Left Drowning(15)



Minute twenty-one. I decide to make a new path of my own. If I am not going to run, I am at least going to walk.

So I walk hard for the next eight minutes, mapping out a circular route in my head that will loop me back to the dorm. I’m breathing hard and wanting distraction when I remember that exercising is when people like to “think.” I try to relax and see what turns up.

As my legs churn and my heart thumps, I rack my brain, skimming through my life history. Images flash quickly through my mind. My mother chasing after me as I’m boarding the school bus, laughing and frantically waving my lunch box. My dad prepping me for the SATs by flashing index cards at me over breakfast. God, every memory is so tied to them, and it seems impossible to separate the memories from the grief.

My thoughts move to Annie, my mom’s best friend, who fought the life insurance company that tried to buy off James and me with a paltry settlement. I have no idea if another lawyer would have brawled the way that Annie did. She made sure my brother’s college education and expenses would be paid for. I told her at the time that I didn’t care what my fortune amounted to. But Annie got us more than enough.

Annie. Thinking about her is a sore subject for me because it’s just another way that I have failed. She is the one person who I can say unequivocally did not run from James and me when my parents died. Annie is the person who went to O’Hare Airport in a nightgown, flew from Chicago to Boston, and then drove over three hours to find us at the hospital in Maine. Annie is the person who drove James and me back to the house where we grew up in Massachusetts, although with our parents dead, the house no longer felt like home in the least. She made the service arrangements and probably dealt with more horrific details than I care to know. She got me dressed for the funeral, and she forced me to eat and even shower when I couldn’t handle basic life skills. For three weeks she kept James and me functioning in ways that no one else could have. Then we moved in with Lisa, my mother’s sister, and Annie went back to Chicago. After that, I couldn’t tolerate hearing her voice on the phone.

Everything about her shredded my heart because she reminded me too much of my mother, and she reminded me too much of my mother’s death. I couldn’t handle it. And so I pushed her away, and even a loyalty like hers could only take so many unreturned phone calls and letters. But even while I was cutting her out of our lives, she continued to fight like hell so that we got the best possible financial result. Lisa eventually dropped her as our family attorney, solidifying the end of that tie. Our new attorney is perfectly good, but he’s not Annie.

I start running again as I shake my head, but last only until I catch sight of my dorm, when I slow to a walk. I tuck my phone into the band of my sweatpants and retie my ponytail. Now that the horrid run is over, I admit that I actually feel good. Although my muscles hurt, and I am overall embarrassingly fatigued, I am alert in a way that I love. In fact, as I near the steps to Reber Hall, I wish that I’d sucked it up and kept going for the full forty-five minutes.

The door opens before I reach it, and a stocky blond guy in shorts and a fitted shirt holds open the door for me. “Good day for a run, huh?”

“What?”

“Couldn’t ask for better weather.” He adjusts the armband that holds his small music player and smiles. “Cool, but not cold. I hate how the cold tightens you up when you run, you know?”

He thinks that I’m a runner, like he is, and I feel false even as I embrace the lie. “Oh. Yeah, I hate that. It’s really gorgeous out today.” I step through the threshold. “You’ll have a good run.”

“Sweet. Catch you later.”

Armband boy makes his way down the steps while he rolls his shoulders in circles.

I roll my own shoulders as I make my way up the wide staircase to my floor. Shoulder rolls. I should have thought of doing those before, but at least I’m doing them now. In fact, I’m going to do more than this. I unlock my door, grab a towel from the top shelf of my closet, fold it in half, and set it on the hard floor. I get on my hands and knees and shift my weight forward. Twenty push-ups can’t be that hard. But even modified push-ups (I refuse to think of them as “girl” push-ups) leave my arms shaking by the seventh one. Ten will have to do for today. Now crunches. Twenty to the center, ten to each side. I may barf. I stand for lunges—fifteen forward, fifteen back. They are clumsy, shaky lunges, but they are mine.

It is a start. More physical activity than I have even considered in a long time. Not that I have ever been much of an athlete at all, but I’ve done a number of classes with my friends at the gym back home. Before. James is the real athlete of the family. Or he used to be. He is obviously never going to forgive me for ruining that, and I can’t blame him. I deserve his hatred.

Stop, stop, stop, I order myself.

My e-mail chimes, and I groan as I roll over to check it. I am probably being alerted of an impending disaster that will require the transfer of my bank funds to an exotically named prince. Instead it’s from my aunt Lisa, who James and I have lived with for the past four years. Her place has been our home base because the house we grew up in was too full of painful memories of our parents after they died. When were unwilling to sell it, Lisa rented it out to strangers.

I skim the e-mail in disbelief; it is cluttered with falsely cheerful exclamation points. I ignore the bullshit pleasantries. The e-mail informs me that since James and I are now both in college, we are technically adults, so we “get to move back” into our parents’ house. Apparently, the renters’ lease is up, and Lisa sees the chance to get us out of her hair; that much is clear by the way her e-mail also explains that she’s shipped all of our things to our old address. The icing on the cake is that she’s going to New Orleans with friends for Thanksgiving and leaving us out of it. So that’s that.

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