Chapter 12 #2
Drew’s deep, somber voice makes me glance up and I see he’s stopped directly in front of a small gravestone that lies close to the ground.
Slowly I approach, stopping just at his side, and I let my gaze settle on the words written across the stone:
Vanessa Adele Callahan
Born September 30th, 2007
Died November 27th, 2010
Forever in our hearts…
There’s a little picture of Vanessa in the upper right-hand corner. Her hair is dark like Drew’s; she has a big smile on her face and her blue eyes twinkle.
She was adorable.
I glance over at Drew and see him staring at her picture, his hands in his jacket’s pockets, his expression bleak. Full of sadness. I want to comfort him, want to draw him into my arms and whisper that everything’s going to be all right, but I don’t feel like it’s my place.
Plus, he needs to do this. He told me so on the drive over. He wanted a few moments where he did nothing else but look at her grave and think of her. Talk to her in his mind.
I agreed, because who am I to judge his grieving practices? We all mourn differently. Personally, I wouldn’t want to come out here, especially since his sister died at such a young age.
Curiosity creeps over me again and I try to ignore it. I really want to know how she died. I don’t know why it’s bothering me so much, but everyone in this family is so damn secretive about everything. This one little detail is major and I want to know.
I have to know.
A shuddering breath leaves Drew, and I can’t take it anymore.
Stepping closer to him, I grab hold of his arm and squeeze it, wanting him to know I’m there for him if he needs anything.
He hauls me in closer, his arm going around my shoulders, and the next thing I know, he’s embracing me, his face buried in my hair, his arms wound so tight around me I can hardly breathe.
But I let him hang on to me. He needs the comfort. I do, too.
“It’s my fault,” I hear him murmur against my hair. “I was watching her outside while my dad took a phone call. And then…then I left.”
A prickly sensation skitters down my spine and I try to keep myself relaxed so he doesn’t catch on that what he’s said disturbs me. Yet I want him to be open with me, not close himself off.
“It was an accident.” I have no idea whether this is true since no one’s told me, but it seems the right thing to say. “It wasn’t anyone’s fault.”
“No.” He sets me away from him, his blue eyes blazing as he stares down at me. His body vibrates with emotion and he runs a shaky hand through his hair. “Did Adele tell you what happened? Did she?”
“I—no.” I shake my head, gasping when he grasps me by the shoulders and gives me a little shake. “She didn’t tell me anything. Only that she died.”
He pushes me away, cursing under his breath, and I stumble, stunned that he would treat me that way. He’s walking away, his head down, his strides quick, and I follow him, confused and angry and suddenly wishing I’d never come with him to this horrible, depressing place.
“Where are you going?” I yell, huffing and puffing against the wind and the cold, pissed that his long legs give him such an advantage.
“I need to be alone.”
“Give me a break,” I mutter, increasing my speed. “You can’t avoid the bad shit forever, you know,” I tell him.
He whirls on me, his face contorted with so much conflicting emotion, it’s as if he’s a different person. “You don’t know me. I don’t avoid the bad shit. I fucking live it every single day of my life!”
I’m taken aback by his outburst, again with the show of emotion. Even though he’s taking all of his anger and turmoil out on me, this has to be good for him, right? “You don’t have to deal with it by yourself, you know. It’s okay to grieve and talk about her.”
“I grieve and it’s full of guilt. It’s my fault my baby sister got inside the pool area and drowned.
I was supposed to stay outside and watch her, but I—I didn’t.
I thought the gate was closed.” He thrusts both hands through his hair, clutching at the dark strands as he stares unseeingly at me. “It’s my fault and her fault.”
“Her fault? Do you mean Vanessa?” She was practically a baby! How could he say that?
“No, fuck, of course not. Her fault. God.” His voice catches on a sob and I realize tears are streaming down his cheeks.
Seeing them, seeing him so distressed, makes my heart ache, but I’m afraid to go to him.
Afraid he’ll only push me away and I can’t stand the thought of that.
Yet it hurts to watch him grieving alone, thinking this is somehow all his fault and whoever else’s.
I’m so confused. And honestly?
I’m afraid to ask.
“Tell me what happened,” I demand, deciding to be brave and face this head-on. “How did your sister die?”
Drew wipes furiously at his face, banishing the tears as we head back toward Vanessa’s gravesite. I give him a moment, sitting on a bench nearby. The tree branches above my head wave with the wind, and I shiver beneath my too-thin coat, watching him as he begins to pace directly in front of me.
“I was outside. Hanging out with my dad and enjoying the sun. That Thanksgiving break it was warmer than usual, and I was riding high after doing so well during my first year on the team.” His voice trails off and he looks lost in thought.
“Adele had been gone most of the day, shopping for Christmas presents. She asked my dad to watch Vanessa and we were playing with her. She’d run back and forth across the back patio, giggling nonstop.
It took her awhile to warm up to me, you know?
Because I wasn’t home much, but I always got her to come around. ”
I say nothing, letting him take his time to tell this story. He needs to get it out, no matter how painful it must be for him to relive the day. I’d rather comfort him and tell him we’ll talk about it another time, but when?
“My dad got a phone call. He’d been working on a big merger that had taken him months to put together and he had to take the call.
He told me I needed to watch Vanessa, never let her out of my sight, and of course I said I would.
” He releases a shuddering sigh and closes his eyes.
“She played hide-and-go-seek with me and we were laughing, I was teasing her. I knew my dad wasn’t too far off—I could hear him talking on the phone.
“Adele was suddenly at the door and she asked me…she asked me to come inside with her. I told her I couldn’t, that I had to watch Vanessa, but she convinced me Vanessa would be fine.
My dad was right there. And he was, I swear he was.
So I went in and…and Vanessa somehow got inside the gated area that surrounds the pool and she fell in.
Turns out my dad had walked to the front of the house, but I didn’t know it then.
He didn’t realize I’d left Vanessa alone.
I thought he had her and he thought I had her… ”
Drew falls apart. Literally crumples to the ground on his knees in front of his sister’s grave, his shoulders heaving as he hunches over the gravestone as if in prayer. “I’m sorry. I fucked up and I’m so goddamned sorry.”
I go to him. Get down on my knees and wrap my arms around him as best I can.
He turns to me, slinging his arms around my neck and pressing his face against my chest. I can feel the dampness of his tears against my skin and I stroke his head, my fingers tangling in his hair as I try my best to soothe him.
We sit like that for several long, silent minutes, his body trembling with emotion as he quietly cries against me.
I let him, feel the tears and the sadness well up inside of me, too, and I cry with him.
Silent tears that purge me, connecting me to Drew as I feel his raw, all-encompassing grief and pain.
This isn’t all that plagues him, I know. I can sense there’s more, much more, and he’s holding back for fear I might freak out. Or worse, think less of him.
It has to do with Adele. And I think I know what it is.
I’m just not ready to face it yet.