The Grown Ups (12 page)

Read The Grown Ups Online

Authors: Robin Antalek

Sam put down the cup.

“Sam, you can't ignore him forever.”

“It's only been two weeks.”

Bella sighed. “Forever, two weeks, what's the difference?”

Sam sighed. “You're right. He doesn't deserve this.” He ducked his chin to his chest. “I think I need to go.”

For a moment Bella looked scared, but she quickly straightened her shoulders, her small breasts brushing against the cloth of her shirt. There was a damp circle above her right breast where a tangle of wet hair had fallen. “Then you need to go.”

Sam reached across the table and grabbed her fingers in his hand. “Hey. You have class. And I have to go see my dad.”

Bella took a deep breath and exhaled. “Pretending was nice, wasn't it?”

“Were you pretending?”

She bit her bottom lip. “Only if you were.”

Sam laughed. “Oh, is that how it is?”

Bella giggled. “Oh, that's how it is.”

They stared at each other. The air smelled of cinnamon, coffee, heat from the radiators, and Bella's shampoo. Sam inhaled. Trying to remember it all.

Sam had intended
to go home, and then he didn't. It took a train and two bus transfers to get there, eleven hours in all. The snow was deep and the walk unpleasant in sneakers. There was an absence of streetlights, although the moon was low on the snow.

When he got to the house every window was an inked rectangle, and he hesitated, but figured, as he put his fist against the old wood, that he had come too far to go anywhere else that night.

When the door finally swung open Sam saw him first and immediately thought he was wrong to have come. Then from the back of the long, narrow hall she came rushing toward the door. Her hair was loose and long; it fell around her shoulders like a blanket. She flung her arms out to her sides as if she were going to hug him and then changed her mind.

Sam opened his mouth to explain why he was in Vermont on a late snowy night in the dead of winter. But the only word that came out of his mouth as he fell against her shoulder was “Mom.”

SIX
We Only Move Backward
Bella—2003

Y
ears ago on a December night in their junior year of high
school they had been in Peter Chang's basement before the winter dance, and Sam had turned to Bella, his eyes as navy as his sweater, and said, “So?”

It began as simply as that, friends who had known each other since they were in diapers. Sam made her happy. Just the sight of him as his cheeks flushed a deep shade of red was all it took. She wanted to kiss him and she knew that he probably wanted to kiss her too. Later, when they had all stumbled from Peter's basement, wandering through the streets of their neighborhood to the high school, Sam had bumped up against her shoulder and she had found his hand down by his side and grabbed hold of his fingers. He wound them through hers and hadn't let go, and right then in that moment she had been so sure of everything she had ever wanted.

Since her mother's funeral, Bella had been stuck on that memory, and she didn't know why. Maybe it was only the ache of nostalgia. That night, coming in late after the dance, straddling
the threshold of her mother's room to tell her she was home, she apologized for missing her curfew. Her lips had been swollen from kissing. She wanted to lie in bed alone and go over every minute she had spent in Sam's arms. But then she had noticed the way her mother was looking at her and instead she had crawled into bed with her and whispered about Sam. The mustard light in the room was diffused by the angle of the bathroom door, and she caught a glimpse of her mother's face in the shadows. She was smiling but there was also something sad in her expression. Bella had pled exhaustion then and gone to bed, not wanting to give her mother a chance to say what she had been thinking. She was sure her mother had never felt anything close to the way Bella had felt that night. She hadn't seen the way Sam had stroked her cheek with his fingers, and looked into her eyes before the first time he kissed her.

But here she was, weeks after her mother's death, without him. And now when she thought about everything she had once believed, she just felt raw and foolish.

She knew her father was worried that she would end up alone, curled up like a snail on the bathroom floor, a weeping, wilting mess. Her brothers had wives and children, full lives that extended into every single minute of their days, and he wanted that for his only daughter. So he called her every morning, usually from the train. And Bella began to look forward to the sound of his voice. There was something comforting about the two of them sharing the quiet part of their morning together.

She also had Suzie. Bella and Suzie had fallen back into their friendship as if the gap in years meant nothing. That night after her mother's funeral, after her sisters-in-law had wrapped the leftovers, cleared the counters of cloudy wineglasses, after the kids had fallen asleep in midmovement, with food-smeared faces,
shoes missing, half dressed in their funeral clothes, after her father had taken a drink into his study and asked to be alone, after the last drunken mourners had left and her oldest brother had locked the front door, Suzie and Bella had lain in her bed. Bella couldn't remember the last thing she had said to her mother. She had never returned the call she promised she would, begging off on the pretense of studying when instead she'd gone out. These things were playing on a loop in her brain. So Bella had asked Suzie to talk. She didn't care about what, she just wanted to hear the sound of her voice, she just wanted anything but the quiet, and Suzie had obliged.

Suzie was interviewing
at medical schools in the city and had convinced Bella to take the train in from Poughkeepsie and meet her for the weekend. Bella, saddled with one last year at Vassar, was envious that Suzie had something concrete to move on to. After everything that had happened, Bella couldn't help but think that her English degree was somehow trivial.

They were staying on the Upper East Side in an apartment owned by the parents of someone Suzie knew from Boston. When Bella rang the bell Suzie greeted her at the door in a suit and heels, holding a bottle of wine, looking the part of an adult. She drew Bella inside quickly with a bright smile and squeezed her forearm. “I'm so glad you're here.”

Bella set her bag on a bench in the hall and followed Suzie into a long, narrow kitchen off to the left. Suzie rummaged around in the drawers until she found the corkscrew. She held it up, triumphant, and grimaced as she wound the metal into the cork. Next to Suzie Bella felt even more like a college student in her tan corduroys, stretched-out sweater, and bulky scarf, and her mother's fur coat.

While Suzie secured glasses and poured their wine, Bella shrugged out of the coat. “Bathroom?” she asked.

Suzie looked up. “Down the hall to the right.”

In the bathroom, Bella closed the door and sat down on the toilet. Across from her was a stack of
New Yorker
s that looked unread. She picked up the top magazine and flipped to the table of contents. The slick pages were virginal, and Bella wondered if
The New Yorker
was the only magazine that seemed always to be subscribed to but never read. She replaced the magazine, flushed, washed her hands, and frowned into the mirror. Her hair, which had been wavy her entire life, had mysteriously gone straight since her mother's death. She smoothed it down, wishing she had a hair tie, and pinched her cheeks, and then felt ridiculous that she was acting as if she had to look attractive for Suzie.

When she opened the door Suzie yelled, “In the living room.”

Bella walked down the hall to an open room with large panes of glass, a grand piano resting on a faded oriental carpet, floor-to-ceiling bookshelves, and an enormous L-shaped couch covered in brown velvet. In front of the couch was an old trunk that held precariously uneven towers of books. Behind the trunk sat Suzie, a wineglass balanced on her knee and another in her hand, which she held out to Bella.

Bella took the glass and positioned herself on the couch so that she could face Suzie, who had taken off her suit jacket and kicked off her heels. Suzie raised her glass and Bella did the same. The wine was tangy and she let it pool on her tongue before she swallowed. Growing up, she and Suzie had shared many days and nights on the couch watching television and consuming bags of junk food until they wanted to puke. If no adult was around to shoo them outside, and frequently none was, they could sit
silently for hours, the only noise the rustling of the bags. Bella wished they could sit like that again. If only for a moment.

“So,” Suzie said, “you found it okay?”

Bella nodded, taking another sip of wine. She looked over at Suzie, her expression expectant. Then Bella remembered the reason Suzie was in the city. “Did everything go okay with the interviews?”

Suzie nodded, as if she had been expecting Bella's question. “Good. Nerve-racking, but good.”

Bella knew that Mount Sinai was Suzie's first choice, but she had also interviewed at Columbia and Hunter. Bella also knew, because Suzie had told her, that Michael was hoping to secure his residency at Mount Sinai. Other than that Suzie had been quiet regarding their relationship. Bella wondered if it was out of deference to her struggles with Sam.

Bella took another sip of wine. “You will have multiple offers, Suzie, I'm sure.”

Suzie shrugged. “I'm not fishing for reassurance here, Bells, but you just never know.”

Bella nodded. “You'd think I would get that by now.” She twisted her mouth into what she hoped looked like a smile.

“You look thin,” Suzie said, changing the subject.

“I'm not,” Bella said, even though when she put on her pants that morning she was surprised to feel them slip down to her hipbones. She looked at Suzie and admitted, “Maybe a few pounds lighter.”

Suzie leaned forward and twisted the stem of the wineglass between her palms. “How do you feel?”

Bella gave a sharp little laugh. She ran a hand across the smooth velvet couch cushions. “Like I've been locked out of my house without any hope of getting the keys.”

Suzie sighed. “You haven't heard from Sam?”

“No,” Bella said. “And I don't think that's going to happen.” She shook her head. “We're not like that.”

“Then why the hell did he go back to school with you?” Suzie sounded a little angry as she reached for the wine bottle.

Bella had always thought that maybe something had happened between Sam and Suzie in high school, before Suzie moved. But so far they had skirted around the whole thing. She supposed anything that happened before was really a nonissue at this point. Bella held out her glass for another pour before Suzie refilled her own. “I don't think Michael has heard from him either. Their dad is worried.” Suzie paused. “Especially since he seems to have ditched school.”

Bella knew how Sam felt about school. Her mother's death and Bella's neediness had temporarily given him the excuse to prolong the inevitable. “He'll show up eventually.” She really believed he was fine, even if she didn't think he would turn back up in her life.

Suzie looked like she was about to say something but instead clamped her mouth shut, her lips squished into an uneven line.

“What?” Bella asked.

“He's so unlike Michael.”

“I guess. I don't really know Michael, but Sam said they were pretty different. He always described Michael as goal oriented,” Bella said.

“That's true.” Suzie smiled. “Michael knows what he wants. He has a plan. I like that about him, you know?” She paused. “Does this seem totally bizarre to you, that I would end up with Sam's brother?”

“Only in a who-ever-would-have-guessed kind of way.” Bella was curious where Suzie was going.

“We were fifteen a long time ago.” Suzie laughed awkwardly. “And it really was nothing.”

It took Bella a minute to realize that Suzie was acknowledging that there had been something between her and Sam. ”Does it bother Michael that you were once with Sam?” she said carefully.

“No,” Suzie said softly. “I wasn't with Sam. I mean there was hardly a relationship. We made out in my basement for a few weeks.” She shrugged. “I mean if I hadn't moved, you know, maybe things would have ended differently.”

“Sure,” Bella said, wondering why Suzie had never told her.

“But that was high school,” Suzie said, “history. No one stays with their high school crush.”

“Right,” Bella said. Suzie chose Michael. Sam chose to run away from Bella. Whatever it had been was over. There really was nothing left to tell.

Bella woke up
curled on the couch. The lights were off in the room, but there was a marine-like glow from the curtainless windows that overlooked Central Park. Bella blinked to clear her vision and stretched her legs out as she settled deeper into the cushions. Her stomach growled. She wondered where Suzie had gone but lacked the urgency to get off the couch, and closed her eyes again, dozing for a few more minutes until she heard a snorting sound, and then a door opening.

Suzie shuffled down the hall toward the living room; she had changed into jeans with a hole in the knee and a plain black sweater. She had a strange look on her face. As she got closer, Bella could see that her eyes were swollen, like she had been crying. She saw Bella looking at her and wiped the back of her hand under her nose.

“Hungry?” Suzie asked. She stood with her head bowed and
her hands shoved deep into the front pockets of her jeans. It was a childish posture and made her look like a vulnerable, sulky teenager.

Bella nodded at her oldest friend and sat up. Whatever was wrong, Suzie wasn't going to talk about it right now.

An hour later
they sat knee to knee at a small table in a hole-in-the-wall place in Chinatown, dim sum for an army crammed between them on the chipped Formica tabletop. They had fallen on the food wordlessly as the plates came out one, two, three at a time, and now they were still eating, but the pace had slowed. Bella's stomach was full to bursting and she was grateful for her too-big pants, but she couldn't keep her chopsticks out of the food.

As they filled up on pork dumplings and Chinese beer, Bella noticed that Suzie looked a little better, but she still wasn't totally present. Bella thought about all the moments of their life they had shared together: bad haircuts, ugly clothes, crushes, first periods, braces, and big pimples. Bella had hidden Suzie in her closet when things got too bad at her house between her parents, and Suzie had come to the hospital every time Bella's mother had been admitted, playing War with Bella on the floor of the waiting room. They had spent endless hours discussing what it was going to be like to be kissed, and what it would feel like to have sex. Nothing was off-limits, or so Bella had thought, but Suzie had kept Sam a secret, so maybe they hadn't told each other everything.

Bella poked the air between them with a chopstick. “Are you going to tell me what's up?”

“It's the same old thing. My mother.” Suzie rolled her eyes. “She can't handle my brothers and they take advantage of her.” She paused. “They have been asked to leave yet another private school.
Really, the school isn't asking, it's insisting they leave. And my mother is running out of options. Just another reason for me to get the hell out of Boston.” She poked at the translucent little pile of ginger. “Do you know she went as far as to have them bar mitzvahed? I think she thought that whole ‘you're a man now' shtick would jolt them into acting responsibly. When in reality it just provided them with boatloads of bar mitzvah money to spend on dope and booze.”

“What does she expect you to do about it?”

Suzie chewed her bottom lip. “She doesn't think like that. She just wants someone to do something and I happen to be that person.” Suzie smiled, but she didn't look happy. “Cash buys a lot, but not even my father's kind of cash can help them there.”

Other books

At the End of a Dull Day by Massimo Carlotto, Anthony Shugaar
The Warmth of Other Suns by Isabel Wilkerson
Summer's End by Lisa Morton
A Family Name by Liz Botts