Authors: C. K. Kelly Martin
Tags: #Canada, #Divorce & Separation, #Divorce, #Fiction, #Interpersonal Relations, #General, #People & Places, #Dating & Sex, #Health & Fitness, #Emotional Problems of Teenagers, #Realistic fiction, #Schools, #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Love & Romance, #Teenage pregnancy, #Canadian, #School & Education, #Family & Relationships, #Marriage & Divorce, #First person narratives, #love, #Family, #Emotional Problems, #Sex, #Pregnancy & Childbirth, #Teenage fiction, #High schools, #Pregnancy
How many times can one person break your heart?
I look like a snowman by the time I get home. My socks are wet, my toes are frozen, and my teeth hurt, but I don’t care. I could take off my clothes and lie down naked in the backyard all night and I wouldn’t feel much different than I do right now.
The icicle lights are still on, but inside, the house is dark. I can’t remember what Mom and Holland are doing tonight, but I hope they’ll be gone a long time because I don’t think I can pretend I’m okay. At the very least I need an explanation for my presence, but I can’t think. My brain is stuck on Sasha in that burgundy skirt, staring at
How the Grinch Stole Christmas!
I pull off my shoes and socks and tell myself what to do.
Change your clothes, you’re cold. Get some food, you haven’t eaten.
It’s like I’m on autopilot, like I’m sleepwalking. I change into sweatpants and throw two Jamaican beef patties in the microwave. I eat half of the first one in the kitchen, but it sounds like a cemetery in there so I stretch out on the living room couch and turn on the TV. There’s a lot of Christmas stuff on—
The Nightmare Before Christmas, Elf, A Christmas Story, The Santa Clause
—but I’m not exactly in a festive mood so I keep flipping until I land on
Minority Report.
I’ve already seen it twice, but it’s good so I stay with it.
The year is 2054 and Tom Cruise is being framed for murder. He keeps saying, “Everybody runs.” It’s the best line in the movie.
Everybody runs.
It’s inevitable. Sometimes there’s only one thing to do. I wish that’s how it was with Sasha and me because I don’t know what I’ll say to her in two days. See, I don’t think I want her to go through with it. I’m like that asshole I told you about, the guy that convinced his girlfriend to have an abortion. I just want it to be over with and I want Sasha to want the same thing so I don’t have to feel bad about it. But this is Sasha we’re talking about. I don’t want her to hate me again. Maybe that’s the most important thing. I’m not sure.
Anyway, Tom Cruise is on the run with that precog girl he kidnapped. She’s the most fragile person you’ve ever seen—pale skin and huge eyes. I’m seeing her and I’m not seeing her because the whole mess with Sasha is squirming around in my head. Then next thing I know, I’m blinking up at Holland. Her mostly pink bangs are back in barrettes and she stares down at me and says, “What’re you doing here?”
I catch a glimpse of the TV and notice
Family Guy
is on. I’m not fully awake yet and part of me knows that I don’t want to be. “I came back,” I mumble.
“Obviously. Did you have a fight with them or something?”
“No, I…” I struggle into a seated position and notice that Holland’s wearing her coat. She must’ve heard the TV and headed straight for it.
Mom steps into the living room behind her and says, “Nicholas, honey, what are you doing home?” She sounds soft and worried, but I’m not ready to lay the truth on her. She won’t sound that way when she hears it; she’ll sound more disappointed than ever.
“I don’t want to talk about it now, okay?” I flip weary glances at Holland and Mom. “I’m gonna be home for Christmas. I hope that’s all right.”
“Of course it’s all right.” Mom’s still in her coat too. She hardly ever wears high heels anymore, but she’s wearing them now. Blush and eye shadow even. “Is this about
her
?”
I shake my head. I think I’m pouting and maybe that’s a good thing. Maybe they’ll lay off me for a while if I keep it up. “Mom, I really don’t want to talk about it right now. Everything’s okay. I’m just gonna be here for the holidays. I might see Dad in a few days.”
I can tell I’ve totally confused them. It would’ve been smarter to let them believe this was about Bridgette or Dad, but I don’t have the energy to lie like that. I squint at the empty plate on the coffee table. I must’ve eaten the second Jamaican patty too, but I can’t remember doing it. I remember Sasha in that burgundy skirt. She’s pregnant. My kid. I already know the second test will be positive.
I should check my IM, but I can’t get away. Holland and Mom have me cornered. “So where have you guys been?” I ask, rubbing my eyes and milking the little boy lost look for whatever it can get me.
“Church.” Holland sits on the arm of the couch. “Then Christine’s.”
Christine is one of Mom’s old library pals. She got divorced a year before Mom did and then married a guy who grooms pets. He offered us a lifetime of free pet grooming, should we ever decide to “take the plunge and buy a furry friend.”
“Barry and Christine asked about you.” Mom unbuttons her coat, slides it off, and folds it over her arm. “He’s a big hockey fan, you remember?”
I don’t remember, but I nod anyway.
“They bought a macaw for Christmas,” Holland adds. “It speaks German.”
“German?” I repeat.
“Wer sind Sie?”
Holland offers, gazing at the ceiling like she’s trying to remember more.
“Bitte bringen Sie Erbsen.”
That’s just like Holland. She probably even knows what it means. “Who are you?” she translates. “Please bring peas.” See what I mean.
I glance over at Mom. “So now she speaks German.”
“Nein,”
Holland says. “Just ‘who are you’ and ‘please bring peas.’”
“The two most important phrases in the German language,” I joke.
Holland smiles and I can’t believe I made a joke. It must be that voice in the back of my head again—the one that told me to change my clothes and eat something. Maybe it means things will be okay. Maybe you can make it through your whole life feeling like shit, as long as you have that voice taking care of you. I glance from Holland to my mom and back to Holland. It’s like they’re scared to move, afraid to leave me alone in the living room with my secret. They’re my little support group, only I don’t want to talk to them.
“I can barely keep my eyes open,” I tell them. “I think I’ll go to bed.”
“We were about to make hot chocolate,” Mom says, her eyes lighting up. “You love hot chocolate.”
And she’s right, normally I do. Hot chocolate with shortbread cookies is a Christmas Eve tradition. Six years ago Holland and I snuck downstairs in the middle of the night and finished off half the shortbread cookies while diving under the tree and searching out our presents. We weren’t going to open them. We just wanted to examine their shapes and test their weights. Then Holland lost her balance and landed full force on one of her own presents, instantly flattening it. Something snapped inside and Holland’s eyes popped out of her face like she was being squeezed. Man, she looked funny, but I didn’t laugh.
“We’ll hide the evidence,” I suggested. “Maybe they won’t notice it’s missing.”
And you know, it actually worked. We unwrapped it and it was one of those paint by number sets, the little brush snapped in two but the miniature paints miraculously intact. A few days later we managed to smuggle the numbered landscape into the garbage. It was from some great-uncle and not something a kid would normally be interested in painting, but I think Holland used the paints during her angels and castles phase.
“Okay,” I say. “I guess I’ll have some hot chocolate first.”
The three of us sit in the kitchen sipping hot chocolate. It feels like we’ll never be done and the moment we are, I trudge up to my room and check my e-mail and IM. There are four new messages, but none of them are from Sasha. I told her to IM me because I thought it might be good for her. Now I realize it’s what I need too. We’re connected, her and me and what’s happening inside her. I’m more connected than I’ve ever been to anything in my whole life, but I’ve never felt more alone.
thirteen
Holland wakes me
up at 9:48 the next morning. Nothing registers at first. I’m plain old Nick scowling at Holland for waking me up so early. Holland’s bangs are hanging in her eyes and she’s wearing one of her many black T-shirts. This one says
Angry Young Girl
on the front and has a pink cartoon face with squiggly long hair on the back. The face is baring its teeth in an angry young frown.
“We’re about to do presents,” Holland says, watching me struggle towards consciousness.
I’d like to stay in that moment where I don’t remember anything, but sure enough it all rushes back to me as I look at Holland.
What happened, Nick? We had that talk.
I sit up in bed. It’s one of many things I have to do while I’m waiting for tomorrow. I have a whole Christmas Day to get through.
“So what really happened yesterday?” Holland asks. “I won’t say anything to Mom, I swear.” She folds her arms in front of her angry declaration. “It was them, wasn’t it?”
“Holland, it’s Christmas,” I rasp. My voice box has accumulated a hundred years of dust overnight. “I don’t want to think about this shit. Go downstairs and wait for me. I’ll be down in a second.”
Holland cocks her head and stares at me. I know this look. She’s trying to decide if she should keep pushing. Well, push away, Holland. It won’t get you anywhere.
“Fine,” she says, and turns on her heel.
I jump in the shower, change into my clothes, and set a course for the Christmas tree. Mom and Holland are sitting on the couch, waiting for me. “Merry Christmas,” Mom says. I go over and kiss her on the cheek. She smells like the perfume Holland and I gave her for her birthday.
“Merry Christmas,” I tell both of them. It sounds okay, I think. It only feels wrong.
“Merry Christmas,” Holland says. “Are you playing Santa Claus?”
“You can do that.” I motion towards her.
“I did it last year. It’s your turn.”
So why ask? Shit. But Mom looks genuinely happy and I don’t want to mess with that if I can help it. I root around under the tree and pull out present after present, reading the tags and passing them on.
Afterwards Mom makes blueberry pancakes, another Severson family Christmas tradition. It’s funny, Dad doesn’t do any of the stuff we used to, but Mom’s kept it all up. Maybe that’s why she normally looks so unhappy over the holidays. She hasn’t moved on. Maybe I’m wrong about that, though, because her smile looks real today, unlike mine.
“I’m glad you’re here for Christmas this year,” she says as I load the dishwasher. “But are you going to tell me what happened with your father yesterday?”
“Who says anything happened with him?”
“Nicholas.” Mom stands with one hand on the counter and watches me, but I don’t stop loading. “There’s obviously a problem here and I’d like to know what it is.”
The phone rings just then and we both step towards it, but Mom gets there first. She frowns at the voice on the other end of the line and says, “Yes, he is, Cole, but he won’t tell me a thing. Maybe you can fill me in on what happened last night.” She holds the phone tight to her ear and my stomach sinks. This isn’t the way I want things to go. Not on Christmas. Not before I’ve seen Sasha again.
“Let me talk to him,” I say. I can hear Dad’s voice, but I can’t make out what he’s saying. “Mom, give me the phone.”
“Well, at least he’ll confide in you,” she says, glowering at me as she continues speaking to Dad. “I still haven’t heard a word about it. I came home last night and found him asleep on the sofa.”
Mom hands over the phone, which I promptly put on hold. I rush upstairs, pick up the phone in my room, and yell for Mom to hang up.
“You haven’t told your mother yet,” Dad says, sounding tenser than he did last night.
“Not yet. Sasha and I want to get some things settled first.”
“And how’d it go last night?”
“We didn’t have long,” I explain. “Her family was going to church. I’m going to meet her again tomorrow.”
“And her family? What do they say?” Dad exhales heavily.
“They don’t know yet either.”
“Nick, I know you just found out, but don’t wait too long on this. Her parents could be some help.” A single note of laughter shoots out of my mouth and slides under Dad’s words. “They seem like good people,” he continues.
“Yeah, I know.” I’ve had as much of this as I can take. He can’t help me. He doesn’t know how. “So how was Christmas Eve? You guys got back okay?”
“Fine. Nicholas, look, I want to hear from you again soon. I know it’s early, but there are different options that could be set in motion.”
“I know.” I don’t mean to say more; it just slips out. “Maybe she won’t have it.”
“That could be the best thing, but this is her decision, you realize,” Dad says cautiously.
I do realize, but I don’t want her to ruin both our lives. Sasha’s got more plans than I do; you’d think she’d want to keep them.
Dad and I don’t talk for long. He tells me he’s glad I trusted him enough to tell him. I don’t point out that it was an act of desperation. I thank him for calling and promise to get in touch with him in a few days.
There’re a few hours before Aunt Deirdre and Co. show up and I spend most of them in my room. My Christmas gifts are piled at the foot of my bed—new shoulder pads, a waterproof clock radio for the shower, gift certificates for clothes, a collection of CDs and DVDs, and a Magic 8 Ball. The Magic 8 Ball is from Holland and I swoop down and pick it up. I don’t even know if you’re supposed to ask the questions out loud or what. It’s a stupid ball, after all.
Is Sasha pregnant?
Magic 8 Ball:
Better not tell you now.
Will she have the baby?
Magic 8 Ball:
Concentrate and ask again.
I drop the Magic 8 Ball on my bed, disgusted with myself. Next thing you know, I’ll be phoning a psychic line that charges by the second. Still, I retrieve the ball and try to focus. The Magic 8 Ball says:
Signs point to yes.
I give it another shake and read the next reply:
As I see it yes.
I keep flipping it over, waiting for a message I can live with.
Yes definitely.
It is decidedly so.
Outlook not so good.
Really? I have no idea what that’s supposed to mean. I balance the Magic 8 Ball on top of the DVDs and stand in the middle of the room. I need to get out of the house and do something. I’m not up to the turkey dinner with my cousins. Mom always forces me and Holland to hang out with Simon because he’s fifteen, right in between our ages. She thinks that automatically means we have something in common, but I don’t understand half the stuff he says. He speaks fluent computer-geek. It’s not my language on a good day.