The Unwelcomed Child Read online

Page 15

I remembered what Mason had told me about walking to his house and said we should go right. For a few long moments, she didn’t speak. She just walked beside me, her arms folded, her head down. I was afraid that might be all we would actually do, but she finally laughed. I paused.

  “Sorry,” she said, “but I’m having trouble believing they kept you. Never once during these years did I ever consider that a possibility,” she said, and described how they had reacted to her being pregnant.

  “They were always so concerned about their reputation in the community. Mom never let Dad go to work in his factory without wearing a jacket and tie, even in the very warm months. She scrutinized every employee they had with a magnifying glass. The CIA probably doesn’t check its applicants as thoroughly as my mother checked theirs. By the time I was twelve and starting to look more like a girl than a boy, I couldn’t appear at the factory unless I was . . .” She raised her hands and with two fingers of each hand drew quotes in the air. “‘Properly dressed.’ Heaven forbid I had a button on my blouse undone. I imagine it hasn’t been much different for you. Probably, it’s been worse. Am I right?”

  I nodded. I didn’t want her to stop telling me about herself and how my grandparents were as parents.

  “I swear,” she said, “half the things I did, I did just to annoy her. The more she said no to something, the more I wanted to do it. Is that the way you feel?”

  I shook my head.

  “Don’t tell me she’s done a better brainwashing job on you than she did on me. Actually, I’m sure she did. They were afraid of you,” she added, and described the day I was born, how they had prayed and looked at me, expecting to see some sign of Satan.

  “I’m not going to lie to you,” she continued as we walked. “I wanted and expected that they would arrange for an abortion. I was betting on their concern for their precious pure reputation. How could they tolerate an unmarried daughter walking about pregnant in this small town, but they solved that.”

  “How?”

  “They practically kept me prisoner in that house,” she said. She looked at me. I nodded, and she saw that was something I understood. “That’s how they’ve kept you,” she said, concluding quickly. “Do you go to school?” she asked immediately, sounding like a detective reaching a conclusion.

  “Not yet. This fall.”

  “So she . . . what do they call it? Homeschooled you?”

  “Yes.”

  “She got away with that this long?”

  “I take periodic exams. She was a teacher. I always do well.”

  “I know she was a teacher. She never let me forget it. Every poor grade I brought home was like another nail in my coffin. How could I, the daughter of a teacher, be such a bad student? Don’t misunderstand me. I wasn’t that bad, just bad in her terms. I was better than average, good enough to get into the state university. So what do you like? I know you like art, and you sing.”

  “I like reading. I don’t mind math, and I really like science.”

  She nodded. “You’re more like her than I am.”

  “No, I’m not,” I said quickly. It made her smile.

  “Maybe you aren’t. She’s kept you from knowing who you are, I’m sure. You probably have had no chance to have a boyfriend, even secretly.”

  I didn’t say anything, but that just widened her eyes.

  “Do you?”

  “No,” I said. I was afraid she would mention Mason at dinner. “I dream,” I told her, and she laughed and nodded.

  “Yes, that’s what you do in my mother’s house, dream, dream of getting out. I think that urge drove me more than anything to flee. I would have ended up on my face if it weren’t for my uncle Brett. He took me in and got me a job on a cruise ship he was booked on with his band. Later, he got me a job in one of the dance clubs he played in, and once in a while, I sang with his band. I was married for a while, a short while, to another musician before Carlos. He had wandering eyes. Carlos is more stable. I hope.”

  She paused.

  “You’re no child, but I’ll bet you don’t know any more about sex than the average ten-year-old.”

  I felt myself blush but not with shyness, more with anger. “I know more than a ten-year-old. I read. I . . .”

  “My point is, she hasn’t been much help in that area, I’m sure. I don’t know what kind of sex my parents had.” She told me the joke about the hole in the sheet. I tried not to look astonished that she would talk about her own parents that way. “Don’t worry about it,” she added as we continued walking. “I’m sure you’ll figure it out when you have to. It comes natural.”

  I paused when Mason and Claudine’s summerhouse came into view. I was afraid they would see me and come out.

  “Maybe we should turn back,” I said.

  “Okay. If I knew you were here, I would have brought you something, something decent to wear, for sure, not that she would permit it. She might even cut it up at night or something. She did that to many of the things I bought on my own. We were constantly at each other. Dad tried to referee, but he was outgunned.”

  I nodded and smiled, picturing what it must have been like.

  “There’s something about you that tells me you’re going to be all right. I think you have enough of me in you to survive.”

  Enough of you, I thought. What about what I had of my biological father?

  “Can you tell me what happened? I mean . . .”

  “How I got pregnant? I’m sure she told you I was raped. I was,” she added quickly. “It wasn’t one of those rapes where someone breaks in and attacks you or anything. I was drugged, the famous rape drug, at a party.”

  “Was he ever caught?”

  “No. I mean, I knew who he was. I wasn’t that out of it.”

  “How did it happen?”

  “He was one of a group of local Albany boys, Sean Barrett. His father owned a bar and restaurant on Greene Street. My girlfriends and I hung out there with him and his friends. We could get whatever we wanted to drink. I mean, they weren’t even college guys. College guys were too immature for us. These guys were dangerous, cruder, but hip, if you know what I mean.”

  I shook my head.

  “Yeah, right. How would you know? Anyway, for us, it was like playing with fire. Maybe I got too close, but that didn’t give him the right to do what he did. Smile or turn your shoulder flirtatiously at a boy, and he’ll think he owns you. Take my word for it. Unless,” she said, smiling, “you want him to think he owns you. Nothing wrong with that.

  “Anyway, I didn’t even see it coming. I should have realized how deep I was in. I wasn’t about to get too involved with him or any of them. I still had high hopes, not for the life my mother had planned for me but a better life. You know, fall in love with someone rich as easily as you do with someone poor or average like Sean Barrett. I didn’t have a chance to fall in love anyway.

  “Afterward,” she continued, “I was too embarrassed about it and didn’t even tell some of my closer friends. I never thought I was pregnant, so that was an even bigger shock. I was so ashamed about it that I didn’t tell anyone, especially my parents. I was in denial, you see. Months passed, and I knew I was pregnant, but I wouldn’t face up to it. When I started to show, I got on a bus and came home from college.”

  She paused and looked toward our house.

  “You know how when you’re a little girl, and you cut yourself or something, and you run home to Mommy or Daddy, who you expect will fix it and make you feel better and comfort you? Well, that was how I was when I stepped off that bus and walked to that house. I was coming home so my parents would make me feel better and fix it, but not my mother. It was almost as if she was waiting for something like that to happen, just so she could drive home a lesson she had been teaching me all my life. She was determined to make me pay.”

  “But you were drugged and then raped.”

  “No difference to her. I’m sure she will be the same with you if something bad happens to you. It will be your fau
lt somehow. You put yourself in that place. If I hadn’t gone to that party, if I wasn’t drinking and flirting with riff-raff, bad things wouldn’t happen to me. See?”

  “Yes.”

  She brushed my hair with her left hand. “When I look at you now, I’m very happy that she wanted me to suffer.”

  “Do I look like him?” I asked, and held my breath.

  “I don’t even remember what he looked like anymore,” she replied. “I see only me in your face.”

  She sounded just the way I had imagined her in my dream, making me feel like I was some kind of immaculate conception.

  “Well, I can’t make these fifteen years up to you overnight, but I promise I will stay in contact with you now. Someday we’ll spend some real quality time together. When you break out of the chains and you can be on your own, you’ll come to me. Not that I have accumulated great wisdom,” she said. “I’ve knocked around, and some of what I’ve learned might help you survive out there. Speaking of that, has Uncle Brett been here much? He doesn’t like talking about them, so I don’t ask. I haven’t seen him in a few years now.”

  “No. I’ve never met him,” I said. “I only heard about him a few times. I saw pictures of him, but they were taken when he was much younger. I don’t recall him ever calling.”

  “Mom’s probably his most disliked person. She wouldn’t welcome him and let him know it whenever she could. As I said, he helped me survive when I ran off, gave me money, helped me find work. I told him what had happened to me and what they had done. He was very angry and promised he would never tell them where I was or what I was doing.” She thought a moment. “It would be just like him to keep the fact that you were living here a secret from me. He thought that would be painful for me, I’m sure.”

  “I don’t know what to tell you about him. As I said, I don’t remember them talking about him except what he was like years ago.”

  She thought about it a moment and then smiled. “I bet he doesn’t know you’re here. It would be just like my mother to make sure my father never told him.”

  She laughed.

  “Isn’t he going to be surprised? I think he went on the road at an early age to escape his family as much as for any other reason. I guess it shouldn’t surprise me. Many people I know have little to do with their relatives, but I promise,” she added quickly, “I’ll have more to do with you. If you want me to, of course, but I can’t take you with me,” she quickly added. “I couldn’t weigh down my new marriage with the responsibility for a teenage girl just yet. Maybe later you can come to spend some time with us.”

  In fantasies, I saw myself finally living with my mother, but her coldly realistic view of it was like having ice-cold water thrown on me while dreaming.

  “Yes,” I said, with a neutral tone in my voice.

  She smiled and hugged me. “Later, when my mother cross-examines you about our conversation, you should tell her that all I did was complain about how miserable my life really is. That way, she’ll feel better.”

  “What?”

  She held her smile, and then something happened that I never expected.

  We both laughed simultaneously, as if we had been best friends for years and years and knew secrets we wouldn’t share with anyone else in the world.

  Despite the reality she had inserted into our conversation, it was as if one of my dreams really had come true. For a few moments, at least, we were like a mother and a daughter.

  But I knew that dreams pop like bubbles in the morning, and stone reality beats them down so deeply sometimes that you lose them forever.

  It’s like watching something precious sink in deep water. You reach frantically but can only watch helplessly as it goes into the darkness and becomes as lost as an opportunity you had failed to grasp.

  Maybe all of this was already drowned and gone.

  11

  To my pleasant surprise, Grandfather Prescott and Carlos were laughing when we returned. Grandfather Prescott was drinking some of the aperitif Carlos had brought. Carlos stood up immediately when we entered. I could see on his face that he was looking for some indication that everything had gone all right between my mother and me. She nodded and smiled.

  “Short one?” he asked her.

  “You bet,” she said. “And not too short.”

  He laughed, then looked at me, held up the bottle, and glanced at my grandfather.

  “God, no,” Grandfather Prescott said, looking toward the kitchen. “Perish the thought.”

  I was disappointed. I had never tasted anything remotely alcoholic. Grandfather Prescott shook his head at me, and I hurried into the kitchen to help Grandmother Myra. She was banging things around, slamming pots a little harder, and clanking spoons and knives as if she wanted to take the kitchen apart. She turned sharply when I appeared, her hands on her small hips.

  “I suppose she filled you with a lot of garbage and told you how wonderful her life is now, how she’s on the Easy Street that she never stopped believing in,” she said.

  “No. I mean, she’s hoping to be happy with Carlos, but she had one unhappy marriage already.”

  “Only one?” she asked with a wry smile. “You mean only one she admitted to having. I can’t imagine marriage ever being happy for her. Or for the poor soul who blindly says ‘I do.’”

  She paused to catch her breath, her hand over her heart. Then she put her right hand on the counter to steady herself.

  “Are you all right, Grandmother?”

  “No.” She paused and shook her head. “I knew this day would come. I dreaded it, if you want to know the truth. It was easier to pretend she was dead.”

  How hard, I thought. Does she really hate her own daughter this much? Will she come to hate me equally?

  “That girl ruined her life. She could have had a decent life, even after . . . even then. Let this be a good lesson for you. Choose your friends wisely. If you lie down with dogs, you’ll wake up with fleas,” she said. She took a deep breath and returned to the food. “Let’s get this meal over with.”

  She had made a pork loin roast with sweet potatoes and broccoli.

  I quickly got to work chopping up the salad, and she checked on her homemade bread. The aromas were delicious. She never intended it, for sure, but this was a wonderful welcome-home meal.

  “All right. Enough. It’s probably the first wholesome meal they’ve had in days, maybe months. Tell them dinner is ready,” she said.

  All three were laughing when I returned to the living room. Grandfather Prescott’s glass had been refilled. My mother’s was nearly empty. They stopped and looked at me as if they had forgotten what we were waiting to do.

  “Grandmother says dinner is ready. We should all go into the dining room.”

  Grandfather Prescott’s face looked a little red from drinking the aperitif. Looking quickly at the bottle, I saw that more than half had been drunk.

  “Get ready. This will be an experience,” my mother told Carlos. “I’d have offered to help, but I’m sure my touch would have contaminated something.”

  They moved to the dining room, and I returned to the kitchen to help serve the salad first and bring in a jug of cold water. In silence, everyone gathered around the table. My mother and Carlos sat across from me.

  My mother looked around and shook her head. “Believe it or not, Mom, I used to dream about this room and the meals I had in it.”

  “You weren’t much of a help,” Grandmother Myra said. “I’m sure you’re not much of a cook now, either.”

  “Sure I am. I cook up reservations,” she said, laughing. Carlos smiled. “Carlos can whip up a mean enchilada. I’ll give you this. You were always a good cook, Mom. ‘Slave to the kitchen, slave to the house, and slave to the man I love,’” she sang. Carlos laughed again. Grandfather Prescott risked a smile.

  My grandmother looked disapprovingly at him, wiping the grin off his face as quickly and roughly as she used to wipe jelly off my lips. Everyone was quiet. She brought her h
ands together and lowered her head to say grace. I looked at Carlos and my mother. They didn’t lower their heads at first, and then Carlos did, quickly. As soon as Grandmother Myra was done, she nodded at me, and I rose and began to serve everyone the salad, just the way I did when my grandparents had their friends, the Marxes, over for dinner.

  “You could get a job at any restaurant,” my mother said.

  “Sure could,” Carlos agreed.

  “I would hope her ambitions will reach a lot higher than that,” Grandmother Myra said.

  “Got to start somewhere, Mom.”

  “Not in the devil’s lap,” she muttered.

  I served myself some salad and then poured everyone a glass of water.

  “The town doesn’t look much different from the last time I saw it,” my mother said.

  “You must be blind,” Grandmother Myra told her. “Many of the older classic buildings have been torn down and replaced, and many lie fallow.”

  “Like I told you earlier,” Grandfather Prescott said, “it’s become one of those second-home communities. People from New York gobble up the properties at ridiculous prices and use them for vacation homes.”

  “Love to have one of those houses on the lake,” Carlos said. “We got just a short view of it coming here. How big is it?”

  “Two miles from end to end, with some coves, of course.”

  “Who bought the Nelsons’ house?” my mother asked. “The one closest to ours on the lake?”

  “Don’t know who they are,” Grandfather Prescott said. “Some city people, I’m sure.”

  I looked down quickly. They were talking about Mason and Claudine’s summerhouse.

  “I remember one summer,” my mother began. My grandmother cleared her throat loudly. “I was just going to say when we all took that boat ride with the Nelsons. Even you had a good time that day, Mom.”

  “That was a long time ago,” Grandmother Myra said. “You were still . . .”

  “Innocent and pure? Yes, I was. I enjoyed my high school life here,” she told Carlos. “We were a small school, but we had great basketball teams and baseball teams. Great school parties, too.”

 

    The Heavenstone Secrets Read onlineThe Heavenstone SecretsWillow Read onlineWillowHouse of Secrets Read onlineHouse of SecretsSecrets in the Shadows Read onlineSecrets in the ShadowsDelia's Heart Read onlineDelia's HeartFalling Stars Read onlineFalling StarsOlivia Read onlineOliviaMidnight Flight Read onlineMidnight FlightMidnight Whispers Read onlineMidnight WhispersPearl in the Mist Read onlinePearl in the MistDarkest Hour Read onlineDarkest HourSecrets of the Morning Read onlineSecrets of the MorningHidden Leaves Read onlineHidden LeavesBrooke Read onlineBrookeRuby Read onlineRubyHeartsong Read onlineHeartsongMusic in the Night Read onlineMusic in the NightFlowers in the Attic Read onlineFlowers in the AtticMayfair Read onlineMayfairThe Forbidden Heart Read onlineThe Forbidden HeartHidden Jewel Read onlineHidden JewelButterfly Read onlineButterflyGathering Clouds Read onlineGathering CloudsGates of Paradise Read onlineGates of ParadiseCeleste Read onlineCelesteDark Angel Read onlineDark AngelShattered Memories Read onlineShattered MemoriesTarnished Gold Read onlineTarnished GoldSecret Whispers Read onlineSecret WhispersHoney Read onlineHoneyEye of the Storm Read onlineEye of the StormDonna Read onlineDonnaScattered Leaves Read onlineScattered LeavesThe Mirror Sisters Read onlineThe Mirror SistersCat Read onlineCatChild of Darkness Read onlineChild of DarknessRunaways Read onlineRunawaysDark Seed Read onlineDark SeedChristopher's Diary: Secrets of Foxworth Read onlineChristopher's Diary: Secrets of FoxworthBlack Cat Read onlineBlack CatApril Shadows Read onlineApril ShadowsRaven Read onlineRavenRain Read onlineRainPetals on the Wind Read onlinePetals on the WindAll That Glitters Read onlineAll That GlittersTwisted Roots Read onlineTwisted RootsWeb of Dreams Read onlineWeb of DreamsRose Read onlineRoseChristopher's Diary: Echoes of Dollanganger Read onlineChristopher's Diary: Echoes of DollangangerInto the Garden Read onlineInto the GardenJade Read onlineJadeSecrets in the Attic Read onlineSecrets in the AtticSecret Brother Read onlineSecret BrotherWhitefern Read onlineWhitefernFallen Hearts Read onlineFallen HeartsHeaven Read onlineHeavenWhispering Hearts Read onlineWhispering HeartsSeeds of Yesterday Read onlineSeeds of YesterdayDawn Read onlineDawnCinnamon Read onlineCinnamonBroken Wings Read onlineBroken WingsStar Read onlineStarBeneath the Attic Read onlineBeneath the AtticIf There Be Thorns Read onlineIf There Be ThornsRoxy's Story Read onlineRoxy's StoryMy Sweet Audrina Read onlineMy Sweet AudrinaThe End of the Rainbow Read onlineThe End of the RainbowDelia's Crossing Read onlineDelia's CrossingForbidden Sister Read onlineForbidden SisterBroken Glass Read onlineBroken GlassCloudburst Read onlineCloudburstDaughter of Darkness Read onlineDaughter of DarknessTwilight's Child Read onlineTwilight's ChildMelody Read onlineMelodyIce Read onlineIceOut of the Rain Read onlineOut of the RainLightning Strikes Read onlineLightning StrikesGirl in the Shadows Read onlineGirl in the ShadowsThe Silhouette Girl Read onlineThe Silhouette GirlCutler 5 - Darkest Hour Read onlineCutler 5 - Darkest HourHidden Jewel l-4 Read onlineHidden Jewel l-4Cutler 2 - Secrets of the Morning Read onlineCutler 2 - Secrets of the MorningWildflowers 01 Misty Read onlineWildflowers 01 MistySecrets of Foxworth Read onlineSecrets of FoxworthHudson 03 Eye of the Storm Read onlineHudson 03 Eye of the StormTarnished Gold l-5 Read onlineTarnished Gold l-5Orphans 01 Butterfly Read onlineOrphans 01 ButterflyDollenganger 02 Petals On the Wind Read onlineDollenganger 02 Petals On the WindSage's Eyes Read onlineSage's EyesCasteel 05 Web of Dreams Read onlineCasteel 05 Web of DreamsLandry 03 All That Glitters Read onlineLandry 03 All That GlittersPearl in the Mist l-2 Read onlinePearl in the Mist l-2Casteel 01 Heaven Read onlineCasteel 01 HeavenHudson 02 Lightning Strikes Read onlineHudson 02 Lightning StrikesCasteel 04 Gates of Paradise Read onlineCasteel 04 Gates of ParadiseThe Umbrella Lady Read onlineThe Umbrella LadyDollenganger 04 Seeds of Yesterday Read onlineDollenganger 04 Seeds of YesterdayRuby l-1 Read onlineRuby l-1DeBeers 02 Wicked Forest Read onlineDeBeers 02 Wicked ForestDeBeers 05 Hidden Leaves Read onlineDeBeers 05 Hidden LeavesDark Angel (Casteel Series #2) Read onlineDark Angel (Casteel Series #2)DeBeers 01 Willow Read onlineDeBeers 01 WillowAll That Glitters l-3 Read onlineAll That Glitters l-3The Unwelcomed Child Read onlineThe Unwelcomed ChildShadows 02 Girl in the Shadows Read onlineShadows 02 Girl in the ShadowsWildflowers 05 Into the Garden Read onlineWildflowers 05 Into the GardenEarly Spring 02 Scattered Leaves Read onlineEarly Spring 02 Scattered LeavesLogan 02 Heartsong Read onlineLogan 02 HeartsongShadows 01 April Shadows Read onlineShadows 01 April ShadowsShooting Stars 02 Ice Read onlineShooting Stars 02 IceSecrets 02 Secrets in the Shadows Read onlineSecrets 02 Secrets in the ShadowsGarden of Shadows (Dollanganger) Read onlineGarden of Shadows (Dollanganger)Little Psychic Read onlineLittle PsychicCasteel 03 Fallen Hearts Read onlineCasteel 03 Fallen HeartsShooting Stars 01 Cinnamon Read onlineShooting Stars 01 CinnamonCutler 1 - Dawn Read onlineCutler 1 - DawnLogan 05 Olivia Read onlineLogan 05 OliviaFallen Hearts (Casteel Series #3) Read onlineFallen Hearts (Casteel Series #3)Dollenganger 05 Garden of Shadows Read onlineDollenganger 05 Garden of ShadowsHudson 01 Rain Read onlineHudson 01 RainGemini 03 Child of Darkness Read onlineGemini 03 Child of DarknessLandry 01 Ruby Read onlineLandry 01 RubyEarly Spring 01 Broken Flower Read onlineEarly Spring 01 Broken FlowerBittersweet Dreams Read onlineBittersweet DreamsDeBeers 03 Twisted Roots Read onlineDeBeers 03 Twisted RootsOrphans 05 Runaways Read onlineOrphans 05 RunawaysShooting Stars 04 Honey Read onlineShooting Stars 04 HoneyWildflowers 04 Cat Read onlineWildflowers 04 CatHeaven (Casteel Series #1) Read onlineHeaven (Casteel Series #1)DeBeers 06 Dark Seed Read onlineDeBeers 06 Dark SeedDeBeers 04 Into the Woods Read onlineDeBeers 04 Into the WoodsShooting Stars 03 Rose Read onlineShooting Stars 03 RoseOrphans 03 Brooke Read onlineOrphans 03 BrookeA Novel Read onlineA NovelSecrets 01 Secrets in the Attic Read onlineSecrets 01 Secrets in the AtticLogan 04 Music in the Night Read onlineLogan 04 Music in the NightCutler 4 - Midnight Whispers Read onlineCutler 4 - Midnight WhispersGemini 01 Celeste Read onlineGemini 01 CelesteCage of Love Read onlineCage of LoveEchoes in the Walls Read onlineEchoes in the WallsLandry 02 Pearl in the Mist Read onlineLandry 02 Pearl in the MistCasteel 02 Dark Angel Read onlineCasteel 02 Dark AngelDollenganger 03 If There Be a Thorns Read onlineDollenganger 03 If There Be a ThornsEchoes of Dollanganger Read onlineEchoes of DollangangerOrphans 04 Raven Read onlineOrphans 04 RavenBroken Wings 02 Midnight Flight Read onlineBroken Wings 02 Midnight FlightWildflowers 03 Jade Read onlineWildflowers 03 JadeLandry 05 Tarnished Gold Read onlineLandry 05 Tarnished GoldCutler 3 - Twilight's Child Read onlineCutler 3 - Twilight's ChildCapturing Angels Read onlineCapturing AngelsLogan 03 Unfinished Symphony Read onlineLogan 03 Unfinished SymphonyOrphans 02 Crystal Read onlineOrphans 02 CrystalWildflowers 02 Star Read onlineWildflowers 02 StarGates of Paradise (Casteel Series #4) Read onlineGates of Paradise (Casteel Series #4)Hudson 04 The End of the Rainbow Read onlineHudson 04 The End of the RainbowDollenganger 01 Flowers In the Attic Read onlineDollenganger 01 Flowers In the Attic