Read Know Not Why: A Novel Online
Authors: Hannah Johnson
Tags: #boys in love, #bffs, #happy love stories, #snarky narrators, #yarn and stuff, #learning to love your own general existence, #awesome ladies
“Don’t knock it,” Dad orders. “Jane Austen told
me that.”
“Really?”
“Yeah. Tell your mom she says hi.”
“Will do.”
“She really liked Mansfield Spark.”
“Sick.”
“Totally.”
We watch the stage for a little while. Amber
moves her hands in eerie, eloquent gestures in time to the words I
can’t hear. The sound of Kristy’s crying is amplified, though,
precise as a pin drop in an empty room. Arthur keeps his head bent
down, his hands moving reverently over the keys. I realize that
it’s a song I know, but I can’t quite figure out what.
“He’s talented, this guy,” Dad observes.
“Yeah,” I say. “He’s sort of like … I don’t
know, this thoroughly awesome human being.” And then, just because
I still can’t quite tell whether he gets it, I add, “He kissed me
in the fake flower aisle.”
“Good for him.”
“Yeah?”
“Sure,” Dad says easily. “Somebody had to.”
“Huh,” I say.
Dad heads over to the nearest row of seats,
takes a load off. He props his legs up on the seat in front of him.
They never like you to do that, but I guess it’s not really a big
deal considering there’s no one here but us.
I don’t know if I’m supposed to sit down next to
him or not. Instead, I keep standing. It’s like this a lot of the
time with him. I guess I started to forget that part.
“Better get off those feet, bud,” he says, an
invitation.
I accept, sitting next to him. The chair creaks
as I sit down. I can’t quite bring myself to prop my feet up the
way he did with his. I don’t really want to look at them.
“Amber’s very good,” Dad says, keeping his eyes
trained on the stage.
“I don’t really get what she’s doing,” I
admit.
I watch a smirk curve at his mouth. “The trick
to women,” he says, jokily all-knowing, “is—” He trails off
abruptly.
“What?”
“Never mind,” he says. “Forgot. I’m not supposed
to tell. It’s the rules. Although,” he adds, chuckling, “I guess it
doesn’t matter so much in your case, does it, kiddo? Not exactly
essential knowledge.”
Here we go. This, I’ve been waiting for. “So you
get it.”
“Yeah, I get it,” he says. He still hasn’t
looked at me. “’Course I get it.”
“That your son’s a faggot.”
“Hey,” he says, turning to look at me. He’s got
really blue eyes, my dad, but my mom’s are brown, so that’s what
Dennis and I got. “Shut your mouth.”
“I just thought you should know,” I say, but I
feel stupid and good all at once. Like I called this wrong to start
with.
He looks back at the stage, and he crosses his
arms in front of his chest. “Nobody talks like that about my
son.”
“Yes, sir,” I say quietly.
Arthur stops playing, and for a second, there’s
just silence. Then he starts up something else, something a little
sweeter.
“What are you going to do?” Dad asks.
“I don’t know.”
He laughs, which I didn’t expect. “It’s great,
isn’t it?”
“No,” I say, with my own laugh, though it’s more
in the incredulous vein of None of This Is Funny. “It’s friggin’
terrifying.”
“Hold onto that, though,” Dad advises. He seems
so all-knowing. I feel five all over again. “That’s a good feeling.
Knowing it could go any which way.” He sighs. “Possibility.”
My mom walks out onto the stage, which seems
like good timing to me. Her hair’s down loose and she’s wearing a
white nightgown. She hovers awkwardly around, glancing out into the
audience like she’s expecting someone who hasn’t shown. I realize
that none of them can see us. The stage lights must be too bright,
so for them it’s just looking out into a whole lot of nothing.
“Miranda,” my dad murmurs. I figure he must miss
saying her name.
“I think she’s looking for you,” I point
out.
“Is that what she’s doing,” he replies, not
quite making it a question.
“You should ask her to dance,” I suggest.
“Kiddo,” he says, “I’m dead.”
“Well, yeah,” I say, a little frustrated.
“But—”
“No buts,” he interrupts. “I’m just dead.”
I know and everything, but it still hurts to
hear it. “That sucks.”
“Not really,” he answers, kind of serene. “It
makes everything clear.”
“Shouldn’t we get back to the quest?” I ask.
“The tree?”
“There’s already a tree,” he reminds me. “With
angels. And popcorn.”
I think I knew that somewhere in the back of my
head, but still, it’s confusing. “Then what are we doing here?”
He smiles a little. He doesn’t say anything, and
so neither do I. I sink back into my seat. We watch.
+
I wake up in the morning. I get out of bed and I
look down at my feet. Still there, still flesh-colored. Excellent.
Weird dream.
What are you going to do
?
I reach for my phone on the bedside table, and I
call Arthur.
“How is everything?” he asks right away. I feel
a surge of gratitude.
“Better. Except for the part where the texty
Christmas song actually, no lie, haunted my dreams last night.”
“You were the one who insisted on coming. I
can’t quite bring myself to lament you suffering the
consequences.”
“You’re a sick bastard, you know that?”
“Yep.” I’m pretty sure I can hear him smiling.
Magnificent super-hearing. It’s a thing.
“I dreamed about you, too,” I add.
“You did?”
“I did.”
“What was I doing?”
“Playing the piano.”
“Hmm.” I remember I used to really hate how he’d
do that, the ‘hmm’-ing and ‘mmm’-ing and noises that aren’t
technically words. Oh, past Howie. You foolish, foolish soul.
“How’s Kristy?” I can’t help asking.
“She went to Cliff’s for the weekend.”
“Oh.” I try not to let myself get consumed by a
sudden sinking feeling.
“It’ll be all right, Howie,” Arthur says gently.
“A little time apart will do both of you good.”
I can’t quite bring myself to agree; it sounds
dangerously optimistic. Instead, I decide to soldier forth to the
point. “What are you doing for Christmas?”
“Sitting around this apartment alone, I imagine.
My family will be in Hawaii, but it seems supremely impractical for
me to—”
“You want to come over to my house?”
“Really?” He sounds like I just asked if he
wanted to spend all day at a farmer’s market.
“Yeah,” I say. “I wanna show you off, you
motherfucking rockstar.”
“Well, when you put it like that, how can I
refuse?” Sarcasm present and accounted for, but there’s warmth in
his voice, this most excellent warmth.
“I’m pretty sure the right answer to that one is
‘you can’t.’”
“I can’t,” he agrees.
And he doesn’t. And this, this would be moving
forward.
+
“I had a dream about Dad last night,” I tell my
mom later in the kitchen. I feel a little jittery saying it. We
don’t talk about him a whole lot. I watch her back, nervous, but
when she turns around from the fridge, carton of milk in hand,
she’s smiling.
“Oh yeah?” she asks, pouring some milk into her
coffee. “What were you two up to?”
“Looking for a damn Christmas tree.”
“Ah. Lucky boy. I know how you love that.”
“Barefoot. My feet froze off.”
“He didn’t even check to make sure you were
wearing shoes first?” She shakes her head. “Oh, Graham.”
“Aside from that, it was kinda cool. I mean, I
know it was just my brain going haywire from excess cookie
consumption, or whatever, but … I dunno. When I woke up, I felt
like I’d really been with him.”
Her smirk softens into a real smile. “That’s
good.”
“Yeah,” I agree.
The fact that we’re actually talking about him
seems to sink in for both of us at once, because she starts
stirring her coffee with more focus than necessary. I shove a huge
spoonful of Corn Pops into my mouth. Chew, swallow. More Corn Pops.
The thing is, I have to tell her. I get the feeling that it won’t
exactly be the best Christmas ever if Arthur randomly shows up on
the doorstep. Besides, I want to tell her. It’s just a weird,
special kind of wanting, the kind that likes to hang out with
all-consuming terror.
Three more bites of cereal, and I muster up my
courage.
“Hey, Mom, about Christmas—” I say, and at the
exact same time, she goes, “Hon, I actually wanted to talk to you
about Christmas—”
What are the odds of that?
“You go,” I say.
“No, you.”
“Seriously. Mom. You go.”
“All right.” She looks nervous. This is
distinctly bizarre. “I invited a boy. Um. A man. Well. David.
Professor Herrick. Is coming over.”
The hell?
That’s all I got.
The hell?
“What?”
“Last night at dinner, I happened to—”
“Dinner. Wait.” Things suddenly start to come
together. I’d really, really much rather they didn’t. At all.
“Business meeting. I thought that was a business meeting.”
“Well, we
are
coworkers. And we did spend
a portion of the time talking about school, so I’m sure that—” She
stops herself, with great restraint. Then, very gravely, she says,
“A date. It was a date.”
“You lied.”
“Accidentally.”
“He took five points off my perfect paper.” It
seems very important at this moment. “He is a fundamentally crappy
person.”
“Oh, Howie, he was just trying to push you to be
better!”
“How do you kn—did you
talk
about me?
Mom! Jesus!”
“Well, people do talk about their children,
Howie! As parents, it tends to be most of what we have going for
us. Besides, he told me in great detail about his daughter’s
breakup with her boyfriend, so really, it could have been worse for
you—”
“You’re, like, dating?”
“I don’t know what we’re doing,” Mom says,
sighing and bringing a hand to her temple. “But he’s just been
through a divorce, and he had no other holiday plans, and so I
invited him. Thoughtlessly, but … there you are.”
I don’t really know what to say. Instead, I just
sit. Sitting is good. My Corn Pops are getting soggy.
“I just scarred you for life, didn’t I?” Mom
says anxiously.
“I can’t really tell yet,” I reply blankly.
She sighs, and looks kind of lost. I stare at
her. Finally, looking down at the table, she says, “I love your
dad, Howie. He’s still my best friend, and believe me, I’m aware of
the several levels of dysfunction and insanity inside that
statement. Lord knows spending time with him isn’t precisely easy,
considering the circumstances. But I’ve begun to feel like if I
just keep missing him forever, I’ll – well, God only knows what
I’ll do. But I don’t think I can—”
Who are you to give her crap about this,
Dater of Arthur?
my brain questions inconveniently. And so,
while I am many levels of freaked out, I try to get my cool
back.
“It’s okay,” I interrupt. “You don’t need to
explain it to me.”
“We can talk about it,” she insists. “I don’t
want you to feel like I was keeping secrets from you and Dennis, or
– or betraying you, or your father. None of that was my intention.
I’ve just been lonely lately, and David’s been a good friend to
me.”
I try to discern whether friend means friend or
friend means, like, sex buddy, in which case I would have to murder
him and then chop out my own brain, oh God, oh God, okay, we are
not going there, there is a place we are not going to go.
“Nah,” I say, summoning as much composure as I
can. “We’re okay.”
“Okay,” she agrees, although she still seems
pretty reluctant. “What did you want to tell me?”
Oh, right. That. In a way, it’s a relief. Now,
this doesn’t seem like such a big deal. “I invited a boy. Too.
Also.”
“Oh,” she says. I can tell it strikes her as
anticlimactic.
“Arthur,” I add. “He hasn’t got anybody to hang
out with on Christmas either.”
“Well, that’s just fine,” my mom says. She’s got
her Extra Momly voice going, like she’s trying to score back
maternal points. “It’s nice of you to reach out to a friend like
that, and I wouldn’t mind getting to know him better. I’m glad that
the two of you seem to have—”
“Mom, I’m in love with him.”
Well, whoa, shit, bam. I did not see that one
coming.
My mom falls totally silent. Goodbye, Extra
Momly voice. Her eyes get huge. Like,
huge
. Her mouth is
still open.
“W-what?” she finally sputters.
In love with him? In
love with him
?
Really, brain? Really, mouth? What sappy nonsense is that?
“Or – I dunno.” Backtracking. I am backtracking
to the max. “That came out sort of strong. I don’t know if I – I
mean, he’s cool, but it’s not like I’m, like, writing him sonnets
in my head all the time or whatever. I just –” But, okay, no, we
are not doing that, we are not moving backward here; forward,
forward damn it!
“—he’s like my boyfriend though. We’re
together. In a sexy way.” Oh, fuck, why, WHY. “Or, uh – romantic.
Way. Fuck.” I stare down at the table. My stomach is friggin’
French braiding itself. “I think I’m going to throw up.”
“Don’t throw up,” my mom orders.
“I—”
“Howie Andrew, if you throw up on this
tablecloth, you’re grounded until the end of time.”
“Okay,” I say, and take a deep breath.
“Okay.”
I stare down into my soggy Corn Pops. They’re so
soggy. I want to go swimming in them. Percy Bysshe Shelley
style.
“What about Amber?”
“Amber?”
“I always thought you two would—”
Oh, God. The end of an era. Goodbye,
misconception that has followed me my whole life. “We’re buddies,
Mom. Bestest buddies. But that’s … ya know, it.”
“Oh,” she says faintly. “I thought
otherwise.”
“Yeah,” I say. “I know.”
“Oops.”
I stare down into my cereal. She stares at me. I
continue to not throw up, which is the best thing I can say about
this moment.