*
It all started, as these things often do, with a boy. Sydney blossomed in high school. And she loved it. She loved every minute of it. And she was so desperate to keep it that she separated herself almost totally from her family. She was rarely at home. Her grandmother Mary understood what it was like to have that kind of attention, so she let her youngest granddaughter bask in it. A little too much. Sometimes it felt like a push. You go have fun. I remember what it was like to be you.
Sydney was the belle of the ball, envied for many things—her beauty, her way with hair, but mostly because the most popular boy in school had fallen in love with her. Sydney and Hunter John Matteson had been inseparable. This was much to the distress of Emma Clark, who had loved Hunter John all her life, and who would end up marrying him, in the end. All she had to do was wait. What she knew, what everyone knew, was that Hunter John was only making hay while the sun shone. He could only dally with a Waverley while in school. As soon as he graduated, real life began, the life each Matteson father thrust upon his son.
In real life, a Matteson never married a Waverley.
Sydney didn’t understand that at the time. She thought she and Hunter John would be in love forever. There’d been no warning when they graduated. He’d ended their relationship suddenly, leaving her stunned, her heart shriveled to the size of a pea and her hatred for this town building until it shed from her skin and left angry blue flakes on her sheets when she got out of bed in the mornings.
Bay never knew exactly why Sydney left Bascom. She didn’t know Sydney left because a Matteson broke her heart and she decided to do what her own mother had done, leave this stupid town and everyone in it. Sometimes Sydney wondered, if Hunter John hadn’t played with her that way, would she have stayed? Probably not. But at the very least she would have left with a bigger heart and a happier soul, maybe one that never would have attracted the likes of Bay’s father into her life. Had it been her insecurity that had made her stay with a man who had beaten her? She might never know.
It was moot, in the end. It all happened the way it was supposed to, because she got Bay out of it. And when she returned to town, there was Henry, whom Sydney had known as a child. Henry had watched her with Hunter John, all while being in love with her himself, helpless to stop her from giving her heart away.
She would be damned if she would let another Matteson break the heart of another Waverley, especially not her daughter. Josh wasn’t as chest-thumping and proud as his father had been, but his good nature only meant he was going to do what he was told. He was going into business with his father, just like his father before him.
Sydney didn’t know how Josh felt about her daughter right now, but she did know that it’s remarkably easy to fall in love with someone who is already in love with you. It’s a little like falling in love with yourself. Sydney was honest enough with herself to know that’s how it had happened with Henry. He had loved her long before she had loved him. And Bay was an extraordinary young woman. Beautiful, kind, mysterious. If Josh spent any amount of time with her, he would fall for her. Sydney knew that with a certainty as hard as flint.
So the obvious course of action was to prevent it from ever happening.
8
Monday afternoon, Bay sat outside on the beige stone steps of the main academic building at school and did her homework, waiting for the late buses, the ones that took the Wide Open Spaces kids home. They were the kids from the farthest edges of the city school district. They were a quieter crowd than the rest of the kids. Their lives weren’t filled every minute with something. Most of their lives, it seemed, were actually spent on the bus. Bay was usually the first one off, at Pendland Street, which she could easily walk to when she felt like it. It wasn’t that far away. But she needed the excuse to be here, because that’s what she’d told Josh she’d do in her note. And giving up would mean conceding that she was wrong, even though at this point she knew she was.
She was just waiting for her heart to catch up.
Everyone loved an October afternoon. Even the Wide Open Spaces kids were more lively than usual on the sidewalk. It was the kind of day everyone thought of as a quintessential fall school day—crisp air, letter jackets, plaid skirts. Something everyone says they once read in a book.
She finished her homework, then brought out her copy of Romeo and Juliet. She’d read it hundreds of times. Now she just liked to turn the pages to words she enjoyed, rolling them over in her mind: solemnity and pernicious, jocund and caitiff.
Doff.
Rote.
Fray.
She heard someone clear his throat behind her, so she automatically scooted aside and moved her backpack, thinking she was in the way of someone walking down the stone steps.
Someone did move by her, but then took a seat next to her.
She looked over, a little irritated because there were thirty-three steps from the sidewalk up to the rotunda, and this person still wanted her personal space.
But then she realized who it was.
“Hi,” Josh said.
Every day she’d been sitting on these steps, waiting for him. And now that he was finally here, she had no idea what to say. She wasn’t sure she wanted to say anything now. She couldn’t help that she belonged with him, that every time he was near, she felt a pull in her stomach, as if something inside her was pointing to him and saying, Home. Home. Home. But she didn’t have to try so hard. It wasn’t changing anything but herself, changing herself into someone miserable and insecure, someone so not her.
“You left your phone in my car Saturday night,” Josh said. He had his elbows on his knees, one hand casually holding her cell phone out to her.
“Oh. Thanks,” she said, taking the phone and stuffing it in her backpack. So that’s where it had been. She couldn’t find it anywhere when her mother had demanded custody of it as part of her being grounded, as if Bay used it all the time and would feel its absence mightily.
She fumbled around in her backpack, thinking he was just going to get up and leave. But the longer she dug through her backpack, needlessly rearranging her books, the more she realized that he wasn’t going anywhere.
She finally turned again to him. Josh was staring at her, sunglasses covering his eyes. He was wearing jeans and a rugby-striped sweater. She stared back, silent, raising her eyebrows. If this was going to be a conversation, he was going to have to make the effort.
“I’m sorry I was rude to you,” Josh finally said. “I was having a bad night, but that was no reason to take it out on you.” He looked at his hands, clasped together between his wide-splayed knees. “I’m glad you were there. I thought about it a lot this weekend. I realized I didn’t even thank you. So, thank you.”
“Okay,” she said.
“Okay?”
“I accept your apology.”
He smiled. “Very magnanimous of you.”
“That’s me. Magnanimous.” Several minutes passed in silence. Bay finally said to him, “You’re still here.” It wasn’t said rudely, but curiously, as if he might have forgotten.
“Yes,” he said, nodding.
“Is this,” she circled her finger in his general direction, referring to his presence, “a part of the apology?”
“No. But I understand why you would ask that. And, again, I’m sorry.”
“Why were you fighting with that guy?” Bay asked, something she’d been dying to know, but figured she would never have the answer. Now that he was here, and wasn’t going anywhere, apparently, she might as well take the opportunity to find out.
Josh shrugged. “He made a joke about how my dad couldn’t buy my way into the state championships. We’re a good team. My dad has nothing to do with it. Literally. He hates soccer.”
“You’re a great player. I’ve seen you play. I mean, we all have,” she quickly added.
“There was a part of me that hoped I’d get caught. Someone even posted a video of the fight. I thought my mom and dad were going to be called back from vacation and I would get a lecture and they would tell me how disappointed they were in me. But the principal didn’t so much as look at me today, even with this,” he said, taking off his sunglasses and pointing to his black eye. It was purple and yellow today, melancholy colors. “They’ll never know, unless I tell them.”
“Why would you tell them?”
He shook his head. “Sometimes I just want them to know I’m not who they think I am.”
It was such a strange thing to say that she automatically asked, “Who are you?” And it finally occurred to her that she really didn’t know. She knew as little about him as he knew about her. She simply had the benefit of knowing, knowing, where she needed to end up.
“I’m Josh Matteson, nice to meet you,” he said, putting on a big fake smile and holding out his hand as if he wanted her to shake it. She didn’t. His smile faded and he put his sunglasses back on. “I don’t want to go to Notre Dame, like my grandfather did. I don’t want to go into business with my dad.”
“That’s not who you are. That’s who you aren’t,” she pointed out. “What do you want?”
He seemed flummoxed by her response. “I don’t know,” he said. “I get cold sweats when I sit in my car in the mornings, trying to make myself go to school. I go to sleep at nine at night because I’m so exhausted. Sometimes my cheeks hurt from smiling, from pretending I’m okay with where my life is heading.”
The answer was so obvious that she thought he was playing with her at first. Then she realized he wasn’t. “Then stop pretending,” she said.
He gave her a look, like she’d said something cute. “I bet you’ve never pretended a day in your life,” he said.
“You say that like it’s easy.”
He shrugged. “Sometimes I daydream of mowing,” he said. “I love watching when the soccer fields are mowed. It seems so soothing, to ride on a lawn mower, back and forth, for hours.”
The late buses pulled in, and the Wide Open Spaces kids grabbed their backpacks and band instrument cases and started lining up.
Bay stood. “You could get a job at the soccer arena in Hickory. I bet they do a lot of mowing there. And playing. And teaching,” she said.
Josh watched her as she shouldered her backpack. He looked a little bewildered, as if he had steeled himself for something unpleasant. Bay did a mental eye-roll. Did he really think just talking to her would be so awful?
“Would you like a ride home?” he asked.
“As thrilling as it was the first time, no, thanks. The buses are already here.” She didn’t mention she was grounded.
Josh stayed seated as she descended the steps.
“Will you be out here tomorrow?” he called.
“I’m here every day,” she said as she got in line.
Just before she stepped onto the bus, Josh called, “Bay!”
She turned to him. He stood up, wincing a little, his hand on his side, favoring his rib cage. “Tell your friend Phin I said thanks.”
“For what?”
“Watch the video,” he said, then slowly walked up the steps and disappeared.