I FORCE MYSELF TO go into work. The bell dings overhead as I walk through the door, assaulting my eardrums like a giant gong. The smell of dough and sugar makes my mouth salivate but my stomach nauseous. There are only a couple of people in here, a man sitting at the counter, a regular, and a woman doctoring up her to-go coffee. I let myself exhale; maybe this will be an easy day. But then Owen approaches from the other side of the counter, tossing a rag somewhere underneath.
“Hey, you!”
I wave but don’t say anything as I make my way behind the counter. When we’re face-to-face, he starts laughing like he knows some big secret about me.
“What?” I ask.
“You’re totally hungover, aren’t you?” he says, leaning up against the doorframe, watching me too closely as I clock in on Jackie’s computer.
“Is it that obvious?”
He laughs again. “I thought you were supposed to be a Girl Scout or something.”
But before I can answer, Jackie suddenly appears behind him, carrying a tray full of pastries drizzled with chocolate and vanilla icing. “Brooke!” she shouts, making my head throb once more. Her smile fades, though, as she looks at me. “Oh, sweetie, do you feel okay?”
“Yeah, I’m fine,” I lie.
Owen walks away, snickering.
“Hey, so I’m dying to know,” Jackie begins, lowering her voice. “Did Aaron say how it went? We’ve been playing phone tag all day.”
“How what went?”
“The exams.”
“I don’t—I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
“He had the GED tests this week.” Her brow creases as she looks at my face. “He didn’t tell you?”
I shake my head no, but I can’t shake this nameless dread that’s suddenly creeping up through my veins, poisoning my blood.
“Well, that’s strange,” she breathes, her eyes crinkling up around the corners. “He better not have forgotten about it with everything else that’s going on.”
“I’m sure he didn’t,” I tell her, and I mean that. Because he wouldn’t just forget—he’s been studying, even. The only reason he wouldn’t have mentioned it is if something happened, something worse than forgetting. I can feel it like something collapsing under my feet, the beginning of an avalanche.
When I get home that night, I find Callie sitting cross-legged on the living room floor, grinning as she messes around on her phone. I ask her where Aaron is and she doesn’t even look up; she raises her arm and points to the hallway, where my bedroom door is open, light on.
“Thanks,” I tell her.
The window’s open. I stick my head out and hear voices from up above. Carefully, I maneuver myself through the window and onto the platform of the fire escape. The higher I climb, the louder they get. They’re laughing. When I crawl over the brick ledge, I see Aaron and Mark, in two lawn chairs set up near the edge of the roof, their feet kicked up on the wall.
I planned on asking Aaron about the exam, but as I get closer, I know I’m not going to be able to talk to him about that tonight. They have a collection of empty beer bottles sitting in a cluster on the ground next to each of them, an overflowing ashtray on the plastic table that sits between them. Mark mutters something I can’t quite understand, but whatever it was, it makes Aaron fall forward, wheeze-laughing, just like he did that day in the kitchen with me. A twinge of jealousy pokes me in the side.
I must make a noise, because they both turn around at the same time.
“Hey, Brooke,” Mark calls out to me. “Did you bring us some scones?” he asks, referencing my work uniform, and they both start cracking up again.
I try to smile. “Nope, sorry.”
“Hey, sorry—just realized,” Aaron says. “Your window, right?”
“It’s okay,” I tell him, stepping closer, trying to act casual. “What’s . . . uh . . . going on?”
Mark shrugs. Aaron takes a sip of beer. When he looks up at me, I see a flash of something. I recognize it immediately. It’s one of Dad’s favorite looks, a gaze designed to make its object feel infinitesimally small and scared and useless.
“Nothin’, little sis,” he answers. “What’s goin’ on with you?” There’s some kind of weird, under-the-surface antagonism exchanged between us. I think Mark must pick up on it too, because he stubs out his cigarette and stands, stretching his arms over his head like he’s been sitting for too long.
“I’m takin’ off, man,” Mark says to Aaron, and then reaches out to do that dude-handshake thing.
“You don’t have to leave,” Aaron says, standing up now too.
“Yeah, it’s getting late. But listen—think about it, right? What we talked about. It’s no problem, dude. No problem at all.”
“Thanks, I will.”
“See ya, Brooke,” Mark calls out as he climbs back over the wall and down the metal steps that creak, one by one, under his weight.
“Sorry to break up the party,” I tell Aaron, but he doesn’t answer. “What was Mark talking about just now—what are you thinking about?”
“Nothing. He might have a job for me, that’s all.”
“Well, what about the job with Ray?” I ask. “What about getting your GED and everything?” I add, though something tells me I shouldn’t go there right now.
“That’s . . . uh . . . not happening,” he mumbles, scoffing.
“Why not?”
He doesn’t say anything to me as he gathers up the empties and tosses them into the plastic garbage can in the corner, the glass bottles making a racket as they fall against each other one by one.
“I’m just saying—” I start, but he interrupts me.
“Yeah, what are you saying?” he snaps.
“I thought that was the plan, right?” I ask, feeling my patience slipping away with each crack of glass against glass. “What, are you mad at me now? For coming up here, ruining your good time?”
“No,” he answers. “I’m not mad you came up here. It’s just so obvious you’re standing there judging me. Which, by the way, you have no right to do, especially after the way you came home last night. So if you have something to say, say it.”
“I’m not judging. I was worried that something happened!” I yell over the glass clinking. “I always worry when you’re up here,” I add, except I don’t think he hears me.
“Well, don’t!” he says, turning around to face me. “Don’t worry about me so much. I feel like you’re always watching me, waiting for me to fuck things up. Guess what? I fuck up sometimes, okay? I already feel bad enough about it, and it makes me feel ten times worse when you look at me”—he points at my face—“like that.”
I wish I could see how I’m looking at him, because then I could try not to do it anymore. “What are we even talking about? I’m not judging anything!” Although that’s not completely true. “The only thing I’m ever trying to do is keep everything from falling apart.”
“How, though?” he snarls. “It’s already apart, Brooke! Why can’t you see that? It’s broken, okay? There’s no saving this.” He throws his arms open and turns in all directions, as if he’s trying to gather up everything around us—the air, the roof, the building, the street below—all of this. Part of me wonders if he’s talking about our family or Mom or maybe just himself.
“If you really believe that, then what are you even doing here—why did you agree to come back?”
Something settles inside of him as he looks at me, his anger suddenly transformed into sadness, weighing him down. He shakes his head, as if he’s trying to find the answer. “Because you asked me to,” he says.
We stand here, silent, on opposite sides of an invisible line. There are so many things I want to say, but so little I think he’ll hear.
“What’s going on with us?” I finally ask. “Why are we all fighting so much?”
He shrugs and shakes his head and smiles sadly as he looks up at the sky. “Maybe it’s just in our blood.”
He starts walking toward the fire escape, and I know I have to say something—I know we can’t leave things like this. “Aaron. Wait, okay?” He stops and turns to look at me. “I disagree. It’s not broken. I think it can be saved. I really do.” I’m not sure if I’m talking about our family as whole, or our mom, or him, or all of it.
“I know you do.” Something in his voice, in the way he says those words, makes me suddenly doubt myself. He swings his leg over the wall, then disappears, his footsteps fading as he descends the stairs.