Authors: Deb Caletti
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #General, #Adolescence, #Suicide, #Dating & Sex
food booth right by the docks.
The Cove
. I looked up at the menu
posted on the wall behind the counter.
“Variations on a cheeseburger,” the girl behind the counter
said. She was a little older than me, I guessed. Long brown hair
tied back, eyes that didn’t take shit. Either it was just my day, or
the ocean made people tough around here.
“I’ll have a cheeseburger,” I said.
“Good choice. Fries?”
“That’s okay,” I said.
“You gotta have fries. They’re fantastic. On the house. Don’t
feed them to the seagulls, though, okay? They come around and
make my life a living hell. Cove combo two,” she said to the cook
in the back. “Look at him.” She pointed to one of the picnic tables
set out front. A seagull stood on it, plucking at something under
his wing.
“He doesn’t seem to be going anywhere,” I said.
“Gulliver. That’s what I call him. I can’t get rid of the guy.
He’s like a stray dog. He tries to follow me home.”
I laughed. In a few minutes my lunch was ready, and I took
the bag and carried it to the grass that overlooked the marina.
Obsession
was not moored there, but I looked out over the water.
I could see it not far off, and I ate slowly and watched it move in.
The girl was right. The fries were fantastic.
* 64 *
Stay
The boat eased to the end of the dock. It was as beautiful as I
remembered. The guy who had been high up on the mast before,
the one I had guessed was Finn’s brother, was steering a huge sil-
ver wheel. He eased forward, backed up, and landed neatly along-
side the dock, where Finn jumped off and grabbed the ropes to
tie it down. I remembered my driving test, how the whole parallel
parking thing seemed as complicated and frustrating as teaching
cats to play Monopoly. But these two guys got this huge sailboat
where it needed to be as smooth as anything.
I watched as Finn leaped down, whipped those ropes fast
around the dock cleats. The boat snugged right up against a
stairwell, which Finn then climbed, giving a hand from boat
to stair to several passengers on board. I watched the people
walk down the steps—several couples, a family with two girls,
another family with a toddler in a life jacket—and they all
looked relaxed and happy and windblown. One guy stopped
back at the ticket booth, which today had a young woman
inside of it, and took out his wallet and handed over some bills,
maybe arranging another ride for another day. The passengers
wandered off the dock at various times—the couple with the
toddler headed for The Cove, the family with the girls stopped
to take pictures.
Finn hopped back on the boat. He obviously had an ease
there. You could tell it was his place. I watched him joke with
the other guy, and then Finn went down below for a while before
coming up again. He worked, making the boat right again after
the sail. He coiled the wild ropes into neat circles. He arranged
the collapsed sail into folds.
* 65 *
Deb Caletti
I had finished my cheeseburger, rolled up the foil into a ball.
I was almost done with my drink. I’d been staring, sure. It was
then that Finn must have finally felt my eyes on him. I was far
away but not so far that he couldn’t see me. He looked my way.
He shaded his eyes with his arm as if to make sure it was me. He
smiled. He waved, and I waved back.
I didn’t walk over and talk to him, though, not then. If I
needed the time for a tree branch to become just a tree branch
again and the wind to become just the wind, then a boy, most of
all, needed some time to be only a boy.
My dad laughed so hard. “You are shitting me,” he said. “You
found Annabelle Aurora? On your first day?”
“You
know
her?”
“Very well. She was a professor of mine in New York. I saw
her at a party there years later, and we kept in touch. She’s an old
friend, Pea. She stayed with us once when she came to a writers’
conference in town. You were just a baby. Of course I knew she
was out here. We keep in touch by e-mail. It recommended the
place, in my opinion.”
“She’s a
friend
of yours.”
“And a poet. A very well-known one, I might add.10* I didn’t
tell her I arrived yet.”
“I’m not sure she exactly has a
phone.
”
10 Three accents, two famous people, if you’re keeping a tally. Dad knows tons of writ-
ers, so there may be more coming. Oh, and Christian’s father was married for a short
while to a woman who was married to one of the Rolling Stones, if that counts.
* 66 *
Stay
“What do you mean?”
“It’s a shack. She’s got an
outhouse
. You always said poets
only got paid in magazine copies.”
He laughed again. He was loving this. He sure got a kick out
of that crazy old lady. “Annabelle is loaded.”
“No!”
“
Loaded
. Her husband was some newspaper guy. Like in,
‘owner,’ not reporter. She might have even had some family
money. They had this great apartment. Two daughters. Very close
to the girls.”
“That’s surprising. She’s alone in that weird place.”
“Happy as a clam, I have no doubt. She always liked the outer
edges. The farther, the better.”
“Clams—right. She said to tell you she had mussels.”
He slapped his hand on the table. “That fucking Annabelle,”
he said. “Good memory for an old broad.” He was grinning
wide. His eyes were sparkly. “When she came out to stay with
us, we steamed some for dinner. You were too young to remem-
ber this, I’m guessing. Your mother—she was in some mood.
She went inside. Upset . . . I can’t remember. Annabelle and
I ate mussels on the back deck and drank beers until we were
toasted. Laughed our asses off remembering these people in our
classes and those stupid parties where literary people try so hard
to be literary people. Cool superiority as a mask for overflow-
ing insecurity. ‘Every time I see people in social circumstances
like that, I can’t help but imagine them in junior high, worry-
ing about who they’re going to eat lunch with,’ Annabelle had
said, and I always thought about that later. You see a person’s
* 67 *
Deb Caletti
inner thirteen-year-old and you won’t look at them the same
way again.”
“Probably,” I said. But I was thinking about Dad and old
Annabelle Aurora on our deck on a summer night, and my
mother in her room. I felt like maybe I
could
remember that
night if I tried hard enough. I wondered what my mother had
been thinking and feeling, what had upset her. Those were the
times you really felt her absence—when you would never know
her, didn’t know her now enough to even guess what would
make her leave a houseguest in the middle of dinner. You only
had these words—
mood, upset
—and yet you had nothing to
hang them on. You had other words, too. But a word like
French
,
or
photographer
, or
sensitive
, they had a thousand meanings and
pictures and your own images would be only guesses. It was all
the things you could never understand and could never possess
that made you ache.
“Annabelle Aurora,” my father said. His eyes were still all
gleamy.
“The mother you never had?” I said. 11*
“I wouldn’t say that, exactly,” he said. “Not at all, really.”
“She scared me, knowing who I was like that. I thought she
was some crazy old fan who knew your life history.”
“She knows my life history, all right. Indeed she does.”
11 My father’s own mother, Grandma Oates, was a conservative woman who lived in
Iowa with her sister, my aunt Barbara. Grandma Oates made you believe it was pos-
sible for babies to be switched in hospitals.
* 68 *
Stay
I tried to read that book again before I went to sleep. I didn’t like
that book, but I kept going for all the reasons a person hangs in
with something that isn’t good—you feel bad about not giving it
a chance, you’ve already come too far to give up now, you believe
it’s going to get better. When you’re a person whose life has
mostly brought good things, you believe in goodness. You believe
that things will work out. Even the worst things will work out.
You believe in a happy ending.
But you are naive. The mostly good in your life has made
you that way. You’ve spent so much time seeing the bright side
that you don’t even believe the other side exists. You are wrong
about that.
I closed that book. I wouldn’t open it again, I vowed. It was
time I learned something.
* 69 *
He cal ed that night, the night I had come home from
the park and had eaten everything in the fridge. Kissing makes
you hungry.
Hunger
makes you hungry. It had gotten late. I had
school the next day. I was getting tired, but I just wanted more of
him, too, like he wanted of me. I was downstairs in the kitchen
getting something to drink, speaking softly, the phone crooked
between my shoulder and my ear, when Dad came through. He
was turning lights off. He tapped the place on his wrist where a
watch would be, turning his eyebrows down in concern.
I know!
I
mouthed. I was mad at him, because I knew he didn’t get this, or
even if he did in some general way, he didn’t get
this
.
Christian and I talked every night after that. We were both
taking AP classes and calculus and had too much homework,
so we couldn’t get together, and that next weekend he had
Stay
plans to go to his parents’ cabin. It was almost unbearable how
long those weeks were. I knew if he came over to study that we
wouldn’t study, but we ended up spending just as much time
on the phone anyway. We spent a lot of time saying
I should just
come over
and
If I’d have come over we could have spent all this
time together instead of on the phone
, things like that. Things you
say. Maybe I was nervous for Dad to meet him, or for him to
meet Dad, though I had no real reason to think they wouldn’t
get along terrifically. Christian was smart and well-read and Dad
liked that. There was something, though, that I knew could hap-
pen, which was that Dad could see things, he was an observer,
and maybe I just didn’t want him seeing and observing any-
thing that might ruin this. I needed him to like Christian and
keep his mouth shut and leave it at that.
Finally, on Friday night, Christian came over to pick me up to
go to a movie. I introduced him to Dad and they stood in the hall
by the front door as if no one wanted to venture further in. There
was this strained kind of chitchat about the number of daylight
hours Copenhagen experienced in the winter or some such thing,
and I kept seeing each of them through the others’ eyes, and I got
us out of there fast.
It was so good to see him. God. I felt so happy that we were
finally at Friday. The word
Friday
—streamers could have hung
from it, balloons. It was such a great word.
“I love watching you drive,” I said.
“I love seeing you in the seat beside me,” he said.
It felt very Mr. and Mrs., being in his car with him driving,
but I also felt a little nervous. We had talked about anything and
* 71 *
Deb Caletti
everything for hours and hours, but it was still all new; being in
his car was new, that careful new that made you worry you had
mascara tracks or would say something stupid, the exactly stupid-
est thing to make him know he didn’t want to be there with you
after all. You did that when you started to care a lot—you worried
he was watching your every move to make sure he really wanted
you. You could forget that maybe
you
were supposed to being
doing that too. You forgot it wasn’t just you being watched and
judged and trying to pass some test.
I looked around his car for pieces of him, ways to know him
better, but it was very clean—no wrappers or dust or books or
empty bottles. Dylan Ricks had had a soccer ball hanging from
his rearview mirror and sports equipment piled in the back,
water bottles and empty PowerBar wrappers, dirt from cleats and
muddy games on the carpets. Athlete leftovers everywhere. I pic-
tured Christian vacuuming the rugs for me, catching the crumbs
between the seats, making sure everything shined. Actually, he
always kept his car like that, but I didn’t know that then. He liked
things clean.12* I watched his finger adjust the radio dial. His
hands were clean, too. So neat, nails trimmed. I liked that, I told
myself. I wasn’t sure I really did, but I told myself I did. It was dif-