Our Song (20 page)

Read Our Song Online

Authors: Jordanna Fraiberg

Tags: #Romance

BOOK: Our Song
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“I thought if I ignored it,” he continued, “that it’d all go away. Turns out, you’re pretty hard to ignore, Olive Bell. Especially lately.”

I looked down at my yellow sundress. It was short and fitted and framed my shape perfectly, as if it was made to measure. But inside I still felt like the same girl in the picture in the drawer. I wondered if Derek thought I still resembled her, if he’d still be standing here if I did. At first it was hard seeing him with Betsy, but I had gotten used to it. Having him here alone in my room with all these unresolved feelings was much worse.

“So, what do you want now?” I may not have known what I wanted, but Derek always did. It was one of the reasons he was so successful. He set goals and went after them.

“I just wanted to make sure we’re good.” Something registered
in his voice, something I’d never heard before. He straightened up and his gaze faltered. Maybe it was because he wasn’t used to me being this direct.

“Good?” What did that even mean?

“Just…” His voice trailed off. “Everyone makes mistakes and can act stupid sometimes. It doesn’t mean anything.”

But I didn’t know whose mistakes he was talking about—his or mine. Besides, mistakes counted for a lot. We both knew that.

There was a knock at the door. Even though it was open, for once my mother didn’t come barging in. How long had she been standing there?

“Sorry to bother you two. I just wanted to invite Derek to stay for dinner.” Her voice went up an octave the way it did when she was in the company of anyone outside the immediate family. “Your dad’s working late so there’s plenty.”

She was acting like Derek’s presence automatically meant we were back together. And like my dad didn’t miss dinner every other night of the week.

“Wow, thanks Mrs. Bell. It’s very tempting but I have to go.” He glanced up at me and I felt my heart sink. What did I expect to happen, anyway? “But I definitely miss your cooking,” he said, looking back at my mother.

A bird chirped. This time it was the one on my phone. “I better get that,” I said.

• • •

After Derek left I marched out into the garden to find my mother. She was in the greenhouse, of course, potting a new batch of baby orchids.

“What was that all about?” I asked, standing at the entrance. My heart was racing.

“What was what about?” she asked. “And mind your tone.”

“Then please mind your own business.”

She pitched a handful of earth back into the bag. Only half made it in. The rest scattered on her red toenails. “I have no idea what you’re talking about and unless you care to explain, I can’t help you.”

“That’s just it. I don’t need your help.” I glanced back toward the cracked window where I had thrown the stone. A short, thin line shot across the bottom. With one kick, the whole panel would shatter. Maybe even the whole greenhouse would come crashing down.

“I honestly don’t know where any of this is coming from,” my mother said, throwing her gloved hands up in the air.

“How about for starters, stop inviting my exes for dinner. If you miss Derek that much, make your own plans with him.”

“Exes? So you are seeing that other boy?”

“God, you can be so infuriating,” I said, kicking a pebble across the floor.

“I’m worried. You haven’t been acting like yourself since…”

“Since when, the accident? Why don’t you just come right out and say it. That you think I deliberately caused it, that you think I wanted to die.”

“I never said that.”

“But you did.” I thought about the knife rack and the medicine cabinet, the way she talked down to me, and how she
didn’t look at me like she used to. “You should just stick to your orchids. They’re all you care about, anyway.”

“That’s not true.” Her voice was clipped and distant.

“Isn’t it? Why do you think Daddy’s never here? Why do you think he always comes home so late?”

I stopped short of telling her about the hotel receipt. A well of tears gathered and pushed against the back of my eyes. I hadn’t called my father “Daddy” in years. I suddenly wished he were here.
Don’t cry
, I told myself, biting down on my cheek. I winced. It was still tender from biting it earlier. My mother picked up the can and resumed watering the plants. The slight tremor in her hand caused the water to splatter onto her feet.

“And for the record,” I continued, “I can’t go back to the way things were before, so you might as well save your energy and stop trying to make me.”

Before she could respond, I booked it out of there, knocking the crate of baby orchids off the counter on my way. I stepped right on top of the scattered batch of earth, flattening the fallen plants underfoot. She could spend the next ten years trying to bring them back to life for all I cared.

I raced in through the kitchen, down the hall, toward the front door.

“Where you going, Ollie?” Noah called out from his room.

I didn’t realize he was already home from soccer. Had he heard my outburst? Just in case, I turned around and went over to him. “Whatcha doin’, bud?”

He was sitting on the floor, his hamster cage half disassembled
around him. “I was trying to clean it but I don’t know how.”

I kneeled down beside him. “Where’s Herman?”

“In here.” He pointed to an old Nike shoebox with small breathing holes poked through the cover. At the sound of Noah’s voice, Herman started scurrying about inside.

“All right, let’s see.” I surveyed the cage’s various parts. They were caked in dirt and grime. “When’s the last time this was changed?” I asked, eyeing the frosted water bottle attached to one of the grated sides. It was almost empty. What was left had turned an opaque shade of green.

Noah shrugged. “Mom used to do it.”

“When did she stop?”

“When you went away.”

Something tugged on my heart. I couldn’t help but feel that I was responsible. Noah’s room, like my parents’, faced the garden. I peered out the window. The sun reflected off the greenhouse so that all I could see were the vague contours of a shadow flitting about inside.

“Sit tight. I’ll just be a minute.”

I went to the kitchen for cleaning supplies. When I came back, Noah and I got to work wiping down and scrubbing each part.

“This is quite a cage for such a little guy.”

“Technically, it’s called a habitat. And dwarf hamsters need a lot of space to run around. Even more than big hamsters.”

I smiled. “When did you get so smart?”

He smiled back. “I don’t know. I was just born this way.”

We laid down the fluffy wood-pulp bedding and finally put in fresh food and water.

“Shall we?” I said, lifting the lid off the shoebox. I was about to reach in when Noah stopped me.

“You can’t do it like that. He’ll bite you.” He put the lid back and turned the box. A small, makeshift door had been cut out and taped shut. “You have to do it like this,” he said, removing the tape so the flap swung open.

Herman’s tiny nose poked out from the dark hole first, his whiskers twitching. “It’s okay, Herman. It’s my sister. Remember her?”

Noah’s voice spurred him on. His tiny white and brown spotted body followed and he walked out onto Noah’s outstretched palm. I couldn’t remember the last time I had seen Herman, if I had even really noticed him before.

“He really likes you,” I said, watching them interact.

“Here, want to hold him?”

Before I had a chance to answer, Noah dropped him in my hand. He was so delicate I could crush him with one squeeze.

“He likes to be petted here,” Noah said, tickling him under his chin.

I could feel his tiny body relax into my palm as I gently stroked his fur. He was almost purring. It reminded me of how I used to feel curled up against my dog Buck’s warm belly. Even though he was a seventy-five-pound Lab, and Herman weighed no more than an ounce, the experience didn’t feel all that different.

“He likes you, too,” Noah said. “He just needs love.”

I stayed with Noah for the rest of the evening and read him his favorite comic books, while Herman did laps on his wheel. I didn’t leave until they were both sound asleep.

CHAPTER
18

I MADE IT
to the end of the walkway when the porch light went on.

“Where are you going?” my mother asked, standing in the open doorway. She checked her watch. “It’s almost dark.”

“To study at Annie’s.”

“I don’t see her car.” Her knees were stained with dirt and there was even a smudge across her left cheek. Had she spent all this time cleaning up the mess I made?

“She’s running late so I decided to walk a bit. She’ll text when she’s nearby.”

I was learning how a simple lie could mask everything. Just like my dad. We were both living double lives. Only it was strange having that kind of power over my mother.

“Do you have your keys?” I could tell she wanted to say more, but it was as if something inside her had shifted since our fight, and she backed down. It was something I’d never seen her do. But I didn’t feel triumphant like I expected I would. Instead, I felt sad.

“Right here,” I said, patting my pocket.

She leaned further out the door and peered down the street, as if to make sure it was clear of predators. “Just be careful.”

I didn’t look back until I was halfway down the block. My mother was still standing there, watching me. Framed by the matching flower beds on either side of the door, her stance reminded me of the day I came home from the hospital.

The backlog of tears started welling up again. It wasn’t just my mother. As much as I tried to push everything that Derek said out of my mind, I couldn’t. Had he really been thinking about me all this time? Had he really been ignoring me because he felt embarrassed? If that was true, why was he dating Betsy, and why was he so public about it? It didn’t make any sense.

It was cooler now that the sun had set, but the air was still thick and heavy from the day. It had been especially hot lately, but it wasn’t uncommon to have heat waves in May. I glanced up to see if the moon was out, but I was now running too fast to focus. It felt good to move my body, to feel my blood pumping and the oxygen flowing through my lungs.

I was panting when I got to the corner of Lily Lane and Foothill Crescent at eight thirty, exactly as planned.

It was the twilight hour, when everything was coated in a glowing blue light and didn’t quite look real, including Nick’s Jaguar, which was just now rounding the corner. He came to a stop and pushed open the passenger door. I hesitated for a second, Derek’s visit still fresh in my mind. He was clearly still with Betsy, so why did I feel guilty seeing Nick?

My phone chirped and I glanced down. “Did you just text me even though I’m standing right in front of you?”

“Indeed I did.”

I smiled and read the message.
GR82CU

“Do I need to translate that one?”

A warm feeling came over me, like the sun had suddenly been revealed after being blocked by clouds for hours. “It’s good to see you, too,” I said, and got in the car.

“How very MI5 of you,” he said, pulling away from the curb.

“How what? Is that another obscure British text-ism?”

“It’s the British secret security service. Sort of like the CIA.” He made a U-turn and started heading toward the freeway. “You know, because of the cryptic pick-up spot. It’s all very mysterious, Olive.”

“Ha, it’s definitely not that exciting.” As we passed Baskin-Robbins on Vista, I recognized a group of kids from school sitting on one of the benches out front. Getting ice cream was one of the only things to do here on a Wednesday night. “I had to sneak out because I’m on thin ice with my mom.”

“Not still on account of the great slow chase, I hope?”

I shrugged. “It’s a little more complicated than that.”

“Am I going to get you in even more trouble tonight?” He flashed his crooked grin, but from his profile, the way his right cheek muscle was flexed, it appeared as though his whole face was smiling.

“That remains to be seen.” I pushed my seat back and propped my feet up against the glove compartment. We were on the freeway now, heading south toward L.A. I had no idea where Nick was taking me, back to Hollywood or the desert
or maybe someplace new. It was right then that I knew there was no returning to my old life, a life spent accepting the status quo, a life trapped within the invisible boundaries of this antiseptic bubble. Not just because it was impossible. But because it wasn’t what I wanted anymore. Not only was I not the same girl in the bottom-drawer photo anymore, I couldn’t be. “I suppose it’ll depend on your definition of trouble.”

I cracked the window slightly, letting in a whistling warm breeze. It was a beautiful night.

Your voice is like an angel

I can hear without sound.

My leaden heart starts floating

Whenever you’re around.

The song seeped in with the wind, but this time I couldn’t hear the guitar. Only his voice, singing gently in my ear, a whispered lullaby. This was my life. At least right now, in this moment.

Forty-five minutes later, we exited the freeway onto Sunset Boulevard. Block after block buzzed with nightclubs and bars and restaurants. Practically every car surrounding us swayed and thumped as it cruised along, like the street had been converted into a giant concrete dance floor for moving vehicles.

“Is this the famous Sunset Strip?” I asked, rolling down the window.

“It is,” Nick said, glancing up toward the looming hills above. “But we’re just using it as a shortcut tonight.”

“So I take it you have a destination in mind?”

“Indeed I do,” he said, flashing that adorable half-smile. “But it’s a surprise.”

A shiver went up my spine. “For someone who spent the last ten years in England, you know this city pretty well.”

“You just need the right person to show you.”

“Lucky for me I already have that,” I said. “The question though, is who was your excellent guide?”

Nick shifted into a higher gear. The sudden force of acceleration pushed me back against the seat. He didn’t slow down even when we approached a sharp curve. I clutched the door handle as the tires hugged the pavement without so much as a squeak. Even though his gaze was fixed on the road, his mind had clearly gone somewhere else. Just like the time at the club. The question was where?

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