Nothing But the Truth (35 page)

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Authors: Justina Chen

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction / People & Places - United States - Asian American, #Juvenile Fiction / Social Issues / General

BOOK: Nothing But the Truth
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The next morning, I was running a fever, and Dad had already run out the door.

Chapter Eight

N
o fair! Reb is totally faking it so she doesn’t have to help us unpack,” Reid grumbled as he propped the front door open for the movers with his foot while writing in his journal.

My head throbbed from all the commotion—the sound of heavy footsteps clomping on the marble floor and Reid grousing that it was a Sisyphean task to move our books from the boxes to the built-in bookshelves in the living room. Like a high-pitched violin above the cacophony, Mom voiced her wonder at the movers’ personal stories along with her orders about where every box should go: “What brought your dad from Samoa, Antonio? Box one-two-one.”

However much I wanted to nap, it was too mortifying to be tucked in my sleeping bag while the movers barged into my bedroom. So I nested in the living room, out of everyone’s way, and
shivered despite the comforter Mom had wrapped around my shoulders as if I were a little old lady.

The few times I ever got sick, I was powerless over my candy-colored visions of people I knew, moving in slow motion as they met their future. As soon as I was well, I would convince myself that I had only been dreaming the fever dream of the sick, that my memory of those dreams was faulty even if I worked to circumvent them. Like Shana in my dreams, slapped around by her college boyfriend when she was sixteen. Instead of telling her as much, I had casually suggested that the Bookster Babes do a community service project for abused women. Even though I didn’t know whether the slap ever happened or not—Shana never said—I could console myself that she would be armed and ready if her boyfriend’s hand contacted her cheek.

To take my mind off these uneasy inklings, I remodeled Mom’s garish bathroom in my imagination, first stripping out the ornate brass fixtures and replacing them with a sleek faucet. That done, I installed a crystal chandelier with extravagant loops of glass that would catch the light and twinkle in a thousand rainbows. There had to be a good store for recycled building materials nearby, what with all these old mansions around us….

My eyes drooped.

Old neighborhoods with brownstone buildings. Brownstone buildings in Manhattan, the kind Mom had hoped we would live in…

My dream drifted to Dad’s voice: “Bits, we need to talk.”

Mom’s breath caught as worry sprouted like invasive
morning glory, entwining every nerve, every terrible possibility. She asked, “What’s wrong? Is everything okay? Is it your mom? Is she okay?”

“No, no, nothing like that. Can you meet me in an hour? At the Starbucks near my office?”

“Is it your job?”

“No, we just need to talk. Can you come here?”

“Thom, I can’t drop everything while the movers are here. Reb’s sick. And I’ve got to get Reid from his friend’s. Remember, only you have a car.” There it was, her perennial accusation. Even sick, I could hear the constant chorus of her blame.

“Take the train. It goes direct from Newport.”

“Just tell me what we need to talk about.”

I wanted to wake up now. The sense of foreboding was so overpowering, I had to claw my way out of this dream, this now. I wanted to throw off my comforter, run to Mom’s room, tear the phone from her hands.

“Bits,” Dad said as though he had practiced this a billion times, “I’ve been seeing someone.”

“Oh, Thom,” Mom whispered, cell phone clutched to her ear. “What have you done?”

“We need to talk.”

“It’s Giselle, isn’t it?”

Pause. Then Dad, surprised: “Yes.”

“How could you?” Mom asked, her voice fracturing.

Only then did I pry my eyes open. Only then did I realize this was no fever dream but a vision I had seen and heard as if I were in my mother’s skin. A vision colliding with reality. A
vision unfolding into Now. Mom was racing up the stairs. Her face may have been hidden behind her hands, but nothing could stifle the raw and painful sobs that stole out of her.

“Mom… ” I whispered.

Somehow I got to my feet, head whirling, the marble floor freezing my feet swaddled in thick socks. Somehow I stumbled to the stairs, unconquerable as slick, sheer rock face. There was no way I could climb to the second floor. One of the movers looked at me and said, “I think your mom needs you.”

This perfect stranger held his arms out to me and waited in silent question.

I nodded.

He swung me into his arms and carried me upstairs to the dark-stained door, heavy and closed. Inside, I could hear the animal crying of a woman in pain.

“What should we do?” the man asked as he lowered me to my feet.

“I don’t know,” I said. I may have found my voice, but finding my balance was harder. I reached for the wall as my world tilted beneath me. “Maybe you should just go?”

Then I opened the door to find my mother collapsed on the floor. Instinct carried me to her, where I sank to my knees and cradled her in my arms, both of us surrounded by a wall of boxes filled with her hopes for our new life here.

Chapter Nine

T
his is what a girl does in crisis. When her world is shattering. When she is cut off from her friends back home because she doesn’t have a landline phone or an Internet connection (her dad didn’t think to add these functions before they moved). And the thick, stone walls block cell phone reception as effectively as they do her mother’s sobs.

This is what a girl does.

She goes outside to call the Bookster moms and leaves messages with each one. And because she is afraid to leave her mother alone for too long, she texts her own friends. Then, her boyfriend.

She ignores the barricade of boxes in the living room that need to be put away.

She listens to the eerie silence after her mom stops crying. The silence is worse than the crying.

She falls apart on her own.

Half an hour later, her mom’s friends haven’t called back. Or her own.

So she calls her grandfather, the one her father has ironically called unreliable. She leaves a garbled message. The words are unclear, but the intent is not:
SOS. Your daughter needs you.

Because he does not answer, she rings her grandmother, the one she hasn’t seen in two years, maybe three. She doesn’t leave a message, because what words can bridge the gap of silence between them?

And then, because she has no one else to call, she phones a neighbor.

A neighbor her mom bribed at Starbucks to be her friend. A neighbor she’s met three times.

A neighbor whose last name she’s forgotten or perhaps has yet to learn.

The neighbor flies into her house a mere five minutes later.

The neighbor takes one look at her and says,
Lie down, honey. I’ll take care of this
.

The neighbor sprints upstairs to her mom’s bedroom. And opens the door. And says, “Oh, Elizabeth.”

Elizabeth? Since when had her mom started going by her full name?

The girl asks herself what else about her parents doesn’t she know?

But then the neighbor tells her mom that Thom is a jerk. That all men lose their brains in their forties.

The neighbor says go meet him. Figure out what’s really happening.

The neighbor picks the place to meet—a private bar in a hotel not far from here.

The neighbor says,
You won’t know anyone there.

The neighbor says,
I’ll drive you there and wait in the parking lot. However long it takes.

The neighbor says,
Pull yourself together. You are strong. You must be strong for your kids.

The neighbor leads her mom downstairs and puts her cell phone in her hand. The neighbor says,
Call him.
The neighbor opens the front door.

The neighbor says,
Fight.

1
Brian Simmons, SUMaC Camp Counselor cum unofficial Stanford University tour guide.

2
Created by yours truly upon meeting Trevor Michaels, Stanford freshman cum budding word guru (like me!). Don’t worry, Mama, I’m not dating him. Yet.

3
Don’t worry, Mama, I lived with her, but I didn’t adopt her lifestyle. That much.

4
Jasmine wanted our Asian Mafia to pierce our belly buttons on the last day of math camp. But, you know, I don’t want to tamper with fate. Who knows what would happen to me if there’s a hole in my belly button!?!

Contents

Welcome

Dedication

Chapter 1: Belly-Button Grandmother

Chapter 2: Mama-ese

Chapter 3: The Truth About Banana Splits

Chapter 4: Tonic Soup

Chapter 5: Othering

Chapter 6: Nipping

Chapter 7: Changing

Chapter 8: Incomplete

Chapter 9: Potluck

Chapter 10: The Three Stooges

Chapter 11: Turbulence

Chapter 12: Amber-Colored Glasses

Chapter 13: The Gates of Math Hell

Chapter 14: Kung Fu Queen

Chapter 15: Hapa

Chapter 16: Truth Theorem

Chapter 17: Model Minority

Chapter 18: Equating

Chapter 19: Buildering

Chapter 20: Blundering

Chapter 21: Great Wall

Chapter 22: Color Theory

Chapter 23: Yellow Fever

Chapter 24: Lotus Shoes

Chapter 25: Walking Tall

Chapter 26: The Return of the Kung Fu Queen

Chapter 27: Feng Shui

Chapter 28: Remember When

Chapter 29: Unbinding

Chapter 30: Writer’s Block

Chapter 31: Wordstruck

Chapter 32: Math Redux

Chapter 33: Homeward Bound

Acknowledgments

About the Author

A Preview of
Return to Me

Copyright

Copyright

The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.

Copyright © 2006 by Justina Yi-Yen Headley

An Excerpt from
Return to Me
Copyright © 2006 by Justina Yi-Yen Headley

All rights reserved. In accordance with the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, the scanning, uploading, and electronic sharing of any part of this book without the permission of the publisher constitute unlawful piracy and theft of the author’s intellectual property. If you would like to use material from the book (other than for review purposes), prior written permission must be obtained by contacting the publisher at [email protected]. Thank you for your support of the author’s rights.

Little, Brown and Company

Hachette Book Group

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www.hachettebookgroup.com

First e-book edition: October 2012

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ISBN 978-0-316-23183-1

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