”
Joanna rushed to correct him, but then stopped—it might be true.
“I probably won’t go.” Scott stared out the window into the parking lot.
Joanna had a thought, breathed in, but then changed her mind and clamped her mouth shut. Scott stared at her, sensing she’d been about to speak. “It’s just, if you need to get out of town, you could come with me to visit my mom,” she said.
A little smile blossomed on Scott’s face. Wrinkles formed at the corners of his eyes when he smiled. His teeth were white and straight. “Really?”
Joanna touched her earlobe. Her stomach hurt; now she just wanted to get out of there. “Well, no. I mean, I was kidding. I don’t know why I said that. I mean, why would you want to visit my mom?”
He waited, that same smile hovering.
“I was just kidding,” she repeated.
“Well,” he balled up a napkin in his palm, “if you change your mind, I’d be happy to come.”
Joanna stood up to throw away her cup of coffee, eager to create some space between them. A few feet away, the wrestler’s mother finished her phone call and was heading to the back of the store toward the wine section. A college-age girl was heading in the opposite direction, and both were caught in a narrow strait between two cheese tables. The mother stepped aside, letting the girl pass first. She even smiled graciously.
It was amazing how appearances could so easily fool everyone. A clean, well-made trench coat, a nice necklace, decent manners, it all said this woman was a good parent, a respectable person. As Joanna dropped her half-empty coffee cup in the trash, she wondered what else she didn’t know about the polished, preppy people around her. Maybe the man in the three-piece suit lived in his car. Maybe the poised, stately woman with the butter-blonde hair, wearing the pink Lilly Pulitzer dress was so dreadfully unhappy she could barely drag herself to the store.
Then she peeked at Scott, who was still sitting at the little bistro table, fiddling with his cell phone and swimming in his sweatshirt, with his coffee-colored skin and thick, almost dreadlocked tufts of hair. What did people assume about him? How did it contrast to what was going on inside of him? It was so hard to know.
She pivoted on her heel, gazing into the wide expanse of the store. Then she remembered her grocery cart. She’d abandoned it by a Jenga-tower display of organic biscotti cookies, but now it was gone. The store hummed, the price scanners made small, polite beeps, the butcher called the next person in line. Joanna could just see the wellscrubbed grocery boy who had rescued her cart, now removing the butcher paper from her purchased meats and slapping them back behind the glass. Two Cornish hens. Slabs of lamb. Gnarled hamburger. Everything back in its right place.
A t the end of the day Jake stuck his hand between the closing elevator doors. “We have an interview set up for next Tuesday with little woman on the prairie,” he said. “Bronwyn …
Pemberley? Paddington? Something like that.”
Pembroke, Charles wanted to correct him. “Okay,” he answered. Jake held the doors open. He’d been watching Charles all day with
a perverse curiosity. He was right to watch, of course—something was bothering Charles, something that was directly linked to work. Not that Charles was about to explain himself.
They stared at each other for a few seconds more. Then the elevator buzzer sounded, indicating that the door had been held open for too long. “So, see ya,” Jake finally said, releasing his hand.
“Yep,” Charles answered. The elevator doors slid closed. So this was where Bronwyn had turned up after twelve years. Charles didn’t see her the summer after senior year. In fact, none of his circle did. She didn’t attend the parties people held when they were all home on breaks from their respective colleges the following Thanksgiving and Christmas, and no one heard from her the next summer, when they were all home for three months. Bronwyn’s dad was still a member of the local country club, and a few of Charles’s friends asked him if Bronwyn was okay. Bronwyn was doing wonderfully, he reported. She’d aced her first year at Dartmouth, just as everyone thought she would. Mr. Pembroke had gotten her a prestigious internship in Europe for the entire three-month summer break. The same thing happened the summer after sophomore year and junior year—more far-flung internships, all orchestrated by her father. By the time everyone finished senior year, many weren’t coming home for summers anymore. They’d found jobs elsewhere. Their strong ties to their Swithin friends were forgotten, at least until the five-year reunion. But Charles, well, Charles didn’t know how to move on.
Charles couldn’t see Bronwyn now. There was no way, not after all this time, not after what he’d done, what she’d heard, which he was sure was why she’d stayed away. Or maybe he could face her: how bad could it be? And really, wasn’t he kind of curious? But then he pictured her with that pitying look on her face, the one she’d given Scott when she cornered him on the patio, probably asking him to come and sit with Charles and the rest of his friends. The same one she’d given Charles the very last moment they were together.
She’d still feel sorry for Charles. She’d see him as a powerless consumer, a slave to modernity. Not brave enough to build a tent, for he’d told her that story of how he’d failed miserably at camping with his dad. He’d told her lots of things about his father in moments of weakness. He’d even slipped out a few resentful words about Scott. Charles always took back everything he said about anyone quickly and repentantly, and Bronwyn understood he didn’t mean it—”Family can be so awful sometimes,” she’d say—but that only made what Charles eventually screamed to Scott in the mud room all the more shameful. It proved to Bronwyn once and for all that he really did mean all those things he’d said. His father and brother affected him far more than he let on.
And then Charles was right back to where he started—he couldn’t see her. He had to get out of this. He could pretend he was sick, maybe, the day of the interview. Or he could just blow it off altogether. Which would get him fired.
If only he could ask Joanna what he should do. But he also knew that hearing about Bronwyn made her uncomfortable—it was a sensitive spot when they first started dating, and he feared raising it again. Soon after they’d become serious, they’d revealed their past relationships. Joanna had had several: some boyfriends in high school, casual flings in college, someone with whom she was serious about shortly after she graduated. It had surprised Joanna when Charles admitted he’d only dated Bronwyn; he’d gone on dates after that, but nothing had panned out. Her eyes had widened. A look of intimidation had crossed her face. “Was she the one who got away?” she’d teased, trying to sound playful. Charles hadn’t offered up a satisfying explanation— everything sounded like a halfhearted excuse. It wasn’t really that no one could measure up to Bronwyn. It was more that he wasn’t sure he deserved anyone after she broke it off.
But it was more than just wanting to spare Joanna’s feelings that held him back from telling her. The longer he and Joanna were together as a married couple, the more she made him uneasy. He sensed something was a little off in her; she was a little restless. There was something on the tip of her tongue she wanted to say but never did, and this hesitance had multiplied since they’d moved out of the city. Several possibilities floated through his mind—was she resentful of family obligations, especially since they lived much closer to Roderick now? Did she hate living in the suburbs altogether? When Charles had walked her through their current house, she’d passed through the rooms silently, woodenly. Then when she was done, she gave him a yearning, pleading look. “What?” Charles had snapped.
“Nothing,” she answered quickly, opening a cabinet and peering inside.
“You don’t like it.”
“No, I do. It’s … nice.”
“Then what?”
“Nothing.”
Was there something wrong with the suburbs? Joanna had lived here before, though; she’d known what to expect. She said she wanted to move out here with him. Why was she making him feel so wrongfooted, like he’d forced her into it?
The looks came so often these days. He’d gotten one when he rearranged some of his books she’d unpacked on the bookshelf. He’d gotten another one when he corrected her on the correct pronunciation of Kandahar and another when he came home with window curtains he’d ordered from Horchow. Hadn’t she wanted window coverings? Hadn’t she said she hated how people could look in and see everything they were doing? She’d looked at the curtains and said, in a baffling, crushed voice, “I’ve never even heard of Horchow.” Charles had no idea how he was supposed to respond. In apology?
Those looks got to him in ways he couldn’t articulate. And then not long ago, it had clicked: they were the same exasperated, disappointed looks his father used to give him. Joanna raised the same questions in him, too. What am I doing wrong? What do you want from me? Perhaps that was why Charles’s father liked her. Perhaps he saw himself in this girl. It both drew Charles to Joanna and repelled him from her at times.
If he told her about the Bronwyn conundrum, he might also get that disappointed look. How dare you? How could you? More than that, Charles wasn’t sure if he could get into the nuts and bolts of it with Joanna. He wasn’t sure he could tell her what he’d said to Scott and why Bronwyn had broken up with him. If he did, Joanna might think differently about him altogether.
It began to pour as he boarded the westbound SEPTA train. He watched the rain drip down the windows, flooding the streets. At his station, he bought a bouquet from the flower seller by Starbucks and sprinted to his car. When he got home, he sat in the driveway, windshield wipers squeaking, and took in his own house’s brick facade— the newly growing grass, the red flag on their mailbox. The house was on a hill, and in the rearview mirror he could see the rest of the development splayed out in the valley. Lights were on in the windows. TVs flickered. A woman stood at a kitchen sink, rinsing dishes. There was the perfectly circular cul-de-sac, the flat, well-sodded dog park, the softly lit sign at the development’s entrance. Down the hill to the left was Spirit, the street of unsold homes. There no lights were on. Every window was bare.
Somewhere beyond the trees was Swithin. Charles hadn’t been there in a while, but he knew that right in the middle of the grand lobby was a bronzed relief of Charles’s great-grandfather’s face. The first time Charles visited the school was when he was about four years old, not long after his parents adopted Scott. His mother let him walk up to the plaque and run his hands over the mold of his grandfather’s nose, the sharp etchings of his eyebrows, the cross-hatchings of his mustache.
“This school wouldn’t be here if it weren’t for great-grandpa,” she whispered, squeezing his hand. “He made all this possible. And you’re part of this story, too. You have his name.”
“What about Scott?” Charles asked. “He’s not part of the story, is he? He’s not one of us.”
His mother looked conflicted. “You shouldn’t say things like that,” she said after a moment.
When Scott was in second grade at Swithin and Charles was in fourth, Scott came home and announced a rumor he’d heard: Greatgrandpa Charlie Bates once paid a wealthy black family a lot of money not to go to Swithin. “Is that true?” Scott gasped. “Did he not like black people?”
Scott understood by then that black was part of his identity, too. He stood out from the rest of them, so their parents couldn’t keep his adoption a secret. They’d taught him that his difference was good, special. To Charles, it just felt like another thing Scott had and he didn’t—it seemed like that list of things was getting bigger by the day. And although Scott hadn’t become connected with black culture yet— that would come later—he was certainly curious about black people.
Charles had heard the rumors Scott was referring to, but Sylvie had quickly dispelled them. He stood up and faced his brother, feeling that he needed to set this straight. “You shouldn’t say that,” he said to Scott. He repeated what their mother said to him: “He was a good man. He rebuilt the school.”
“But …” Scott looked confused. “Why would someone say it if it’s not true?”
“It’s not true.” Charles looked at Sylvie for assistance. She sat there, stunned, her fork at her plate. “He’s the reason you’re here,” he said to Scott. “You should be grateful.”
“Enough,” James said, rising to his feet. His face was red again. He pointed to the door, sending Charles to his room.
“James!” their mother pleaded.
“I don’t want him saying things like that,” James boomed, turning to her. He looked at Charles again, who had shrunk against the wall, tears in his eyes. “Just go,” James said.
Charles ran upstairs as fast as he could. His bedroom was configured in such a way that a moment later he could hear his parents whispering through the vents. They must have been in the dining room, putting some distance between themselves and Scott.
“Are you trying to turn him against my family?” Sylvie hissed.
“Am I supposed to lie?” James lobbed back.
“It’s not a lie,” she answered.
“Don’t be naive.”
Then there were harsher, stilted whispers Charles couldn’t discern.
That same night while Scott was taking a bath, Charles stood outside the bathroom doorway, clenching his fists. Why did Scott have to push buttons? Why was Charles always the one getting punished for it? Maybe Scott didn’t deserve the privilege he’d been given, the life they’d rescued him from.
Charles wanted to make his brother understand what he had. Charles fantasized about bursting into the bathroom and telling Scott that their parents had come to a decision: they were sending him back to his real family. He would have to leave tomorrow on a Greyhound bus, alone. That would show him.
Then he’d felt a hand on his shoulder and turned. Sylvie stood above him, a questioning look on her face. “Do you need something in the bathroom, sweetie?” she asked. Charles wavered, wanting to explain to her why he’d defended Charlie Roderick Bates at dinner. The only thing that mattered was defending her honor, their family’s honor.
“I made pudding cake,” she said to him, guiding him downstairs. “You can have an extra-big piece since you didn’t get to eat all your dinner.” And there was nothing else he could do but follow her, swallowing his pain. His frustration continuing to build and build.
C harles found Joanna sitting on the couch, flipping through the channels from one reality show to another. There were still tons of unpacked boxes all around her. “It’s really coming down out there,” he said.
“Is it?” She didn’t look away from the TV. There was a glass of wine balanced between her knees. “I haven’t been out.”
Charles thrust the flowers at her. “Here.”
She looked baffled. “What are these for?”
“I thought you’d like them.”
She blinked fast. The cellophane crinkled as she touched it. “Huh.”
She held the flowers outstretched, as if they were wilting. He sat down next to her and looked at the television. A dark-haired news anchor was announcing that some economists were predicting that housing prices might fall another fifty percent by next fall. “Jesus,” Charles said. “Maybe we should have rented.”
Joanna looked at him, startled. “That doesn’t apply to us.”
“It doesn’t?” He gestured out the back window. “Those houses on Spirit? The longer they sit there unoccupied, the lower our value will go. We won’t have any equity anymore. I won’t get the down payment money back.”
Joanna stood up, walked to the kitchen, and found a vase for the flowers. “Yes, but I mean, it’s not the same.” When he stared back at her, not understanding what she was getting at, she added, “It’s not down-payment money from your salary, is it? It’s from your trust. It’s not like you slaved away for it.”
Charles winced. Something about that hurt. “It’s still my money.”
Joanna tucked her chin into her chest. “Well, I bet Mrs. Cox and Mrs. Batten aren’t worried about their deposits,” she said over the running water.
“Mrs. Cox and Mrs. Batten?” Charles squinted. “Our … neighbors? The ones you called me about yesterday?”
She turned her head toward the fridge, giving him her crooked ponytail.
He laughed. “Do you really call them by their last names? They’re our age.”
She placed the vase of flowers on the island. Several of them drooped over immediately, nearly kissing the marble surface. “They don’t seem our age,” Joanna said. “They seem … different.”
“Maybe you’re not giving them enough of a chance.”
Her expression became wounded, then beseeching. The look.
“What?” Charles implored, suddenly exhausted.
She turned her head toward the refrigerator and said something very softly. It sounded like, “So I’m the pathetic one then.” And then, after inaudible mutters, something like, “Banana bread.”
“Huh?” Charles said, growing more and more perturbed.
She walked back to the couch, reached for her wine, and took another sip. “Nothing. Forget it.”
He waited. The television flickered against her face. It showed a commercial for Gatorade, three long-limbed basketball players spinning and dunking. “Scott’s working at a sneaker shop,” Joanna said.
Charles cocked his head. This conversation was making him a little nauseous. “Scott … my brother?”
“Uh-huh. Helping out a friend or something.”
“How do you know that?”
She picked at her nails. “I saw him at the grocery store, La Marquette. We had coffee.”
Charles shifted his weight. “Well, aren’t you two buddy-buddy?”
Joanna folded her hands, matching his stare. What was she driving at? Look at me. I can have a civilized conversation with your brother and you can’t?
“So is this sneaker store he’s working at like a Sports Authority?” Charles asked after a while.
“Not exactly,” Joanna answered. “It sells limited edition stuff. Everything’s high end.”
“Sneakers can be high end?”
“Sure. It’s kind of a city thing.”
“Ah.” City. This basically shut Charles out of knowing or understanding anything about it. “And how do you know so much?” he asked her.
She let out a huffy, indignant smirk. “It’s not like it’s a secret.”
He bristled and turned away. Joanna always had an inside track to things that had flown straight over his head—music, old foreign films, indie artists, fashion trends. “You’ve never seen Kill Pussycat, Kill!?” she’d say, and off they’d go to the video store to rent it. “You’ve never heard anything by the Velvet Underground?” she’d exclaim, and she would pull out her large, zippered case of old CDs and play What Goes On. But as time passed, the exclamations sounded more like disgusted accusations. Once Charles even groaned and said, “No, I’ve never seen any of the Dirty Harry movies. It’s amazing I’ve got testosterone in my veins. It’s incredible that my brain hasn’t exploded.” She had stared at him, stunned—it had probably been the first time he’d raised his voice at her—and then shrugged and backed off. Those kinds of comments waned after that.
He turned back. “It could be a drug front, you know.” She pushed her hair out of her eyes. “What could?”
“The sneaker store Scott’s friend owns. It’s in an alley? They sell high-end sneakers? Come on. They’re probably selling meth in the back room.”
A wrinkle formed on the bridge of Joanna’s nose. Now it was her turn to look naive. Charles held her gaze, hoping she wouldn’t call his bluff. She turned away and stared at the television. Now it was a commercial for a company that paid cash for old gold jewelry. “Nice,” she whispered sarcastically, looking at Charles out of the corner of her eye.
Charles placed his hands on his head and swiveled around to face the kitchen. What the hell was happening? Why were they arguing? And why were they talking about Scott? There was no way he could mention Bronwyn now, not in this tense room.
“We should go out,” he announced.
She didn’t take her eyes off the television. “Out?”
“Let’s go get a drink.”
“A drink? “
“Sure,” he said. “There’s that Italian place a couple miles from here we’ve never tried. I think they have a bar.”
She gestured toward the window. “It’s pouring.”
“So? You told me before we never go out. And that you didn’t want to be the one to always suggest it. Well, now I’m suggesting it.”
He could take her somewhere quiet and explain the uncomfortable bind he was in, the person he was being asked to interview. I’ve tried to get out of it, but Jake wants me to do it. But, I mean, she’s living without plumbing and electricity. I won’t have anything to say to her. You have no reason to be jealous.
“All right,” she said, setting her wine glass on the coffee table. “There must be an umbrella in one of these boxes.”
The television blinked soundlessly; an ad about Toyotas, then another about eHarmony dating service. “Actually,” Charles gazed out the window. “It is pretty bad out there.”
Joanna paused, her hand on the doorknob. “So … you don’t want to go out now?”
He shrugged. He knew he wasn’t making sense. He felt like he was losing his mind.
Joanna slapped her hands to her thighs. “Whatever.” She walked to the kitchen sink and turned on the faucet. “Oh. I have to go to Maryland next week. My mom’s having a biopsy on Tuesday.”
Tuesday. The day of his interview with Bronwyn. “Is she all right?”
“I hope so. Probably.”
Then he had an idea. “Do you want me to come?”
She looked up from the sink, startled. “What?”
“Do you want me to come?” he repeated. “We could go to Baltimore after your mom has her appointment. Or to DC.”
She blinked. “You’ve never wanted to come before.”
“Okay. Never mind. I just thought I’d ask.”
“No, I mean, sure. Come.”
“Yeah? “
“Of course.”
There. It was a good enough excuse. His mother-in-law was having a biopsy. He needed to be there for moral support. It would get him out of the interview. He could assign someone else to the story. The end.
“Don’t expect much,” Joanna said over the running water. “We don’t have to stay at my mom’s house if you don’t want to.” “Okay. Whatever you want.”
Decision made. He stood there in silence for a while, watching the muted TV, the rain on the windows, assessing the piles of still-sealed boxes. Most of them were marked joanna, kitchen or joanna, bedroom or joanna, misc, remnants of her life before him. Good, he thought. This was figured out. He was free.
And then, feeling something rise up inside of him, he padded down the hall to the first floor full bath, the one they never used. He shut the door.
It was warm in the bathroom. The towels were fresh and dry. The dispenser was full of orange soap, and the shower curtain was printed with bug-eyed fish, maniacal octopi. Charles ripped it back and stepped into the scoured, empty tub. He sank to his knees, spread his legs out, and closed his eyes. The memory pressed at him, begging him to think it through. Even though he didn’t want to, even though he might not have to explain it, it wouldn’t leave his mind.
The last time Charles had seen Bronwyn was the end of his senior year, at the Swithin award ceremony and banquet. The ceremony, which presented achievement awards in academics and sports, was taking place in his parents’ garden. Charles’s great-grandfather had held one of the first award banquets there, and a board member had held succeeding banquets at one of their homes ever since.
Charles and Bronwyn sat together with their friends around one of the large, round tables that had been set up in the back garden, sneaking sips of champagne when their parents weren’t looking. They all were guaranteed to win something: Nadine the English department’s award, Rob a plaque for student government, Bronwyn for art and science, and Charles, well, Charles was pretty sure he was getting the Academic Achievement of the Year. It was a Renaissanceman award, reserved for the senior who excelled in all areas—academics, community service, and activities. The awards committee allegedly kept the winners secret from the board members, but Charles had a feeling his mother knew something. Why else had she asked his father to come home from the office early so he could catch the entire presentation? Why else had she gazed lovingly at Charles while he put on a jacket and tie, telling him she was so proud of all he’d accomplished?
The headmaster, Jerome, stood in front of the rose trellis—they’d long since replaced the one Scott had burned—calling out the sports awards. When he called Scott’s name for wrestling, Charles thought it was a joke. It was unheard of for underclassmen to be honored. Scott burst through the crowd, wearing a brown suit that seemed like it had been dug out of some seventies time capsule. Everything about the suit was huge, made for a much larger man, and the pants sagged low on Scott’s hips, the same fit as his jeans. He swaggered with irony up to the stage and instead of shaking Jerome’s hand, slapped him high five. Jerome looked startled but then smiled nervously. There was a guffaw from the left—their father. He had materialized at the table next to his mother when Charles wasn’t watching. Charles suddenly felt anxious and sweaty, astonished his father was really here and annoyed Scott had stolen some of his thunder.
Jerome continued with the sports awards and then moved on to academics. One by one Charles’s friends rose to claim plaques. The Academic Achievement of the Year was last, and Jerome took a long time winding up to it. Bronwyn squeezed his hand. Charles glanced at his father. He was still there, listening. When Jerome called out Heather Lawrence’s name, Charles stood halfway anyway. Bronwyn pulled him down.
Heather Lawrence made her way across the grass. She was in a wheelchair, paralyzed from the waist down from a childhood illness. She was a coxswain for the boys’ crew team; the crewmen gently carried her into the boat whenever it was time to practice or race. Charles had a lot of classes with her; Heather diligently turned in papers and gave oral reports from her chair. She’d been accepted to Harvard and Brown, but she was going to Penn to remain close to her family.
Bronwyn dropped Charles’s hand and began to clap. How could she not clap? How could any of them not? When Charles glanced at his parents, his mother looked sheepish. More than likely she’d assumed Charles would win, too, forgetting about Heather entirely. His father clapped tepidly, his expression not wavering. From the back of the garden, someone yelled out, “Yeah!” Charles swore it was Scott’s voice.
After that Jerome thanked everyone for coming, and the crowd began to disperse. Scott approached Charles’s table, his arms across his chest.
“Uh, hi,” Schuyler, one of Charles’s friends, finally said.
“Hey,” Scott answered.
He stared right at Bronwyn, coolly and challengingly. Bronwyn flinched and looked away, and Charles oscillated between the two of them, wondering if he was missing something. Bronwyn ran her tongue over her teeth and stood up. “Excuse me,” she said, walking back into the house.
“Are you all right?” Charles called after her.
“I’m fine,” Bronwyn said over her shoulder, shooting him a smile.
Charles’s other friends, likely sensing the tension, congratulated Scott on his award. Scott blinked, broken from his trance. He stared at the plaque in his right hand. “Right,” he said, indifferently. Scott’s fingerprints were all over the brass plaque. It would languish in some cardboard box under his bed, unappreciated. Ha, he no doubt thought. Dad came home from work just in time to see you lose … again. Why else had Scott stopped at this table? Charles’s gaze slid over to their parents. Their mother was still sitting at the table, but their father was gone. Charles could practically hear Scott’s thoughts as he loomed over them, his suit smelling vaguely of mothballs. You think you’re so great with your fancy friends and your ass-kissing, but I know how it really is.
But when Scott met his eye, his face wasn’t full of nasty smugness but of pity. He lingered on Charles for a moment, and then turned toward the house. Rage flooded Charles’s body. Smugness he could handle, but pity was reprehensible. After a few shallow breaths, Charles stood up roughly, bumping his knees against the bottom of the table, and followed his brother through the side door.
He found Scott standing in the mud room next to the washing machine. The air felt ionized, fraught with another presence, as if someone had just slipped out of the room. “Apologize,” Charles boomed. “Apologize now.”
Scott gazed at him warily, exasperatedly. “Apologize for what?”
Charles twitched. Scott stared at him, waiting. Pity crossed his face again. He threw his shoulders back, waved his hand, and turned toward the kitchen.
“Come back!” Charles screamed.
He chased Scott into the mud room, spun his brother around, and pinned him against the utility sink. His insides felt black and curdled. Lava rose to his throat and spewed out his mouth. “This is all just a joke to you, isn’t it,” he said through his teeth. “You don’t get what you have. You should be grateful. But instead you act all … entitled. Like you deserve this. But you’re a piece of shit. You came from nothing. And you will be nothing. You’re the joke, don’t you see? You’re going to end up just like where you came from. Nothing but a n-n—”
The word hung on his lips. He reined himself in, holding back, but was still out there, as good as said, radiating out in toxic, concentric waves. All the pain inside him, all the dark, insecure caverns of his mind illuminated.