Read What I Thought Was True Online
Authors: Huntley Fitzpatrick
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Love & Romance, #Family, #General, #Social Issues, #Dating & Sex
Nic’s broad-shouldered figure to appear out of nowhere, illu-
minated in the orangey glow of the porch light. But there’s
nothing except the dark road, the distant waves, the hulks of
houses, the Field House rising a little higher than the ones
before it.
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Five houses down.
The Field House is five houses down. What, an eighth, a
sixteenth of a mile? I could walk there. But I can’t. Because
my first instinct was to tell Cass he screwed this up for me.
We finally had that conversation about what we were doing
together. And doing this right. Is that gone now? Now that he
kept something from me, and I left him without a word, or
with all the wrong words, choosing my cousin’s side without
a second thought?
I let the screen door slam closed as I finally head inside.
“Anything?” Viv texts the next morning at five.
“Nicky Nic Nic!?” Em asks, throwing back the covers of
Nic’s bed as though he’s sure to find him there.
Grandpa Ben frowns over his raisin bran grapefruit. Instead
of leafing through the newspaper while he eats, highlighting
the yard sales, he focuses on the food, only occasionally flick-
ing a glance to the screen door.
I try Nic’s cell again and again. It goes straight to voicemail
every time.
He never remembers to charge that thing,
I repeat to myself, again and again. It’s in his pocket, dead. It’s not somewhere under water, somewhere where Nic jumped deep,
somewhere he didn’t swim back up.
Mom doesn’t even ask. She gives me one swift look when
she comes out of the bedroom, then, shoulders slumped, piles
her supplies into her cleaning bucket, bumps it down the stairs
to the Bronco.
Then she turns back.
“Shouldn’t you be dressed to get to the Ellingtons’?”
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“Mom. I can’t go today.”
Her gentle face turns as stern as it ever gets. “I didn’t raise
you to let people down. Abandoning an old lady who counts
on you is out of the question. Get to work, Gwen. That’s what
we do when we don’t know what to do.”
So I go.
All morning I’m preoccupied, peeking out the front win-
dow, looking across at the Tucker house, waiting to see Hoop’s
truck, Nic hitching out of it, paint-covered, complaining,
resentful, or sad or angry . . . just—alive.
Or the flash of a pink shirt or the gleam of a blond head.
But Cass, who was everywhere at the beginning of the sum-
mer, and especially in my days and nights lately, is nowhere to
be seen. Half a dozen times my fingers hover over the buttons
of my phone to call him. Finally, Mrs. E. reaches out her hand,
exactly like one of the teachers at school, and confiscates it, saying briskly, “You will get this back at the end of the day. We
agreed from the start that you would not be one of those texting
teenagers, and I am holding you to our agreement. Now, I’m in
the mood for some hot tea, so please make me a pot. You look as
though you could use some as well.”
I go through the motions, the lemon thingie, the scalloped
silver spoon . . . but the little silver creamer and the silver sugar bowl are nowhere to be found. Great. Somehow, from
the moment I saw Henry and Gavin Gage doing . . . whatever
they’re doing, I knew that the person who’d be there when one
of those itemized things turned up missing was me.
Mrs. E. taps her chin with a finger, brow crinkled. “I had it
out just a few days ago to serve tea to dear Beth. I know Joy
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put them back in the cabinet afterward because she was so
cross about having to do so. Really, that woman is unpleasant. I
believe I should tell Henry to find another nurse.”
I open my mouth to speak, shut it, open it again.
“You look like a codfish, Guinevere, and are most distracted
today. Your young man was also supposed to be pruning the
boxwoods and I haven’t seen hide nor hair of him. Is there any-
thing you need to speak with me about? I was young a thou-
sand years ago or more, but I do remember. Sometimes better
than I remember what happened yesterday, truth be told.” She
reaches over and pulls out the cornflower-blue painted kitchen
chair, gesturing to me to sit down, then takes one of my hands
in her soft, wrinkled one.
“Does everyone just keep secrets and lie all the time?” I ask
at last, my voice loud in the quiet kitchen. “Is that just how it
goes?”
She blinks, her gray eyelashes fluttering in surprise.
“Because remember how you told me there were no secrets
on Seashell? There are nothing
but
secrets on Seashell. Everywhere. It seems like this big open place . . . I mean, no one has
fences and there are hardly any trees, people leave their win-
dows open, some of them don’t lock their doors. But . . . but it
doesn’t matter. There are all these walls and . . . No one knows
everything that anyone is doing or they know and aren’t telling
or they’re telling the wrong people. I just . . . I just want to get away from this place to somewhere else. Somewhere nothing
like that.”
“My dear girl, I fear you will be hard-pressed to find such a
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place outside of the pages of a book. Even there, what are sto-
ries made of but secrets? Look at Lady Sylvia. If she had simply
told Sir Reginald that she was the mysterious chambermaid
with whom he’d spent that passionate night, the book would
have been twenty pages long.”
I don’t want to think about Lady Sylvia and her sensuous
secrets. I want what’s true.
Mrs. E. examines my face. “I never thought I’d see you pout,
Guinevere. You don’t seem the type.” She reaches for the china
cup, takes a sip of uncreamy, sugarless tea, makes a face. “I
expect my job at this point is to come up with some of the wis-
dom one supposedly gains with age.” She taps her chin with
her finger again. “This is difficult, as I seem to know less, and
be far less sure of anything, in my late eighties than I was in my youth. Tea is dreadful without sugar, Gwen. Just add it from the
canister, will you, never mind the silver service?”
“It’s okay, Mrs. Ellington. You don’t need to advise me.”
“How about this, dear girl? It’s about the best I have to offer.
Yes, it’s incredibly difficult for two people to be straightfor-
ward with each other. We get afraid, embarrassed . . . we all
want others to think highly of us. I was married to the captain
for five years before he confessed to me that he had never cap-
tained a boat at all. That, indeed, boats made him seasick. I’d
thought he’d had a bad experience in the war and that was why
he didn’t want to go out on the water. But he was never in the
Navy at all . . . but I digress. Perhaps, dear Gwen, you could
think, instead of what a betrayal it is to be lied to, how rare and wonderful it is when two human beings can tell each other
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the truth.” She pats my hand, gives me her most joyous smile
and then says, “Don’t pout, though. The wind may change and
your face could be stuck like that.”
“Mrs. E., your son is taking your things and selling them.
That friend of his . . . he’s looked through your silver and your
paintings and your chairs and I overheard them . . .”
I trail off.
I wait for her face to darken with rage—at Henry, or more
likely me, the eavesdropping bearer of bad tidings. The person
who tells things no one wants to know.
But instead, she laughs, deep from the belly, patting my
hand again, and leaving me completely confused. “Yes, dear,”
she says finally, practically wiping tears from her eyes.
“You know?”
“Yes, Henry and I had a conversation yesterday. But even
before that . . . I’m not a fool, dear girl. Gavin Gage is an old
friend of Henry’s, but it was hardly likely he’d be popping by
for a social call. Everyone on Seashell, if not all of Connecticut, knows Gavin is the man to go to when you wish to discreetly
part with a useless family heirloom for a few useful dollars.”
“But . . . But . . . he was always sneaking around and mak-
ing sure you were napping and worrying about whether you’d
notice something was missing.”
“I’m so grateful I’m not a man,” Mrs. Ellington says. “We
women are proud, but honestly, men! Yes, Henry and I had a
long discussion yesterday when I asked him to show me the
balance books to see if I could give you a little something for
being such a help so far this summer. I’ve never seen such
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hemming and hawing, and finally he had to confess that he’d
made some unwise investments and that we are now, like half
the families on Seashell, asset rich and cash poor. As if I’d rather he work himself into a heart attack than sell that hideous ring
that belonged to my mother-in-law.”
She tosses back the last of her tea, then says cheerfully, “It’s
chilly today. Too cold to go to the beach. The ladies will no
doubt be wanting to hear more of Lady Sylvia’s sins. Can you
make some of Ben’s sauce for them? He sent Marco to me last
night with a perfectly cooked lobster.”
Nic has been gone for a whole day of work now, edging into
evening. Tony and Marco haven’t even called to check on him.
Manny must have said something. Mom goes to clean that office
building in town. Because it’s Thursday, and that’s what she
does on Thursday. Grandpa heads out to bingo night. Viv has
a wedding rehearsal to cater for Almeida’s. Emory had speech
and occupational therapy and he’s tired and wants to watch
Pooh’s Big Adventure
. So I’m sitting here with my little brother, staring blankly at the screen, remembering Nic and me always
trying to figure out why on earth Pooh had a shirt but no
pants. I want Nic. I want Cass. I want the things I thought were
sure things. The thing I was thinking, finally believing, would
be a real thing. Rewind. Redo.
“Hideout loves you,” Emory whispers, burrowing into my
side, nudging his hermit crab into my armpit.
I’m crying over a stuffed crustacean.
I think this is what they call rock bottom.
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“What in God’s name is Emory doing awake at this hour?” Dad
asks. I jolt awake. Myrtle groans. Dad is dragging in his laundry
bag and tossing it in the usual spot.
I have no sense of time at all. It’s dark. Emory’s sitting beside
me, eyes like saucers, still watching Pooh. Have I been asleep
for minutes? Hours?
The digital clock reads 11:20. Nic’s been gone now for
more than twenty-four hours. We can report him missing,
now, right? Or does it have to be forty-eight? The fact that I am
even wondering about this makes my stomach hurt.
Mom and Grandpa are at the table, flicking out cards. Gin
rummy? Really? We all start talking at once, including Em,
who gets up, walks over, and puts his arms around Dad’s waist,
wailing, “Niiiiicky!”
Dad ruffles his hair absentmindedly, looking at Mom. “Luce,
don’t get yourself into one of your swivets. Gwen, I’d think
you’d be smarter. Ben, he’s fine. Calm down, all of you. I’ve
got him. He’s at my house. He’ll be back tomorrow.”
Tomarra
.
Hard on the accent. Dad’s not as casual as he sounds.
Our voices are still overlapping, asking if Nic’s okay, telling
Dad how worried we were, all about swim captain and “Why
didn’t you call and tell us, Mike?” This last from my mother,
in such a loud voice that Emory murmurs, “Be nice to Daddy.”
“It’s fine, Emmie,” Dad says. “I know all about the captain
thing and the girl. He came over yesterday to Castle’s wicked
messed up, but I had a busload of tourists getting ice cream, so
I told him to head to my house, get ahold of himself and take
this the way a man does.”
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“How exactly is a man supposed to handle finding out that
the girl he’s loved all his life likes somebody else, Dad?”
Mom’s and Grandpa’s mouths drop open.
“Don’t get all dramatic about this, pal. I expect better from
you,” Dad says, but then he gives me a grin that makes him
look unexpectedly boyish, the eighteen-year-old Mom fell for.
“Like a man takes everything. By drinking a beer, watching
sports on television, feeling sorry for himself. For one night
only. He was doing all three when I left him. He’ll be fine.
Christ, what a bunch of drama queens.”
I grab Dad’s sleeve as he’s climbing into his truck, to thank
him, yes, but also to ask why he let us worry for so long. Dad
doesn’t do the cell phone thing, but still . . . how hard would