The Paper Swan

“When he died,” she continued, “he wanted to be buried next to her. My mama and grandpa lived in San Diego. That’s in the States. But when she came to bury grandpa, my mama stayed. She says it’s because she grew up here, but I think it’s also because three of my grandparents are buried here. I don’t know my other grandfather. I don’t know my father either. His name is Damian. He’s the one in prison. Real prison. Not working there, like my ma—”

 

“Sierra! I’ve been looking all over for you. I told you to meet me by—” Skye skidded to a halt. She was holding candles, one in each hand. They snuffed out with her sharp exhalation.

 

They stood paralyzed, Damian kneeling on a bed of marigolds, and Skye between her parents’ tombstones, holding on to them, as their daughter introduced them.

 

“This is my new friend, Mama. I visit him after school sometimes . . .” she said, but neither Damian nor Skye were listening.

 

All around them, families were gathered in little units around lost loved ones, and there they were, lost to each other, but brought together by MaMaLu, and Warren, and Adriana. For a moment, it felt like the dead really had joined the living, like they were all gathered in that one spot, at that one time, and all of their flaws and choices and mistakes didn’t make them any less perfect. It didn’t matter why Warren did what he did, why Damian did what he did, why Skye kept Sierra from Damian.

 

In the grand scheme of things, we do the best we can, all of us, and we make up our stories as we go along; we write them and direct them and project them into the world. And sometimes we get other people’s stories, and sometimes we don’t, but always there is a story behind a story behind a story, linked in a chain that we can only see a small part of, because it’s there when we’re born and it continues after we’re gone. And who can comprehend all of it in one lifetime?

 

Skye and Damian could barely handle that one moment. It was loaded with too much—too many thoughts and emotions, revelations and separations. Too many years. Too much space. Everything expanded, straining at the seams, and then contracted, losing shape, losing form, until the moment hung between them, like a wobbly bubble ready to burst at the slightest shift.

 

“Where do you want the rest of these?” Nick Turner caught up to Skye and dropped the bags he was holding.

 

Damian felt himself snap back to reality. He had lost so much, and then gained so much—Sierra, Skye, within his reach, within his grasp—only to lose it all again. Skye might have had his baby, but she had gone back to Nick. And why not? She had dated him at one point. He was familiar and successful and stable. Her father had obviously approved. He was the lawyer who’d handled the case so he knew exactly what she’d been through. Had he accompanied her for Warren’s funeral? Been the shoulder she cried on, when Damian had shunned her in prison? How old had Sierra been then? A few months? Had they been together all along? Is that why Skye worked in the prison? As Nick’s partner, helping him with his cases? Had Nick stepped in and claimed Sierra?

 

Each question tore deeper and deeper at Damian’s insides. Damian had grown up without a father and it killed him to think that his daughter was growing up without hers, too. Sierra obviously knew more about him than he did about her. What had Skye told her about him, apart from the fact that he was in prison? Had she ever asked to see him? Wondered why she never heard from him? What would she say if she knew the truth now? Would she be ashamed? Horrified? Would she shrink back from him?

 

It took Nick a few seconds to realize who Skye was staring at and why she was standing so still. When his eyes fell on Damian, he looked from Skye to Sierra and back at Damian again. His discomfort was clear. He didn’t know how to handle the situation any more than Skye or Damian. Sierra was arranging paper garlands on Warren’s grave, oblivious to the tension around her.

 

Damian saw the snuffed out candles in Skye’s hands, the bags of decorations by Nick’s feet, the stunned looks on their faces. He was the outsider, the wild card who had upset the balance of their perfect evening. He had been let out of prison a few months early but he wished he were still behind bars, so he could lock out the pain. Not knowing had been hell, but this, this was a completely different level of torment.

 

Damian got up, crushed marigolds sticking to his jeans, and turned into the swell of people surrounding them. He was thankful for the nameless, faceless sea of bodies around him. He imagined this was what it felt like to be dead among the living.

 

“Get me out of here,” he said, when he found Rafael. “Get me far, far away.”

 

 

 

 

 

I SKIMMED THE SURFACE BETWEEN sleep and wake, half submerged in wild, crazy dreams, where Sierra, Damian, and I were green iguanas, sunning ourselves on a deserted island. I was the one with the tail chopped off, but it didn’t matter because it was warm and beautiful. We were eating ice cream beans, and Sierra kept chewing on the seeds instead of discarding them.

 

Crunch, crunch, crunch.

 

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