Authors: Deb Caletti
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #General, #Adolescence, #Suicide, #Dating & Sex
it,” I said. We walked. “Nope, that’s not it. That place has indoor
plumbing,” I said.
My father gave me a look. “I’m expecting your best,” he said.
I was two steps behind him, dragging the way I used to when I
was a kid and didn’t want to go somewhere. “How often do you
get to have dinner with an esteemed poet? I’m talking National
Book Award.”
He waited for me to catch up. “Fine,” I said. I saw the
* 96 *
Stay
shack up ahead at the same time he did. Maybe my mind
moved over a bit when I did, the way a mind can when you get
more information. Because Annabelle Aurora had lit the place
up for our welcome. Candles big and small lined the railing of
the small deck and the steps to the front door, and there were
candles on the windowsills and on pieces of driftwood and set
upon rocks out front. Little flickering lights were everywhere.
Firefly magic.
“It’s beautiful,” I said.
“One of the hardest tasks as a human being is knowing when
to keep an open mind,” my father said. “And when not to.”
I took that hit. I had it coming. Annabelle Aurora emerged
from her door and took my father up into a great hug. “Bobby.
Look at you!” she said. “My eyes are so happy right this minute.
So happy.” She took my hands. “Clara. We meet again.”
Annabelle Aurora’s stern mouth had relaxed into a smile and
her eyes were glittery. She wore a long caftan of a bright magenta.
“This is beautiful,” Dad said. He felt the fabric with his fingers.
“India,” she said. “Come in, come in.”
It was not at all what I had imagined. I pictured cat food
bowls and the smell of tomato soup and a couch with worrisome
stains. But the house was clean and warm, with wood paneling
and tiny paintings and books in piles used as end tables. It was
a cozy, sheltered cave, and it smelled like garlic and wine. From
inside, mostly what you saw was the sea out before you. The light-
house. The sun resting on the horizon.
They chatted while she steamed the mussels and tossed the
“grittle and snips,” the edible plantings she found on the beach,
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Deb Caletti
into a salad. She unfolded a little table and set it out on the deck.
She draped a cloth over the top.
“So pretty,” I said. The cloth was blue and soft, swoops of
shapes. It looked more like something you’d wear than spill
food on.
“Thailand,” she said.
We brought out the dishes. Melted butter to dip the mus-
sels in, warm baked bread, the mysterious salad. The sun
dipped, and the lights from the candles lit the night like earth
stars. Dad and Annabelle Aurora talked books and old friends,
though Annabelle remembered to include me.
Did you know
your father almost failed my class?
she would ask. Or,
Have you
ever been to New York in the winter? Well, your father hadn’t
either.
We laughed and they drank wine. The salad was strange
and tasted like grass and herbs and seaweed. Annabelle told
us how she tried to live mostly from the land. She was worried
about the mark she’d made in this life. What was wasted. She
could manage to eat and survive with most everything from
her garden and the beach.
“No more capers in cut glass jars?” my father said. She leaned
over and pinched his arm. We watched the candles flicker.
“Did you hear that Daniella Morgan married that violinist?”
she asked.
“I heard,” he said.
“She was in our class,” Annabelle Aurora explained. “Your
father followed her around like a puppy. And . . . what was
her name?
Summer of the Gray Swan
? That story. I haven’t
forgotten it.”
* 98 *
Stay
“You haven’t forgotten her name, either, you old bitch,” my
father said. Annabelle laughed. “You have a mind like a steel trap.”
“Listen to us and our clichés,” she said. “Someone should
pummel us with a red pencil. Fiona Husted.”
My father looked down at his bread.
“She dumped him,” Annabelle said to me. “And then she
became very successful.”
“She regretted it,” he said. “Not the success, of course.”
“Ha!”
“I know she did.” His voice was quiet.
“Yes, well,” Annabelle Aurora said. She poured more wine. I
thought about my mother, then. The thought came suddenly, a
memory, maybe, sparked by this conversation, that name,
Fiona
Husted
. A door slamming—the night she’d had a “mood” when
Annabelle visited for dinner. These kinds of stories, maybe, were
funny for only a while. Maybe after a while they just made you
feel bad. I wondered about the rocky territory of love and security,
the ways a known person can suddenly seem unknown enough to
threaten our sense of safety. Past loves were never past, Christian
had said, and I had argued, that was stupid. We could never be part
of every corner of a person’s life, and you just lived with that. You
didn’t go delving around in those corners in ways that made you
feel weird. That was just asking for trouble. You had to separate
the real threats from the ones that lived only in your imagination.
“Ah. All in the sordid past,” my father said.
“Still,” Annabelle said. “You should maybe start living again.
Fiona Husted never married.”
He was looking at her, and she was looking at him, and they
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Deb Caletti
were saying things that only they understood. “ ‘Love’s tangled
branches’ ” he quoted again.16*
“It was a different time in my life. And yours.”
“ ‘Deep scratches on bare arms to those who risk passing . . .’ ”
“ ‘To those who
brave
passing,’ smart-ass.” She threw her
napkin at him. It was sort of flirtatious.17*
I helped Annabelle cut thick slices of raspberry pie. We came
inside. It was getting cold, and there were mosquitoes. Annabelle
started to yawn. Her old eyes looked tired. My father noticed, too,
and we cleared the dishes and got ready to leave. He went outside
to fold up the table for her.
Annabelle Aurora took my hands. Hers were small and
warm, but she gripped me tightly. “Adrienne Rich wrote about
this, what you’re doing,” she said to me. “Primitive tribes send
their women away ‘to go down into herself, to introvert, in order
to evoke her instincts and intuitions.’18* Yes? You, here? Think of
it as a natural process. You find yourself by finding your instinct.
By listening. By seeing what
is
.”
“Dad told you why we’re here,” I said.
“Well, we all come to the ends of the earth for our own rea-
sons,” she said. She shrugged, as if to say it were a simple matter
16 Annabelle Aurora, Green Pastures, Selected Poems.
17 If she’d slept with him or something, I didn’t want to know. She hadn’t always been
that old. Still. I’d die.
18 Adrienne Rich, Of Woman Born. I’d insert the proper footnote form here, but that’s
one of those things I never could get to stick in my mind. Footnote form, roman numer-
als, common denominators. Trash bin of the brain.
* 100 *
Stay
of fact.
“What are your reasons?” I asked.
“To lick my wounds. By the time a person’s my age, they have
quite a number of those, I suppose.”
Dad returned. Annabelle dropped my hands and hugged him
good-bye. “Annabelle, it was lovely,” he said.
And it
had
been lovely. My father and I trudged back up
the narrow piece of sand that was all that was left of the beach
now that the tide had come in. We climbed our way back up the
steep slope. My father reached the top and held his hand out to
me. The lighthouse shot out its intermittent beam in that deep
darkness. Sylvie Genovese’s own lights were out. You could only
hear the intermittent
chshsh
of waves unfurling on sand and the
threep threep
of crickets. The sea was endless-dark except for the
glowing tips of the waves in the moonlight.
We were quiet. My father was deep in his own thoughts. And
I was thinking about the women of primitive tribes and a hun-
dred drowned sailors and closing my eyes in my bed at the ends
of the earth.
* 101 *
I was not a girl who felt so free and comfortable with
my own body that it was easy for me to share it. I was shy. In my
bathing suit, I was shy. I remember being scared to start middle
school because we thought we were going to have to take show-
ers in P.E. That was the rumor. The image I had was straight out
of a prison movie. Naked, exposed me, huddled, arms clutching
for cover, as the other girls stood under the water, free and fear-
less. I still have dreams about that—some sleep-brain P.E. class
where I can’t find the hook I left my clothes on. In the dream I
am Holocaust thin, as if even my usual protective fat has left me
to fend for myself. Of course, they never made us take showers.
Still, I am not one of those women you see in gym locker rooms
strutting around with their bare droopy breasts and pocked
thighs. They don’t even seem to know it might be a good idea to
Stay
undress in the bathroom stall. Then again, who’s the one with
the problem.
I was self-conscious when Dylan Ricks first kissed me, when
he touched me. To me, my body seemed only good enough,
something you’d buy if it were 60 percent off, but not at full
price. I didn’t know what men liked in a body. From what I could
tell, it wasn’t what I had. We were told to be thin, but it seemed to
me it was girls who wanted that, not boys. Boys liked breasts and
asses and thin girls didn’t have those. I was neither thin enough
to be admired by girls, nor lush enough to be admired by boys,
so my body just seemed . . . serviceable. A toaster. A bicycle. A
thing capable enough, I guessed, of carrying my spirit around. I
couldn’t understand the worth it might have to Dylan. Dylan had
said I was inhibited, but I wasn’t inhibited, I was sixteen.
When I first leaned in to kiss Christian on those bleachers,
the momentum of the night picked me up and set me down
into another way of being. A new person in your life gives the
rest of it a chance to be new, too. Your life can be whatever you
want it to, from there on out. I leaned in and kissed and that is
who I was to him, not shy, but bold. Not inhibited, but brave.
I was that to him and so I kept being that. It was what I thought
he wanted and what he was attracted to, and yet it was this, this
exact thing I wasn’t even really, that made him the most insecure.
I got to the point, later, where I didn’t know who I was. I didn’t
know which one of those people was me. I just couldn’t tell.
We didn’t make love often after that time in the car, but when we
did, there was an intensity that made me feel too much—I was
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Deb Caletti
glass, transparent and breakable. It bound us closer together.
It was the one thing we alone had with each other, with no one
else, and to me that made it feel like it was brick set tight against
more brick, another layer to our own private wall, but that’s not
how Christian saw it. For him, it was as if he’d had a nice object,
a painting, say, or some vase, and then he suddenly found out
it was rare and valuable, so valuable it made him nervous. He
needed to guard it. He needed to make sure no one would steal
it. It was perfect, so he also needed to make sure it stayed perfect,
with the help of his constant, small corrections. When summer
came and I started my bookstore job again, he’d ask too many
questions about who came in. He worried about my coworker,
Mark, even though Mark was a graduate student and had a girl-
friend. I learned what not to say.
My father noticed. Christian and he always stayed their polite
distance, but Dad would catch me in the hall sometimes, stop me
on the way to my room.
What’s with all his questions, C. P.?,
he’d
ask.
You in jail or something? You the princess in the tower?
I’d get
pissed, and he’d back off. He learned what not to say, too.
Still, if it was just
that
all the time, just insecurities and jeal-
ousies, I would have left. It wasn’t just that all the time. Not at all.
We went swimming a lot that summer. He’d come by Armchair
Books when I was done working, and we’d head across the street
to Greenlake. We’d lay our towels out on the dock; our hair
slicked back, that clean, tired, swimming happiness just soaking
up the late afternoon sun. We sometimes laughed so hard, my
stomach hurt. We would drive. We’d ride the ferries back and
forth from Seattle to the islands just to feel the strong wind on