Read The Shortest Way Home Online
Authors: Juliette Fay
The final e-mail was from someone named Lorianna offering enhancement products that Sean was pretty sure weren’t based on medical science. He chuckled.
My first spam.
He sent a message to Yasmin Chaudhry, saying that although he’d love to work with her again, his family needed him, and it just wasn’t in the cards right now. He found himself telling her about his school nurse work, his experience with Amber and how familiar it had seemed.
She’s not the kind of refugee you and I are used to, but she’s a refugee all the same. I’m thinking I’ll look into Emergency Department positions, maybe in Boston, where my language skills would be useful. Even if I end up as a school nurse, there’s good work to do anywhere.
He asked if there might be an opportunity for short-term stints at her clinic—a week or so—and whether he could bring some nonmedical volunteers with him.
Then he picked up the phone and dialed. “Hey,” he said, “I’m calling first.”
“How’s your energy?” Rebecca asked drily.
“Stable as the Rock of Gibraltar.”
* * *
W
hen she opened the door her face was composed, but he could tell she was wary, her sensors scanning him for hidden pockets of irrational anger.
He held out his peace offering, a doormat. “For your new-old house.” He pointed to the pumpkin-colored sun printed on the brown fibers. “When you use it, you’ll be . . .” he prompted.
She thought for a minute. “Walking on sunshine?”
He smiled, gratified that she got the joke. She pursed her lips, but a hint of a reciprocal smile broke through anyway. She let him in.
In daylight, and without the toxic veil of his guilt and anger, he could appreciate what she’d accomplished with the room. The soothing cream-colored walls were the perfect canvas for the warm wood and jewel tones of the furniture. It was a room you could sit in all day long and never wish for something better. “Wow,” he said appreciatively.
“Yeah, I’m pretty happy with it.”
“Sorry I didn’t notice it the other night when I was here.”
She crossed her arms. “You weren’t in a particularly noticing mood.”
“I was pretty busy,” he said. “Being a jackass takes a lot of focus.”
She let out a little chuckle of agreement and sat down on the couch, which he took as permission to do the same. “I’m really sorry,” he said. “A whole ocean of sorry for the way I acted.”
She nodded, accepting it, and the simple gesture sent a warm wave of relief through him.
“There’s no excuse,” he went on, “but here’s why.” He told her about how Barb had cornered him about raising Kevin, and his guilt rising to new heights, and how crazy it had made him feel. “So of course, I came here because you always make me feel better about everything, and I ended up taking it out on you.” He grinned at her. “And you
threw me
out
!”
“You were awful!”
“Okay, well, let me ask you this: have you ever done that before—shown someone the door like that?”
“Wait a minute,” she warned. “If you’re making some point about how you
once again
taught me to stand up for myself—”
“No! I wasn’t teaching you anything other than what a jerk I can be. But I have to tell you, it was kind of . . . I don’t know, impressive. Like we must be pretty solid if you’re comfortable enough to chuck me when I’m being an idiot.”
She gazed at him, contemplating their solidity, and he could see the pain behind her eyes. “I’m not going to Haiti,” he said. “I’m staying here.”
Her face went wide with disbelief. “Sean, you can’t give up the one thing that makes you really happy. It’ll crush us. It’ll crush everything.”
“My God, Rebecca, do you think that’s the only thing that makes me happy? You make me
crazy
happy. Kevin, for all his little quirks, makes me unbelievably happy. I’d be miserable so far away from you two. I’m just sorry it took me so long to get that.”
Rebecca watched him intently as he spoke, slowly absorbing the here-ness of him.
“There’s something else,” he said. “I’ve been thinking about what you said about getting tested, and I’m going to look into it. I think I’m ready to know.”
She was still for a moment. Then she launched herself into his arms, hugging him so tightly he could barely take a full breath. He held her and stroked her hair, still a little surprised by how much he could affect her. He was used to saving people’s lives, but he still wasn’t entirely accustomed to making this kind of personal impact. He would have to get used to that, he told himself, now that he no longer lived on the edges of the world, but right in the heart of it.
Juliette Fay’s previous novel is also available from Penguin.
Read on for the first chapter of
ISBN
978-0-14-311851-0
CHAPTER 1
I
n jeans that fit four pounds ago but now squeezed her in a mildly intrusive manner, Dana stood at her kitchen counter pinching foil over a tray of lasagna and waiting on hold, the phone wedged against her shoulder. Her gaze skimmed the obituaries in the local paper, but Dermott McPherson’s name did not appear—not this time anyway. Mr. McPherson was the reason she’d made the lasagna, though it wasn’t actually for him. He probably wasn’t eating much. It was for his family, who were understandably distraught over their loved one’s terminal illness. Dana didn’t know them. She belonged to Comfort Food, a group who cooked for families in crisis.
When it was her turn, Dana prepared meals that would, she hoped, sustain them as hands were held and medication dispensed, bedding changed and phone calls placed. She often thought of her own mother’s quick descent into a gray, fetid-smelling infirmity, with lungs that seemed to shrivel almost visibly. Dana would have appreciated a well-made meal. Nothing fancy, just something better than rubbery pizza and half-flat soda. A small connection to a world outside the thick humidity of death.
Her father’s exit had been swift and clean by comparison. There’d been no hospital stays or grieving friends, or even a casket to choose. But Dana didn’t like to think about that.
“Cotters Rock Dental Center,” said a voice in her ear. “May I—”
Startled from her somber reverie, Dana flinched, and the phone clattered to the floor. She grabbed it up quickly. “Kendra, I’m so sorry! I hope that didn’t make an awful noise in your ear.”
“That’s all right,” said the receptionist.
“I’m so embarrassed. I really apologize.”
“I’m fine. May I help you?”
“This is Dana Stellgarten. Morgan and Grady’s mom? I need to make appointments for their checkups, if that’s okay.”
Out in the mudroom, there was a squeak of the door and the thud of a backpack dropping onto the tiles. “Excuse me for just a minute, please,” Dana murmured into the phone, then covered the mouthpiece with her palm. “Morgan?” she called.
“Yeah.”
“I thought you were going to Darby’s.”
“Well, now I’m not.” Morgan appeared in the kitchen and opened the refrigerator door. She stood staring in, as if there were some movie playing that only preteens could see, in among the condiments and containers of yogurt.
“I’m so sorry, I’ll have to call back,” Dana said into the phone. She focused on her daughter, backlit by the refrigerator light. “The plans changed?” she asked.
“Darby didn’t
feel
well
.”
Morgan’s fingers twitched abruptly into little quote marks.
“Did you reschedule for another day?”
Morgan twisted toward her mother. “No, Mom, we didn’t
reschedule
. It’s just hanging out. You don’t reschedule hanging out.”
“You seem . . . Are you angry with Darby?”
Morgan closed the refrigerator door with a thump. “I don’t
get
to be angry. She didn’t do anything wrong.”
“How did she tell you?” Now that Morgan was in sixth grade, Dana had learned it wasn’t
what
girls said to each other anymore. All the real information came from
how
they said it.
Morgan slumped into a kitchen chair, picked up a napkin, and twisted it into the shape and density of a swizzle stick. “She was standing with Kimmi, and I was like, ‘Hey, I’ll meet you after last period.’ And she looked at Kimmi.”
This was bad, Dana knew. Their eyes were their weapons now. “She looked at her?”
“Yeah. And she was like, ‘Oh, yeah, um, I don’t feel good. I think I should go home.’ So I said, ‘Are you sick?’ Then she looked at Kimmi
again
and said, ‘I’m fine. I just need some downtime.’ ”
She would rather be alone than with Morgan?
thought Dana. A wave of protective anger swept over her, but she didn’t show it, knowing that it would confirm Morgan’s suspicions and make her feel even worse. Dana herself often needed to cling to the slim chance that things weren’t quite as disheartening as they seemed. “Honey, maybe she’s just overscheduled,” she offered.
“We’re not preschoolers, Mom.” Morgan rose and went up to her room. Dana let her alone. She knew that Morgan would open a textbook and curl over the page, narrowing her focus until all that existed in the world were Figure A and Subsection B.
* * *
“I
’m taking Grady to practice!” Dana called up to Morgan a little while later. She loaded Grady and all his gear into the minivan and made a detour to drop off the lasagna, Caesar salad, Italian bread, and brownies at the McPhersons’ house.
“Ca’ I shay inna car?” asked seven-year-old Grady, sucking on his mouth guard.
“What?” Dana struggled to pick up all the containers of food. “I could use some help here.”
He yanked out the mouth guard. “I don’t wanna go to the door with you. It’s all, like,
sad
in there. And if a kid answers, he’s gonna hate me because
my
dad’s not sick and
I
don’t have to wait for some lady to dump off my dinner.”
Dana sighed and went to the door. No one answered. She placed the food on the front step in the cooler labeled
COMFORT FOOD
and went back to the car. As she was pulling away, a woman in jeans and a T-shirt came out with a toddler on her hip, glanced down at the cooler and then out toward the street. For a brief moment, she met Dana’s eyes and raised a hand in thanks. Dana waved back.
So young . . .
she thought as she drove away.
* * *
D
ana tried to attend as many of Grady’s football practices as she could. The coach scared her. He yelled at the unruly posse of second-graders as if they were candidates for the Navy SEALS. Dana wasn’t used to this. Until football, Grady had been coached mostly by weary fathers who sped down Interstate 84 removing their ties as they drove, trying to get to practice on time. They had no interest in yelling at other people’s children—they yelled enough at their own. They just wanted the kids to learn a few skills, have fun, and avoid bloodying each other.
Coach Roburtin—Coach Ro, as the kids called him—espoused a less limited philosophy. Football practice doubled as his own workout, and he charged around the field running laps with the boys and doing push-ups. He slapped the tops of their helmets when they weren’t listening, their little heads bobbing into their shoulder pads, a sight that made Dana’s own neck hurt. She’d heard he was unmarried and childless, had grown up in town and played football for Cotters Rock High. He was now a car salesman in nearby Manchester.
“Stelly! Where’s Stelly? Get your butt over here, son! Did you come to play or knit mittens?”
“Mitten knitting” was a catchall phrase for Coach Ro, indicating anything that wasn’t football. A boy ran over, his bright blue T-shirt dangling down from under his practice jersey. That was Grady’s shirt, Dana was sure of it. Coach Ro was so busy roaring at the boys he hadn’t learned their names! Maybe Coach Ro had had his
own
helmet thumped a few too many times. Then it occurred to her—Stelly was short for Stellgarten.
“All RIGHT, now.” He grabbed Grady’s face mask and positioned him next to the quarterback. “Timmy’s gonna take the snap. And he’s gonna hand it off to YOU, and you are NOT going to drop it. You are going to run like your PANTS are on fire to the end zone! You with me?” Grady’s helmet bobbed up and down. “Lemmehearyousay YES!” bawled the coach.
“YES!” came Grady’s high-pitched howl.
Then the play was in motion, and the disorderly gaggle of youngsters suddenly transformed into two focused, goal-driven teams. For about six seconds. And then Grady’s blockers seemed to forget they had anything else to do but ram their friends or straggle toward their water bottles. The opposing team swarmed toward Grady, who’d been running back toward his own team’s goal line. One boy yanked at his practice jersey, pulling him down from behind. Then boys from both teams began leaping on top of them until there was a pile of bodies about three feet high. With Grady at the bottom. Dana let out a panicked, “Oh, my God!”
“Get up, you baboons! Get off him!” boomed Coach Ro, grabbing players by their shoulder pads and heaving them to the side. “Stelly, you okay? You’re fine, right?”
Dana began to rush toward Grady but got only a step or two before a hand grasped her forearm. “You
know
you can’t go to him,” said the voice behind her. Dana turned to see Amy Koljian, Timmy the quarterback’s mother. “Coach will wave you over if it’s bad,” Amy said with a knowing nod.
“But he could be hurt!” Easy for Amy to be calm. Her son was now sitting off to the side, chewing on his mouth guard like he hadn’t been fed in a week.
“No parents on the field unless Coach says,” Amy chided. “Grady’ll be embarrassed if you go.”
“Coach says?” said Dana. “Coach doesn’t even know his first name!”
Amy motioned toward them. “See?” she said smugly. “He’s fine.” Grady was sitting up now, air heaving in and out of his little body. Dana willed him to look at her, to assure him of her presence. His helmet turned in her direction, and then he slowly got up. Coach thumped him on the shoulder. “All right, you knuckleheads, what the heck was THAT?” he yelled.