Authors: Deb Caletti
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #General, #Adolescence, #Suicide, #Dating & Sex
the thought of the smell of that scotch made my stomach swim
with nausea.
I called out, but my father wasn’t home. I looked out the win-
dow, to the side of the house near the back deck where my father
* 285 *
Deb Caletti
kept his bike, and I was right, he was gone.51* The wind was whis-
tling. Everything was sudden angles in that wind—the grass bent
wildly and the waves slanted and the rain, too, fell at a diagonal as
the wind pressed against it. I shut the blinds. It was crazy, but I
went around shutting everything I could shut. Windows and cur-
tains and closet doors. A bathroom drawer that held my father’s
shaving kit. The wardrobe that held the television.
I found my phone in my purse and then zipped my purse
up tight, too. I was going to call my father. Wherever he was, I
needed him back. I didn’t want to be in that house all alone with
the slanting wind outside. I had never been a baby about being
alone, never. But there was this thrum of inevitability inside me,
and his presence could stop that, I thought. Something needed to
stop it. A person, a conversation, regular keys being dropped on a
regular table, some regular words, dinner being made.
I called him but the phone only rang and there was his voice
leaving his message in that smart-ass voice that was only one side
of him. I hung up. I tried to tell myself I was being stupid when
I knew I was not being stupid, and that’s when the phone started
to ring right in my hand and it was him. It was Christian.
I shoved the phone down deep into the couch, under the
cushions. I felt a grip of panic. I opened my purse again and took
out my car keys and put them in my pocket, same as I did that
other day, the last time I had seen him. I could hear the thrum of
ringing under those pillows, and then it stopped. I didn’t know
what to do. I needed to do something only I had no idea what.
51 An idiot, to ride when a storm was coming.
* 286 *
Stay
I went to my father’s room. I looked under his bed and
took out the paperweight he kept there. It was heavy for its size,
shaped like a typewriter, jagged and intricate, with frozen, silent
keys. I brought it out to the living room. I set it down on the cof-
fee table in front of me.
I was getting myself worked up over nothing. You could do
that. You could make something big in your mind that didn’t
exist—Christian himself had done that, and what he’d created
was as real to him as real actually was. You could see ghosts.
How could you tell the difference? How could you tell the fear
inside from the danger outside? How could you hear what was
real when the wind was battering and the rain coming down and
those ghosts were restless and rising from the seas?
* 287 *
I sat there on the couch and circled my knees with
my arms and watched the sky turn briefly pink and orange in
the skylight before it went dark. The phone rang under the cush-
ions again. I knew it might be Finn, but it might not be, too. I
couldn’t stop to find out, because I needed to listen. The phone
stopped. I sat very still and listened hard to the night—the
ocean, the wind, the rain, the creak of the joints of the house,
so I would hear if he was coming.
And so I did hear it coming from a long way off, that car.
The car was one I knew well—the sound of the engine was.
A car engine can sound like no other car engine, same as
the sound of a particular car door slamming shut, same as
particular footsteps, which I did not wait for. I looked out the
window when I heard the engine. I saw the headlights and
Stay
the outline of the driver, and I knew those headlights and that
outline.
“Oh, Jesus,” I said out loud. My voice was both so big and so
small in that room. “Jesus,” I whispered.
He had closed that door in his room, and I had been trapped
in that corner, I remembered that. I would not be trapped again.
I had the keys in my pocket, but the keys would do no good.
The paperweight sat on the table, and it would do no good,
either. They were small, silly weapons, pointless objects offering
no protection. I saw the headlights swing into the driveway, and
they swooped across the living room, same as the lighthouse
beam making its slow arc. I went to the sliding door that led to
the back deck and opened, it and the blind clattered as I shoved
it aside and stepped outside and then remembered that he could
hear my shoes on the wooden planks of the deck. I heard him
knocking. I heard him calling my name, in that voice, and I ran
then. I bolted down the dunes toward the beach and I started
running and I could still hear him calling my name.
The rain soaked my blouse in an instant. It clung to my skin,
and my hair was wet and rain dripped down my forehead and I
stumbled across bits of driftwood and rock to the place on the
shore where the sand was hard and I ran and ran until I realized
he might see me easily there. He would walk around the house
after he had knocked. He would see the open door. Maybe he
would walk around inside the place where my father and I had
lived, invading our private space, forcing himself where he wasn’t
wanted. He would get in his car again and drive on the road just
above me where he would see my white shirt in the darkness.
* 289 *
Deb Caletti
I ran back up to the shore again, to a covey of rock, and I lay
down against a huge stone, hidden from the road, feeling the hard
slate against my wet clothes, the cold of the rock against my cheek,
gritty with sand. My heart was pounding. My phone—it was still
under that couch cushion. I felt crazy. I couldn’t locate my own self
where I was—It was like that other night, when I was driving and
there was the ammunition store and the phone booth, and I was in
a town where other people lived, not me. I gripped that rock, and
the rain soaked my jeans now, and I waited, I don’t know for what,
just for the right amount of time, the signal inside that it was the
right amount of time, and then I climbed up toward the road and
crossed it so that I would be farther from where he might look.
I ran. My chest was burning with fire from running. I
breathed hard. I prayed I might see my father biking up the road,
but then I realized how silly that was. Him on a wobbly bike to
save me felt as feeble as those policemen on bikes or horses, the
ones you were sure wouldn’t be good for much other than stop-
ping some jaywalking citizen. Even my father, though, would not
take his bike out now, in this pounding rain and wind. He would
stay smartly where he was until he could get a ride back, maybe
from Sylvie Genovese’s, if that’s where he was.
That’s where he was, I was sure of it.
It suddenly appeared like the right answer, even though I had
been moving that direction all along. The lighthouse. The safest
place now, I knew, the safest place in any storm, that column of
stone, and inside the keeper’s house, Sylvie and my father and
Roger, Sylvie’s warm rugs and cups of tea and my father, who
would not let anything bad happen.
* 290 *
Stay
Only, he had let something bad happen. He had let it happen
and didn’t, couldn’t, stop it.
The road was empty—there was no car in sight, not Sylvie’s,
not Christian’s driving slowly past in that rain. It was just me
walking now, walking because I couldn’t run anymore, and the
lights of houses coming on in the dark and the wind whistling
and the sound of the waves crashing hard into rock and some-
thing banging far off in the wind, some door loose on its hinges.
I could not see the lighthouse in the distance and then I could
because the sensors must have gone off, and the beam lit up and
it began to swivel in the sky, and I went toward it. It was a long
way away when not in the car or on a bike, and I was soaked and
started to shiver. A car approached, and I hunched down, and
it sped past, a car I did not know. A cat cried out, one of those
horrible cat cries, a howl. I felt that howl inside me, curling up
from somewhere deep, my own cry. I stood and kept walking,
and then I started to run again because I couldn’t bear the rain
anymore, that night, that road, and the sound of my own steps
on pavement.
I ran up the curved drive to the lighthouse. The visitors’
center parking lot was empty, but, yes, there was Sylvie’s Jeep
and my father’s bike resting against the gate, and yellow lights
blazed upstairs, and in the backdrop was that huge and slowly
swiveling beam.
I caught my breath, thankful that I had made it. My father
would be shocked to see me there, standing on the porch, soaked
and scared. I bent over, rested my hands on my thighs as I let the
fire in my chest subside. It seemed crazy and unreal—the head-
* 291 *
Deb Caletti
lights, running out that back door, Christian’s car. It had been
real
, right? It had been. It was windier up there on the bluff than
it had been on the road. The wind had turned from a whistle to
a loud, spinning howl, and my teeth were chattering, and I felt
so far outside myself that I had a hard time making myself move
to that front door, and I just stood there breathing so hard, my
hands on my knees.
But I was there, and so I rested a moment. And in the small
space of that moment he was in front of me. He was there with
the lighthouse behind him.
“Clara!” Christian called, and his voice caught in the wind
and carried upward, disappearing.
“No,” I said. “No.”
He was soaked, too. A striped cotton shirt, his jeans, his hair
plastered to his head. His face was much thinner than I remem-
bered. His voice, familiar. He was familiar, too. He was still wear-
ing that leather wristband I had given him that one Christmas.
That was the weird thing. I still knew him.
“Stop. Just stop for a minute!”
“Get away from me, Christian.”
“You have nothing to be afraid of, Clara! I need you to know
that. I would never hurt you.”
The rain poured down. I started to cry. “Please, why can’t you
leave me alone?”
“You need to know I would never hurt you!”
“You came to tell me that? You followed me here for that?”
“I can’t believe you would think you needed to run away! You
needed to hide from me? From
me
? Do you think I’m a monster?”
* 292 *
Stay
He stepped toward me.
“No!” I cried. “Dad!” I yelled. My father would hear me. I
was in no danger, with my father just steps away in that house,
upstairs where the yellow light was. The door would fling open,
the police would come. “Dad!”
My voice lifted up in that wind, too. It lifted and drifted and
blew away from that cliff and out to sea.
“You have nothing to be afraid of. It’s me! It’s only me!”
“Why did you follow me?” I was sobbing. My face was wet
with tears and rain, and my nose was running.
“To
talk
to you, Clara. To talk. You won’t talk to me! I need
you to know I would never hurt you. I just want to explain!”
“I don’t want your explanations, don’t you see? I don’t want
them. You may need to give them, but
I don’t want them.
”
He wouldn’t listen, even then. His need was greater than my
will always, always: even as we stood on that bluff, he pressed his
need over mine, like a hand over my mouth.
I should bolt, I thought. My father couldn’t hear me as that rain
pummeled down, but he was right there, if I could reach that door.
But Christian stood before me, and I knew him, he was familiar in
spite of everything, and his arms were out and his palms up as if in
pleading, and I could see there was no shiny knife there.
He saw me soften for that second. He saw it. “Clara,” he
pleaded. He stepped closer to me. “I love you. I would never hurt
you. That’s all I want you to know. That’s all.”
“Okay. I know it. Now go.”
“I loved you. I will always love you. Christ, Clara. We had so
much. Why did you throw it away without giving me a chance?”
* 293 *
Deb Caletti
This was what happened with him, wasn’t it? If you took one
of his words, he gave you a thousand more? If you gave him one
of your own, he would beg for a million? It was a never-ending
need, a pit too deep to see to the bottom of. It was why Captain
Branson said no contact, wasn’t it? Because a single word was
just kindling on a fire, and contact like this was gasoline.
“Please stop.”
“I want you to know I’ve changed. I’m not the person I
was. I’ve learned. A person can learn from their mistakes! I was