Read The Things We Wish Were True Online
Authors: Marybeth Mayhew Whalen
Bryte looked around, trying to remember what the place used to look like, ascertaining whether it had changed. The trees were a bit taller, the vegetation perhaps denser, but otherwise she knew exactly where she was. She heard a branch snap, and a rustling noise, and she took a step back in the direction they’d come from. These woods had creeped her out as kid, and they didn’t seem less foreboding now that she was an adult.
She thought of the news reports of Hannah Sumner, gone missing from a neighborhood nearby, one very much like this one. They’d discussed her at the pool just recently, swapping bits of information they’d gleaned from various news reports and rumors, their voices low and out of earshot of the kids. She thought of the madness that would ensue if Christopher ever went missing. Losing him would be the end of her—this she knew more certainly than anything. She pulled him tighter still, and he squirmed in protest. He pointed at the copse of trees ahead. They’d reached Everett and Jencey’s hideaway.
“Go in there?” he asked. She set him down but kept hold of his hand, scanning the area as she did, just to make sure. There was talk of coyotes in these woods as well.
She looked down at him, willed herself to relax. “You want to?”
He nodded vigorously, his brows unknotting, his face open. They moved closer to the hideaway. She took exaggerated tiptoe steps forward like Elmer Fudd hunting “wabbits,” and Christopher laughed. They were on an adventure, nothing more, nothing less. But how would she explain to Everett if he mentioned it that night at the dinner table? She would have to say they were somewhere else; that was all. She could lie to Everett.
“I just want to be friends” was the first lie she ever told him, just after that make-out session in ninth grade. Jencey had been away with her family, and Bryte had made a good stand-in, a practice dummy. This was before Everett and Jencey had officially coupled off, but everyone knew it was coming. Bryte’s lie had been a preemptive strike, an attempt to save face before he chose Jencey. What happened between them that one night, she told herself—and him—meant nothing. She stuck to that particular story for a long, long time, right up until the night she admitted her real feelings for him, the night everything changed between them and he became hers for real.
But there’d always been that nagging doubt that it wasn’t real.
Pushing the branches back, she held her breath and stepped inside the hideaway, hoping that she didn’t find that same blow-up mattress, and evidence that her husband and Jencey had resumed their meetings somehow. She exhaled as she stepped inside, finding nothing at all save a little clearing, the trees encircling them and blocking all visibility except the small patch of sky just over their heads. She looked up at it, the neat round bit of blue the only thing she could see that wasn’t green.
She pointed at the natural skylight so Christopher would look up, too, thinking as she did of how Jencey and Everett would lie on that blow-up mattress and wish on whatever stars they could find in that circle, their arms folded behind their heads, their eyes intent on what lay in front of them. The scene was almost like her own memory, even though she’d never witnessed it, only heard about it from Jencey. Bryte knew full well what Jencey’s wishes were, even if she wasn’t privy to Everett’s back then. She wondered if those old wishes depressed Jencey now. She could only guess at what her husband’s wishes had been, and if the life they’d built together looked anything like whatever he’d thought of when he watched the stars twinkle in that small circle of sky.
EVERETT
With Bryte out of the house, Everett was able to search online for that doctor’s number without her seeing. He’d been looking it up earlier when she’d come to tell him she was leaving, startling him as much as if he’d been caught looking at porn. He’d quickly flipped back to another screen before she saw, waiting for her to leave before he tried again. He got up and watched from the front window until she was safely out of sight, her back moving steadily away from him as she pushed Christopher in the stroller to go get Rigby.
He wondered what she would say if she knew he was going through with his idea to talk to the doctor, to get things moving along. He knew she was scared. He knew that the fertility issues leading up to the pregnancy had been hard on her—harder than anyone could understand. Something had changed in Bryte, beginning when they didn’t immediately conceive, and spiraling progressively downward the longer pregnancy eluded them. By the time she got pregnant, it almost seemed too late, that the damage—psychological? physical?—had already happened. He’d urged her to go to support groups, to talk to someone, but she’d steadfastly refused. Ultimately, it was Christopher who brought her back. But she wasn’t interested in ever doing it again.
And yet, he saw his son growing up like he did—an only child, always alone—and he didn’t want that for him. He’d worked on Bryte for several months but was getting nowhere. The only thing he knew that might jump-start things was to make a grand gesture. And making an appointment to talk to the doctor himself was the best idea he could think of. When she learned he’d done that, surely she’d see how serious he was, how much he wanted this. If he could go, maybe she’d muster the courage to do the same. Granted, his part in the process had been minimal, but what man in his right mind voluntarily goes to a fertility specialist without his wife forcing him to do so? It had to make an impression. It just had to.
He spoke to the nurse, who seemed confused by what he was asking. “And this is an appointment for your wife, sir?” she asked.
“Um, actually, it’s for just me,” he said. “To talk to the doctor myself.” He could feel his face reddening.
“It’s highly irregular for the husband to come in without the wife, sir,” she said, her voice clipped.
“Yes, I realize that, but I’m just trying to gauge what we’re looking at this time around. And since we worked with Dr. Ferguson in the past, I thought perhaps he could, er, talk me through what we can expect. Just in case there’s anything I can do to get the ball rolling, so to speak.” He cringed at that particular choice of words.
“I see,” the nurse said, but the note of doubt in her voice told Everett that she didn’t see at all. She was humoring him at this point, leaving the rest to the doctor to sort out. She made the appointment, wished him a good day, and hung up.
He held the dead phone and tried to feel something other than foolish, something akin to hope. He strode over to the mantel and pulled down the photo his parents had snapped at Easter, the one on the front steps with him and Christopher in those goofy matching ties, Bryte in a pretty spring dress. He tried to see the three of them as any other person might. Did they look like a complete family? He didn’t think so. He squinted at the photo and tried to see another child there with them, another boy or maybe a little girl, the one who would turn their triangle into a square, the one who would make their lives complete. He looked for the place where he or she might fit, if only his wife would make room.
ZELL
Two days after the visit to the hospital, she could feel herself getting sick. Those places were germ factories. She made it through the morning without letting on to Cailey, but by lunchtime, she couldn’t fake it any longer. She told the child to occupy herself, and sank into the couch for a little rest. She pulled the afghan over her and rolled over to her side, so that her vantage point was the den windows, which faced the house next door. Jencey’s car was there, again, and she didn’t know how to feel about that. She closed her eyes and thought of Debra’s leaving, and whether it was time to tell Lance what she knew about it. The thought of telling him made her feel sicker. She could anticipate the look on his face, the betrayal that would spread across his normally open features the longer she talked.
Before Debra and Lance had lived in that house, she’d never befriended the people who lived there, never really had time to. She was always dashing off to activities and commitments, running one child here and another there. John joked that they ought to put in one of those revolving doors like they have in hotels so that he and Zell and the kids could actually run in circles instead of just feeling like they were. She always felt bad for not being more neighborly, but really, who had the time?
When Debra and Lance moved in and it turned out they were Yankees, well, that just cinched it. She certainly didn’t have time to fool with Yankees who didn’t know how things were done. They put tacky blow-up characters in their yard at Christmas. Their Halloween decorations were just plain evil looking and, if you asked her, disturbing to children. They launched fireworks in the street on New Year’s Eve and set all the neighborhood dogs to barking to the point that she couldn’t sleep a wink and was tired all through New Year’s Day. She could hardly make her pork and collards and black-eyed peas like she was supposed to.
Still and all, she minded her manners and smiled in passing at Debra or Lance if they were in their driveway. Sometimes she gave a little wave. She’d watched with a detached fascination as Debra had their second child, a son. She saw Debra pose in front of the gigantic (and tacky, if you asked her) stork they put in the front yard, holding up the pinch-faced baby, looking swollen and strung out. Zell felt equal parts envy and relief as she watched the scene play out. Oh, to do it all over again! Thank God I never have to do that again!
And yet, as she watched Debra maneuver the baby blankets so that Lance could get their son’s face in the photo, Zell tried to recall the day she’d brought any of her babies home, the feelings and thoughts she must’ve had. She aimed for some vivid, standout recollection, crisp and clear in her mind. But all she could turn up was a vague sense of exhaustion and panic. She wondered if she’d retained any of the experiences of motherhood, the scope of it, if the joy would ever start to outweigh the anxiety. She felt as though she’d been sucked up into a whirlwind and periodically touched down long enough to look around, register the unfamiliar scenery, only to be sucked up and tossed about again.
She’d taken them a loaf of quick bread, still warm and smelling of chocolate and bananas, and knocked on the door, intending to leave it and dash away. Debra had answered the door, looking haggard but glad for company. “Please come in,” she’d said, and the
please
sounded less polite than desperate. Zell agreed and found a seat at the nearby kitchen table.
Debra sat across from her. In her arms, a bundle of blue squirmed. “You wanna hold him?” The note of hopefulness in her voice told her she needed Zell to say yes. Debra thrust Alec into her arms before she’d even finished nodding.
She dutifully studied the baby, making appropriate comments about his size and features. “Who does he look like, do you think?”
“I think my father, but of course Lance thinks he looks just like him.” Debra laughed and Zell joined in, though she didn’t fully understand the joke.
They limped through small talk, covering the weather and the local schools and the headlines. But it was conversation and it filled the dead air. She’d played the part of the good neighbor that afternoon, and that had been, very nearly, that. She watched as the boy grew from baby to toddler to kid, registering the changes from afar just as she’d always done with the people who lived in that house, being a tolerable neighbor, if not an especially good one.
And then one day she’d heard screaming in their driveway. Her mother ears twitched at the sound, which was especially loud in her quiet house. She put down the book she was reading (she had book club that night and was cramming). The screaming was horrific, as if someone was being murdered. She grabbed the phone just in case she needed to call 911. She peered out the kitchen window to get a better look.
When she saw the blood, she moved toward it, carrying her phone with her as she ran out the kitchen door. She prided herself on being someone who moved toward things, even if they were frightening or gory or just plain uncomfortable. She didn’t shrink back like some people. She wanted to be of help, to be that person about whom people later remarked: “I just don’t know what I would’ve done if you hadn’t been there.” She ran to Debra’s side and knelt there with her beside the older child, Lilah.
“What can I do?” She tried to gauge just where the blood was coming from and whether Lilah was critically injured.
It was an accident that started it all, and an accident that ended it.
The little girl’s shoelace had tangled in the bicycle chain, and she’d toppled over, her sneaker still affixed to the bicycle in such a way that every time they moved her, the bicycle grated along the concrete, making a horrible scraping noise. She looked at Debra’s panicked face, the way the blood was informing her reaction, and rested a hand on her shoulder.
“I think we should take her to the hospital,” she said, willing her voice to sound calm and relaxed. She was almost certain the little girl had broken something, and the cut on her leg that was the source of all the blood was of concern as well. It was deep and jagged, lying open like a yawning mouth. Zell tried to brush some of the dirt from it, but Lilah went crazy trying to get away from her touch. Zell extracted the shoelaces from the chain and scooped up Lilah, carrying her as she ordered the uncertain Debra to grab Alec and follow her to her car. They settled Debra and Lilah in the backseat, with Alec tucked in, too, and set off.
Zell sat in the waiting room and entertained Alec while they waited for Lilah to be stitched up. Lance showed up and offered to take care of him, but Zell sent him into the exam room to be with his wife and child, magnanimously staying put, her arm around Alec. “You go,” she said, and waved him away. “Lilah will want to see you.”
Lance had looked skeptical, glancing at Alec, who was intent on finishing a drawing Zell had started out of desperation. She’d meant it to be a dog, but he’d turned it into a cat, his lips pursed in concentration as he applied the whiskers to the face. “He’s fine,” she said, her voice assuring. She waited for him to say that she was a lifesaver, but he didn’t. Instead, he ruffled his son’s hair and trotted off down the hall. He disappeared into the room they’d had Lilah and Debra in for hours.
Lilah had to have stitches in her leg, and she had a broken collarbone, which required a sling. Eventually Lance took Alec home, and Zell, uncertain what to do without the child to mind, decided to go home, too. She knocked tentatively at the door she’d seen Lance disappear into and heard a weak “Come in” in response.
She poked her head inside the room to see Lilah asleep, her arm bound to her side, her leg resting atop a pillow. Debra was slouched in a chair beside her bed, staring vacantly at a TV with the sound turned off. “I was just going to go home. Unless there’s anything else I could do?” she said.
Debra shook her head. “They’re about to release us.” Debra covered her eyes with her hands, like Ty used to do when he was very small and thought that if he couldn’t see her, she couldn’t see him. She heard small sobbing sounds and waited politely for Debra to collect herself, wondering if she should just back out of the room or wait to be dismissed. She moved inside the room and let the door swing shut behind her.
Finally Debra spoke. “I’m sorry for crying.” She swiped at her eyes, embarrassed.
“It’s OK. You’ve been through a lot.”
“You know what I was thinking just before this happened?” Debra asked, picking at a cuticle instead of looking at Zell. She went on with her story before Zell could admit that she had no idea what the younger woman was thinking moments before her daughter had a bike accident. Before Zell had heard the screaming, she hadn’t thought of Debra at all.
Debra answered her own question, her answer coming out in a rush of words. “I was thinking that this isn’t so bad. The kids are starting to get older, and Alec will go to kindergarten in the fall and I won’t be so tied down. They can play outside without me helping them or watching their every move, and maybe, just maybe, I might end up like the others.” She finished speaking, lifted her finger to her mouth, and began to chew at a piece of stray skin on her cuticle.
Zell’s daughter had a nasty habit of doing the same thing. Her fingers were a mess. She thought about lecturing Debra the same way she lectured Melanie but decided against it. She was not this girl’s mother. “The others?” she asked gently.
Debra still didn’t meet her gaze. She continued to nibble at the skin on her cuticle for a moment, then spat out the piece of skin she’d been trying to chew away. “The other mothers. The ones who seem to actually enjoy this gig.” Her finger began to bleed, and she put it back in her mouth, sucking the blood away. Zell was repulsed but tried not to show it.
She spoke quietly, cautiously, the way one might speak to a child. “I’m not sure any one of us is enjoying all of it fully—not the way you might think.”
Debra’s laugh was a scoff. “That’s easy for you to say.” Finally she raised her eyes. “You’re already past the worst part. You’re home free.”
She gestured to Zell. “And look at you. You’re wearing a white shirt, and there isn’t a speck of ketchup or grease or a child’s lip print or dirt on it. And I bet you’re what—a size four?” Zell had almost corrected her—she was a size two then—but decided it was better to keep that detail to herself. Debra gestured at her own stomach, pooching onto her lap. “I’ve been trying to get the baby weight off since Alec was born!”
When her voice raised at the end, Lilah started to stir. She blanched and went back to speaking in an emphatic whisper. “You might be ‘just trying to survive’”—she held her hands up to make air quotes—“but your survival and mine are light-years apart.” Her voice got softer and her eyes flickered away again, this time toward the window.
“I watch you go running every day, and I think, ‘I wish I could do that. Just run away like that.’ The difference is, I’m not sure I’d come back like you do.” She glanced back over toward Zell, her expression caught somewhere between shame and surrender. She shrugged her shoulders as if it were nothing and straightened her back. “Thanks for helping out today. I don’t know what I would’ve done without you there. And I’m sorry for falling apart in front of you.”
“You’ve been through a traumatic experience,” Zell said. “You’re entitled to fall apart.”
A little burst of laughter escaped Debra’s lips. “Tell that to my family,” she said.
Zell was about to speak again, to say something—anything—to put Debra’s mind at ease. She wanted to tell her that she knew exactly how she felt and that it would get better. The kids would stop needing her quite the way they needed her now. The intensity would ebb, at least. She wanted to tell her that there would come a day when she could go for a run uninhibited, when she could run away, as she put it. She wanted to tell her that this reality wasn’t the only one there was, forever. That nothing stayed the same.
But just as she opened her mouth to speak, the nurse bustled in with the discharge papers, speaking loudly enough to rouse Lilah and giving Zell a pointed look that told her it was time to vacate the premises. She mumbled something about getting out of their way, but no one heard her. She slipped out, feeling vaguely guilty, as though she’d done something wrong, seen something she shouldn’t have.
She stopped and picked up Chinese takeout for dinner, then at the last minute went ahead and picked up some entrées for Debra’s family, too. It wasn’t a homemade meal—she’d see to that tomorrow—but it was food, and it was, after all, dinnertime. She sent John next door with the neighbors’ food, put some out for her own hungry brood, then made it to book club and kept up with the discussion even though she never did finish the book. She sipped wine and made small talk with the other women, all the while thinking about what Debra had said and wondering just what she could do about it. Should she invite her to book club? Offer to keep the kids for her?
It wasn’t until she was doing her stretches before bed that she hit upon an idea. Years later she could still feel the little zing of inspiration that traveled up her spine at the moment she thought of it. She pictured Debra gesturing to her stomach, pointing at Zell’s smaller body. Everything that happened after came from that one idea, which came from that strange encounter in the hospital room when a woman she barely knew bared her soul, admitting something Zell felt quite sure Debra had admitted aloud to no one else. Her confession left Zell feeling responsible. She had never been able to turn away from another person’s pain.