Read The Window Online

Authors: Jeanette Ingold

Tags: #Young Adult

The Window (12 page)

BOOK: The Window
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"It was and it wasn't," I finally answer. "It made everything different, but ... there wasn't much in my life really settled before, either."

Although, I remember, I'd had hopes that things might settle down.

I remember how, for the briefest time, Mom and I had thought maybe we were going to stop being just the lonely pair that we were.

It had taken Mom several weeks and a staggering phone bill to get the name of the place that had her adoption records. But, finally, she had an agency's name and address, and it wasn't all that far north of Baltimore, where we were living.

"They said I'd have to come in person with my questions," she said.

We went up together, catching an early morning Amtrak, and by eleven we were watching a woman examine all the identification papers Mom had brought with her. Finally the woman put them down and opened a folder.

"Actually, Karen," she said, talking to my mom, "this record of your adoption has never been sealed. Your mother left instructions to provide her name, should you ever request it."

And then she wrote several lines on a paper, which she handed, folded, to Mom. "Of course," she added, "you must understand that this address is quite old."

We were in the hall before Mom looked, her fingers trembling just a little bit, and a red spot on each cheek. I read with her, "Margaret G. McKenney," and an address in California.

Mom dithered all the way home about whether she should write or call. Then, when we got home and telephoned Information, she learned there wasn't any listing for McKenney, not at the address Mom had.

"It's a sign," Mom said. "I should write. The post office will forward a letter if she didn't move too long ago."

Mom spent three more afternoons composing the perfect letter, finally settling on one that began, "Dear Mrs. McKenney, We have never met, but I am the daughter who..."

And then she wouldn't mail it until she had good stationery to copy it on to. "I want her to like me," she said.

"Mom, the kind of paper you write on won't make any difference."

"Let's go buy some," she said.

Outside, bits of dust hung in the air and a low afternoon sun glistened golden red behind them. We got into the car and Mom swung into traffic, just as a delivery truck turned a corner going too fast.

When the truck slammed into us, my seat belt kept me from being thrown through the windshield, but my head still smashed into the dashboard.

Mom had just been pulling her seat belt on when the accident happened, and she was hurled through the windshield and crushed against a utility pole.

I become aware that Hannah is waiting for me to answer and I wonder how long I've been silent. I think back to what her question was.

"There's not much to tell," I say. "A delivery truck hit us. Mom died in the hospital several days later, and you know what happened to me."

I leave it at that. I've never really heard all the next part anyway, except that while I was starting to learn how to live without my sight, a child services worker was busy trying to figure out where to send me when I left rehab. She first tried to track down Margaret McKenney and learned she'd been dead a couple of years. Then she went to the adoption agency and from there backward to my uncles.

Sometimes I imagine the woman calling. I wonder how she asked, "Want to take in a blind teenager?"

But I suppose that's not fair. She must have worked hard to find me my family.

After Hannah goes home, Emma asks, "Want to go to the grocery store?"

When we're driving I say, "Aunt Emma, can I ask you another question?"

"Certainly."

"When you all found out about me ... When that child services woman asked if you wanted to help ... Did you and my uncles say yes right away, or did you have to talk it over?"

"We said yes, of course. You're family, Mandy."

"Without even talking it over?"

Aunt Emma laughs.

"I suppose we did spend an evening at the kitchen table. But the discussion started with your uncle Abe saying he'd make sure the stair railings were all safe. There was never any question what we wanted to do."

"Just because I was family?"

In a curious way I want her to say no. To tell me they wanted me for me, and not because they felt they had to take care of a relation.

Which is stupid, because how could they have wanted me for me when we'd never met?

But Aunt Emma must know what I'm thinking. She pats my leg. "Mandy," she says, "we'd want you if you didn't have a single drop of family blood."

And suddenly I feel the most awful longing for my mom, and I feel so sorry for her. All those moves after all those things, from religion to good health ... Maybe if she'd somehow known to move here, she'd have found what she really wanted.

I tell Aunt Emma, "I wish you'd taken my mother in."

"But Mandy," says Aunt Emma, "we didn't even know your mother existed. We never knew Gwen had a baby."

It makes me angry. "You could have known," I say. "Why didn't anybody go after Gwen?"

But I'm the one who knows the answer to that question. Abe and Gabriel were too young when Gwen left, and their mother threw Gwen's letter away.

One woman, and her meanness, spoiled Gwen's life and my mother's life.

"She could have put the envelope back together if she'd tried harder," I say.

"Who, Mandy?" asks Aunt Emma.

But I shake my head. It's too complicated.

Night comes. I open my window, pull the curtains around my shoulders, and call to Gwen.

I want to talk to Gwen, alone and signing the adoption papers that would cut her off from the last person she had a blood tie to. I want to thank her for letting me know what happened, tell her that her granddaughter is going to be OK.

A warm breeze wraps me in soft air, a breeze like the Chinook winds that blew the year Mom and I lived in Montana. I can't tell if I am wishing the words or hearing them, but a woman's voice says, "I'm glad, Mandy."

The breeze stirs, slowly lifting the lace curtains from my shoulders. They drift in front of me, hang still on the sill.

Chapter 16

I
T'S FIVE
more days until Christmas and I still haven't figured out gifts for Aunt Emma and my uncles. I want to be able to give them things
I've
chosen, so they'll really be gifts from
me,
but I also want to be sure the gifts are just right. Hannah has asked a couple more times if I want her help shopping, but I've told her no, I have Christmas under control. I wish.

At least I have presents for the girls at school. I take the wrapped boxes with me since it's the last day before vacation. We do our gift exchange at lunchtime.

Charla goes first, handing me a case with three colors of lip gloss. "They're all in your color family, Mandy," she says. "Just remember, the darkest is on the left and the lightest on the right."

I get a wood box with a croaking frog from Blakney, and Rosa has made ornaments for everyone. She tells me mine says, in gold glitter,
ROSA AND MANDY, FRIENDS FOREVER.

And they all say they like the writing paper I give them, which has a design worked around their first names. I did it on the computer with Ted's help, which was all right to take because he's an art student and I'm not, and I printed it on parchment-feeling paper that I bought specially.

The only sad thing about our gift exchange is that Hannah is absent.

I'm surprised she didn't call to tell me she wouldn't be in school because it's not like Hannah not to call. And she didn't say a thing yesterday about not feeling well.

"A crummy time to get sick," I tell Ted as we walk to the resource room.

He
uh-huhs,
like he's not exactly agreeing, or he's thinking something else altogether.

The phone rings not long after class starts, and a moment later Ms. Z. says the principal wants to see me.

"I'll walk Mandy over," Ted offers. "Mandy, you don't know which one the office door is, do you?" The way he asks it, I know he wants to go along.

"No," I say, "I'm not sure."

I have a sick feeling about the reason the principal has asked for me, a premonition, I guess, except ... Well, anyway, I'm right.

"Mandy," he asks right off, "do you know where Hannah Welsh is?"

"Isn't she home sick?" I ask, hoping mostly.

"No, her father found she was gone this morning, and he's been looking and calling since." The principal's voice is stern. "Mandy, her father believes that if she's run off, she's probably gone to a friend."

"No," I say with certainty. "If Hannah went to a friend, it would be to me. And I haven't seen her."

Even as worried as I am, I'm also surprised at what I've said, at what I've realized. I am Hannah's best friend.

Ted and I go back into the hall.

"Ted," I say, keeping my voice low but turning so he can see my mouth. "Hannah's pretty upset about her folks getting a divorce."

"I can imagine," he says. "My mother heard Hannah's mom just took off and left yesterday. For good. But that woman is such a ... Hannah will be better off without her."

"No! That's not true." I say it so loud someone calls, "Keep it down. We're testing in here."

"Sorry," I mumble to whoever it is.

I know that Hannah was upset about her folks separating, but it would never have occurred to her that one of them might want to get away from her, too. I try to think how she'd take it. I remember the talk we had, how she'd imagined ways to run off.

"Ted, we've got to find her before she disappears forever."

"You know where she's gone?"

"I think so."

We take off right after school lets out, after first calling our folks.

Nobody's home at Ted's house or mine, but we leave messages on the answering machines, so they won't worry.

We drive the highway in silence, except once Ted says, "That woman," and I know he's thinking about Hannah's mother.

I hear the traffic getting heavy as we get close to the city. I can feel Ted's concentration and guess he hasn't done a lot of this kind of driving. "There's a map in the glove compartment," he says.

I unfold it so that it's ready for him to look at when he gets a chance. "Turn it over," he says. "You've got it wrong side up."

"The bus station's got to be downtown," I shout. I don't want him trying to read my lips.

"We're almost there now. I'm pulling into a gas station."

And between the two of us, we get directions from a young-sounding guy who tries his hardest to act like he doesn't find anything unusual about us at all. "You're only a few blocks away," he says.

The traffic has gotten terrible, cars and trucks all around us. Once Ted jams on the brakes so hard they squeal.

There's no place to park near the depot, and I'm terrified we've arrived too late, that Hannah's already found a bus going someplace that sounds good, and that she's taken it.

"Ted, let me out, please."

He does, saying, "I'll come in as soon as I park."

Then I'm on the sidewalk, and horns are telling Ted to move on. I can't hear what he's shouting about where the depot door is.

Someone walks into my cane, knocking it clattering onto the pavement. It's put back into my hand, and a woman is saying, "Do you need help, Miss?"

And because Hannah needs help, I say, "Yes, please. Would you take me inside?"

We go through an entryway of rushing air into a station that's all echoing noise and smell, and the woman's suddenly eager not to get involved. She leaves me alone in the middle of hundreds of sounds and crowds of people.

For a moment I feel helpless, wish I'd waited for Ted. What good did I think I could do by myself? Even if Hannah's here, she can hide in my blindness.

A loudspeaker voice bounces off hard walls. "... to Amarillo, Albuquerque, Flagstaff, Phoenix, with connections to points south and west, now boarding in lane four."

Amarillo.
Albuquerque.
Hannah would like even the words. Flagstaff, Phoenix, they'd both sound good, too, and a desert away.

"Northbound passengers holding tickets to..."

That's it, I think, the loudspeaker. Maybe I can get them to put on an announcement for Hannah, say, "Will passenger Hannah Welsh please check in at the counter?"

But first I've got to find it myself.

I walk forward until my cane runs into someone's foot. "Please," I say, "would you show me which way the ticket counters are?"

Someone pushes from behind, and whoever I've asked doesn't answer.

I bump into a child. Hear a slap, a woman saying, "Can't you see she's blind?"

The noise is louder to my left, and I think that perhaps the counters are that way. I turn, run my cane out but not up, and bang my face into cold metal.

The loudspeaker blares again, "Final call for passengers to Albuquerque, Flagstaff, Phoenix." Its twanging threat echoes through the depot.

Is Hannah outside, waiting to board? Maybe already sitting on the bus?

I have to get to the counter, get someone to look for her quickly.

"Please," I say to whoever can hear. "Would someone please..."

BOOK: The Window
12.32Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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