Chapter
15

When I was eight, Dad told me my mother would like to be in contact with me again. He said, “How would you feel about that?” And I said, “Great!”

He seemed sad, like it was a hit on him as a father. It wasn’t. He was a perfect dad.

No, no one’s perfect. Lesson learned the hard way.

I think Dad would’ve told Carly to stay away if I wasn’t being so horrible to Tanith. This was right after Dad married Tanith and she moved in. Everything she asked me to do, I’d snipe, “You’re not my mother. You can’t make me.” Dad would send me to my room until I apologized. Maybe he thought I’d be nicer to Tanith if I knew the horror of my real mother. Who knows what people’s motives are?

I was so nervous about meeting Carly, worried whether she’d like me. Maybe hoping she’d whisk me away to Disneyland or some enchanted kingdom, swoop me up, and carry me off to her palace in the sky.

When I opened the door to her the first time, I actually gasped. She was stunning. She had on a short, fitted maroon dress with matching shoes and lipstick. She said, “Alyssa? I’m your mom.”

She laughed at my speechlessness, or Dad’s. He stood there stiffly, clutching my hand. She said, “You can call me Carly,” and she shook my limp hand, the one Dad didn’t have a death grip on.

All I wanted her to do was hold me and tell me how much she missed me and how we would all be together now. She kissed Dad on the cheek and left a lipstick print. His face turned bright red. She introduced herself to Tanith.

Carly made me feel special. She set me apart from my friends, who had frumpy, ordinary moms like Tanith. I’d talk about my real mom, the dancer, who was off dancing in a Broadway show or making music videos.

Or porno films.

What a stupid, naive kid I was. Now I’m a stupid, naive teenager. I guess people never change.

The next day Finn’s eyes are bloodshot, and she looks like death on meth. “Thank God you’re here,” she says in a monotone. She tosses me a dish towel. “Could you bus for me? My head feels like a bomb went off.”

“Big night at Wet Willy’s?” I ask.

She presses her thumbs into her temples and drones, “I never drink. I know better.”

“Can I get a waitress over here?” Arlo sticks his head out the order window. “I know I have two somewhere, and both of them are overpaid slackers.”

Finn bleary-eyes me.

“This should make you feel better.” I pull out the bank envelope and hand it to her.

She looks inside, and her jaw unhinges.

Finn says, “Where did you get this?”

I tell her, “I have some college savings. Don’t worry about it.” I snag the bus tub to head out front, and Finn yanks on the other end to stop me.

“I can’t take your money.”

“Yes, you can,” I say. “I assume it’s a loan, right?”

She shakes her head slowly. “Alyssa, no.”

“Finn, yes.”

She holds my eyes for a long moment, and then lets out a breath. “I’ll pay you back. With interest. I promise.”

I toss her a casual smile. “I know you will.”

She glances at the money again, and the joy that spreads across her face is even better than I imagined. And I put it there. Me.

“Any century now!” Arlo yells. “These orders ain’t serving themselves.”

I pull the tub away from Finn, thinking, I do trust her. I don’t know why, since I barely know her. But if she says she’ll pay the money back, she will.

The first customer left Finn a one-dollar tip. Cheap bastard. I hope Carly’s in no hurry to get repaid. I pocket the tip for Finn, and the front bell tinkles. It’s that perv construction dude who violated me on my first day. His crew is lined up behind him. He sees me, and then he glances Arlo’s way and nods. I thought Arlo had kicked him out.

The guy walks right up to me. I skirt the table to put hardware between us as he clears his throat. “I apologize for my rude behavior the other day. I didn’t mean to pinch your as—er, heinie. Bum.”

I want to say, Yes, you did, jerk. But I hold my tongue.

He peers over his shoulder at Arlo, who’s rolled out the swinging doors and is sitting there with his arms crossed. Arlo hitches his head, like Go on. Meantime, I stack a dirty plate and cup in the tub.

Creepo says, “Do you accept my apology?”

Is he talking to me? I keep working.

“Look. Me and the guys want to come back here and eat cuz, I’ll tell ya, there’s no better or cheaper place in the area. So, what do you say? I promise we’ll be respectful and keep our hands to ourselves.”

He sounds like a child who’s been spanked. He comes at me fast and then drops to his knees, folding his hands and steepling his fingers. “Please?”

Everyone’s gawking. Someone yells, “Aw, just tell him you’ll marry him.” People laugh.

“Okay,” I say to him between clenched teeth. I think, Get up, fool.

He grunts as he pushes up to stand. “Guys!” He waves his crew over. Extending a hand, he says, “I’m Rufus.”

I shake his meaty paw. “Alyssa.” I slide my hand out, and it’s all smeary.

Each guy introduces himself, like I’ll remember their names. One of them—Rick or Dick—points at me and says, “Know who you look like?”

I grab the tub and scramble. When I bring back menus to the table, Rick or Dick says, “Thank you, Alyssa.” He smirks.

I say to the guys, “Did Rufus mention how he promised Arlo you’d all double-tip from now on?”

They turn on Rufus, and I leave him to the slaughter.

The stream of customers is steady, and Finn’s dragging. I try to pick up the slack, but I’m not as fast as she is. The cowboy, Dutch, comes in and says, “Mornin’, little lady.” I seat him at a window table, where he removes his hat and sets it on a chair.

“Sludge and fudge?” I ask him.

He smiles. He has these sparkly blue eyes, clear as crystal, like my grandpa’s. “Sludge for sure.”

I hand him a menu, and he holds up a hand. “Gimme a number twelve, extra green chili, the way I like it. Arlo’ll know.”

I write the order, printing Dutch at the top so Arlo will know.

The rush ends, and the last customers trickle out. “Thanks, Arlo,” Dutch calls. “Dee-lishus and new-trishus. Thanks, Alyssa.”

“You’re welcome.” I lock the door behind him. Oh my God. The Scrubs left me a six-dollar tip for a fourteen-dollar tab. Wait’ll I tell Finn.

She’s at the grill, scraping and looking nauseated.

Arlo rolls up next to me. “Ya done good, Alyssa. You’re a natural at this.”

“So give me a raise.”

“And a comedienne to boot,” he says to Finn as he dumps a pile of huevos rancheros into the trash. Finn hustles to the bathroom to hurl.

“How about this instead, to make you official?” Arlo hands me a name tag.

Wow. Cool. I pin it on my shirt, even though I’m done for the day, and the tee is going in the wash later. I stretch out my tee to look. My own name tag.

Finn staggers out, and Arlo says to her, “If Sysco makes a delivery, see if you can finagle an extra case of sugar and creamer.” He wheels toward the exit. “Lock up when you’re finished. I’m off to get me some.” He chuckles on his way out.

Finn’s there when I turn around, holding out the bank envelope. “I can’t take this.”

“Why? Yes, you can.” I walk past her. She tries to stuff it in my back pocket, but I smack her hand away and go, “Perv.” She tries again, and I snag a spatula and slash the air like it’s a sword. Finn smiles, but it’s a weary smile that vanishes quickly.

Carly’s words replay in my head. I say to Finn, “When someone gives you a gift, accept it graciously.”

She hesitates and then says, “Okay. But I promise to pay you back every dollar before I leave.”

I look at her. “You’re leaving?”

“As soon as possible.” A truck beep-beeps like it’s backing up to the door, and she drags toward the sound. Now I wish I’d never given her the money.

Dad has a list of rules for vacations: no computers or cell phones, don’t hog the TV at Grandma and Grandpa’s, help out with chores. On my iPhone, which is cooler than shit, I tap in Grandma and Grandpa’s number. No one answers, and I don’t leave a message. What would I say? “Did you notice I’m no longer a member of the family?” Honestly, I wonder what Dad and Tanith are telling them about me.

I know no one’s home in Virginia Beach, but I call anyway. I leave a message for Paulie: “Snot-nose brat boy. I’m finally getting around to calling you back. Timing is everything, as they say. Not that I forgot, or was too busy, or didn’t want to talk to you.”

That sounds pathetic, plus I’m choking up. “I just wanted you to know I called you back.” I disconnect.

I check my e-mail, and my heart leaps. Two messages from M’Chelle. I open the first one:

im still in shock about everything. ur dads a bastard. im worried about u, Al. call me, ok?

Who told her? It all happened so fast. One day I had a home and a life and friends and a family. Then, poof, up in smoke.

The second e-mail is a duplicate of the first, like M’Chelle hit SEND twice. Spaz.

I guess she forgives me. She shouldn’t. I’m an ass. I miss M’Chelle. I miss my life. I miss my brother and my grandparents. I dial M’Chelle’s number to call her, but I can’t bring myself to touch the last digit. If I hear her voice, I’ll crumble. And I know what—who—we’ll end up talking about. Instead, I e-mail her:

i’m sorry. about everything. i love u.

End of April

M’Chelle said she needed to talk to you. She came over. You sat on the bed, and she hugged one of your beaded pillows to her chest. “Alyssa, you know I’m your friend, right?” she began.

“Of course.”

Her eyes held yours and then dropped. “You should know that Sarah’s been hooking up with Ben.”

First you froze. Then you laughed.

M’Chelle didn’t.

“He’s playing the role of her boyfriend so her parents don’t get suspicious,” you told M’Chelle.

She shook her head. “No, Alyssa. It’s more than that.”

Your heart beat a hole in your chest. “Who told you that?”

“No one,” M’Chelle said. “I saw them at Gracie Field after my soccer game. Making out in the bleachers.”

Your blood was rupturing every vessel. But still you believed in Sarah. In your friend Ben. You wanted to believe; you needed to believe. So you lashed out at M’Chelle. She was jealous. You’d suspected all along that’s why she hated Sarah, and this was confirmation.

“You’re wrong,” you told her.

M’Chelle picked at a bead on the pillow. “Look, I know what I saw. I just thought you should know.”

“You’re lying. You’ve always been jealous of everyone I’ve ever liked.”

“Alyssa—”

“Get out.”

M’Chelle slumped her shoulders.

“Get out!”

“Okay!” She threw the pillow on the bed.

After M’Chelle left, hours later, you were still numb and disbelieving.

You’d been driving Sarah home after school, stopping in the Starbucks lot to let her out. She kissed you. Every day she told you she loved you.

You know you promised not to call her, but… She didn’t answer. You wanted to try again but then thought, no. You trust her. She’d tell you the truth if there was anything to tell.

The next day she jabbered all the way to Starbucks, something about this discussion she was having in class about gay marriage, and a guy said it was unnatural and against God’s law, and other people were gay bashing, and Sarah wanted so badly to stand up and yell, “What do you know? How would you feel if everyone was against you?”

“I couldn’t do it,” she said. “People kept looking at me, expecting me to say something, and I couldn’t. I was scared to death. I thought, if I say one word, I’ll just start yelling and crying and lose it in front of everyone. Now I feel like I let down the whole GSA. Every gay and bi person in the world.”

“Are you seeing Ben?” you asked her outright. Because it was killing you inside.

Her expression was unreadable.

“M’Chelle told me she saw you kissing him.”

Sarah blinked once and then went, “What if I was?”

A million thoughts collided in your brain. She’d been lying to you. She didn’t love you exclusively. You were confused, angry. At her, and at Ben too. How could they betray you?

Sarah said, “He wanted to see what it felt like to kiss a girl. So I let him.”

That was all? It sounded plausible, you guessed. Ben had never asked to kiss you. Because—gross. Maybe he felt Sarah was safe to experiment with. Maybe you refused to see what was right in front of your eyes.

“Alyssa.” Sarah ran her hand down your arm. “I love you.”

“I know.” You couldn’t doubt her. You loved her. You knew M’Chelle had ulterior motives.

Ben. The jerk. You’d strangle him.

Sarah’s watch beeped, and she said, “I have to bust.” She grabbed her backpack and scooted out of the car. She kissed her fingertips and blew the kiss to you. You caught it. You pressed it to your heart. You watched her round the building, and then you drove out the exit, the way you always do. But something, a nagging feeling, made you retrace your route.

Sarah trotted along the wrought-iron fence surrounding the Starbucks patio, stopping when a car pulled over. Ben’s VW. She got in.

Your heart raced, thrummed in your ears. You thought… you don’t know what you thought.

They didn’t kiss or anything. Of course they didn’t. Your imagination was in overdrive.

You called Sarah from your car. You couldn’t help yourself. Just answer, Sarah. You needed to hear her voice. But another voice sounded in your head—Dad’s—warning you never, ever to talk or text on your cell while driving.

Sarah answered.

“Hi, babe,” you said.

“Alyssa—”

“Can I talk to Ben?”

There was a prolonged interval. Ben came on. “Hey. ’Sup?”

You felt ridiculous. Unhinged. You couldn’t even think of one thing to say to Ben except “fag.”

You expected him to counter with “dyke.” The way you banter. He didn’t say a word. You swallowed and said, “Let me talk to Sarah.”

“It’s for you,” you heard Ben say.

Sarah came on. “What are you doing?”

“Nothing. I don’t know. Why is Ben driving you home?”

Sarah let out a long breath. “Because that’s what he does. My mom hasn’t asked me once about you since I started bringing Ben home. It’s working great. You’re the one who gave me the idea, Alyssa. Do you have a problem with it now?”

“No.” Yes.

Sarah said, “Is there anything else?”

It’s the same question you wanted to ask her. Is there anything else?

You hung up and hated yourself. You despised how jealous and bitter and resentful you felt toward Ben, her “convenient” boyfriend, and Sarah, her mother and your father, yourself. You were the one who was jealous. Of Ben! Your friend. The one person in the world who lived openly without fear, who never had to risk exposure and the consequent fallout from his family. Because they accepted him. They loved him. Ben, who got to love freely, who got to spend the time with Sarah you didn’t. You thought all this and more, and you felt so sick with jealous rage, you didn’t see the stop sign. The other driver in the intersection screeched his brakes and you swerved to miss him, running up on the curb and smashing into a tree. The impact crunched your hood, releasing your air bag and swallowing you, suffocating you until the only screams you heard were the ones inside your head.