Don't Let Me Go (26 page)

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Authors: Catherine Ryan Hyde

BOOK: Don't Let Me Go
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“You’re so weird, Billy.”

“Hey. Something I’ve been wanting to talk to you about. Here, hand me the cat, OK? This will be easier to say if I’m holding the cat.”

“Why?”

“I don’t know. She just calms me down.”

“OK, whatever.”

Grace passed Mr. Lafferty the Girl Cat to Billy, noticing that the cat was still trying to lick the last of the peanut butter off the roof of her mouth.

Billy pulled a big breath, so loudly that Grace could hear it.

“Tomorrow…when you go to school…”

“Tomorrow’s Sunday.”

“Oh. Right. Monday, when you go to school…I thought I might try walking just a little tiny bit of the way with you and Rayleen.”

Grace opened her mouth to shriek, but Billy held up a hand to stop her. And he seemed firm about it. Much more than normal Billy-firm. He didn’t want to hear any feedback.

“Don’t say anything,” he said, “because if you get all excited about this, then I’ll just get more scared.”

Grace held still, against all of her impulses, for what seemed like an impossible length of time. Then, when she spoke, she was smart enough to whisper. Really whisper.

“Does this mean you’re coming to my school?”

“One thing at a time, baby girl. One thing at a time.”

She threw herself at him, causing the cat to scoot away, and hugged him tightly around his neck.

“I knew you would,” she whispered, even more reverently. “I knew you would say you couldn’t, and it would really seem like you couldn’t, but then when it came right down to it, I knew you would.”

“I only said I was going to walk part of the way to school with you on Monday.”

“Right,” Grace said, sitting back on her heels. “Got it.”

“And you can’t push me, and you can’t judge me. Because, the first day, I might not get much farther than the front stairs.”

Grace could feel her own eyebrows scoot up.

“You’re gonna do it every day?”

“Well,” Billy said, and then paused for a weirdly long time. “I have to practice.”

“Is that why you came to Rayleen’s today? To practice?”

“Well. Yeah. Partly. That and the fact that I didn’t want the new neighbor guy to think I was a complete and utter freak.”

“What’s so special about Jesse? What about the rest of us? What about what
we
think?”

“Oh,
please
. It’s way too late for you guys. You already know I’m a complete and utter freak.”

“That’s true,” Grace said. Then, after she’d thought the comment over, “No offense.”

“None taken,” Billy said.

Billy

In a spectacular stroke of luck, when Jesse knocked on Billy’s door the following evening, Billy was refining the choreography of Grace’s school dance. Which meant he was dressed in his dance pants and a soft, oversized light blue sweater. And he was even wearing shoes.

Maybe our luck is changing, Billy thought, but not out loud.

He opened the door to find his handsome new neighbor standing with a shiny smile on his face, a bottle of red wine in one hand, and two wine glasses, held by their stems, in the other.

It filled Billy with an odd and hugely unfamiliar feeling. It was good, nonetheless. Though he couldn’t have found the words in that moment, it was a sense of rightness. This is how life should go. You should be nicely dressed in your home when a gentleman knocks on the door to visit you, and he should be holding wine and smiling. And maybe he should say something like, “Is it OK? Because I really should have called first.” And then you can say something like, “Not at all. Do come in. I was just working on some choreography.”

Heaven-like, yet so completely forgotten. Such an ancient piece of history.

“How do you feel about neighbors who drop by unannounced?” Jesse asked, still smiling. “Mild irritation? Irrational hatred? Homicidal rage?”

“Not at all. Do come in. I was just working on some choreography.”

Amazing. It was almost akin to a life.

“What are you choreographing?” Jesse asked, settling himself on Billy’s couch. He set the bottle of wine and the glasses on the table. “I wasn’t sure if you’d have wine glasses. I didn’t want to assume you would. Then again, I didn’t want to assume you wouldn’t. I wrestled with myself a lot about that.”

“I’m working on that dance for Grace to perform at her school.”

Billy stepped smoothly, aware of being witnessed, into his kitchen. He opened the cupboard and took down two of his own wine glasses. They were hand-blown, insanely fragile, with unique stems, no two quite identical. Syncopated, Billy thought. Syncopated for the more sophisticated.

He carried them back into the living room and set them on the coffee table in front of Jesse, who properly admired them.

“What about a corkscrew?”

Billy felt his face flush red. Right up to that moment, he’d been living the dream. Caught up in that image of “this is my life, and it’s just like everybody else’s life.” Of course he had lovely wine glasses. Who doesn’t, save a barbarian? But he had no corkscrew. So now Jesse knew he never used the glasses.

He didn’t answer the question. But, apparently, he didn’t have to. His red face and his silence had given him away.

“Next best thing,” Jesse said, standing and digging a hand down into his jeans pocket. He was wearing lightly faded blue jeans with a white button-down shirt and a tie. A tie! It made Billy proud that someone would put on a tie to come visit him. “Swiss Army knife.”

“Were you a Boy Scout?”

“How did you know?”

“I was only kidding. Actually.”

“I
was
, though. I really was a Boy Scout. In fact, I pushed it all the way to Eagle Scout. You?”

Billy laughed. Blushed. “Not nearly. Not even. I wasn’t the scouting type. Camping is not my style. It has bugs.”

“It does indeed,” Jesse said, his words followed by the pop of the cork coming free. He held it up as if it were prize game he’d just shot. “And bears. And mosquito bites itch unmercifully. Tell me about Grace and dancing. In fact, tell me about Grace in general. What’s going on between that girl and her mother?”

“Oh,” Billy said. “That.”

He sat on the couch, a foot or so from Jesse’s knee, and accepted a glass of wine. It stirred something in him to hold the insubstantial glass by its stem. He took a sip of Jesse’s wine, feeling the light warmth of it settle into his stomach. So many memories.

“This is lovely,” he said.

“Glad you like it. Had to make up somehow for my rudeness. Barging in like this with no invitation. And I don’t know what you would normally drink.”

“Water,” Billy said, and it made his guest laugh. “I would normally drink water. For budgetary reasons,” he added, so Jesse would not think he was a barbarian. “So, Grace. Her mom has a drug problem. As best I can figure, she had a couple of years in recovery and then fell off the wagon in a big way.”

“So who takes care of Grace?”

“We all do. Rayleen takes her to school, and Felipe picks her up and walks her home, and then she stays with me until Rayleen gets home from work, and then she’s with Rayleen all evening and all night.”

Billy thought he saw a slight change in his guest on that last sentence, a brief flicker in Jesse’s ever-present smile. Nothing worrisome. More as though a thought had pulled him briefly out of the conversation.

“Mrs. Hinman upstairs even makes clothes for Grace on her sewing machine,” Billy added.

Jesse reached up and loosened his tie slightly.

“That’s unusual,” he said.

“I suppose it is, in a place like this.”

“A place like what?”

“Well. You know.”

“Poor and run-down, you mean? No, I think it’s unusual anywhere. But maybe a little
less
so in a place like this. The people with the least to give always give the most. Haven’t you noticed that?”

“Hmm,” Billy said, because he did not want to admit that he hadn’t spent enough time around actual human beings to gather many observations.

Mr. Lafferty the Girl Cat sauntered into the room and rubbed against Jesse’s legs. Jesse reached down and scratched the cat behind her ears.

“So these are all you?” Jesse asked.

At first Billy had no idea what Jesse was referring to. Then he realized Jesse was looking at his photos.

“Oh. Yes. That. My past life.”

“What kind of dancing?”

“Oh, you name it. Classical. Tap. Modern. Jazz. Even some ballet.”

“What made you leave it all behind?” Before Billy could even answer, though, Jesse said, “No, sorry. Never mind. Too soon. That’s for about two bottles of wine down the road, isn’t it?”

“If not ten,” Billy said.

They sipped for a few moments in silence. In fact, it was so quiet that Billy was aware of the sound of Mr. Lafferty the Girl Cat’s purring. Meanwhile Billy dove down inside himself, chasing an elusive…something. There was something familiar about this. About Jesse, or drinking wine with Jesse, or the way he loosened his tie. Not that he thought he’d ever met Jesse before. It was not that kind of familiarity. But what kind was it? No matter how hard he chased it, it always managed to turn a corner and disappear, like the name of an actor that’s just at the tip of your tongue.

“So what’s the cat’s name?” Jesse asked, startling him.

Billy wondered if he’d jumped enough to expose his pathologically flimsy nerves.

He laughed. “I’m not sure you even want to know. First, before I tell you that, I have to tell you she’s really not my cat. She’s Grace’s cat. And Grace named her.”

“Ah. Got it. I promise to take that into account.”

“Mr. Lafferty the Girl Cat.”

“The whole thing?”

“Yes. The whole thing. It started out as just Mr. Lafferty. But then that got too confusing because there used to be a person by that name. So then she changed it to Mr. Lafferty the Cat.”

“And then she found out it wasn’t a boy cat.”

“Nice to know you’re following along.”

“Wait a sec. Isn’t Mr. Lafferty your neighbor who killed himself in my apartment upstairs?”

“The one and only. This used to be his cat.”

Jesse set down his wine glass and picked up the cat. He held her under her arms, looking right into her face. The cat dangled amiably, still purring.

“So. Mr. Lafferty the Girl Cat,” he said, addressing her earnestly. “I do believe you have a story to tell. Care to talk about it?” After a silence, Jesse held the cat snugly to his chest. “That reminds me,” he said, this time to Billy. “I wanted to invite you to come to my apartment for the smudging ceremony. We’re going to have a talk with whatever’s left over of this Mr. Lafferty. The person,” he added quickly, looking down at the cat. “See if we can’t make some kind of peace. The more neighbors who’re willing to come, the better. After all. You knew him. I didn’t. What was he like?”

“He was horrible. He was a bully. And a bigot. But he liked Grace a lot.”

“Good. I’ll see if I can get Grace to come. There should be somebody there who isn’t holding any hard feelings about him. I know you’re not big on going out, I get that—”

“I’ll come,” Billy said quickly. “I can do that.”

Billy looked down at his wine glass, and, to his surprise, saw there was barely a sip left. When had he drunk it? He hadn’t even been aware. But, now that he’d noticed it, he felt that old familiar feeling creep into his muscles. The warm tingling. It was just one glass of wine. But he had barely eaten. And he hadn’t had wine in more than a decade.

He sat still a moment, watching Jesse pet the cat, and chasing that feeling again. Something ancient yet familiar. But why did it keep evading him?

“Oh, you need a refill, neighbor,” Jesse said.

He leaned forward, and the cat jumped off his lap and up on to Billy’s. Jesse had to lean across Billy to some degree to fill his glass, which brought him closer. His blue-jeaned knee just barely brushed Billy’s dance pants. And he smelled good. Fresh. A scent that could have been a hint of cologne, or maybe just his laundry detergent, or it could have been the way Jesse smelled all on his own.

Billy swallowed hard and grabbed on to the feeling that had evaded him.

Of course. Of course.

Attraction of the heart. Nothing base, though. Not that crass, purely physical attraction, but rather one of those romantic admirations that make your heart swell painfully. The kind that make all the colors in the world suddenly brighter, and have you smiling at strangers, and sending wishes of joy to people you hadn’t noticed a moment before. Like love, only newer and less fully formed.

No wonder it took time to pin down. Now
that
was an ancient memory. No wonder he’d had a hard time recognizing it.

“There,” Jesse said, and sat back. He looked straight into Billy’s eyes. “Better.”

Billy glanced away and drank half the wine in one long gulp.

“I hate to have you thinking I came down here with any ulterior motives,” Jesse said, clearly changing the direction of events. “I really just want to get to know my neighbors. But, while I’m here, I
was
hoping to ask you a couple of questions about Rayleen. If that doesn’t seem too rude.”

A soft, wiggly line of pain etched its way down between Billy’s ribs and settled in a spot between his stomach and groin. He stared into his wine glass for a moment, then drained it in one more long gulp.

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