Chapter 10 #2

There’s a clenching in my chest, that stupid nostalgia that makes me miss something I hated at the time. It just feels very

cruel suddenly, how time races by but gets snagged in the branches, keeping little bits of us in places we don’t want to be.

And it’s cruel too, even crueler actually, how friendships can seem so strong, so sturdy, and then one person can defect just

like that and reveal how shaky the foundation is, how the concrete has all these cracks. Maybe it’s not even concrete at all.

Maybe it’s sandstone or just mud, caked dry by a drought, ready to return to mush the moment a storm strikes.

Hal and Tara text me, assuring me that they’re still 110 percent in on the Anti-Marriage Pact, that we always knew Jenni was

the weakest link, that it doesn’t change anything.

But that’s a lie. It changes everything.

I pass by Mr. Hubert’s green-shuttered house, where I used to go for piano lessons.

I hated those piano lessons so much, but my mom still made me go for two whole years because she wanted me to be the docile, domestic, piano-playing daughter of her dreams. She never heard me, she never saw me, and she still doesn’t now.

My body seizes up even more. I have to sit down in the snowbank and feel the ice burn my bare hands just to prove I can still feel anything.

I just want to hug our old family dog, Melon. She’s been gone for many years now, but I can still picture her so clearly,

too clearly, on this cul-de-sac where I always walked her. She never liked the leash and I loved that about her. I’d let her

run free, take the heat from crabby Mrs. Benson next door, who took her lack of orgasms out on everyone else, or at least

that was the story I crafted back then, the story I repeat to myself now.

Taking out my phone, I scroll for a moment to numb the numbness. Chris answers the phone before I realize I’ve called him.

“Emily Jane,” he says, voice warm like an old sweater, tucked in a bottom drawer because it’s not fashionable enough to be

seen in but you can’t bear to donate it. “Merry Christmas Eve.”

“Merry Christmas Eve,” I hear myself echo.

There’s laughing and hollering in the background. It sounds like people are playing a game or something. The sounds revive

me somehow. I have an absurd desire to be there with Chris’s family, around a fire, drinking hot cider. It doesn’t even have

to be spiked.

I just have this vision of cracking up over the stupidest things or maybe nothing at all. The vision dissipates as quickly

as it came, but something about it lingers in my legs and helps me stand back up and continue walking.

“I was just missing Arnie.” I hate how weak I sound admitting to missing anything.

“He misses you too,” Chris says. “You’ll have to come by and see us in the New Year.”

“Yeah, sounds good,” I say. “If my jam-packed calendar allows for it.”

Chris seems to pick up on the sarcasm, which shows how far we’ve come, or at least how far he’s come, this past year. He’s really started to appreciate the full range of my humor and break out of his accountant box.

I ask him if Olivia is there and he says no, that she’s with her family down in Florida. This cheers me up a bit—not that

I actually care. It’s just kind of a game at this point, trying to stir up trouble because I like the constant churn of swirling

motion.

“Give her my best,” I say and he says he’ll do that. I have a feeling he means it too, which makes me feel good picturing

him telling her about how we had this intimate phone call on Christmas Eve, which is pretty much the most romantic of all

days because there’s none of the letdown of Christmas itself. But then it makes me feel a bit sad actually, that Olivia might

freak out at Chris for no reason, just because I called him and he picked up. So I tell him that he actually doesn’t have

to mention anything. But he still says that he will.

I guess I respect his integrity, but I’m also annoyed that this means he still doesn’t think he has to hide me.

Chris says he should probably get back to his family; they’re in the middle of a game of Balderdash. “They’re very competitive

about it,” he whispers, like he’s confiding in me.

“Right.” I hang up first, shuffling down the street back to my parents’ house, back to the TV room that everyone has migrated

to, back to my dad yelling at the screen, waving his hands this way and that.

I don’t say much, just watch my sister and her husband sit on opposite sides of the couch, not even touching. They act like

friends, not lovers. It makes me feel sorry for them but also oddly sorry for myself. Then I start watching my mom and dad,

which makes me feel sorry for everyone.

I rifle through the presents under the tree and count how many are for me.

It’s one of my only traditions that’s worth keeping.

I always like presents best before I unwrap them, when I can still imagine them as whatever I want to.

Before the disappointment of their underwhelming reality pops the iridescent membranes of hope, swelling then stinging like bubbles of soap.

My phone buzzes and I expect it to be more about Jenni’s betrayal, but it’s Chris. He’s texted a photo of Arnie wearing a

pair of reindeer antlers and grinning at the camera like a total goon. I stare down at the photo for a long time, and my sister

asks who I’m texting and why I’m smiling.

“What’s with the interrogation?” I scowl at her. “Smiling isn’t a crime in this house, or is it?”

“Knock off that attitude, Emily Jane,” my dad says without peeling his eyes away from the TV.

“And this is why I come home so often.” I send myself to my bedroom just to get away from them. My room still has these heinous

pink walls that explain so much about who other people wanted me to be.

There’s this little toy piano I used to practice at. I sit down on the too-small bench, my spine slouched and my legs wedged,

and try to play a song from muscle memory. It’s just senseless notes, nothing fits together, nothing comes out cohesively,

not even “Hot Cross Buns.” It’s like I’ve forgotten every single song. My brain tries to tell my body that this is success,

that this is what we wanted, to leave the past behind. But my body isn’t buying it. It’s all tense and wobbly again.

Standing up shakily from the piano, I get this childish urge to look out the window for the Christmas star, the one the wise

men followed all those years ago, or so I once believed, back before I knew better. I’m too tired to fight the desire, so

I push aside the checkered curtains and look up at the sky. It’s too cloudy. I can’t see anything, not that I’d see anything

even if it were clear. We’re alone in this world. We only have our family and friends, but you can’t trust them either. We

really just have ourselves.

I crawl into bed and pull the tattered comforter up over my head and stay like that all night.

It feels suffocating but also safe, and I like to believe that I’m a caterpillar, transforming into a new creature.

It’s not that I don’t like who I am now; it’s just that I wouldn’t be opposed to growing some wings.

Not butterfly wings, those are too flimsy, but maybe some dragon wings.

Flying while breathing fire sounds pretty ideal to me, but when I wake up the next day on Christmas morning, I’m still fully human. Still just me.

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