Read The Snowball Effect Online

Authors: Holly Nicole Hoxter

The Snowball Effect (3 page)

BOOK: The Snowball Effect
6.16Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Kara'd gotten some scholarships, but she still needed money for college and she actually made decent tips working at the diner. Unlike most of our graduating class, Kara would be at a real college in the fall—UMBC, on the other side of the beltway. She wanted to be a nurse.

When Christine had found that out, she'd rolled her eyes and said, “You could take nursing classes at CCC,” which is Corben Community College, where about half of us were headed. After Christine's boyfriend, Wallace, decided to go there, Christine started talking about CCC like it was Harvard or Yale, even though anyone could get in; you just had to decide you wanted to go, and then you went. Christine wasn't going to college at all. All she
wanted to be was a homemaker, and you didn't need even an AA degree for that.

I'd be at CCC in the fall. Riley, too. He'd taken a year off after high school so we could start together. I would major in business and he would get certified in auto repair, and then we were going to open our own repair shop. I'd be the receptionist and run the business side of it, and Riley would fix the cars.

I sat in one of Kara's booths and ordered an omelet and sausages. She found an old Sunday paper in the back and brought it out for me to read so I wouldn't look pathetic sitting all alone. She kept my coffee cup filled. When she wasn't busy, she came and sat down with me and told me stories about dumb customers she'd had. Some of the stories I'd heard before, but I let her tell them again. I knew she was just trying to get me to laugh.

When she got off, we went back to her house and her mom was up already for work. She stood in the kitchen in her robe and started the coffeepot.

“Mabel talked to your boss,” Kara's mom said to me. “She told him you'd be out for at least a week, but if you want to take more time, just let us know.”

I nodded.

Kara's mom kissed me on the forehead. “Sleep tight, girls.”

Kara and I slept awkwardly together in her twin bed. I woke up about a million times. I finally got out of bed in the early afternoon, just in time for
Heartstrings
. I went
out to the living room and turned the television on.

I must have woken Kara up, because she came out a few minutes later. “Are you kidding me?” she asked as she sat next to me on the couch. “We haven't watched this in forever.”

On soap operas, everything is so drawn out and overstated that even if you haven't watched in a long time, it isn't hard to figure out who's had an affair or who's gotten killed or come back to life. The only thing that threw me was Lainey St. James's baby, who'd been born the summer I was eleven. They'd rapidly aged her. She was a grown woman now—engaged, even.

It boggled my mind to look at that beautiful girl and remember the day she was born. I knew it wasn't real, that twenty years hadn't actually passed, that it certainly wasn't the same baby actress I remembered. But still, I felt old. I felt ancient.

 

After
Heartstrings
we spent the afternoon watching movies. I kept my phone turned off. I hadn't felt like calling anyone back yet. I went to work with Kara again that night. When I woke up the next afternoon, I saw that Kara's mom had washed my clothes and left donuts for us.

“I guess I should probably talk to Riley,” I said to Kara as I dunked a chocolate donut in my milk. I didn't feel
too
guilty about it, though. Mabel would have told him I was at Kara's, so he could have found me if he'd really wanted to.

I knew he had to be devastated about my mom. He'd try to get me to talk about my feelings, and he'd make it into such a big deal. But I wanted to ignore it for as long as possible. Denial was my favorite stage of grief, by far. I didn't mind being numb. When you go to the dentist, who wants to feel all of that scraping and drilling? If you don't take the novocaine, you're crazy. There's nothing wrong with being numb.

Riley would understand why I'd been ignoring him. He knew me. I wasn't some fake perfect girlfriend, and he loved me anyway. Even when I let his calls go straight to voice mail.

Kara raised her eyebrows and took another donut. “You haven't talked to him? He's probably worried.”

I glared at her.

“Just saying.”

After we ate, I changed back into my own clothes and left Kara's house. I didn't drive straight to Riley's. I got on the beltway and drove around for a while. I drove past the spot where Carl crashed his bike. I'd done it before and it didn't really bother me. Mom, though, never went back on the beltway after Carl's accident.

I practiced how I'd apologize to Riley for ignoring him.

I'm sorry I've been distant. Or, you know, completely absent.

I just wanted to be alone. Sort through my thoughts.

I know I should have wanted to be with you.

Hey, my mom is
dead.
I don't have anything to apologize for.

Ugh, yes I do.

I was selfish. I am sorry.

Finally I pulled up in front of Riley's house. I didn't even have to knock. He saw me coming up the sidewalk, and he opened the door and stood back and let me in. Like he'd been waiting for me. Maybe he had. Maybe Kara had called him, or he'd called Kara.

“Anybody home?” I asked.

He shook his head.

Riley's family was always busy, and they were hardly ever home. His mom owned a craft store and spent all her time there. That's what got Riley motivated to open his own business. His dad was a car salesman. His brother spent all his time with his girlfriend or playing soccer.

He took my hand and led me upstairs to his room and then shut the door and gave me the longest hug of my life. He probably thought I would start bawling, because that's what he remembered me doing after Grandma Elaine died. And like I'd done when Mom said we couldn't afford to fly to Orlando for the funeral. She never went back to work after Carl's accident, but I knew she was lying about not having the money.

Riley had really wanted to take me to the funeral. He had money saved up because we'd been planning on getting an apartment together after I graduated. But Riley's mom didn't want him to miss work, and I didn't want to
go by myself. I told him we should just keep the money for the apartment. I knew Grandma Elaine would have wanted us to get out on our own as soon as possible. So in the end I didn't get to go, but he'd tried.

“Are you all right?” he whispered in my ear.

“Fine,” I said. “Let's watch TV.”

He let go of me and pulled his sheets back so I could climb into bed. I snuggled up under the blue plaid comforter that I'd helped him pick out a few years earlier.

“Are you hungry?” he asked. “I was getting ready to make a snack before work.”

My eating schedule had gotten so out of whack after spending two days with Kara that I didn't even know if I should be hungry or not. “Um, yeah,” I said. “I guess.”

Riley tucked me into bed and turned on the TV. He handed me the remote and then headed to the kitchen. He didn't ask me what I wanted and I hadn't told him, but I knew whatever he came back with would be perfect.

“I can't believe it,” Riley said after we'd finished eating our sandwiches. He sat beside me on the bed holding my hand, like I was sick, or an invalid or something.

“I don't know why you're surprised. I mean, she practically couldn't do anything for herself the last few months.”

“But she seemed happy at Collin's graduation.”

Ugh, Collin's graduation. Collin didn't go to either of the elementary schools I'd gone to. Since he needed special services, he went to a school outside our zone. He
was in a regular kindergarten class, but they pulled him out for one-on-one help since he didn't always do well in big groups.

The graduation thing had been outside. All the kinder-gartners lined up in the grass wearing their graduation gowns and sang a few little-kid songs. And then Collin almost ruined the whole thing in the middle.

While they were supposed to be singing “My Country, 'Tis of Thee,” Collin turned around and bolted across the field toward the baseball diamond. His teacher looked back at him, lost her place in the song, and then looked around the audience for Mom. Mom just sat there staring off into space like she didn't know what was going on. Mabel nudged her, but by the time she figured out Collin had run away, Riley had already crossed the field and caught him. He threw Collin over his shoulder and tickled him as he carried him back to his class. Collin wouldn't stay with his kindergarten class by himself, so Riley stood with all the little kids. And he sang, too.

Mabel took a ton of pictures with Mom's camera. Mom couldn't stop crying long enough to hold the camera up to her face. Later Mabel had them printed and got a big blown-up version of the only decent picture she'd gotten of all four of us. We were a sad excuse for a family. Collin scowled and looked away from the camera as he tried to pull away from Riley. Riley looked down at Collin with his mouth open like he was telling him to hold still. Riley had his other arm around my waist. I
squinted because the sun was in my eyes. Only Mom, with her face red from crying, had smiled. Trying to pretend like she wouldn't be dead in a week.

I snorted. “Were you there?” I asked Riley. “She cried through the whole thing.”

“Other mothers cried too. You get emotional when your kid graduates from kindergarten.”

I rolled my eyes. “She was just crying about Carl. She probably didn't even know where we were.”

“Lainey, you're—”

“Let's talk about something else.”

“Fine. How's Collin holding up?”

That wasn't really changing the subject, but whatever. “He's fine.”

Mabel probably thought I was a terrible sister. I still hadn't actually called to see how Collin was doing.

“Jeez, I can't even imagine how he feels right now. He must be so confused.”

I nodded.

“Who's watching him?”

“Mabel. Don't you have to go to work soon?”

He checked his watch. “Yeah, I should be leaving now. If I go. I'll call in sick and stay with you if you want.”

I shook my head. “You should save your sick days for when we can actually have a nice day together.”

He rubbed my knee through the blanket. “You can come with me.”

If I'd wanted to, I
could
have gone to work with him
and sat in the waiting room reading car magazines and drinking gross coffee out of a Styrofoam cup. But it didn't really sound all that appealing.

“I think I'll just go back to Kara's,” I said.

Riley nodded. “Maybe I can come over after work?”

“I might go to work with Kara.”

“I could meet you at the diner.”

“All right. That'd be nice.”

“I'll call you.”

I forced a smile. “I'll answer.”

2
LAINEY ST. SOMEBODY

A
fter I left Riley's, I drove to my house. I decided if I saw police tape, I would keep driving. But when I got to my house, it looked completely normal, just like it had the last time I'd been there. I parked in the driveway and then walked up to the front door. Then I changed my mind and walked next door to Mabel's.

“Hi, sweetheart.” Mabel greeted me with a big smile. Then I noticed her looking me up and down, and I knew she was thinking,
The poor girl's had on the same clothes for forty-eight hours.
“Come on in!”

As I followed Mabel into the house, I noticed the silence first. And then I noticed that all her animal knickknacks were still carefully arranged on her shelves. Those goofy animals had provided hours of conversation after Carl died and Mabel started coming over a lot. It was good to have something to talk to her about besides
church and Basket Bingo and dead people. I'd buy her a grizzly bear figurine or whatever, and when I gave it to her, she'd tell me how much she loved it; then she'd tell me about her other grizzly bears and where she'd found them, and that would eventually lead into a story, and the stupid grizzly bear would provide an hour's worth of conversation between me and Mabel, while Mom sat in the recliner looking comatose.

The knickknacks were intact and the house was perfectly silent. My brother was definitely not here.

“Where's Collin?” I asked Mabel.

“Oh, honey, sit down,” Mabel said. She took my hand and pulled me into the living room. I wondered if I'd been wrong. I'd just assumed Collin was okay, but maybe he wasn't.

I sat on Mabel's couch. Mabel stood beside me.

“I called Carl's mother, and she came and picked Collin up. The day it happened.”

“Oh. Is he going to live with her now or something?”

“I don't know, sweetheart. Would you like some cookies?”

“Okay,” I said, even though I wasn't hungry. Mabel smiled at me and went to the kitchen.

Mabel's house always smelled like tea, and not instant iced tea from a canister like my mom always made, but the kind that you made on the stove with boiling water and tea bags. I hated that kind of tea, but whenever Mabel gave me a cup, I drank it. She came back with two glasses
of nasty tea and a plate of cookies (store-bought; Mabel never baked) on a tray.

“Did you talk to your father?” Mabel asked.

I nodded, but of course I hadn't.

“Good. He sounded so worried about you. Are you going to visit?”

I shook my head and then took a big gulp. The trick was to drink the tea as quickly as possible. “I think I'll go back to Kara's tonight.” If my dad had been all that worried about me, he would've come to Corben already.

Mabel nodded. “Her mother sounded very nice on the phone.”

I nodded. “They're all really nice.”

I sat on Mabel's couch and stared at her coffee table. It was so quiet that I could hear myself chew, and it sounded like the loudest noise I'd ever heard. I finished my cookies and took two more big gulps of the tea and then put my empty glass down on the tray.

“Did you want me to walk next door with you and help you pack an overnight bag?” Mabel asked.

I shrugged. “If you want.” There was no way I'd admit to Mabel that I might actually be afraid to walk into my own house.

We got up and walked outside. When I saw the red Mustang convertible with Texas plates parked in front of my house, I stopped. Mabel bumped into my arm.

“What is that?” I asked. “Whose car is that?”

Mabel stared and shook her head. “I don't know,
dear. It's probably just someone visiting one of the neighbors.”

As we walked toward my house, I saw that the gate was already open. We never left the gate open, and I knew I'd shut it fifteen minutes earlier.

We walked up to the porch. Mabel turned the doorknob. It was already unlocked. She gave me a look.

“Hello?” Mabel called. “Is anyone home?” I followed her into the living room, but I left the door open in case we had to make a quick escape.

A blond girl flew into the doorway between the kitchen and living room. “Hey!” she exclaimed. She wore white shorts and a pink T-shirt with a rainbow on the front. She was tan. Really tan.

And she looked just like Mom.

Okay, she looked like what Mom would have looked like twenty years ago.

Mabel looked at me, like she wanted me to explain. But I just stared. She took a few steps toward the blond girl.

“Hello,” she said. “I'm Mabel White. From next door.” She held out her hand and the blond girl shook it.

“Vallery Lancaster,” she said. “From Texas. I'm Lisa's daughter. I just got here. I left as soon as Lisa's lawyer called, but it's a pretty long drive.” Vallery looked me over. “Hi!” she said. She held out her hand.

I knew I shouldn't be offended that she didn't recognize me. I hadn't even bothered to find her number and
call her. But I just stared at her hand. “It's me, Lainey,” I said. “Remember?”

“Oh!” Vallery threw her arms around me. “My God, Lainey, it's been
years
.”

I let her hug me for a few seconds and then I pulled away. We stood there awkwardly in the doorway between the kitchen and the living room.

“Uh. So. Do you dye your hair now? It looks lighter.”

Vallery rubbed her hair. “The sun lightened it up a lot.”

I nodded.

“Do you have any food or anything?” Vallery asked. “I haven't eaten since Tennessee.”

I waved my arm toward the kitchen, and Vallery turned and went in. Mabel and I sat down at the kitchen table while Vallery opened the refrigerator.

“So you're Lisa's oldest daughter,” Mabel said.

Vallery looked at Mabel over the refrigerator door. “Yep.”

Mabel nodded. “I'm so sorry for your loss. I'd gotten very close to Lisa, so I can only imagine how you must feel right now.”

“Yeah,” Vallery said. She walked away from the refrigerator with a block of cheese. “It's really…sad. Just sad. I don't know any other way to describe it.” Vallery turned to me and made a jabbing motion with her hand, like she wanted to stab me.

“You need a knife?” She nodded. I went to the silverware drawer and found a sharp one.

“Thanks,” she said. She sat at the table and cut off a wedge of cheese. “I know this is probably rude, but I'm so hungry I think I might pass out.”

“Are you diabetic?” Mabel asked.

“No. Just hungry.” Vallery smiled at me. “I wish you could see your face right now. You'd think I'd come back from the dead or something.”

“I just wasn't expecting to see you. I didn't know Mom had a lawyer. I don't even have your phone number.”

“We didn't have any idea how to get in touch with you,” Mabel said. “I'd started planning the funeral with my pastor.”

“Oh crap, funeral. Yeah, we'll have to talk about that.”

Mabel nodded. “I bet you girls would like to catch up, so I'll go on home. When you get all settled in, you can come on over and talk to me.”

“It was nice to meet you,” Vallery said.

“Thank you, Mabel.”

Vallery and I sat at the table and waited for the front door to shut behind her.

“How did you get in?” I asked.

“You keep a spare key hidden under a flowerpot, like every other person in the world.”

She put down the knife. “Where the hell did Collin come from? Why didn't anyone bother to tell me that Mom had another kid?”

I shrugged. Vallery sighed and threw her long, tan
legs up on the chair beside her.

“I about shit myself when Mom's lawyer called. First, I was surprised that Mom had been smart enough to even talk to a lawyer. And then it was surprise after surprise after surprise.” She picked the knife back up and pointed it at me. “You know, I'm not the one who didn't stay in touch.”

I nodded. “Yeah. I know Mom.”

“I mean, when I got a little older, I really tried to be a good daughter. I called Mom sometimes to let her know how I was doing. It didn't seem like she cared all that much, but I did it anyway. Every time I moved or changed my number, I let her know, just in case. And this, Lainey, is the very definition of ‘just in case.' She should have called me. My God. I would have taken the kid off her hands so she could get some counseling or whatever she needed to do. Jesus.”

“What did the lawyer tell you?”

Vallery grinned. “Oh, it was great. First he tells me, ‘Angel, I'm so sorry to be the one to tell you this, but your mother has passed away.' And I'm like, ‘Oh my God, was she sick?' And he's all, ‘Yes, emotionally she was very sick. She was never the same after Carl's death. She couldn't get over it.' So I'm like, ‘Oh, her broken heart killed her?' And I kind of laughed, which was real appropriate, I know. So he says, ‘No, she killed herself. She hung herself.' And I'm like, ‘Oh my God.' But then I'm like, ‘Wait, who is Carl?' And that surprised him. I guess Mom had given him the
impression that we were super close or something.”

“I can't believe Mom
had
a lawyer.”

“Yeah, apparently after she knew she was going to off herself, she got in touch with this guy to get her affairs in order or whatever. I think they used to date. So anyway, he explains to me about Carl and the motorcycle accident and everything. And I'm like, ‘Well thank you for letting me know, but I'm not sure I'll be able to make it up there in time for the funeral, money's tight, blah, blah.' And he's quiet for a minute. And then he says, ‘Of course there's still the matter of your brother, Collin.' See, by then he'd figured out that if I didn't know about Carl, there's no way in hell I knew they had a kid. I bet he was mad as hell at Mom. He had to explain to me all about the kid and how Mom wanted me to be his guardian or whatever. So I said, ‘All right, I'm on my way, but I'm coming from Texas so it's gonna take a while.' And now here I am. I have a meeting with this lawyer guy tomorrow.”

“I thought you lived in Colorado.”

“I moved to Dallas after college. God, Mom didn't tell you anything, did she?”

I shook my head. “You went to college?”

“Yes, I went to college. That's surprising?”

“Well, the last time you were here, you didn't seem really…scholastic.”

I hadn't seen Vallery since I was eight years old. She visited one summer during Mom's Dark Days when she'd been too paranoid to work so she somehow got on disability
and saw a counselor five times a week. Vallery was fifteen, and her dad sent her to us because she'd gotten out of control. Like Mom could have done anything to fix that. I guess he just needed a break.

Somehow she made a zillion friends her first day in Baltimore, and had a party in our living room every single night for six weeks. It was hard to sleep with all that noise all night long. Mom got pills from her doctor, and she had no idea what was going on. I snuck one of her pills one time and downed it with a glass of grape juice, but it made my arms and legs feel so heavy that I crawled to my bed and slept it off for about sixteen hours.

Vallery rolled her eyes. “Yeah, well I'm twenty-five, Lainey. I grew up. Didn't you? I notice you're not still wearing Care Bears pajamas and picking your nose. Besides, it was just state college, not the Ivy League or anything.”

“I wasn't saying I thought you were dumb.”

“Yeah, I know. Hey, I do like this house a lot better than the old one. Man, that place was a dump. Whoever Carl was, I guess he set you and Mom up pretty nice.”

I laughed. “We even have gas here.”

Vallery wrapped up the cheese and dropped the knife in the sink on her way to the refrigerator. “Gas?”

“We didn't at the old house. Mom had it shut off when you were there.”

“I don't remember that.”

“You don't remember? Mom was afraid of ovens. She
was on disability. Saw a counselor and everything.”

Vallery laughed. “You're making that up. That sounds too whacked out even for Mom.”

“You don't remember we couldn't cook anything on the stove? We could only use the microwave?”

Vallery looked up at the ceiling and then nodded. “I guess I do remember eating a lot of Hot Pockets that summer.” She sat back down at the table. “Where's the kid?”

I shrugged. “Mabel says his grandmother came and got him.”

“He has a grandmother?”

I nodded. “Carl's mom.”

“Then why did Mom make
me
his guardian?”

I shrugged.

“Why do you think she
hung
herself?”

“I don't know.”

“I mean, she has pills out the ass in the medicine cabinet.”

I stared at her. “You've been here for twenty minutes and you went snooping through the medicine cabinet already?”

“Yes. Wouldn't it have been easier to swallow a bottle of those and then just drift off to sleep?”

“Is that how it works? You just go to sleep?”

“I don't know. But it seems like it'd have to be more pleasant than snapping your neck.”

“I think you suffocate when you hang yourself.”

“I don't think so. Anyway, this Mabel lady? She was Mom's friend?”

“Yeah. She lives next door.”

“I guess I better go talk to her about this funeral.”

“Now?”

Vallery shrugged. “Yeah, why not? Left or right?”

“Left. The yellow house.”

“'Kay. I'll be back in a few.”

Vallery started for the living room, and then she walked back to me and bent down and gave me a hug. She kissed me on the cheek and walked away.

Alone again.

I sat at the kitchen table and stared at the door to the basement. I walked over and shut it. And then I pushed a chair against it. I knew it was kind of crazy, but I didn't care. I felt entitled to a little absurdity, under the circumstances.

BOOK: The Snowball Effect
6.16Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Toxic Bad Boy by April Brookshire
The Pink Ghetto by Ireland, Liz
The Warlock Rock by Christopher Stasheff
And on the Eighth Day by Ellery Queen
The White Witch by B.C. Morin
Going Long by Ginger Scott
These Dark Things by Jan Weiss
Scorn of Angels by John Patrick Kennedy