Shutter Buggered
- 1 year ago
- 36
- 0
The elation and fright of what I’d just done with the necklace still fluttered violently in me when I arrived at my destination a little while later. I could still go back to the pier... ‘It was all a mistake, Darya ... A joke... !’
I swiped the ridiculous idea aside as I stared at the house. There was no need to climb the stairs and knock, on the chance that anyone would be there. The ‘For Sale’ sign out front and lack of decorations on the porch were enough indication that they’d moved out. I stood there for a long time, remembering occasions when I’d walked here late at night. Compared to other locations around Montauk, the memories were fewer since it wasn’t a place I usually hung out. But to see that it was on the market seemed to put a final point on things.
Salvation today would not come in the form of blonde hair and sweet brown eyes. I cast my mind out to Florida, wondering how it would go for my friend. Things had fallen apart quickly the first time her dad had come back, a year ago. But this time it sounded like it would be different. I doubted I’d see her anytime soon. Not all was lost, though: Julie had my number, and she’d promised to call once she was settled in. At the very least I could keep in touch with her on occasion, and that was one small and welcome comfort amidst the avalanche of recent changes.
I realized I was just stalling, though. I wasn’t expecting that I’d catch Julie, but I’d still taken the short detour to visit her old house, just to see what could be seen. Now I forced myself to walk on, my real destination weighing on my mind and legs like an anchor. Almost there... Although if that house proved empty as well, I knew I’d have to continue even further to the waterside again. I checked my watch, wondering when my mom might get antsy to leave. Then I dismissed the thought. She and Frej will just have to wait for me.
A much more familiar house came into view. I slowed, my heart pounding. A flood of regrets washed through me, as I wondered how much they had to be suffering in the current situation. I’d never called them after she left, unable to deal with it. Then weeks had passed, and months now.
I can still turn around and walk to Beth’s...
The air seemed to thicken with each step, but with effort I finally set my gear against the side of the house, climbed the steps, knocked, and waited. After a while, the door made some noise and then swung open. I felt woozy, as Mairead’s eyes locked onto mine. She didn’t look exactly like her daughter, but there certainly was enough of a resemblance that the sight of her made my breath catch. It made the absence just a little more real, the pain a little more sharp.
“Oh gosh!” she cried, covering her mouth.
“Hi, Mrs. Martin,” I rasped. “I’m just here for the morning, since we’re picking up Frej, and I came by to say hi.”
She remained bewildered. “Please, will you come in?”
I pulled the screen door open and stepped into the house. I wasn’t sure what to expect, but it was a relief to suddenly find myself in her embrace. She held tightly to me for a long time.
Neither of us knew quite what to say, though. What does she know? What does she think I know? What the hell do I even know? So little, as usual...
When she finally broke the hug, her face was moist.
“Oh, dear ... It is so good to see you.”
“You too. And I’m, uh...” I murmured, her voice reminding me of Muireann’s and driving another sharp pang of longing through me. “I’m sorry I haven’t called, since...”
Mairead squeezed my hand. “You don’t have to apologize for anything. I know this mustn’t be easy for you.”
I sighed. “No, not really.”
“Please, come in and sit. Can I make you some tea?”
“Uh, sure, if it’s no trouble.”
“Yes, of course it’s not.”
“I can’t stay too long, but a cup sounds good. Is Mr. Martin at the market?”
“Yes, as always. I will go there later this morning, but I have some time right now.”
“Okay. We’re driving back home today.”
“Of course. Frej told us he was going to spend some time with your family. We will miss him, but it will be good for him to have a change of pace. He’s not been ... Well, he can tell you, if he likes. And how was school for you this year? I understand you were instrumental in setting up some sort of memorial fund for your friend?”
I related some superficial details about my spring exploits, and Mairead appeared to be quite pleased as she brewed and then served our tea. And why wouldn’t she be pleased? On the surface, it all seemed so damn noble. But underneath it all...
I caught her up on my folks, Lara, the twins. Eventually I ran out of small talk so she took over. She and Aongus still ran the shop and it was business as usual, even if a key employee was missing these days. The weather was nice. Frej’s new captain was a solid man. Montauk was full of tourists, more so than ever, which was good for business but intrusive nonetheless.
I finished my cup of tea, and she hers. We both seemed to be searching our brains for a missed aspect of everyday life that we hadn’t touched on. But no ... There was really only one topic remaining that made any sense to broach. Otherwise, I should just take my leave.
Steps...
“Can I ask you just one thing?” I finally ventured. “I don’t need to know any more than this, but I’m just wondering ... if she’s doing okay. That she’s happy up there, with Frej’s sister. I would like to know, but I also don’t want to hear any more than that, because I promised that...”
Because she cut me off ... She left me...
Mairead smiled sadly, an emotionally unsteady expression that I was suddenly having a hard time looking at. “Don’t worry,” she said quietly. “I can tell you very little, because I don’t know very much myself.”
“What do you mean? Don’t you call her?”
She shook her head. “We call Birgitte on occasion, or Frej does. But she says almost nothing about Heather. She will not speak of her, whether she is still working there, or ... anything at all.”
I gaped at her, my entire world withering. “Are you saying that you haven’t talked to Heather since she left?” I said, my voice hoarse.
Mairead glanced at me, her eyes suddenly unsteady. “I’m afraid we have not.”
I shifted my gaze outside, utterly dumbfounded. “I can’t—I can’t believe that,” I stammered. “Not even once? What—How is that possible?”
She seemed shaken as she sighed. “Can I pour you another cup?”
I waved my hand vaguely. Luckily Mairead knew what I had answered with that gesture, because I didn’t know myself. This was too crazy to process.
“Has Frej talked to her?” I finally asked.
“Surely not. But you could ask him, if you want to be sure,” she said, her words getting choked off by a sob.
“I’m so sorry, Mrs. Martin! Somehow I didn’t think it was like this!”
I felt awkward, unsure if I should give her a hug. Eventually, she composed herself a bit, at least enough to pour my tea and sit again.
“It is that way,” she murmured.
“Jeez ... I mean, it’s just so strange for her to not speak to you at all.”
“It may seem strange ... But it’s not.”
I glanced at her. “What do you mean?”
“She’s never done things the way they’re meant to be done.”
“Well sure, that much I’ve figured out. But this ... It’s just hard to imagine that she’d cut everyone off, so completely!”
Mairead took an absentminded sip from her cup. “It’s her way.”
“Her way?” I frowned. “You mean she’s done this before?”
She gestured vaguely. “Not to where she’s gone and left us ... But there have been times when she will not speak to us for weeks.”
“Weeks! Are you serious? Why? Because she was angry with you?”
Mairead looked at me with an odd expression. “Angry? Oh no. Quite the opposite, dear.”
I shook my head in confusion. “Opposite?”
Mairead stared out the window for a time. “Heather does not do things out of anger. How to explain, though ... No, ‘opposite’ is not the right word. But it’s common for her to be completely absorbed in something to the point that nothing else exists. I think you don’t see that, not all of it, as you only spend short periods of time with her, here and there. But the time between, it can be quite ... interesting.”
I pondered all of this. “All right. I know that, at least somewhat,” I said slowly. “Her projects can be pretty intense. Especially the vision one.”
“Indeed. All-consuming, I’d call it.”
“Fine, but still ... Not talk to you for weeks?”
“It’s her way,” she repeated. “You don’t know the troubles I have with her school.”
I grimaced. “School? What do you mean?”
“We often get calls from them.”
“Really? She’s the most brilliant person I know; how could she not do well in school?”
“It’s not her grades, so much, although this year has not been good at all. A complete loss, in fact...” Mairead then smiled slightly. “It’s more that she causes one headache after another.”
I was pretty sure I was the main recipient of her schemes of late, but apparently not the only recipient. I imagined Heather working her tricks at the school, messing with teachers and students alike when it suited her. But that image didn’t seem quite right, though. In fact, it didn’t fit at all.
“Often she can’t even be bothered to attend,” Mairead continued. “When she has something more important to do, classes are simply a nuisance. I don’t know how many times she’ll leave for school, only to go do something else for the day. And later, we receive a call. ‘Mrs. Martin, do you know where your daughter is?’”
If the situation wasn’t so heart-rending, I’d have been laughing my head off by then. As it was, I only smiled a little, suddenly remembering Heather’s clandestine outings with Frej on his boat. Frej... Unsure if it was still meant to be a secret, I said nothing, though.
Mairead put her cup down and leaned closer to me. “Matt, you’re a good lad, as Tommy would say. Maybe it’s best that you know this about her now.”
“Why do you say that?”
“I know how much you care for her. I imagine that very few people, if any, would tolerate Heather for very long.”
“Well, for some reason, I’m one of those very few people.”
Mairead laughed gently. “And you will never know how much Aongus and I appreciate that. I say with all my heart that you have brought my daughter joy like no one else has. So you should know that you are the focus of much of her efforts. But as well, how shall I say this ... you’ve seen the results, but not very much of the process.”
I sighed heavily. “Well, I used to be the focus. Not anymore.”
“You don’t know that.”
“No, I don’t. But everything is up in the air. I don’t know what’s happening.”
“I wish I could tell you. I do wish! But you know that with her, you cannot say what will happen. Perhaps she is about to knock on the door in a few minutes. Or perhaps we will not see her for months yet. I wish I knew, just like you. But we can only wait for her.”
“No, don’t wait,” I said softly.
Mairead cocked her head. “Don’t wait?”
“Heather said not to wait for her. Not to waste my life, waiting. Because like you said, it could be today, or it could be years.”
She shivered and nodded slowly. “That may be sound advice, then.” She fingered the edge of her cup, her hand trembling. “Sound advice, indeed.”
“What would happen if...” I hesitated, as the question was stupid. “If you made her come home?”
“How do you mean?”
I shrugged. “You know, as her ... parents,” I said, feeling my throat tighten at this fuzzy statement. “Tell her she has to come home, to finish school.”
Mairead eyed me. “You’d be more successful trying to change the schedule of the tides.”
I sniffed, nodding. “No, I know she probably wouldn’t come back, but what would she do if you tried? Get mad? Leave forever?”
“None of those things. She would simply smile and continue on. There’s only one thing that can change my daughter, and telling her what to do is certainly not it.”
“What can change her, then?”
Mairead finished her tea. Her hand was still shaking as she set the fine cup down with a bit of a clatter. “Accepting who she is.”
I felt my blood slow to a crawl. “But if you accept who she is ... you don’t change her.”
She smiled at me, again very emotional. “You’re a keen young man. And so you see why I’ve not talked to her since she left, why I’ve not insisted on it, or driven to Birgitte’s house to collect her ... I’ve made too many mistakes, and it’s why I sit here, every day, hoping for a phone call,” she wailed, “or a knock on the door, to see my dearest Heather, but at the same time doing nothing but waiting!”
“No waiting,” I whispered absently, feeling uneasy at the sudden change in mood. Not that it wasn’t sad to begin with, but everything was suddenly on edge.
“Yes, she would say that to you. Be careful, Matt,” she said softly, her eyes moist and yet sharp.
“Careful? Why?”
“You don’t have to cast your lot with her,” she said almost inaudibly.
My insides jolted. “I don’t understand what you mean.”
She wiped at her wet cheeks. “You’re still very young. There are easier ways to live a happy life.”
I shook my head. “Mrs. Martin, I love her like crazy.”
“Yes, I know. But—”
“And I’m sure she loves me, even now!”
Mairead nodded, giving up on trying to dry her face. “I know, dear, I know she does. But you must know that she’ll never settle down. She’ll leave you again and again. That is her way. I don’t know what she’s told you, but that is who she is.”
I sat up in my chair. “Are you saying you don’t want me to be with Heather, if she comes back to me?”
“No, don’t you see? Heather doesn’t come back to people. They can only come to her. She doesn’t wait. For anyone.”
“And what’s wrong with that?” I asked, trying in vain to remain calm.
“It is a constant race. You don’t see it all, Matt, the effort of keeping up with her. Every day, another surprise.”
“Which is one of the most amazing things about her!”
“But you only see the good times of being together! The fun result of this unpredict—”
“Mrs. Martin, I haven’t seen her in months!” I cried. “You can’t say that I’ve only seen the good times! She has left me this time, and it’s the craziest of things. But I’m still here, hanging on to a bit of hope. Yeah, it’s the tiniest little bit these days, but it’s what I have!”
Mairead seemed to suddenly shake herself out of things.
“Oh dear,” she murmured, her eyes streaming. “What am I saying ... I’m so sorry ... So sorry!”
“What are you trying to tell me here?” I asked, settling into my chair again.
She was quiet for a time, fingering her cup again. “I deeply apologize. I got carried away. It’s been so hard, not talking to her, after what’s happened ... I didn’t mean—”
Now she really broke down. I hesitated, and then moved to crouch by her side. Taking her into a hug, she melted against me.
“I am so sorry,” she cried softly. “I feel like this is all my fault. For not telling her the truth when she was younger, and for not exerting a firmer hand as she grew up. Now she runs away from all of us, and for what? For nothing.”
“No, not nothing. You said it yourself: it’s who she is,” I said quietly.
“Yes, yes, Matt. Of course it is ... But that doesn’t make it any easier.”
I was quiet for a time. Mairead calmed herself and gave me a little squeeze before excusing herself to the bathroom. I took to my chair again, sipping my tea, contemplating everything Heather’s mom had told me, and everything she seemed to be implying.
She’ll leave you, again and again...
A part of me found this so hard to believe, even as another wondered if it was the truth. Well, I wasn’t wondering. It was the truth, actually. The entirety of my relationship with her was exactly that. Surging and receding...
I sniffed, hearing Lara’s voice in my head, calling me Barnacle Man...
I sat there helplessly as these two ideas fought with each other in my brain, somehow feeding two opposing feelings at once: Heather is coming back ... Heather is never coming back... My heart tightened at the echo of Mairead’s words. Sure, she had hope for us, but she also had been rather definitive, for that brief moment when she’d cracked open.
And so, the tide shifted a little more to one side. ‘Hope springs eternal,’ they say, and yet the projection of how fast mine was fading certainly seemed like it was going to make a liar of the person who came up with that horrible saying.
Mairead returned, her face still a little flushed and her expression extremely dejected.
“I apologize,” she said, taking to her seat again. “I fear this whole episode has caused me too much pain to speak clearly about it. Please don’t take what I said to heart. I don’t know what will happen, or what you have agreed between Heather and yourself. I meant no harm by telling you about her, and yet I fear that I have harmed things even further today.”
“No, it’s okay. I understand what you’re saying about her, and I do appreciate the advice.”
“It was not good advice, and it was unkind to both of you. Very unkind.”
I hummed. “Or maybe it’s what it is. I’m not in the best shape right now either, so I’m sorry I got worked up. But earlier this morning, I realized—”
Mairead looked up at me when I stopped.
“I guess I realized that just like you said, she’s not coming back,” I finished, feeling unexpectedly hollow. “Not like she was before, anyway.”
She let out a long breath and closed her eyes.
Abruptly I rose from my chair, figuring that the point of this conversation had long been lost. Way too much talking... “I should probably get back, since we’re supposed to leave soon.”
“Yes, of course,” she replied quietly.
“Again, I’m really sorry I haven’t called to say hi.”
“Don’t fret about that. We know where your heart is, Matt. We are most grateful to you.”
She accompanied me to the door, clinging to my arm. I felt bad for not staying longer; for leaving her behind as well.
“Um ... Is Heather’s photo exhibit still up at the vision place?” I asked.
Mairead nodded, her face pained. “They planned to have it up through the end of August, at least.”
“How...” I swallowed. “How was the opening night?”
She brushed at her cheek. “We didn’t go.”
I felt even worse now. “Have you been there to see them?”
She shook her head, her face flushing with shame. “None of us have gone.”
“I’m sorry. But I completely understand why.”
She gave my arm a squeeze and nodded sadly.
I cleared my head as best I could and smiled a little. “Say hello to Mr. Martin for me, please?”
“I will.”
I stopped short. “Oh, no. I brought back his drum. The, uh...”
“Bodhrán?” she supplied, smiling only a little.
“Yeah, that. After all this time you’d think I’d remember how to say it right. But anyway, I should’ve brought it over, but I forgot. I can have my mom drive by here on the way out.”
“No, I’ll be at the market soon. Leave it at your aunt’s, and I’ll go over this week and pick it up.”
“Okay. Please thank Mr. Martin from Lara, because it really was nice of him to let her borrow it all this time.”
“He was most happy to see someone take it up and learn some of the music from our home.”
A last hug, and I stepped outside. Perhaps it was my random glance at overhead telephone wires, the ones that used to connect me to my girl, but for some reason an odd memory struck me. I turned to Mairead.
“I know this is going to be a really weird question, but ... do you have something on your phone that shows you who’s calling, when it’s ringing?”
Though she did answer me, she didn’t have to, since her face twisted into dubious surprise.
“I’ve never heard of such a thing. Does it exist?”
“Yeah, something new. I guess you can rent it from the phone company. I was just wondering.”
“We certainly don’t have that here. It sounds like magic.”
I held her gaze for a long moment. “Yeah, magic ... That’s because it is. Take care, Mrs. Martin.”
She watched me as I gathered my fishing gear and walked off down the road. I turned around once, looking at the house, the door already closed. It was a senseless thought, but I couldn’t shake the feeling that I wouldn’t be seeing the place for a very long time.
Sarah was just finishing breakfast with Frej and Beth when I got back. Since I had nothing to pack, having lost my only other set of clothes to the impish waves, I visited the water for the short time before we left. Out on the sand, I sat down and took a last look at the ocean.
Families were already populating the beach; kids were running around, laughing and playing. A dad was putting the finishing touches on a rather intricate sandcastle he’d built with his son and daughter. The water level was rising, though, so I knew it wasn’t going to last the hour. Funny that ... The sweet spot for castle building was between the lines of high and low tide, where the sand was just the right consistency and moisture ... And yet that was the zone of certain destruction as well, given the surging and receding waters.
For now, the man had built a break wall in front of the structure, and the little building lived on even as the water occasionally parted and foamed around the thick bulwarks.
It would all be for nothing, though. The sea would let nothing so beautiful stand forever. Indeed, even as I watched, an above-average swell collected itself out on the surface, like a whip, and surged toward us. The family ignored the sound of the large crash, but their noticing it would’ve made no difference anyway. They could never stop such power.
The leading edge sped forth, accelerating into the sandy incline and spilling over itself so eagerly, closing the distance ... It smashed into their pointless little protective shell, leaping over it in a fountain of joyous flooding. The kids shrieked as suddenly everything was overrun. The base of the building started melting into the moat; seashells and seaweed that had served as decorations jumped ship and floated away on the retreating eddies.
After a moment, the family turned their heads at a flanged sound that faded in to everyone’s ears. I followed their gaze and watched a seaplane fly by, a long banner stretched out behind it. It was morning, and therefore a strange hour to be flying advertisements, I thought, but what did I know.
The dad soon went back to fixing the half-ruined construction with urgency. He was admirably dedicated, although he now looked over his shoulder at the sound of each breaker. The fear of destruction had gripped him, given the ocean’s betrayal at sending that unexpected wave.
His kids helped out by bringing new seashells and seaweed for decoration. The encircling protective mask was shored up... So useless... But then I realized that I myself was sifting the sand next to me and pulling up little white decorations. And I was even on the verge of standing up to deliver to them the few good ones I’d found so far. Useless beauty...
“Hello!” came a little voice beside me.
I turned to find a young girl of perhaps five standing there smiling at me.
“Hi there!” I replied, tossing my pointless shells aside.
Despite her enthusiastic greeting, she seemed to shy significantly at suddenly discovering that I would actually talk back to her.
“Are you having fun on the beach?” I asked.
She nodded bashfully. Then she extended her arm, offering me something.
“Oh, what’s that?” I asked.
She dropped a little white car into my palm and immediately ran away to where her mother sat reading a magazine near some bright colored towels.
I laughed, amused by her cute act, and a little sad that I hadn’t had a chance to give her at least a seashell in exchange. I shook the sand out of the car, peering at it curiously. An unexpected flush of warmth ran through me, from the gratitude I felt at being gifted this prize.
I stood up and walked over to them. The girl watched me approach, half-hiding behind her mother’s chair, though her face was more shyly curious than scared.
“Hello?” I called.
The woman glanced up and then pushed her giant sunglasses up over her forehead.
“Sorry to bug you, but your daughter just came over and gave me this car. I actually have to take off, though, so I wanted to give it back to her.”
I held the toy out and the mom looked at it briefly.
“Oh, that’s nice of you... ! But I don’t think that’s ours. I’ve never seen it before. Addie, is this your car?”
Still hiding behind the beach chair, the girl shook her head.
“Oh, did you find it in the sand?” her mom asked sweetly.
Now Addie nodded. The mom grinned and turned back to me.
“She must have thought it was yours. So sorry she bothered you!”
“Oh no, it’s okay. And she can have it, since she found it.”
“Did you hear that, Addie?” the woman said, taking the toy from my palm. “This nice person is giving the car back to you. Can you say thank you?”
The little girl flashed me a smile and took the car from her mom. But she didn’t speak, so the mom turned back to me. “Thank you,” she mouthed, a knowing smile on her lips.
I looked back at little Addie. “You know, I used to play with cars on the beach when I was younger, so I know how much fun it is. Anyway, enjoy your day!” I chimed, giving them a wave as I walked off, smiling to myself.
Rings of energetic tingles were coursing up and down my spine, though I didn’t know why.
I was almost at the porch steps when I felt like someone was approaching. I turned to find little Addie running toward me, the sand swishing at her feet. Before I could react, she reached me and pressed the car back into my hand. As she skipped away once more, her black hair danced in the breeze. I saw her mom standing by her beach chair, watching us. The woman spread her arms and shrugged, her amused grin almost as wide as her gigantic sunglasses.
I waved back, pocketing the car as I climbed the steps to the house. Once inside, I felt remarkably light, touched by the simple generosity of the little girl. It was just a generic little toy, and yet to her it was a treasure, and one that she’d had the enormous heart to gift away ... twice, even. And that of all the people on the beach this morning, somehow I deserved this present?
Crazy...
I laughed, wondering if my sudden happiness at this smallest of gestures was only because everything else was so depressing at the moment. In darkness, even the glow of a tiny ember might seem as bright as the sun.
But no, there was something else to it, which I couldn’t quite put my finger on. A longing ... to be like little Addie again, perhaps?
“Ready?” Sarah asked, intruding on my thoughts.
“Whenever you are.”
“Sure. But Aunt Beth would probably appreciate you closing the fridge before we go.”
I sheepishly glanced at the open door and then at my aunt’s amused face in the living room.
“Sorry. I was just about to grab a soda,” I explained.
“Three minutes ago, yes,” Sarah teased. “How was your morning?”
I sniffed. “I have no idea...”
She frowned. “Did you catch anything at the pier?”
“I have no idea,” I repeated, fingering the little car that I had in my pocket. “But I’m really wanting to go home and get back to Lara ... I think she’s really missing us.”
Sarah nodded and handed me the keys. “Say goodbye and we’ll be in the car in a few minutes.”
“Wait, I’m driving?”
“You are.”
“And what, are you going to sit in the back with Frej?” I teased, surprising myself.
She gave me a patient look. “Aren’t you up for driving?”
“I don’t know. After all, I was just too distracted to close the fridge!”
Sarah patted me on the shoulder. “I’ll sit in the front seat and keep an eye on you, don’t worry.”
As it turned out, getting behind the wheel was the perfect foil for my mental state. Being still very new to driving, the act demanded focus, and this served to take my thoughts off of all other possibilities. No one was particularly talkative, which was fine by me. Only two things occasionally seeped into my thoughts; the feel of four little plastic wheels against my thigh, and a vision of Lara’s sweet face.
Although, at one point, a third idea reminded itself in my head.
“Interesting ... Have you found a short cut across the Sound?” Sarah asked me, as I made an unexpected turn.
“No ... I just have a favor to ask you.”
She frowned at me, but soon her expression softened as she realized where I was heading.
“Why do you need a favor from me?” she asked softly.
“I just want you to go in and tell me if they are as cool as I imagine they are. I don’t think I can look at them myself.”
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Colin and Shannon were still chatting near the door to Jane’s classroom, so I told her I’d grab our regular seats. When the bell rang a few minutes later, she joined me. “I guess we’ll have to check out the photos later,” Shannon said apologetically. “Tomorrow’s another day,” I said, grinning. “Nah, no school tomorrow.” I turned to her as Jane called for quiet. “Really? Why?” “Another big storm,” she whispered. “Whoa! They already cancelled?” “I don’t know. But we’re going to get...
After the successful phone call to Colin, Shannon was on cloud ten as we tramped through the deepening snow with the saw horses. Well, I carried the barricades; she badgered me about not being allowed to help. “They’re not that heavy,” I dismissed. “Which is why you should let me carry one!” “They’re crazy heavy,” I amended quickly, pretending to stagger. “This isn’t the eighteen-thirties, Matt. Chivalry is pretty much dead.” “Says the girl who dances in a show where there is literally a...
Friday. The last day before the masks went on, before Dad would have to sleep in my desk drawer for two full seasons, and before Truth was buried, maybe forever. We cleaned, we arranged, we considered everything to make our home normal. After dinner, the four of us were satisfied with both the house and the cabin. Our guests would be treated with respect and love. After dinner, Lara and I went for a walk. It was made much easier by the fact that Colin and Shannon had plowed our driveway at...
Given the unknown amount of potential baggage, Sarah decided to pick up the twins by herself. At best, one more person could have gone with her, but if it turned out that Muireann and Tommy were major packers then it would’ve been a tight fit and an uncomfortable ride. We knew from their letter that they’d likely be bringing some instruments with them. “Better safe than sorry. Besides, this will be my first and last chance to talk to them, I’m sure,” Sarah joked. “Don’t worry, we’ll let you...
I’d set an alarm for five, deciding that the lack of sleep would be better than leaving the twins stranded by themselves. However, when I slapped the sound off and staggered out into the living room, all was quiet. Figuring they’d be up soon, I grabbed my Walkman and stretched out on the couch to relax while I waited. As it turned out, I fell asleep and Lara ended up waking me up. I started, surprised to see her shaking me. “What time is it?” I asked, pulling the tangled headphones from my...
Figuring that the ‘warmest’ part of the day was passing, Lara suggested that if we still wanted to swim, now was the time. Tommy had not forgotten the offer and eagerly agreed, not put off by the frigid air temperature. We put away our guitars and returned to the house to don bathing suits. It was admittedly a bit odd, since Lara and I never did so; pulling jeans over the trunks felt completely alien. Lara had a giant stack of towels in her arms when we met up in the living room. Muireann...
“Well, last period is finally here. Enjoying the first day?” I asked, leading Muireann to some desks on the side of the classroom. I avoided my usual study hall spot, where Carl and a couple of other guys I usually sat with were already seated. “Aye, though it’s been a whirlwind,” she admitted. “Yeah, introducing you in each class ... I swear everyone has met you three times over!” Muireann sniffed. “At least that many. It felt a bit odd, all that. But everyone seems nice.” “For the most...
The morning Alana dropped me off, my reunion with Lara was delicious. We shared a long and happy hug. I’d made every effort while with Alana to do exactly one thing: be with my dear friend. But on returning, I let all that stored-up love for Lara emerge again, and I didn’t want to let go of her. Of course, we eventually had to peel apart. She was due at the shelter soon, so after greeting my moms and Frej, we resumed our morning walks that she’d kept up in my absence. As usual, we didn’t...
We entered August, the last full month of summer, of vacation, and of divine mountain warmth. I spent all my time at Clara’s; Lara increased her hours at the shelter since Chuck hired her more formally and started paying her for her computer work. Our tent became lived-in and undeniably welcoming the more we used it and adjusted our setup. With Frej’s help, we’d flown an oversized tarp above the area that gave us some dry space around the shelter in times of rain. It remained a heavenly...
Are you sure about this... ? Back down by the house, I found Frej in the garage. He was peering closely at a tangle of wires. “These new electronics...” he grumbled. “They are all so small and impossible to fix... ! Or maybe I need glasses.” I laughed as best I could with the tremors that seemed to be creeping into me from all sides. I haven’t been sure of anything lately... “Need a break?” I asked. He tossed the thing onto the worktable and grinned at me. “Yes, that is enough for...
We followed Heather down the pathway to the rocky intertidal expanse and picked our way toward the rowboat that sat patiently in the shallows. Between us, we silently pushed the craft into deeper waters, until it floated freely with enough clearance for the extra weight it would now carry. Heather held it steady as first Lara and then I got in. She joined us with a nimble leap. I studied the rowboat as I sat in the stern with Lara. Though clearly aged, it was sturdy and well-maintained. A...
Not even twenty-five hours into our new life, it became clear that our bodies were entirely unprepared for the relentless existence of sea-harvesting with Heather. When we awoke after that first night’s sleep, early morning’s glow was faint. What’s the rush? It was Heather who had roused us, and despite various attempts to roll over and slumber away the deep soreness that pervaded every cubic inch of my limbs, she would not allow it. I finally yawned, struggled to sit up, and gave her a look...
“Welcome to darkroom class,” I announced as Muireann followed me into the darkroom the following evening. She eyed me. “Are you going to lie on the bed again?” I grinned broadly. “I think I might, and let you do the work. Hands-on is the best way to learn, right?” “You’re going to give Tommy a run for the title of laziest boy.” “Am I winning yet?” Muireann just smirked and started blacking out the windows. “I have to admit something,” she said. “What’s that?” “I didn’t realize the...
When Melissa and I returned to the house after dropping off the order for the necklace, nothing much had changed. In the cabin I found Lara and Tommy at the table, intently studying a sheet of paper. They didn’t even glance at me as I closed the door. I could hear Muireann’s muffled fiddle playing from the darkroom, the sound of a slow Irish melody permeating the warmed air inside. “How’s it going?” I announced, taking off my coat. After scribbling something down, Lara turned to me, smiling...
I felt an arm grip my winter coat. “Matt ... I don’t know that we can do this!” “Of course you can. It’s not that hard.” “No, I’m worried about Tommy!” she whispered. “What if he falls? Or runs into someone?” I gave her gloved hand a pat. “He’ll be okay. It’s pretty soft, you know. Watch...” I let myself fall sideways like a cut tree, landing on my hip and shoulder. Muireann gave a little cry of surprise, but I just laughed it off. In another moment I was standing again. “You want to...
“We need to decide what song we’re going to audition with,” I announced, as the five of us settled into the cabin for some rehearsal. Colin looked at me. “Let’s vote then. What are the choices? We have a lot of songs that we know now. Some more than others.” “I’m thinking we should do an original,” I offered. “We have Four Days, Shell Game, Absinthe... And Please Don’t Stop, but since we played that one at the show last year, probably not a good idea.” “Don’t forget Gunkstomp!” Lara...
“What have we here?” Jane asked, coming to a stop in front of our half-dozen pictures. “Twins,” Muireann said. “Aha.” She examined our spread. “Did you do the project together?” “Aye, we tried something different.” I could hear the hope in Muireann’s voice, that this would be okay by our teacher. Jane pursed her lips. “Interesting approach.” “I know there’s only six photos, but we both did take six shots,” I explained. “There’s two exposures on each!” Jane gave me a small smile. “Yes,...
“Damn, I’ve missed you,” I whispered. She giggled. “Wow, I didn’t realize how much!” “Hey now! Hands above the waist!” Heather cuddled up closer to me on the couch as the hubbub carried on in the rest of the great room. After all the greetings and chats following our guests’ arrival, dinner was soon going to be ready. With Frej volunteering to help with what remained of meal preparations, we’d been told to go hang out. Not being one to deny my parents’ wishes, I didn’t think twice to drag...
I tried delaying our hike for a day. I really did. Although Heather’s ankle was sore after she removed the ski boots in the lodge, by the time we got home it was already feeling a little better. She could certainly get around, since it mostly hurt only when putting sideward pressure on it. Skiing was probably out for a few days, at least, but a walk through the woods was not worth postponing. Or so she said. I was of two minds. Twenty-four hours of extra rest would allow more time for her to...
The music store wasn’t too far from the jeweler’s shop, so Heather and I walked there. “I mean, I get it, now,” I said, still caught up in the surprising meaning of the Chinese symbol she now wore around her neck. “Oh, I think you got it a long time ago,” Heather said. “It’s just a word, Matt. It has no meaning on its own.” “I know, I know. It’s just ... most people would find it kind of...” “Weird,” she supplied. “You said it, not me,” I laughed. “It is what it is.” “Yeah ... Anyway,...
Three girls, three cameras... And me, tagging along, superfluous but certainly enjoying myself. I offered to be their model a few times, but they seemed to prefer photographing each other. And there was the teasing, of course. Endless. “Nice, Muireann!” Heather chirped. “You’ve learned a lot about photography, I can tell.” “She has a good eye,” Shannon agreed. “Matt has been teaching me.” “Which makes it all the more surprising!” Funny... But even there, I was given three cute grins,...
Admittedly, I was slightly apprehensive as we pulled into our clearing that evening after our day of skiing. Heather, alone with Tommy all day... The snow was falling heavily again through the headlight beams. Both Frej’s and the Martins’ cars were parked in the same positions they had been that morning, and they remained covered in several inches of snow. Oddly, there were no lights on in the main house. Maybe Muireann was rubbing off on me, because for a few seconds I had a panicked vision...
Mairead and Aongus left after lunch the next day, forced to end their vacation earlier than Frej and Heather due to the demands of the business they owned. I was indeed grateful for the Danishman’s generosity in allowing Heather to remain for another three days. The Martins’ departure left a rather obvious hole in our daily schedule. After dinner was cleared and we sat around the table, it suddenly seemed remarkably silent. The positive feedback loop between Tommy and Aongus had been...
I was grateful for the band. Heather’s departures were never a good thing for me, inevitably the start of a long slide down into wistful distance, but the fact that I could go from our final embrace to playing my guitar within fifteen minutes was at the very least a welcomed distraction. “So we need to start thinking about a set for the battle,” I said, once we’d played a few numbers to warm up and clear the farewell feelings as best we could. “We have six originals, so we’ll need another...
The week passed slowly and somewhat agonizingly, since Gwen couldn’t rehearse again until the following weekend, and the homework was being laid on thick. I was anxious to make as much progress as we could on the set, which we still hadn’t quite settled on. Certainly as the battle approached, I was imagining more and more how it might turn out, even though I knew that daydreaming about the glories of winning was a dangerous game. Things could turn out so many different ways, surely, but in...
If I hadn’t been sure that Tommy had Dr. Kendall in his back pocket, that was put to rest in study hall the following Tuesday. Carmen, Tommy, and I were walking along the outside of the school building, on our way to the fields as was our habit now, when the principal rounded the far corner and came toward us. “Uh oh,” Carmen said. “Caught.” “Principal alert,” I whispered, for Tommy’s benefit. The three of us laughed quietly, all of us wearing shades as was our other habit these days. “We...
Carmen was disappointed but seemed understanding when I called her to let her know that we didn’t have room for her after all. It was a bit strange to talk to her on the phone, something that I didn’t think I’d ever done before. Odd, considering we were together for a while. Then again, this fact was testament to how messed up that time had been for me. Saturday evening arrived, and it was not without some anxiety that we packed the gear into Colin and Shannon’s vehicles. While my moms...
“Hello?” “Oh hi, Mrs. Martin. How are you?” “Matt ... It’s me,” Heather said. I jerked in my chair. “What... ? No way! You said ‘Hello’!” “I guess I did.” This must be part of a joke... “Okay ... Where have you been? We were supposed to talk on Wednesday, remember?” “What day is it today?” Heather asked. I was quiet for a second. “It’s Friday? Seriously, is everything all right? You answered weird ... Well, you answered normally, which is weird for you. And you really don’t know what...
I was surprisingly alert when Tommy and I slipped into Frej’s car at a quarter of six, just as the light was starting to make itself known in the east. I let Tommy have the front so I could squeeze against Heather in the back. “Good morning, my love,” she whispered, and immediately I wondered if I was overdressed for the warmth she caused in me. Maybe forgetting all my clothes at home would be okay after all. Damn kissing ban, though... “Is your man coming with us today?” Tommy asked...
Lara responded so sweetly when I asked if she could entertain the twins, that I took her into a surprisingly hard hug. We were alone in my room, so I made no effort to hold back. “Easy there, bro,” she warned, even as she returned the tight embrace. “I’m so sorry about the underwater thing,” I breathed. “I still feel terrible about it.” “No sweat. I know you didn’t do it on purpose, because you hate doing laundry. And now you’re stuck doing it every day!” I laughed. “True. But it’s the...
It was strange to wake up. I was still on the couch, but Heather was gone, and I was horizontal and covered by a blanket. I could hear my moms and aunt chatting in the living room, since I was occupying their usual morning hangout spot. Then again, the sun was bright and the shadows on the porch floor were well past parallel to the wood beams, suggesting that my first meal of the day would be called ‘late lunch’ and certainly not ‘breakfast’. So, I really took their usual afternoon spot......
I think I’m half-Danish... It took me a moment, I’ll admit. It was perhaps like seeing someone on a distant hill make an odd movement, and only realizing a long second later that it was the head-on motion of an archer having released an arrow to fly forth from her bow. It took me a moment, yes, but then that five-word missile arrived, slamming into my heart with surgical precision. The world seemed to spin. I only knew one Danish person, and I knew him quite well. I struggled to hold her...
“Do you wish this never happened?” she asked quietly. I turned to look at Heather, her face illuminated by the fading twilight. Until now, Heather had not spoken in the half-hour or so since I’d silently confirmed her connection to Frej. I didn’t mind the quiet, because I had much to think about myself. The pier was strangely deserted, and we’d migrated to the gazebo to sit. “Why do you say that?” I asked. “Because it really puts a new light on everything.” “It does, it does,” I agreed....
I was just about to make a call when Lara poked her head into my room. “Back to the telephone life, huh?” she said, giving me a sympathetic look. “Yep. Hard times again.” “You could’ve been born a hundred years ago,” she observed, “and then you wouldn’t even have had the phone.” “If I’d been born a hundred years ago, I would’ve missed out on her completely. And on you too, sis ... But I’m glad for the phone either way.” Lara nodded thoughtfully. “True. Come up to the cabin when you’re...
On Monday, I was very relieved to get summoned to the principal’s office. Despite the amused looks I got from my classmates, I was feeling pretty high. Dr. Kendall had been silent since our meeting the previous week, a bit worrisome since the time before May wasn’t exactly abundant. But I trusted in his promise, and now it seemed we’d be shifting into gear. When I stepped into his office, another man was already sitting in one of the chairs. He looked vaguely familiar. I took the initiative...
“Sorry I stole your bed,” Lara said, giving me a sheepish grin as she wandered out of my room the next morning. I shrugged. “The couch is comfortable enough.” “I didn’t mean to fall asleep. We were working on lyrics, you know, and ... Yeah. Where is everyone?” “Colin’s not here yet, and Gwen came by a while ago but just grabbed Muireann and took off. And you and Tommy have been sleeping like logs.” “Where did Gwen take her?” “Beats me. She said they’d be back in a few...
“Hello?” Uh oh ... That’s not good... “I don’t like the sound of that,” I said. “The last time you answered ‘Hello’ was—” “Good evening, Matt,” Mairead interrupted. “Oh, hi, Mrs. Martin!” “Heather is not here,” she added, her voice quite amused. I would’ve laughed, except that I suddenly realized how close I’d just been to revealing Heather’s secret. Holy shit... ! Way too close. “I’m sorry about that just now,” I explained, my skin prickling. “Sometimes Heather, well ... She’ll...
The scene at Smith Park, when we pulled in around noon, was rather astonishing. The light scaffolds loomed over the stage, and for a long moment I stood by the car door in complete shock. We’re going to be playing on that... ! “Are you coming, lad?” Tommy asked, having already seized his guitar and equipment bag from the trunk. I snapped out of it and went to grab my own things. “Yeah. It’s just that ... it looks pretty damn neat, man.” He grinned. “I’m sure it does. Now let’s go set...
The post-concert went by in a rush. People came and went, to greet us, share their joy and emotions. The twins and Lara in particular were mobbed, which was fine with me. I’ve had just about as much excitement as I can take... After hugging the people closest to me, I slipped back up to the stage again, grateful for the banality of winding cables, collapsing mic stands, and the opportunity to help the sound and lighting crews get their work done just a little faster. They’d been amazing...
Away... From us... To say these words affected me would be a vast understatement. The massive upwelling that I’d seen a moment earlier in Heather’s eyes, that flood which would destroy everything around ... It suddenly burst out of the sea. Nothing prepared me for its impact. My throat constricted and suffocation beckoned, caressing me gently into blackening edges. “Why?” I tried to ask, but the sound was grotesque, a pitiful gurgle at best. “Shh, shhhh,” she consoled through tears,...
On the day that our connection was severed, I was roused by a warm hand caressing my face, the fingers leaving behind energetic currents. “Good morning, my love...” I opened my eyes all at once. The sun was just barely tinting the sky, and I was disoriented, wondering why the couch felt odd. It took me a moment to realize that I was down in the main house. Memories abruptly returned in a panicked rush. The night before, after partying for a while, the three of us had taken to Lara’s old bed...
The long work of pulling the concert together had fully caught up and crashed into me. That wasn’t the source of my problems, though, or I would’ve simply slept hard for a few days and been done with it. If I’d wanted to take a ‘sick’ day or two to stay home from school, no one would have batted an eyelid, for any of us. I wouldn’t have even had to fake a fever, holding the thermometer against a hot light bulb. I could just cash in on good karma. Instead, on Wednesday I’d found myself...
“So, how much of this will you tell Tommy?” It was the first thing Muireann had said in some time, having grown progressively more reticent as I revealed my secrets to her, one by one. There were many, so it had taken a long while. But they were out, now... All of them. “Tommy...” I murmured. “Yeah, I’m not sure.” “He’s very fond of Lara.” I sniffed. “I know that. You think he’ll be weirded out?” “I can’t say for sure. And what about her?” I frowned. “Lara? She knows all of this...
I was waiting for Muireann to emerge from the restroom before we headed to photography class, when I felt a tap on my shoulder. I figured she was playing the other-shoulder trick to get me to look the wrong way, but I was surprised to find Bruno there after all. “Oh, hey man ... What’s up?” I greeted. “We need to talk,” he said quietly, glancing anxiously down the hall. “Hm. Let me guess ... Pete?” “Yeah. Are you heading to class? I can walk with you.” “I am, but ... I need to wait for...
That evening, I was once again drained. Despite the temporary refueling that Muireann had gifted me in the pool after the terror of Pete’s episode, the subsequent rehearsal of Other Side had eventually sapped me. I could also tell that Muireann was almost as wiped as I was. The song was intense. It was a great relief when we both settled down into our beds in the main room of the cabin, her on the cot and me on the couch. “The downside of sleeping out here is that you can’t go to bed until...
Pete didn’t attend school the rest of the week. The two times I called over to his house, I hung up as soon as I heard his dad answer. Even Bruno said that he hadn’t been able to talk to him since the day he canned Skinner. I was feeling unsettled again, but I held on to the hope that whatever was in motion was happening out of sight. It was all I could do, besides barging over there again and trying to force another chat. In the meantime, I made sure that all my other irons were still in...
The talent show was in full swing. Ready or not, the acts were cycling on and off the stage with inevitable tempo. This time around, Green Space had opened the show, and The Nameless would soon close it. “I hope Pete keeps it together,” I said to Lara, as we stood in the wing watching a kid play a rather impressive classical piece on the piano. “He will. Muireann seems to have a calming influence on him.” “Yeah, I noticed. She’s been so helpful in dealing with Pete these last few weeks, I...
It was early evening on Sunday and the final music marathon was coming to an end, our last opportunity for rehearsing as a full band before Jonah’s concert the following weekend. Gwen was particularly intent about everything, calling out any and all problems she heard, and by now we didn’t question her judgment or ear. The only unknown was if we had the skill to do whatever she asked of us. Usually we did, even if it meant practicing it thirty times. Or more, in my case... But now it was...
We arrived at Jonah’s in the early afternoon as arranged. He emerged from the side door of the Castle, grinning broadly. “What’s up, motherfuckers!” “Fella’s in a better mood than usual,” Tommy quipped. “Aye, probably this is his highest form of greeting,” Muireann added. We exchanged fist bumps, handshakes, and shit-eating grins. “This event is going to be the jewel in the Castle’s crown, I’m fucking telling you!” he gushed. “You’ve been busy,” Lara said, looking around at the yard...
Sunday was a complete waste. I spent the morning dead to the world, vaguely aware of being moved from Jonah’s cabin to Shannon’s car, and then to Colin’s recliner. At least the world was happy about something, because whenever I was semi-conscious I could mostly hear laughing around me. In retrospect, I was obviously being hidden from my folks until such time that I was with it again; that turned out to be late afternoon. Well, maybe not ‘with it’, but a few hours before dinner I finally...
I slumped in the front seat as Sarah started the car. She drove slowly, winding through the short-term parking lot, then out into the seemingly hundreds of ramps and exchanges that strangled the airport like a concrete octopus. Eventually the stress of navigating lanes and fighting off aggressive taxis dissipated as she started heading east on the Southern State Parkway. East, yes, because we had a stop to make. In fact, the twins would be sleeping in their own beds again before I did. Then...
Truth is out... There was a long moment where nothing happened. Having been pulverized, that brittle shell washed away and left everything wide open. All was paused as I remained on the couch, stunned and unsteady. My thoughts all glanced at each other in confusion, blinking in the sudden light. What happens now? Then Clara said one thing to me: ‘Let me go... ‘ It wasn’t really her speaking, of course. I wondered what message she would’ve had for me if I’d answered her question with a...
Chapter 25: The Dreams of a Girl Alana’s driving was a balm, a relaxed and smooth ride augmented by the loose shocks on the wheels of her old Buick. I reclined in the passenger seat, swigging from the wine. “Want some?” I asked, holding up the bottle. “Come on, I’m driving.” “I know. I was just being polite,” I murmured. Alana patted my arm. “Fine. But be safe first, polite second, dude. Someday someone will take you up on that offer and next thing you know you’ll end up making out with...
Lara held my hand as we stood in the currents of the Roe, watching the flow of life as this playful tendril of the sea wound her way around and through us. Each little splash measured one more instant of being together with my sister, little moments that when placed end to end added up to simple perfection. Because the hours that recently passed had been just that: a complete surrender of any fear of each other. Our deeds and misdeeds were starting to come out now, weighed and reckoned, then...
“Good morning, sis!” I sang. “Nice bedhead!” Lara squinted at me from the doorway to the darkroom. She released a giant yawn into the cabin before speaking. “Morning ... Uh, what the hell are you doing in an apron?” “Making breakfast!” “I thought I smelled something good, but then I remembered who I live with and was like, nah, can’t be. What’s the deal? Wait, are you making boxty?” “Fuck yeah!” She came close and scrutinized my meal preparation. “You do realize the twins aren’t here,...