the right to be.
Okay, I donât care if my stupid little sister has decided to live in the park with Barefoot Jack and the other local homeless and crazy, but it does make me curious. I imagine sheâs on a downward spiral, like we all are, but I donât think the parents realize how much closer she is to the edge than the rest of us. She loved Sarah more than anyone else did, and sheâs got to be taking her death the hardest.
Youâd think any average parent could figure that out. But Lena, sheâs lost in her own world right now. She is taking the role of grieving mother seriously. Sheâs been waiting a long time to play the role, ever since Sarah got her first cancer diagnosis all those years ago.
As I pass by the park on my way to Davidâs house, I consider stopping and giving Asha a personal plea to come help spread the ashes. I think sheâll want to be a part of it, even if she acts like she doesnât.
But sheâs not there now.
As I turn onto Davidâs street, I see his car in the driveway of the house he shares with friends, and my stomach knots. Itâs been a long time since weâve seen each other alone, and not just his stopping in to say hi while Iâm working at Sacred Grounds, which heâs started doing again lately. Problem is, AJ stops in too when heâs in town doing business, and if the two of them ever cross paths, some shit will go down.
I climb the front steps of his porch, and he must have seen me because he opens the door and comes out. âHey, what a surprise.â
He looks seriously fugly, his beard overgrown and his shirt off. Heâs wearing a drooping pair of jeans that stay up thanks only to a belt. His ribs and hip bones jut out in a way that isnât exactly attractive, reminding me of pictures of starving people in India.
He leans in for a hug, and I hug him back halfheartedly. When my sister disappeared over the edge of a cliff last month, whatever I felt for David went with her, I think. He just feels like a whole lot of nothing to me now.
Iâm relieved when he doesnât try to kiss me.
âYou doing okay?â he asks as we sit down on the front steps together.
âYeah. You?â
âNot so much.â
I nod and make a sad face. I guess I should be falling apart moreâDavid and I united in our grief or some shitâbut I canât muster the energy. I am remarkably calm, detached, waiting for some real emotions to come along.
I look away from David, at a house across the street, a run-down, blue cottage with faded Tibetan prayer flags hanging limp over the front porch.
âWeâre scattering her ashes Sunday night, around nine oâclock,â I finally say when I feel enough time has passed.
He stares at a squirrel scurrying across the street.
âI could ask my mom if you can come along.â
âThatâs okay. Itâs a family thing. I shouldnât be there.â
âI donât think sheâd care,â I say, but Iâm kind of relieved he said no.
Silence again.
When Iâm about to change the subject to the reason I guess Iâve come, he says, âI went out to the spot. Where she fell. I did my own thing there ⦠and scattered some flowers ⦠you know.â
âOh. Thatâs cool,â I say lamely.
Some bitchy, little part of me feels jealous that he had this private moment for Sarah. And some part of me feels violated that he went there, to the spot that belongs to me and my own fucked-up feelings.
âIâve been thinkingâ¦â
Before he can go on, I hold up my hand for him to stop talking. I have to be the one to say it. âI have too. I donât think we should see each other anymore.â
I watch his face, not sure what I want to see there. Grief? Pain? Relief?
Love?
Shock.
Long, awkward-ass pause.
I look down at his hands, which are clasped a little tighter than they should be on his knees,
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