Authors: Benway,Robin
I glanced at it. “Probably. You're getting good.” And he was. He had already ridden to the shore several times that day, hooting and hollering with each successful wave.
“I'm taking it,” he said, then swung his legs out of the ocean and back onto the board as he started to paddle.
“Oliver, wait,” I said as he started to move, and he deliberately reached out and splashed me, leaving me sputtering.
“Oh, you're going down,” I said, racing to catch up to him. It wasn't too difficultâhis arms were longer and stronger, but I had three years' worth of experienceâand we rode in together, almost like we were moving as the same person.
Afterward, we sat on the beach together, our wet suits drying on a rock next to us as we huddled together underneath a blanket that we found in the back of the minivan. “Your car needs a name,” Oliver said. “Something with personality.”
“Stealth Fighter,” I offered. “Secret Mission.”
“Barely Running,” Oliver said, and I laughed and pretended to choke him.
“Get your own car if you don't like mine!” I cried.
“Oh, Emmy, I would if I could,” he said, and the sadness I had seen in the water was back now, clouding his eyes like a storm.
“What is it?” I asked. “What happened?”
Oliver shrugged and picked up some sand to run through his fingers. “I guess some national crime show called yesterday. They want to do a feature on my dad and . . . you know, everything.” Oliver brushed the sand away, then waved his hand, the kidnapping just a pesky fly that could be swatted away. “My mom thinks they could find my dad that way. âNational exposure,' that's what she said.”
“And you don't want to,” I guessed.
“It's, like, I can move on or I can stay stuck here. I can't do both. She wants to me to adjust to school, to her new family, to be
normal
âwhatever the hell that even meansâbut then she wants me to go on camera and talk about how my dad kidnapped me ten years ago? I just want to let it go.”
“You don't want to find your dad, though?”
Oliver looked down at me, his face as sad as I had ever seen it. “I want that more than anything in the world. But not like this.”
He trailed off. “I just can't hate my dad the way everyone wants me to.”
“Ollie, no,” I said. I reached for his arm but he pulled away. “We don't want you to hate him.”
“You know what I mean,” he replied. “I had a life with him. He taught me how to do things, how to ride a bike and catch a pop fly. We went to movies, museums. He showed me the constellations.” Oliver laughed a little. “One time, he even used a flashlight and a grapefruit to explain the phases of the moon. It wasn't awful. Except for the fact that my mom wasn't there, I mean. That part sucked.”
I sat quietly, realizing that I had never asked him about his dad, about their life together. “I'm sorry,” I said quietly. “I just thought it would upset you, that's all.”
“I'm not mad at you,” Oliver corrected himself, then put his hand over mine, pressing it into the sand. “But everyone acts like I stopped growing up at seven years old. They act like the past ten years didn't happen to me, too.”
“It was just so terrible here,” I said. “It was scary, not knowing where you were for so long. Your dad just took you, Oliver. We didn't know what happened.”
“I didn't know what happened, either!” Oliver said. “Everyone has spent the past ten years thinking that my
dad's
the monster, but I've spent the last ten years thinking that my
mom
left
me
. I spent all that time being mad at her, and I can't just flip that. I don't work that way, Emmy. My brain, it doesn't . . .”
I tangled my fingers through his, feeling the sand rub between our skin.
“My mom and Rick and the twins, they have this perfect family, you know? And I just came in and fucked everything up. They're fighting all the time and I know it's because of me. And I can't go back to where I was, and this town is just so fucking . . .” Oliver shook his head at me. “I don't even know what I'm saying anymore. We should go.”
“No, we should stay,” I said. “I'm sorry. I didn't realize.”
“Even you and Drew and Caro, you have all these in-jokes and you talk the same and know all the places and people that I don't know anymore. But I had places and people and in-jokes, too.”
“People?” I asked.
“A few friends,” he clarified. “I even had a girlfriend when I was fifteen.” He glanced down at me. “Sorry.”
“Why are you sorry?” I said, then thought,
I'll kill her if she hurt him
. The jealousy passed after a second, though.
“I'm not. I just mean that I had a life before I came back. And no one ever wants to hear about it. I feel like if I talk to my mom, she'll just use it against my dad.”
“Like on a TV news show,” I said.
“Exactly.”
I tightened the blanket around my shoulder, pulling Oliver and me closer together. It was freezing now, but I didn't dare move. “Maybe we should talk about it more,” I said. “About both of us during the past ten years.”
“Can I ask you a question?” he asked after a few more minutes of silence, and I nodded against his shoulder. “What happened after I left? I mean, after my dad and I . . . ? Maybe we can start there.”
I sat up a little, trying to organize my thoughts. “Um, there were police. A lot of them, in your house talking to your mom, in my house talking to me and my parents, Caro and
Drew. They took your clothes, your shoes, your toothbrushâanything that would help try to find you. But your dad, he already had a three-day start, you know? You can go anywhere in the world in three days.”
“Chicago,” Oliver murmured. “You can go to Chicago.”
I looked at him. “Really?”
He nodded, splaying his hand over mine so that his fingers reached all the way past my fingertips. “We were there for a week or so. He said we were having a vacation, that we needed some father-and-son-bonding time.” Oliver's voice was as soft as his touch and he traced my fingers as he spoke. “But I wanted to go home after a while. Chicago is loud and we were in this tourist area and it wasn't like here at all. And he said that we couldn't because my mom had left, that she didn't want to be with us anymore.”
Hearing him say the words so matter-of-factly made me wince, but he didn't notice. “And I cried and I cried because I just wanted to see my mom, you know? And I didn't understand why she would just leave like that because we were supposed to make cookies for Halloween. That's what I kept telling my dad, that we had to make cookies, and I couldn't stop crying. And he just held me and he just kept saying how sorry he was, that he was so,
so
sorry.” Oliver huffed out a laugh that didn't sound funny. “And now I know what he was really apologizing for. But all I really remember was missing my mom.
“And then he said we needed a âfresh start.' That's what he said, a fresh start. And that he had always wanted to call me Colin so we should change our names.” Oliver shrugged. “I guess I was afraid of pissing him off, not because he was mean or abusive or anything like that, but just . . . I was already down a mom, you know? I didn't want to lose my dad, too.”
“You should tell your mom this,” I whispered. “Oliver, you need to tell her.”
“What kind of kid doesn't call his mom, though?” he murmured, looking down at the ground so that his hair fell down around his face, hiding him. “Why didn't I just call her?”
“You were
seven
,” I whispered, brushing his hair back behind his ear with my free hand. “You were a little kid, Ollie, and you thought she didn't want you. No one could ever blame you.”
He glanced up at me, and I suspected that he didn't quite believe me. “I'm serious,” I told him. “No one has ever or will ever blame you. Your mom never has. She never
did
.”
“Yeah, but now . . .” Oliver's jaw tensed before he said the rest of his sentence. “The problem is that now I miss my dad just like I used to miss my mom.” He glanced back at me, waiting for judgment.
“I would miss my dad, too,” I admitted.
“Even if he lied to you for ten years about everything?”
“Even then,” I said, because it was true. “I'd hate him and miss him at the same time.”
“That's . . . pretty much what it is. And it sucks.” Oliver took another deep breath, then looked toward the purpled sky and exhaled. “Fuck. I am so tired of paying the price for something I never did and didn't even want in the first place!”
I sat and I thought of surfing, of college, of ten years spent in a gilded cage. “I understand,” I said, then curled back up against him. “I really, really think I do.”
He wrapped his arm around my knees so that we were huddled together, and I tucked my hands into his hoodie pocket. We sat in silence for a long time, listening to the waves and seagulls and distant traffic.
The world continues to spin even when we want it to stop
, I thought.
Especially then.
UNCORRECTED E-PROOFâNOT FOR SALE
HarperCollins Publishers
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A
fter that, we talked.
He told me about his dad, how he had once organized an at-home movie festival just for Oliver so that he could learn about the great directors and count it toward homeschooling. (“The movies were kind of boring,” he admitted, “but the popcorn was good.”) He talked about how they went fishing in Illinois, hiking in Vermont, and once even to Disney World, when Oliver was eight. “It was the greatest day of my life,” Oliver said, still smiling at the memory, and I smiled, too, wondering where the day he finally came home ranked on that list. I almost didn't want to know.
He also mentioned different things, like the fact that he was lucky that his adult teeth
grew in straight because his dad would never have let him go to an orthodontist, and that he never was allowed to have sugar or candy because they never went to a dentist. It didn't make sense at first, but then it hit me. “Dental records,” I said, and Oliver tapped his nose as if to say,
Bingo.
“I mean, I don't know if anything would have happened,” Oliver clarified. “But I didn't care. I was just excited that I didn't have to go the dentist. And of course, it was one of the first places my mom took me.”
“Did you have any cavities?”
He grinned at me, and yeah, he was lucky his teeth grew in so nice and straight. “Not a one,” he said.
In return, I told him about what it was like growing up here, me and Caro and Drew becoming our little triangle of friends. I told him about the police, the yearly updates on the news, how the interest had been so big for a month or so and then tapered away. “That's when things really got bad,” I told him one night, when we were driving around in the car. “I think when everyone was focused on the kidnapping, it was more helpful to your mom. But when interest waned . . .” I shrugged. “It's hard when everyone else moves on, but you can't.”
“Did she ever have to . . . ?” Oliver trailed off, but I knew what he was asking. No one could ever ask that question directly.
“Identify a body?” I asked, and he nodded. “Not directly. She sent dental records a few times, but they never matched. I think it got to the point where she just wanted to know even if it was bad news, but then the police would call and ask her to send them and she would just . . .” I shook my head. “It was bad.”
I told him about how protective my parents were, not even letting me get my license until I was seventeen. “That was huge,” I admitted. “Like, monumental. I thought they would just keep saying no, but they finally said yes.”
We were sprawled in the grass at a park near Drew's house for that conversation, listening to crickets and general nighttime noises. It's always easier to talk in the dark when you can't see the other person's face, when you don't worry about how they're reacting to what you say. You can just . . . talk.
Oliver found my hand across the damp grass, then gathered it up in both of his and placed it on his stomach. It felt solid and warm. “You should tell them about surfing,” he said. “I think they'd actually be proud of you.”
“No way!” I snatched my hand back and rolled to sit up. “Are you crazy? They'd freak out for a million different reasons. No. Just no.”
“Maybe not, though. Maureen would probably talk to themâ”
“You told your mom?”
“No! Emmy!” Oliver sat up, too. We were supposed to be studying at Caro's house for a group project that didn't exist. “I didn't tell anyone, okay? Relax!”
But my heart was pounding. “If they find out, then I can't surf anymore, and they probably won't let me move out and go to school, either.”