honey,â he said softly, close enough that she could feel the warmth of his breath, which smelled faintly of drink. And while she was watching the small figure spin and spin in perfect, consistent circles, she heard her father say, âSilla, honey . . .â He hesitated, but her eyes remained on the ballerina, remained focused on her dancing. Until, that is, she heard him say, âYour mamaâs gone.â Her eyes snapped to his and he nodded once. âSheâs gone.â
CHAPTER TEN
The Big Hill
R ose and I stood on top of the Big Hill in the park, just above the pond in which Warren and I used to catch tadpoles and turtles, putting them in big plastic pitchers until Warren, his face creased with worry, insisted that we set them free. The pond was only five or six feet deep, so it always froze quickly, and on Christmas Eve the fathers would take the kids ice-skating while the mothers made dinner. Mr. Vanni would bring a thermos full of Irish coffee and the men would stand shoulder to shoulder, letting the whiskey warm their bellies, while we scrambled around on the slick ice, until our wool mittens were soggy and the knees of our jeans damp. Then our mothersâ voices would call us inside, where weâd slip into hot baths, giddy and delirious with the wonder of what might await us in the morning.
After leaving my motherâs house, Bobby had said that he and Gabby would meet us in the park in ten minutes, though it felt like it had already been fifteen.
Iâll just go and grab Gabs,
he had said.
âUncle Warren and I used to go ice-skating on that pond,â I said to Rose, trying to keep her mind off the waiting and off the wind, which had begun to pick up.
âWhatâs ice-skating?â asked Rose.
Anytime Rose was unfamiliar with something as common as ice-skating, I felt a stab of inadequacy. âOh, Rosie. Itâs the most fun thing. You wait until the pond turns all to ice. Then you put on special shoes and go sliding around on it.â
Rose smiled, almost with nostalgia for a pastime she had never experienced; then she turned back toward the Vannisâ house just as Bobby and Gabby were exiting the back door. âHey!â said Rose, pointing. âThere they are!â She bounced onto her toes. âHey, Gabby!â she called, though they were still too far away to hear. I hadnât realized how much she had enjoyed playing with Bobbyâs daughter at the block party.
Bobby bent down and said something in his daughterâs ear, a permission likely, because Gabby came bounding toward Rose and me, her long, dark hair waving like a flag behind her. Rose rushed to meet her, leaving Bobby and me walking slowly behind our daughters and toward each other.
âSorry,â he said, closing one eye against the low, late-afternoon sun. âMy momâs going out tonight and she needed to give me explicit instructions about reheating dinner.â He seemed to find Lindaâs mothering amusing, if a bit overbearing.
âI bet,â I said with a smile. âShe always did like feeding you guys.â Mrs. Vanni was a fusser. She fussed over Bobby and his sister. She fussed over her husband. And now she fussed overGabby, probably baking cookies for her class and setting up elaborate tea parties for her stuffed animals. My mother loved Rose. I knew that. But her heart was tethered elsewhere.
Hey, Mom,
I had said on the phone soon after Rose had started preschool,
Roseâs school is having this Grandparentsâ Day thing next Tuesday. . . .
I remember the silence on the line.
Well, what about Warren?
she finally said.
Tuesdayâs his day off and I was going to go with him to get his haircut.
Bobby glanced back at his motherâs house. âIt has its moments,â he said, a nod to the fact that living with his mother at the age of thirty-six was not exactly what heâd had in mind. âBut honestly, sheâs
James Patterson
Kelli Stanley
Sophie Littlefield
Micah Uetricht
Aubrie Elliot
Bru Baker
Karla Sorensen
Sarah Morgan
Jean Plaidy
Forbidden Magic (v1.1)