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A Symphony of Cicadas Page 11


  “Joey!” I shouted in frustration, angry that I was now stuck. Sure enough, Sam opened his door and looked at me. His face changed in an instant from contempt to surprise, settling to his mask that hid anything he might be thinking.

  “Yeah?” he asked.

  “Can I come in?” I requested of him, all the demands I’d rehearsed leaving through the open window of his room. He moved aside and allowed me to walk past him. I cleared a spot on his bed among the clothes and piles of books that took residence along with the tangle of sheets and blankets. I sat down at the same time he did in a chair across the room, and we both looked at each other in this foreign act of socializing. I realized that, despite my fear, I needed to act more like a parent and less like a scared stranger.

  “Where have you been?” I demanded. And that’s when I saw. His eyes were rimmed with red, the whites of his eyes an unnatural pink that contrasted with his tan skin and blue irises. “Have you been smoking pot?” I asked him. He looked away in embarrassment, but didn’t answer. “Seriously, Sam? You’re fourteen years old! Why are you messing with drugs? What would your dad say?” I blurted out the last sentence without even thinking about it, giving away the fact that I didn’t want to tell John. Sam relaxed when he realized this at the same time I did. He looked at me and shrugged. That’s when I saw there was more to the story. While his eyes carried the giveaway-hue of rosiness, the reddened rims of his eyes were from something else. “Have you been crying?” I asked, this time with concern.

  “No,” he said, breaking his silence. But he swiped at his eyes to catch the small amount of moisture that still existed at the edges.

  “What’s going on?” I asked him.

  “What do you mean?” he answered with his own question to evade the actual issue. I realized we were stuck back in the Sam game, going round and round instead of getting straight to the point. But I had my own theories about what was up. I decided that instead of trying to win an unbeatable game, I’d just run with what I figured was going on.

  “Sam, I know you’re upset about your mom being gone, and that I’m here instead of her. I promise you, I’m not here to take the place of your mom. But I know it’s rough when you don’t see her as much as you used to. And if you ever want to talk about it, I’m a great listener. But sweetie, the pot has to go.” He tensed up across the room. I could see him struggling with his demeanor, trying to challenge me while also tiptoeing through a respectful stance.

  “It’s not like pot is bad,” he argued with me in his fourteen-year-old logic. “It’s only considered bad because the government wants you to think that. And it isn’t any worse than you drinking a glass of wine,” he countered.

  “But it’s illegal,” I said, my tone weak as I tried to wrap my mind around a sound argument against marijuana. “I don’t want it around you or Joey, and I definitely don’t want it in this house.”

  “But you have wine in the house, and you drink that around us,” he said with a smug air.

  I was struggling in the moment, ill-prepared to give a talk on the war on drugs. If I had prepared I would have researched facts on the effects weed had on a young mind and the laziness it encourages at a time when he needed to be at his most ambitious. But all I could think of were the many times in my own youth when I had enjoyed getting high in the privacy of my bedroom before slipping on a pair of headphones and drowning in the music. The intense experience of having every note go straight through me as I sank into the bed I was laying on was a delicious feeling I never experienced any other way. And now in my thirties, I was neither dumb nor worse for having smoked out in my teens. But I had also grown past it; my last joint years ago with Joey’s father in a life that felt like it belonged to someone else.

  To argue against something I enjoyed in my own youth felt hypocritical. But more than that, I felt like I’d be a bad parent if I gave in, and worse if I condoned this. If Sam were my own son, I’d have a much clearer argument against drugs in his system, and I’d be confiscating the pot by now. I realized that even though he wasn’t my son by blood, I still owed him the duty of being a parent to him. I needed to treat him as if he were my own son.

  “Look, when you’re out of this house and supporting yourself after eighteen, you are free to do what you want. But while in this house, you go by our rules. That includes not bringing drugs into our home. So hand it over.” I held out my hand and waited.

  “What? No! I’m not giving it to you!” he said, his voice raising. I could hear John starting to ascend the steps.

  “Look,” I whispered. “I don’t want to get your dad involved, but I will if I have to. Either hand it over or I’ll have your dad come in here and get it from you.”

  In that moment, we both knew I had won. But I couldn’t help feeling like a tyrant when he groaned, stuffing the plastic bag of weed in my hand; I pocketed it just as John poked his head in the room.

  “Everything okay?” he asked.

  Sam looked at the floor, and nodded in silence. I looked at John and gave him a smile.

  “Everything’s fine,” I said. I realized that I hadn’t even addressed his lateness for dinner, but decided we’d covered enough ground for one night. “Sam understands that he needs to be a little better about letting us know where he’s at if he’s going to be out, and that he’ll be home by six o’clock for dinner unless he tells us otherwise. Right, Sam?” I caught the faintest glimpse of a smile before he buried it in a blank stare at the floor and nodded in reluctant agreement. “Great. Are you hungry? The food’s totally cold, and it’s a crapshoot if there’s enough left to make a full dinner plate. But there are a few leftovers if you want them.”

  “Thanks. I’ll come down soon,” he said.

  ****

  Of course, I’d been wrong about what was bugging him. Sam smoothed his hand over another rock, ready to drop it into the water. On that day, he’d been rejected by the girl he liked. Worse, he’d seen the girl kissing one of his friends. It made him feel as if he were a loser, as if no one would ever think a pudgy kid like him could be cool. So he took off with a few other friends and smoked out. It wasn’t his first time, as I had believed in the moment, but more like his third. He thought the weed would help him escape from the pain of rejection, but the pain only intensified as he sank under the weight of his own mind, grabbing onto the last thought he’d had before he went under to keep from falling too deep. That was the image of his friend and this girl. And it made him question the loyalty of the guys who now sat around him, his paranoia doing double time as they sat chattering and laughing while waiting for their turn with the joint. Soon he just slipped away, his absence unnoticed as he started walking home, letting the tears fall free as he felt friendless, weird, and ugly.

  But when I had talked to him about his mom, it reminded him of another sadness he’d been stuffing deep down, and he added it to his list of faults and failures. In a strange sense, he was glad to add it to the pile of hurts. He was in a space of mourning and wasn’t ready to leave it. And while his dad made careful efforts not to mention the fact that his mom wasn’t calling so much and never even fought for him to stay with her, I had been bold in my acknowledgment. He didn’t even mind that I called him out on his possession of weed, appreciating that I cared enough to set boundaries, despite how he argued with me.

  Sam picked up the rocks that lay at his feet, holding the final pebbles in the palm of his hand and closing his fist over them. He missed me, wondering if anyone else would ever see through his defenses again. He even missed Joey, the little brother he felt like he never got to know. He ached over his dad, seeing him slip even further into being an absent parent than he was before he met me, despite the fact that they lived in the same house. He missed his mom, the way she used to smooth his hair on his head before kissing the top of it, and the pancakes she used to make every Saturday morning in celebration of another week successfully survived. He missed the mom she used to be before things got bad and she moved out, before she bec
ame too busy with life to care about a teenage boy who needed her to break through the barriers he put up.

  And in one swift movement, he lifted his arm and flung the rest of the rocks out into the water with all of his force, hearing the satisfying sounds they made as they disturbed the smooth surface.

  Except, not one of those rocks took away the pain he was carrying.

  Eleven

  “I brought some oatmeal bread,” my sister said, standing on the other side of the apartment door facing John. “I just made it last night and thought you and Sam might want a loaf. You look terrible, by the way.”

  “Um, thanks,” John said, giving a small laugh before moving aside to let her in. “How are Kevin and the kids?” he asked. He raced in front of her to grab the laundry that was starting to pile on the couch again and dump it into the laundry basket in the corner of the room. As he attempted to straighten up, Sara waved her hand to dismiss his efforts.

  “Please don’t worry about cleaning on my behalf. You’ve seen what the girls can do to my house in a matter of moments. I’m not afraid of a few clothes and papers lying around.” She placed the bread on the counter and surveyed the dishes that filled the sink. Rolling up her sleeves, she turned the water on over them and let the sink fill with sudsy hot water. John made no efforts to stop her. “The family’s doing fine. Kevin received a small promotion last month that gave us a little extra income in the household. But as a result, he’s been working longer and longer hours at the office. The girls and I have been going at it alone much of the time, which isn’t as fun as it sounds with two little kids.”

  “Must be hard to have him gone so much,” John said, trying to sound sympathetic.

  “It really is. I feel like a single mom! I don’t know how Rachel did it for so many years.” She paused then, realizing how all this sounded. “Oh god, John. I’m sorry. Here I am rambling on about being alone in the house, and…” She didn’t know how to talk her way out, hesitating in the awkwardness that lay between them.

  “It’s okay, Sara. It’s been six months. The emptiness of the apartment is starting to feel normal. I don’t even see Sam that much these days.” John grabbed a towel and began drying the dishes that Sara had washed.

  “How’s he doing?” she asked.

  “Fine, I guess. He doesn’t talk to me much, though I can’t blame him. I wouldn’t talk to me much either. He mentioned his mother the other day, talking about moving in with her for a little time.” Sara set the dish she was washing back in the water and looked at him in alarm.

  “And what did you say? Did you tell him no? Wendy doesn’t seem to have much time to be raising a kid. Besides, you’d be left here all alone!”

  “Well, it’s his choice really.”

  “I guess, from a court’s point of view. But he’s your son! Surely you told him it wasn’t a good idea!” she protested.

  “Not really. And he’s her son too. I mean, I wasn’t happy about it, and I think he knew that. But I didn’t fight him about it. Besides, it was more of a musing than anything else. I don’t think he really wants to move in with his mom. He’d have to leave behind all his friends and his school,” John reassured Sara, and himself.

  He left the subject at that, not telling Sara the relief that also lay in the thought of his son moving in with his mother. He was failing Sam every day he slipped into his grief, unable to get out from underneath it and move on with his life. If Sam moved out, he could check off his parental duties and be free to fall headfirst into his sadness and pain. While it was true that Wendy lived far enough away that Sam couldn’t continue at the same school, summer vacation was close enough that Sam could stay there for the summertime. John couldn’t help but feel that this was a good answer for both of them.

  “I guess you’re right,” Sara said. “And I get his natural curiosity about wanting to know about living with his mom. But it wasn’t like Wendy was the most attentive parent when she was here. Has he talked with her about this? What does she say?”

  “I’m not sure. If he’s said anything to her, she hasn’t told me. Hey, how’s the flower shop doing these days?” John asked, changing the subject. Sara had a million more questions about Wendy, and what it would mean for Sam if he went to live there. But she caught John’s cue that he was done talking about it. She wasn’t sure why she was feeling so protective of Sam in that moment. Perhaps it was even John she was protecting. All she knew was that the idea of Sam moving in with his mother felt like a bad choice, and she was disturbed by how apathetic John was being in a decision that could mean losing his son. It made her think of her own daughters, and how she would fight tooth and nail to keep them with her if she were faced with a custody battle. She shuddered at the thought.

  “The shop is doing really well. With summer approaching, we’re at the peak of our game as orders have been flying in. Thank goodness for Hannah!” she breathed.

  “Is that the new girl? How is she?” John asked.

  “She’s great! She came at such a difficult time, when we were all reeling from the loss of Rachel. But she holds such an air of grace and professionalism, the transition was almost seamless - from a business standpoint, of course,” Sara noted in haste. “No one could ever take the place of my sister. But Hannah has really pulled through in understanding what needs to be done while also being sensitive to the fact that she has this job because Rachel passed away.” Sara finished the last dish and set it in the rack on the counter, drying her hands on the towel while glancing at the clock. “Speaking of which, I need to be getting back to the shop. Do you need any other help around here before I go? I’m a whiz with a vacuum and a dust cloth, you know.”

  John looked around and gave a sheepish grimace when he realized how far he had let the place go once again. It was going to take some practice getting back in a routine of keeping things in order.

  It was ironic since he had been the stickler for tidiness when I was still alive. He was often on Joey’s case when he left tiny tornado paths in every room he visited, and shaking his head at the permanent pile of clothes and books I kept next to my bed with a promise that I’d clean it later. Now he was the one who had a hard time remembering to switch the clothes from the washer to the dryer, sometimes washing them three times to get the mildew scent out of them from sitting damp for so long.

  “You’re really kind, Sara. But I have a handle on it. I can’t thank you enough for just washing the dishes. I’m embarrassed that you even had to do that, but it helps a lot,” he said, giving her a hug. For a moment he smelled me in her hair, and he breathed deep, holding her a moment too long before letting her go. He blinked hard when he saw Sara’s face in front of him, and he shook away his mistake in hopes that Sara hadn’t noticed.

  Sara had no idea that I was the thought that had passed through his head when he hugged her. She was too preoccupied with the feeling of intimacy that came from just a simple hug.

  ‘What is wrong with you?’ she asked herself. But she knew. It had been so long since she had been held with such care, making the distance that had been growing between her and Kevin that much wider. She pushed away the feelings of comfort the hug gave her, giving a vague smile to John as she picked up her purse.

  “If you need anything – a friend, a home-cooked meal, a cheap maid – I’m here,” she told him. He chuckled and led her to the door.

  “I will,” he promised.

  When Sara was gone, John did another quick survey of the room. He began to pick up the various piles of clothes, and then stopped. He just wasn’t in the cleaning mood. He knew that’s what got him in this mess to begin with, but it just seemed like a waste of time at the moment.

  “I’ll do it later,” he promised himself, taking a line from my book in a phrase I often used. He grabbed his keys and scribbled a quick note out to Sam.

  “Went to San Anselmo, be back tonight. Don’t wait up,” it read. With thoughts leaning toward black and white checkered floors and a walkway lined with flowers, Joh
n headed out of the apartment and toward his car in the covered parking lot. He was going to the house he was building – our house. I clapped my hands in excitement, stowing a ride in his car as he crossed the bridge and headed toward the familiar road that led home.

  I’d visited the abandoned project often in the past few weeks. I’d wandered the dusty hallways, the floors covered in sawdust below lights that swung from fixtures that still needed to be fastened to the ceiling. I ran my hands over the bare walls, imagining our family photos covering every square inch of the smooth plaster with our laughing faces. I’d stood in the center of our bedroom, remembering the last time we’d made love before we’d been interrupted, placing us in this bedroom instead of the one in our cramped apartment. I spun circles in the large kitchen with sunshine streaming through the picture window over the sink, brightening the room despite its unfinished state. I dug my hands in the soil outside, pretending I could feel the dirt form to my hands and travel underneath my fingernails.

  I kept waiting for John to resume his work on the house, even though I knew that if I were in his position, I’d never set foot in the place again. But that didn’t keep me from hoping he could overcome the temptation to scrap the project and move on. I’d taken to whispering images of the house into his ear while he slept. I was delighted whenever he dreamed of the two of us unpacking wedding gifts in the living room, lounging on the couch watching TV, making love in the grassy backyard… But always, when he woke up, the visions were forgotten at once, and he would be mistaken in his sadness about being unable to dream.

  “You can only mess with the living so much,” Jane had told me on one of her occasional visits as we jumped from dragonfly to dragonfly. “You may be able to see him, hear him, even smell him. But you’re still worlds apart.” It didn’t stop me from trying, though.

  As John pulled in front of the house, I settled into the reflection of his blue iris and looked at the house through his eyes. His carpenter’s mind saw past the perfection in the wide porch with solid railings, the inviting red door, the friendly double-paned windows that let in the sunlight but kept out the sounds of the outside world. Instead, he saw the way the unfinished wood on the porch bowed in the middle. He saw the brown crabgrass that had choked out a once-plush lawn. He saw the minuscule chips in the red paint on the door, the way the bottom of it had too much of a gap to keep the house warm, the smears on the windows from months of neglect.