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    Stay (ARC)

    Page 31
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      him nervous to have something as vital as a brake pedal

      operated by a part of his shoe that doesn’t even have a

      foot in it. That he can’t even feel.

      The only reason I drove him to the funeral is because

      his truck wouldn’t start.

      “We’re seriously going out there in the dark?” he asks

      as I park on the shoulder of the road.

      “Sure, why not?”

      “But why are we doing this again?”

      “Because you didn’t even know if it was still standing.

      And because it is. And because it brings back so many

      memories, you won’t be able to believe it. It just brings

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      Catherine Ryan Hyde

      her back so crystal clear in your mind, you feel like she

      might be standing right behind you. Like you might turn

      around and slam right into her.”

      He nods a couple of times. I can see it in the dash

      lights as I turn off the ignition.

      “Okay,” he says. “I’d say I’m up for that.”

      * * *

      “What happened to the floor?” Roy asks me.

      “Drifters,” I say. “It’s been broken into a couple of

      times.”

      We’re sitting with our backs up against the wall where

      the head of Zoe’s bed used to be. Roy started a fire in

      the old potbellied stove with some ancient kindling that

      got left behind on the hearth. It’s very dry, that kindling.

      It’s possibly had as much as twenty-five years’ worth of

      drying time. It’s burning hot, but it won’t burn long,

      and that’s just as well. We don’t plan to sit here all night.

      “What did they want to go and mess up the floor

      for, though?” he asks. He sounds like a kid who thinks

      something isn’t fair.

      “I have no idea.”

      He’s pulling off his right shoe, which is not a surprise.

      Like I said, he always does when the opportunity presents

      itself. His sock has been shortened, a process he performs

      himself with scissors, a darning egg, and yarn, so all that

      extra sock doesn’t bunch up and irritate him.

      “Who owns this now?”

      “Grandkids,” I say.

      “They’re not doing anything with it, though.”

      “Not at the moment, no. But I figure one of these

      days one of them’ll need the money they could get for

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      Stay

      the land. That’s another reason I figured we should come

      out here sooner rather than later.”

      “Here’s a question,” Roy says. “How come so many

      people we know are dying?”

      I laugh out loud. I can’t help it.

      “What’s funny?” he asks.

      “You are. It’s because we’re old, Roy.”

      “Speak for yourself,” he says. “I’m not that old.”

      “You’re going to turn seventy next year.”

      “Oh,” he says. “Yeah. Wow. I guess that is pretty old.

      When did we get to be so old?”

      “I don’t know,” I say. “It’s crazy. We always used to

      be so young.”

      * * *

      For a while we talk about Mom, and I’m not sure why.

      “I told you about the last time I got to see her,” he

      says. “The last time I got to talk to her. You never did.

      You kept those cards close to your vest.”

      Our mom died in 1998. She was living in a nursing

      home by then, and her mind had mostly gone. Every now

      and then it would come back in a flash, and she’d know

      who I was. But before I could mount a response to that

      momentous occasion, she’d be gone again.

      When the nursing home called to say a last visit had

      better happen soon if we wanted one, Roy and I had to

      go see her separately because of our work schedules.

      Honestly, I wasn’t trying to play those cards close to

      my vest. I figured I’d told him.

      “Well…,” I begin. Trying to bring back details as I

      go. “I sat beside her bed and watched her fade in and out,

      and at first I didn’t say anything, because I thought she

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      Catherine Ryan Hyde

      was too far gone to hear me. Then I figured at least her

      spirit was still there.

      “So I said, ‘Hey, Mom. It’s me, Lucas. I came to say

      goodbye.’

      “She turned her head toward me and looked me dead

      in the eye, and she said, clear as a bell, ‘I know I wasn’t

      a good mother and I’m sorry.’”

      “Holy crap,” he says. “How do you answer a state-

      ment like that?”

      “I know, right?”

      Now, I had a lot of anger toward my mom. I won’t lie

      about that. She was not a good mother, and in most other moments of my life I would have agreed with her. Just

      straight out. But I think a parent needs something different on her deathbed. In the absence of actual abuse, I think

      in that final moment if you can’t see it’s not about you,

      then you’re just not living the right kind of life. I could

      get into therapy and tell my counselor how unhelpful she

      was for the rest of my days, but this was my last chance

      ever to say something to my mom.

      I tell Roy “I fell back on something Zoe Dinsmore

      said to me, and in defense of you, by the way. I quoted it word for word, as best my memory allowed. Except I only

      repeated the first half of the thing. ‘We’re all just doing

      our best.’ I left out the second part. ‘Even if it doesn’t look so good from the outside.’ Because why plant the negative part of the thought in her head at a time like that?”

      “You think she heard you?”

      “I have no idea if she heard it. I have no idea if she

      took any of it in. But I know they were the right words

      at the right time. And besides, I heard it.”

      * * *

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      Stay

      “Remember that thing with Zoe at your track meet?”

      he asks me.

      The fire is beginning to die down, but we’re making

      no move toward leaving.

      “Which one? She was at practically every meet.”

      So was Roy, but I don’t say that out loud, because he

      was there, so he knows.

      “The one where that kid’s father said something …

      unpleasant to me?”

      Roy didn’t get to keep his war hero status. Word got

      around. But it was okay, he told me years later. Much the

      same as jail and that dressing-down from Dad was okay

      for me. It’s the price we paid. It’s the price we chose.

      “Remember what Zoe did?” he asks when I don’t

      answer.

      “I was out on the track, but I remember hearing

      about it. But I don’t remember what she was supposed

      to have said.”

      “She didn’t say anything. That was the beauty of

      the whole deal. She got between him and me and just

      stood there facing him with her arms crossed over her

      chest. And she never said a word. And he said every

      word under the sun. He tried reasoning with her. Then

      he made fun of her. Then he tried getting mad, or at

      least pretending he was mad. Then he started telling

      her she was crazy, because she never said a word. She

      barely even blinked. Then finally he got
    freaked out by

      the whole thing and just … you know … retreated. It

      was amazing.”

      “She was a scary woman,” I say.

      And it’s funny the way I say it, because it’s in this

      wistful voice, like I miss her and that was the best com-

      pliment I’ve got in the box. Well, I do miss her. Every

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      Catherine Ryan Hyde

      day. But I’m sure I could think of better ways to express

      it than that.

      “Boy, you can say that twice,” Roy says. “That lady

      was a force of nature. Why do you think I stayed clean

      all those years? I would’ve been too scared to go and tell

      her I messed up.”

      “But she’s been gone fifteen years, and you’re still clean.”

      “Knowing Zoe, she’d haunt me.”

      “I get it,” I say. Then I add something that’s sort of

      tickling at the edges of my thoughts. “If she was so ter-

      rifying, which she totally was, and we were such cowards,

      which we totally were, how did we manage to love her

      so much?”

      “Oh, that’s easy. She was on our side.” While I’m

      pondering the truth of that, he says, “You won’t have a

      best friend anymore.”

      I notice that the last of the embers are winking out.

      It’s dark in here now. My flashlight is turned off. And

      I’m not answering.

      “You’ve had a best friend since you were three,” he

      adds. “Now what?”

      “I have the dogs,” I say. “And you.”

      “I’m not sure if I’m best friend material.”

      “You’ll do,” I say, a little sarcastically.

      Then I bump his knee in a signal that it’s probably

      time to get up and go home.

      He puts his right shoe back on and struggles to his

      feet. I reach out a hand to help him, but he doesn’t seem

      to notice it in the dark. Just as well. He doesn’t need it.

      He’s been getting to his feet on his own since before I was

      born. I’m not sure what I thought I was doing with that.

      He says, “Ask around town, and most people’ll tell

      you I’m not best friend material.”

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      Stay

      “Yeah, but some of them told me the same thing

      about Connor.”

      “Oh,” he says. And in that moment he pauses in his

      movement toward the door. “That’s right, isn’t it? And

      they sure were wrong about him.”

      “It’s really important,” I say, “when you’re thinking

      bad thoughts about yourself, to remember that they might

      turn out to be wrong.”

      * * *

      We’re standing outside, taking one last look. The stars are

      just wild. There are millions of them, really sharp and

      clear between the trees. I’ve never stood beside the cabin

      at night before. Not once in all these years.

      I think, No wonder she loved it out here so much.

      And then after the fact, I realize I said it out loud.

      “Yeah,” he says. He’s looking up, too. “People think

      she did it to punish herself, but I know she really loved

      it out here. It may have started as penance, but this be-

      came her place. You were right when you said you feel

      like you’ll bump into her when you turn around. It feels

      almost like she’s still here.”

      I’m looking half at the stars and half at the chimney,

      imagining smoke coming out of it the way it used to in

      the winter. Or even on a few cool summer evenings.

      And, yes, I’m positive I’m imagining it. We made sure

      our fire was out so we didn’t burn down the cabin and

      the whole forest with it.

      I turn on the flashlight and shine it all around again

      for one last look. Because, even though I guess I could

      be wrong, I get the feeling that it’s my last look.

      The sweep of the light touches on something. A flash

      of color. I keep the light trained in that direction. On

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      Catherine Ryan Hyde

      either side of Zoe’s outhouse there’s a riot of untended

      flowers growing. Colored blooms on long stalks. Some

      are yellow. Others are purple or red.

      Roy comes up behind me. I can hear his footsteps in

      the dry leaves.

      “Whoa,” he says. “I thought those would die with-

      out her, but they’ve really taken off since she was gone.

      There used to be just a little tended patch of them hidden

      behind the outhouse.”

      “Which explains why I never saw them.”

      “But you knew, right? You knew she grew flowers

      and left them on the two graves. Right?”

      “I did and I didn’t,” I say.

      And he knows me too well to ask for a clarification

      of that.

      I turn off the flashlight. We hang in this place for a

      time, our eyes adjusting to the darkness again. I can feel

      how neither one of us really wants to leave.

      “You know,” Roy says. And then pauses. “That wasn’t

      true what you said to Dotty today.”

      “What did I say to Dotty that wasn’t true?”

      “You did more than just introduce Connor to Zoe.

      You saved Zoe’s life. It’s only because of you that she even survived long enough for you to introduce him.”

      “Oh,” I say. “Right. I guess I wasn’t considering that

      part of the thing.”

      “If you hadn’t developed that weird habit of running

      with somebody else’s dogs, she would have died in her

      cabin that day, and there would have been nobody to

      pull our butts out of the fire. We probably would’ve lost

      Connor. And I’m not sure if I would’ve gotten clean. Or

      how I would’ve turned out if I hadn’t.”

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      Stay

      I look away from the stars and the chimney. The wild

      stalks of flowers. Then, with no real outward signal to

      each other that we’re about to do it, we make our way

      back toward the road together.

      I don’t turn on the flashlight again. Our eyes are ad-

      justed to the lack of light, and besides, if there’s anybody who knows how to navigate a dark night, it’s me and

      my brother.

      “I wouldn’t have been running with somebody else’s

      dogs if Mom would’ve gotten me one of my own,” I say

      as we reach the River Road together.

      “Then it’s damn good thing she wouldn’t get you one

      of your own.”

      And in this one perfect but probably fleeting mo-

      ment … nothing in my life has ever been a mistake.

      317

      STAY BOOK CLUB

      QUESTIONS

      1. In this book the author highlights how a single choice

      can alter the path of one’s life. How might Lucas’s life

      have been different had he not chosen to take a short-

      cut through the woods and encountered two strange

      dogs?

      2. In the face of life-threatening circumstances in Viet-

      nam, Roy makes a choice that ensures he will be sent

      home. How does this action, coupled with keeping the

      truth a secret, affect his life going forward?

      3. As a boy growing up, starting at a young age, Lucas felt responsible for everyone and everything. In what ways


      did his family dynamics play into this type of behavior?

      4. In contrast, his best friend, Connor, chose a completely different way to cope, leading nearly to a tragic end.

      What was missing in both boys’ homelife? How did

      meeting Zoe help fill that void for both of them?

      5. For many years, Zoe has carried the guilt of being

      responsible for the death of two young children. Do

      you think one can ever make amends for something so

      heartbreaking? Ultimately, how did this tragedy shape

      her to become the person Lucas and Connor come to

      rely on?

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      Catherine Ryan Hyde

      6. Lucas interprets the dogs’ expressions about Zoe to

      mean: “Well, we all know how she is, don’t we? We

      know how she can be, but we love her all the same.”

      He goes on to observe “that’s what you really do get

      from dogs.” What do you think the author was trying

      to convey in this passage?

      7. During the second part of the book, it is revealed that

      Lucas felt so strongly about his conviction not to fight

      in the Vietnam War, he chose instead to go to prison.

      This was a brave choice during those turbulent times.

      Was his decision worth the consequences?

      8. At the end of Lucas’s retelling of his life, Harris says,

      “everyone dies in your story.” Lucas replies, “But I still

      have to say it’s not devastating that people and animals

      live and then die … It’s hard, but those are the rules

      of the game.” And then he thinks, “If you think having

      and losing is so bad, try never having. Now that’s devastating.” Do you agree or disagree with Lucas’s philoso-

      phy on life?

      320

      ABOUT THE AUTHOR

      [AUTHOR BIO TK. You

      will have an opportunity to

      enz

      review the bio as part of the

      Promotional Text creation

      aurel R

      process. The final copyedited

      017 L

      bio will be inserted into the

      manuscript at the proofread

      stage.]

      hoto © 2P

      321

     

     

     



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