Authors: Deb Caletti
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #General, #Adolescence, #Suicide, #Dating & Sex
moved on from
that
moment, when Shakti grabbed my arm
and squeezed. Instead, I watched him as he headed through the
crowd, and he looked back at me and our eyes met again before
he disappeared.
It was already too late. Basically, two springs and two sum-
mers and the sea and the haunting had all already happened.
* 5 *
That was before.
But after, as that second summer approached, my father
decided we needed to leave. It felt too dangerous there. We
rented our house to a researcher doing work at the university.
Something scientific. It was hard to imagine a science guy
in our house, which overflowed with my father’s books and
papers and his collection of ship lanterns and paperweights.
My father would be leaving behind his cherished and tangled
grapevines, which grew over a large arbor in the yard and
which he tended to lovingly with clippers and a careful eye.
We’d be back in time for their ripening, in time for him to
make his home brew wine. I thought my dad drank too much,
for one thing.
I stood in the open doorway of his office, the large old
Stay
French doors swung wide. His reading glasses were on a chain
and hung down on his chest.
“It all seems too big,” I said.
We were trying to hurry, but I couldn’t seem to get going. My
father was shoving things into a box. “Don’t get stuck, Clara Pea.
Get a move on.”
“How do you pack for three months?” I asked him. I’d never
been gone from home that long. Everything about the trip seemed
hard to grasp. My mind felt lately like a building destroyed by a
natural disaster, where all I could do was walk around the rubble
and wonder what I could possibly do next.
“Just bring the things you love most. You’ve got to have
good things around you now, right, Pea? Your favorite shoes,
your favorite sweater. Shirts, T-shirts. You need anything else,
God forbid, we can go shopping.” Dad hated shopping. Malls,
cell phones and reality television—don’t even get him started.
“You bringing that?” I asked. He was wrapping one of his
paperweights, one of the largest, shaped like an old typewriter
and just as heavy.
“I’ll keep it under the bed since I don’t have a baseball bat.”
My stomach dropped. His eyes were bright and he was
grinning, but I thought he might be serious, too. He felt that
same shadow looming that I did. One time I actually drove
too fast and turned down some crazy street because I thought
I was being followed. Looking at Dad then, I felt guilty sud-
denly, or rather,
again
, for this leaving. He had a book due
by the end of the summer. He had every reason to stay here
where he was.
* 7 *
Deb Caletti
“Pea, you know I can write anywhere,” Dad said, reading my
mind. He was good at that. He was someone you couldn’t hide
from. “I could write in the back of a pickup truck driving across
the country. Who could have complaints about the beach, Pea? I
just might want to stay.”
“God, Dad.” I rubbed my forehead. “This is all so strange.”
“It’s good for both of us,” he said, even though there was
nothing good about what was happening. He finished wrap-
ping the paperweight in newspaper and set it in a wide leather
bag. I could see the fat pages of a manuscript there, too, and
a stack of index cards wrapped in a rubber band. “You need
a place you can breathe for a while.
I
need a place you can
breathe for a while.” My father knew about recovering yourself
after you were sure you were lost . He had taken a trip like this
once. Different, though. It was more about grief than guilt,
and it only lasted the two weeks he thought he could be away
from me, since I was young and needed him. I had stayed with
JoJo Dean, a friend of my father’s, as my father mourned my
mother in private.2
“You went away to a beach before,” I reminded him.
“A different beach. Not one I want to go back to.” He closed
the zipper of the bag. “Haul ass, kid,” he said.
And so I did.
2
Yes, this story has a dead mother. Mine. She had a sudden aneurism when I was
barely four. Died before she could even get to a hospital. Dead mothers have become
a story cliché thanks to Disney movies and novel writers. All the dead mothers in
books, you’d think it was a common occurrence. Even Dad’s books have them. But
mine was real. She was no cliché and neither am I.
* 8 *
Stay
* * *
tened into farms and pastures and tulip fields. And then east,
down two-lane roads forested on each side, full of tall evergreens
and dark, mossy places that made the air feel suddenly cool. Little
towns appeared at stoplights, three or four buildings at most, a
church, a café, sparse I wonder-who-lives-here-and-why streets.
And then forest again.
“Do you remember the bridge?” my father asked. The car
smelled like french fries, and the backseat held the crumpled-up
bags from our lunch stop.
I looked around. “Bridge?”
“Not yet. This is one you wouldn’t miss. It’s the bridge over
Deception Pass. We came here a long time ago. I carried you in
a pack down to the beach. After we hiked up to the car again, we
realized you’d lost your sandal. Your mom ran all the way back
down the trail to get it. I said, Leave it, we’ll buy her new ones,
but she ran the two, three miles down there anyway. Came back
with that shoe.” He smiled. “A triumph.”
I smiled, too. The windows were rolled down. He was
shouting a little. He didn’t like air-conditioning when you
could get the smells and feel of the real outside right there in
your face.
“Okay, be ready.”
He was right. Deception Pass—you couldn’t have missed
that bridge spanning those waters. It was almost shocking the
way nature can be so suddenly before you in all its enormity and
beauty. Out of the forest, and then—wow. Just, wow—this deep,
* 9 *
Deb Caletti
steep down-ness, this drop to the sparkling waters of Deception
Pass, a thin bridge spanning the impossible distance.
“Let’s pull over. This is a bridge you have to walk across.”
“Got it. A metaphor, right?” Dad was a writer down to his
cells, and he loved metaphors. Everything was a metaphor. Your
dirty laundry could be one. Unexpected encounters with dog shit,
definitely.
“Ha, I didn’t even think of it,” he said. He’d already unbuck-
led his seat belt and had flung his door open in the small crescent
of gravel that was the lookout point. “Deception Pass. How does
one make
that
crossing, at least permanently?”
“You’re asking
me
?” I said. We wouldn’t be standing there
right then if I understood how to manage deception and my own
self-lies. I stepped outside. I breathed in—the air felt huge. The
blue-gray-green waters that stretched out before us sparkled in
the sun. It smelled great out there. “I keep feeling like we have to
go
. Like we have to
hurry
.”
“We can relax now,” he said. He took a big dramatic breath.
“Ah! This is magnificent, eh? Christ, I should set a book out here.”
He was right. The rock wall that dropped to the water was
sheer and craggy, and as we stepped out onto the narrow footpath
of the bridge itself, my stomach seemed to tumble and fall the
million miles down to the jagged waves below. The landscape was
moody and dangerous. “I can’t look,” I said. It was too far down.
We were safe; our feet were on the solid ground of the bridge and
I gripped the iron rail, but my heart still felt the long, long drop.
“Look right at it. Know you can,” Dad said. “Look right at that
fear. Fear is the biggest bullshitter.”
* 10 *
Stay
This was not just some motivational rah-rah to get me
through what was happening right then. This was how my father
talked a good lot of the time. His words had layers—they went
two or three directions when other people’s words went one. He
was curious and playful and hungry for meaning, and his speech
reflected that. My friends said he sounded like a writer. I didn’t
know what this meant until I stayed over at Annie’s or Emma’s
or Shakti’s houses, where dads either asked you about school or
didn’t say much at all.
You had to walk single file on that bridge, and so I followed
him across, the cars whipping past us on one side, the sheer drop
below us on the other. We made it to the far end, where a match-
ing set of warning signs were posted along the cliffs, as if anyone
would be stupid enough to climb there. I felt a little sick and a
little proud. It had a sort of significance, though I didn’t know
what kind. It had to—you didn’t cross the perilous distance over
Deception without it meaning something.
We got back in the car and wound our way down the island. You
could practically follow the wet and salty air and that tangled
underwater smell right down to the sea. The house was small
and gray and shingled and sat at the tip of the peninsula. In spite
of everything I felt excited, like I wanted to run out and explore
the place, like you do when you’re a kid on vacation. My father
had found the house in the back of
Seattle
magazine, where the
travel ads are. Some guy was renting it out while he was work-
ing in California. We left the car packed and my father unlocked
the front door, and I checked it all out—the small kitchen and
* 11 *
Deb Caletti
the closets and the little white bedroom with white curtains that
would be mine and the bigger paneled bedroom that would be
my father’s. The man who owned the house had good taste—his
shirts were expensive and the cupboard had flavored vinegars and
fancy olives and a bottle of Scotch.
“Something to do with the film industry,” my father guessed.
“California, right? It makes sense.” He was standing by the book-
shelf, the first place he always went to find out about a person.
I looked, too. “
The Elements of Screenwriting
. Elia Kazan:
A
Life
;
The Making of Citizen Kane
. But wait. Zig Ziglar’s
See You at
the Top
?
The Art of Closing Any Deal
? Some sort of businessman?
What do you know about the guy?”
“Not a thing,” my father said, pleased. This was a game that
could last us the three months, easy.
“We could just look him up on the Internet,” I said.
“Cheating!” he said. “Don’t you dare. I’m going to get the
bags. Feel free to gather more clues about our host.”
Instead of gathering more clues, though, I sat down on the
bed in my crisp, clean room. The bed had the kind of sheets
and down comforter you could sleep years in. I wished I could
sleep years, that’s how tired I was. A million years tired. The
sheets smelled good, like spring. I looked out my large win-
dow, trimmed in blue paint. I could see the coastline from my
bed, the blue-gray sea, though that night after dinner, it would
become unbelievably dark out there. The dark of the ocean was
an endless dark.
It started to sink in: no one knew who I was here, and no one
back home knew
where
I was. It was a fantastically freeing feel-
* 12 *
Stay
ing. I could be anyone at all. I could be someone with an entirely
different past, and a wide open future.
You’d imagine with a feeling like that, a person could sleep
easy. I guess I was thinking, though, that if someone were walk-
ing around outside, even right outside my window, you wouldn’t
hear those footsteps in the soft sand.
* 13 *
Of course I went to the next basketball game our
school played against his. The minute I got home that first night, I’d
looked up the game schedule to see when we’d be playing his team
again. I thought about him every day until then. I started having
those conversations with him in my head that you have when you
first meet someone you sense is going to be important in your life.
I told him things about me I thought he should know. That I was a
mostly shy person concealing that fact; too straight, probably. Maybe
even hiding in my own straight person’s closet. Never tried pot and
never wanted to but had several times been to parties and pretended
to drink something I wasn’t really drinking. I read too much. I was
scared of spiders but once was stung by a hundred bees and didn’t
cry. I told him I loved the butter lake you could make in mashed