Authors: Deb Caletti
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #General, #Adolescence, #Suicide, #Dating & Sex
His mouth was open, but no words came out.
“I saw Annabelle today. She said it must be hard for you to
be here.”
He just kept staring at me. “Fuck,” he said. He ran one hand
through his hair. “Fuck.”
“Why would it be hard for you to be here?”
He thought. He moved his head back and forth a little with
the effort of it. “It’s . . . Your mother loved the water. We had our
honeymoon . . .”
He was lying, it was so obvious. Searching around for words,
same as when you lose your lip gloss under the car seat. “Did it
have to do with Fiona Husted?” It came out like an accusation. I
don’t even know why I said it. Her name just seemed bad-famil-
iar, like when you run across someone you’d met before, couldn’t
recall it, but still had a sense if the experience had been a good
one or not. Maybe I’d heard that name a long time ago when I
should have been sleeping. While I lay awake in my bed with my
pink blanket and my plastic horses, words winding their way up
through the heater vents of our old house.
“Jesus, Clara,” he said.
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“What happened? What?”
“Clara, stop this. Nothing happened.” His face was blazing
red. His eyes—we caught a raccoon once, eating the grapes on
Dad’s vine. We saw him in the glare of our porch light that we’d
suddenly turned on. My father’s eyes looked like his. Caught.
“You had some stupid fling with Fiona Husted. Mom got so
upset she made herself sick?”
“You can’t make someone have an aneurysm, for Christ’s
sake.” He stepped to me. “Clara, come on. Stop this.”
“Wait. You were gone. She was sick and you weren’t there.
You were off with someone else.”
“I was right there. I did everything I could. Everyone did.
They even said at the hospital—there was nothing more that
could have been done.”
His voice caught. He put his palms to his eyes. “Jesus,
please.”
“I’m sorry,” I said. “Dad. I’m sorry.”
“Let it alone, Clara.”
The little blue flame under the sauce was still going. Red
sauce started to boil and rise, threatening to spill over the sides.
He grabbed the handle and shoved it off the stove, burning his
hand. “Fuck!” He flung the faucet handle up, stuck his hand
under the cold water.
“Are you okay?” I asked.
He didn’t respond. Just kept moving his hand slowly under
that water. I picked my shoes back up. I grabbed my sweatshirt
out of the closet. I left through the deck door, went down the
steps and out to the beach. I was done with him right then.
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Deb Caletti
The sun was setting. There were streaks of an artist’s pink
brush in the far-off parts of the sky. They wouldn’t last long. It got
cold at night on the beach. I walked toward town, away from the
lighthouse and Annabelle Aurora’s shack. If I kept walking and
walking, I could end up near the docks where
Obsession
was, and
the small house that Finn had pointed out to me, the one where
his family lived.
I looked down; my eyes picked amongst the shell chips and
rocks and seaweed bits for something worth keeping. I didn’t
understand what was happening. My father had always been
clear and whole and present to me. He was there for me in any
way I needed, and I was there for him, too. We were on the same
side. But something felt changed about that now—a dividing line
had been drawn. I was the sand, and I could see where it started
and ended. But he was the sea, and it went on and on, to places I
didn’t know or couldn’t imagine.
Still, I had places of me he couldn’t see, right? So there was
no good reason it couldn’t work the other way, too. I wondered
if parents had an easier time with the secrets their children kept
than children did with the secrets of their parents. A parent’s
secrets seemed like some sort of betrayal, where my own just
seemed like a fact of life and growing up and away. I was sup-
posed to be independent, but he was supposed to be available.
Him having his own life seemed selfish, where me having my
own was the right order of things.
I thought about Annabelle Aurora’s daughters. They must
have felt that, too, when she moved across the country, away
from them, to this beach. I kept walking until I was too cold.
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Until I realized that we complain about our parents acting like
they own us, and yet maybe we’re worse at that than they are.
I headed back home. I thought I’d come to some conclusion
in my mind, that I would just let things be. He could have his
secrets if they meant that much to him. Fine. But then I saw the
car gone. Inside, that pan was back on the stove, the blue flame
flicking low, the sauce burned down to a black crust. He could
have burned our house down.
The Christmas card of our mystery host sat on the kitchen
table where he’d left it. I wished this was something my mother
could do—send a card after all these years to tell us how she was
doing wherever she was. Funny, she had always been
my mother
and not
Mom
in my mind, as if we didn’t quite know each other
well enough yet to drop the formality.
God, I know that’s not how she ever would have wanted it,
though. It was my one comforting thought, how she’d never have
left if she could have helped it. It gave me some weird reassur-
ance, like her arms were around me still. She would have wanted
to be with me always, to know my favorite music, to know I hated
scratchy tags and green peppers and that my allergies got bad
when the Scotch broom bloomed. That’s what a mother would
always want, right? See, we had a complicated relationship, my
mother and I.36* I wondered what she would say to me now. It
was strange how near she felt lately.
The house was too quiet. I thought about starting dinner
36 I guess even death doesn’t make your relationship with your mother less com-
plicated.
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Deb Caletti
all over again so that it would be fixed when he returned, but I
decided I wasn’t even that hungry. I ate a bowl of cereal in the
name of dinner-duty, and the pouring of the milk sounded loud,
and so did the spoon against the bowl and the sound of my own
crunching in my head.
Sometimes maybe you should let someone you love travel
great distances away from you. You shouldn’t think you needed to
set out to retrieve them and put them back where they belonged.
Sometimes they were only safe and happy, like Annabelle
Aurora. And then other times, it was just possible they were lost
at sea. It would be your duty, then, to get out into the boat and
search, even if the waves were choppy and the wind was howling
the protests of the dead.
My father didn’t come back that night. At least, not until the very
early hours of the morning, just before my own alarm went off.
I knew, because I was sleeping the 60 percent sleep of worried
people, where part of your mind is listening from the shallow
depths of a dream. I woke up when I heard the car’s engine and
the crunch of tires driving up. He was trying to be quiet, but I
knew how that went. I had snuck out before to see Christian. I
understood the near-silent turning of door handles.
I let Dad sleep and went to work. I was surprised to see Roger
trotting around freely in front of the visitors’ center, sniffing and
digging, his little butt sticking up and his nose down in a hole
he’d made.
“Roger!” I called. He looked up. I might as well have just
caught him with a bag of loot in front of the bank. Anyone who
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says dogs don’t feel human feelings are wrong, if you ask me.
You see guilt and shame and disappointment and hope right on
their sweet furry faces. They’ve got everything but words.37*
“What are you doing out here?” I asked.
I would have liked to hear the answer to that one. You won-
der if dogs would lie, too, if they could talk. But Roger was too
shocked to do the dog lie of slinking off. He was still standing
there being the stunned perpetrator.
I scooped him up and went inside. The air smelled like frying
butter and vanilla. A familiar smell I couldn’t place at first. Then
I realized. French toast. Sylvie came downstairs when she heard
the door.
“Oh!” she said. She wore a soft lavender blouse I’d never
seen before and the same expression Roger had had when I’d
walked up.
“Roger was out front,” I said.
“Oh, no! I did not even see him escape,” she said.
Sure, because love or sex or whatever it was could make you
careless about the other people around you. It could make you
careless about everything, even the love and sex itself, that’s how
powerful it was. I knew about this. I put my nose in Roger’s fur. He
smelled like he’d been gardening—that aroma of cool, fresh dirt.
“Lucky he didn’t go far,” I said. I set him down. He started hopping
around on his back legs near Sylvie, but she didn’t pick him up.
“What do you want me to do here today?” I asked. My voice
was sharp.
37 And, you know, the ability to drive a car and go to college.
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Deb Caletti
“Just the usual, Clara.” Sylvie opened the cash register with
her tiny keys.
“All right,” I said. “Fine.”
“You’re angry with me,” she said.
She was right. I guess I was. I didn’t know why, exactly. I took
my seat behind the register. Sylvie had now become someone
my father had turned to, someone who could be important to
him, and I had to decide how I felt about that. My feelings were
jumbled up. You could have Feeling A and Feeling B and Feeling
C, but once you got to D and E, it was all too much and they
smashed together in a big mess.38*
I didn’t have time to sort anything out, though, because just
then a couple poked their heads around the door—a bookish man
with a white beard and a small, sparrowlike lady. They whispered,
the way you do in quiet places, like you might awaken the place
itself with your voice. They asked if they could see the lighthouse,
and instead of leading them outside toward the small narrow
lighthouse door or telling them sharply that the lighthouse itself
was not open to the public, she tossed me her keys. She handed
over three sets of the gloves visitors wore inside to protect the
highly polished brass of the upper floors.
“Go,” she said.
I guess sleeping with my father earned me some increased
responsibilities on the job. I hoped it meant a pay raise, too.
38 Some people can keep going through F and G and H, and some reach their limit at
A. I’m sure this ties right into mental illness somehow. You know, how soon you reach
the tipping point.
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I’d never opened the small lighthouse door on my own before,
and I had trouble with the key. Finally we were inside, looking
up the long curve of metal stairs. The stairs wound around the
cement center pole, which housed the clockwork. Long ago the
clockwork used to rotate the shade around the lamp so that the
beam of light would appear to go on and off.
It was freezing in there. And there was good reason Sylvie
didn’t usually let people go up. First, the long climb on steep,
narrow steps. Then, once you finally got to the uppermost floor
where the lamp was, there was the shock of where you stood.
The lamp was in the center, and you stood on the deck around it.
Around that deck was the old crystal casing you could see when
you were outside, the glass that acted as a giant lens, making the
light visible for miles. Meaning that when you stood there and
looked through that glass, you saw only the hundred-foot drop
down to the rocks below. There was the vast stretch of ocean, the
cliffs, the most amazing view around, but the visual fact of how
high up you were was impossible not to notice. The first time I
went up with Sylvie, my stomach dropped and my heart squeezed
in warning. You knew that the old glass has been there forever.
You knew you wouldn’t suddenly drop through. But, obviously,
certain pieces of you didn’t quite believe that.
Of course, we never took anyone out to the outside deck,
where the brave keepers (and now a special service) used to go to
clean that glass. The deck where The Lovely Mrs. Bishop leaped
to her death.
Our feet clanged loudly on the steps, a long rhythmic
march. On the way up, the couple (who’d introduced them-
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Deb Caletti
selves as Hal and Sharon) stopped to gaze out of the long rect-
angular windows, though it was probably just a sneak move to