Tin Lily (9 page)

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Authors: Joann Swanson

BOOK: Tin Lily
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I look at Nick and feel my head tip to the side. I try to see if he’s making fun of me, but there’s only his smile. And now his easy laugh.

“You don’t believe me?”

I see my pasty face distorted in the elevator doors again. I don’t believe him, but I don’t say so. Nick Anders, happiness on his face for the world to see—he’s a good tether. Like Cheetah. I decide I don’t want to say he’s wrong in case he makes up his mind to go away.

Nick watches me for a little while. I watch him for a little while. “So you live in the city now?” he says.

“With my aunt. Queen Anne?”

“Your Aunt’s Queen Anne?” He bows and his hair spills onto his forehead. When he stands he combs through it, making it stand on end again. “I had no idea I was in the presence of royalty.”

I don’t get Nick’s joke at first, but then I do and give him a look that lets him know it was pretty lame.

He just laughs again. “Queen Anne’s a nice area,” he says, then gives me the once over. “You don’t dress like most people up there.”

“My mom made me this sweater,” I say because I’m not sure what he means.

“It’s a nice sweater. Where’s your mom?”

I start coughing, double over, try not to choke to death in front of the dancing water. My breath is all caught up in my lungs. My focus is too big. I narrow it, narrow it.
Finish
The Stand
.
I’ll be left an empty husk, a breathless nothing if I can’t narrow it. I pluck a loose thread from my sweater. Threads are narrow enough. My thread:
finish
The Stand.

“You okay?” Nick asks. He’s worried and busy patting the air above my back as I bend away from him.

“I’m okay,” I say. “I need to get to my aunt’s.”

I focus on walking to the curb. First, I make my feet move three steps. Then I make them move three more. Nick interrupts.

“Are you okay, Lily?” he asks again, like I lied the first time.

I did.

“I am not okay,” I say because I’m not. “I am not okay and I don’t want to talk about my mom.”

“Of course. I’m sorry.” Nick watches me closely. He’s like Margie when she’s deciding if she should push. Finally he puffs a big breath out and lets the words he wants to say go with it. “What are you doing now?”

“Walking.”

He laughs a little through the concern, through the guilt that he’s why I almost choked to death in front of the dancing fountains. “I mean, are you headed home?”

Nod. “To Aunt Margie’s.”

“Would you like to go to Pike’s Place with me?”

I stop walking. “Why?”

“Well, I’m headed down there and it’s a nice day and I thought you might want to come with.” He waves one arm around like he’s a tour guide. “I could show you our fair emerald city, starting with Pike’s where you can, you know, buy a fish or whatever.”

“Do I seem like I need a fish?”

“Everyone should totally have a fish of their own.”

I think about walking around with Nick-the-stranger, all the people, the bees coming along anytime they feel like it, making me head on into the quiet like there aren’t better places to be. “Thank you,” I say. “I’d rather not today.”

Nick looks surprised, like no one’s ever refused his company before. “Do you think I could have your number?” He shuffles his feet and waves one hand around. “Just in case I want to send you a fish or something.”

“I don’t know it.” Margie thinks I’ve memorized her home number and my new cell number. I tried, but there’s no room inside for numbers.

“Will you be back next week?” he asks.

“Yes.”

“Can I meet you right here at say—” He looks at his watch. “Two o’clock?”

“I’ll have to see what kind of day it is. I can’t say for sure.”

“What kind of day?”

“Yes.” I spy Margie driving down the road and take three more steps. “Nice meeting you,” I mumble because I don’t know what else to say.

Margie pulls up and I climb in. Nick is still standing there and he’s got a big grin on his face. I wonder if he’s like the boys in my old school who laughed at me.

It used to matter, the laughing.

It doesn’t anymore.

 

 

Seven

 

Days go by like they’re minutes, like they’re seconds. I read and I only think about the very next thing I have to do. Get out of bed. Take a shower. Eat breakfast. Watch for Hank. Listen for the bees. Answer the phone.

I feel a tug at the first ring, but don’t disappear. It’s not like our old phone—loud and shrill. Margie’s phone is quiet, newer. Fancy.

“Hello?”

“Is this Lily Berkenshire?” The voice is familiar, but I can’t place it.

“Yes it is.”

“Lily, this is Officer Archie. Do you remember me?”

I see hair that won’t shine in the sun, soft eyes, a nice smile. “Yes, I remember.”

“I’m calling to see how you are.”

“I’m doing okay. How are you?”

He pauses, then laughs a little. “Well, I’m fine, thank you.”

There’s a long silence that’s probably awkward. I wonder if he’s going to tell me they’ve found Hank, found him in Seattle with white and orange cat hairs on his black shirt.

“In our investigation we found something. A letter.”

The knot in my chest pounds like it hasn’t in awhile. “A letter?”

“Yes, from your mother.”

My hands shake so bad the phone knocks me in the head.
Whack.
“To who?”
Whack. Whack.

“To you, kiddo.”

I wait for him to say more. He doesn’t. “Did you open it?”

“We had to. I’m sorry. We thought it might be from your father, that it might offer a clue as to where he is.”

“Hank,” I say. Not my father anymore.

Officer Archie breathes into the phone. “Hank. Yes,” he says. His voice understands.

“What–?” I clear my throat, count to five.
Whack. Whack.
“What does it say?”

“I thought I might send it to you. And then you can read it privately?”

I think about this for a long, silent moment. I’m not sure I can wait the two or three days it will take.

“I’ll overnight it. It’ll be there tomorrow, late morning?” Officer Archie says like he’s read my mind.

“Yes, please, that would be great. I have some money—”

“No, that’s okay. It’s just a few bucks. I’m glad to do it.”

“Okay, thank you.”

Officer Archie waits a minute. “Lily, I wish I had better news for you. We still have no idea where Hank’s gone.”

My voice doesn’t want to work. “Okay,” I croak out anyway.

“I’m sure we’ll catch him soon.” Officer Archie thinks I’m scared, afraid Hank won’t pay for what he did.

“Okay, Officer Archie. Thank you for calling.”

“Okay, kiddo. Bye now.”

I decide not to think about the letter. It’s a big thread, the letter. It’s bigger than I can do without disappearing. I don’t want Margie to come home and find me gone. I look outside and see it’s a beautiful day, decide to venture onto Margie’s patio. It’s private, quiet. I can’t see the street. The street can’t see me.

Margie’s got some nice furniture out here. I lay down in a cushy chaise lounge and look up at the sky. Whoever said it rained all the time in Seattle never visited during the summer. Margie’s got a nice patio, made for grilling and entertaining. I lay my head back, let the heat and sun make me forget.

They make me remember instead.

Mom

s prepping dinner in the kitchen—her famous burgers. She flattens them out so they

re big patties and soaks them in some kind of booze, brandy or scotch or something. The smell reminds me of Dad, but not for long. She washes what

s left down the drain and then it

s time for the grill. We head out to the patio.

“Here

s a good tip, Lilybeans. You might as well cook on the stove if you

re gonna use propane. You want good flavor, you soften up your cedar chips in water first, then sprinkle them over your hot coals. You won

t get better tasting burgers anywhere.”

I nod, agreeing with her because I want a hamburger like a dying-of-thirst desert walker wants a drink of water.

The burgers are on, sending smoke up into the air to drive out the dog food smell for a little while. We

re sitting in our cheap plastic chaise lounges, the kind that want to come along with you when you stand up, that leave red stripes across your skin. We love them.

It

s a month since we moved into the house next to the dog food factory, six weeks since we left Dad.

“What do you think, Lilybeans? Should we grill up that pineapple in the fridge too?”

“Definitely.”

I swing my legs out and get up from the chaise. It totters back and forth, threatening to collapse.

Mom jumps up from her own plastic contraption with less drama. She

s what you might call graceful—
one trait I didn’
t inherit.

We

re in the kitchen and Mom

s pulling a cutting board out of an almost bare cupboard. I

m grabbing the pineapple. She sets us up and cuts the pineapple in half. We work side-by-side to get the rough scales off the outside. Smoke is puffing out of the barbecue and the whole kitchen smells like smoldering cedar.

“I always feel a little bad cutting up a pineapple,” she says.

“Oh yeah? That

s pretty weird.”

She bumps me with her hip. “You

re weird.

“Maybe, but I

m your kid, so that actually says a lot more about you.”

She laughs again—chimes tossed by the wind, tinkling and clear. “Got me there, kiddo.”

I look at Mom, really look at her. She

s happier than I

ve seen her in ages. Not the fake happy-for-me happy. Happy because we

re free, I think. I reach out and touch her floating curls with my fingertips.

“You

ll get me sticky.”

“Your hair

s like cotton balls.”

“White and fluffy? You saying I

m old?”

“Soft and floaty. And, yeah, you

re old.”

She bumps me again and we go back to cutting up the pineapple.

I point at the strips of bright yellow fruit. “Why does it bother you, cutting it up?”

She frowns a little. “It

s like we

re taking its life, its essence. The blade slips in—” She slides the knife, point first, behind a row of scales, runs it down the length and strips them off. “And, just like that, you

ve sliced off its armor. You

ve left it defenseless.”

She picks up a piece of pineapple and pops it in her mouth. “The inside, the fruit, might be delicious, it might be the best thing you

ve ever tasted, but you

ve changed it. You

ve taken away everything that protects it.”

Her eyes have gone sad and far away.

“Is that what Dad did to you?”

She looks at me sideways, gauging me. She nods a little and makes her decision. “Yes. It

s also what Grandpa Henry did to Dad, what I let him do to both of us and I

m sorry. It

s what I hope you

ll never let another person do to you. If you can keep the best of you for you and not compromise what you know to be right and true, you might find it

s a little better, a little easier to stay happy.”

Easy quiet settles between us until we

re finished and throwing away the pineapple scales. I

m glad we have quiet moments now. I

m glad we can barbecue pineapple on our own grill and have friends again if we want. I

m glad we can go for walks in the evenings and hikes on the weekends.

The phone rings and my fingers tighten on the pineapple slice I

m holding, squeezing it until juice plops to the cutting board. Squeezing what

s left of its life.

“Tell him we

re getting ready to eat and that you

ll call him back later. He

ll pass out and won

t remember.”

I nod, forget to wash my hands and head toward the phone. This is the way it was when we left. There was peace and there was life until the phone rang.

I wake up in the chaise just before Margie walks through the door. I’ve been in the sun too long and I haven’t eaten. I feel sick from no food, from too much summer heat, from the memories.

 

 

 

Eight

 

Margie pulls me over to the couch after she puts her bag away.

“How was today?” she asks, like she does every night.

“Today was fine,” I say, like I do every night.

She nods and I see her eyes are extra shiny at the corners where a little mascara’s gathered. “I picked up a message from Officer Archie. He called my cell, but I had that all-day meeting.”

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