“I’m spoiled.” I put my larger palm over the back of her hand on the table and squeezed it appreciatively.
“So, Charlie was in the Marines.” Adriana addressed me when she said it, obviously moderating a less awkward, more informational dinner conversation.
“Oh yeah?” I leaned back in my wooden chair until it started creaking.
“Infantry,” he added. “Couple of gunslingers, you and I.”
A muscle in my cheek jumped. “You ever killed anybody?”
“Frankie.” My mother laughed nervously.
“It’s just a question.” I shrugged.
“Frankie’s a pilot,” Adriana said quickly. “He’s thinking about making a move to Colorado to teach flight school.”
Charlie crossed his utensils on the plate. “Of course, I know. Your mother told me about the accident.”
I winced, pulling at the collar of my T-shirt, the fabric suddenly making my skin itch. “Did she?”
“You look great,” he offered. “Strong.”
“You got a crush on me, Charlie?”
Malia sputtered into her glass of water and everyone’s attention landed on her. “Sorry,” she choked. “Is it hot in here?”
“So hot in here, right?” Addy stood, bounding to the sliding door and pulling it open. "Must be the oven."
A loud thump shook the table, rattling the utensils and glassware. My mother was up from her chair, still barely taller than me in my seated position, but with a scowl that made the hair on the back of my neck stand up.
“I’m sorry, Francesco.” She sighed. “I’m sorry I haven’t been honest about my new relationship. I know how you are, and I was worried you would react this way. I didn’t want to bring another person into our lives until I knew for certain it was serious.” She tucked her hair anxiously behind her ears. “Maybe this was a mistake, thinking we could all be adults—”
“Ma.” I shook my head, feeling embarrassingly reprimanded.
“No, you listen to me for a minute. No one will replace your father in my heart. Charlie knows that, Adriana knows that, the neighbors know that. Everyone—” She paused. “Everyone knows that.”
Malia quietly slunk out of her seat at the table and joined Addy where she’d disappeared onto the deck, leaving me to have the long-awaited, candid conversation with my mother.
“He’s been gone for over twenty years.”
“I know.” I frowned. “But I still feel like the door might swing open and he’ll walk right back through it.”
Her tired eyes glossed over. “I used to think that too,” she murmured. “But we can’t live that way, right? I don’t want to spend the next twenty years looking at the front door.”
My chest tightened painfully.
I did want her to live comfortably. To be taken care of, and enjoy every second of every day because she deserved nothing less than everything my sister and I could give to her. I wanted her to go out to the beach, and join clubs, and read books, and plant flowers in the backyard so she could drink her coffee on the deck in the morning and look out at them. I needed that for my own well-being, clarity, consciousness. Leaving Florida was never going to happen if that didn’t happen first.
“I only want you to be happy.” I swallowed my pride.
She reached back and held hands with a silent, reverential Charlie. “I am happy, Frankie. I am very happy. More so than I have been in years, and I will never take your sacrifices for our family for granted.”
“It was never a sacrifice.” I stood, pulling her into a long, tight embrace. “Just love.”
My body relaxed, remembering to inhale and exhale again, the emotions of the day rolling once more in an ever-changing tide. I felt seasick. The hurt still lingered, but it was bandaged enough for the time being.
Charlie stood with us, waiting patiently behind my mother. With gratitude and a subtle apology, I offered him my hand.
“How many people do you think I’ve killed, Charlie?” I asked.
His lips curled into an appreciative smile. “Let’s hope I never find out.”
“All right, then.” I kissed Mom on the head. “Now help my mother clean this up. I have some flowers to plant.”
“Is the nameless girl following you out West?”
I smeared the dirt off my hands and onto my jeans. Black dust had weaseled all the way under my fingernails and into the pores of my skin. I’d need a shower for the first layer and a Brillo pad for the residual mess.
Adriana climbed the short hill to the garden with two beers in hand, the lights from the house and the hazy coral backdrop of evening the only two things still illuminating my workspace. It had dropped down to a temperature that penetrated my thin T-shirt and made the sweat cool against my skin.
“I’d be following her,” I confessed, grabbing the bottle and taking a long swig. “She’s from Colorado.”
“No shit.” Addy said. “You’re going, then.”
“I didn’t say that.”
She plopped down on the grassy area beside the holes I’d dug out and started primping flower petals. “Why not?”
“What, are you sick of me? You see me once in three months and you’re already trying to send me across the country.”
“What’s the difference between here and Colorado Springs if we already see you so little?” She tilted her head and snatched the small shovel out of my hand as I tried to start digging again.
“I can’t take care of the things I need to when I’m two thousand miles away.”
“What are you even talking about?” She threw her head back and lay in the lawn, wild blue tendrils of hair splaying out over the green. “Look around, brother dearest, everything is better than ever. The garden is taken care of, the house is painted, the gutters are replaced, the toilet in the fucking basement doesn’t gurgle when you flush it anymore. That envelope of money you mail over here every month? In a little safe in Mom’s room, untouched.”
“That’s her money to do whatever she wants with.” I pierced a shearing knife into the dirt and rolled over next to Addy, both of us staring up at the pockets of constellations brightening with the looming sunset.
“Charlie had the cameras installed so she would feel safer alone in the house all the time. He’s good for her, Frankie.”
I closed my eyes and inhaled the sweet scent of flowers. Each deep breath felt more and more like a release of tension I’d been storing for longer than I thought possible. Years’ worth of worry and resentment, blame I’d placed on myself for the shit luck I’d had in my life until recently. Until I let myself start feeling worthy of something more again.
Until Ophelia.
“Why didn’t anyone tell me?” I complained. “Now I look like a fucking loose cannon.”
“I don’t think that was avoidable; it’s part of the reason we put it off for so long. It was gonna be a shitshow one way or another.”
“I need fucking honesty, Adriana.” I released another aggravated breath.
Her hand looped with mine in the grass. “We know.”
“Too much change is happening right now. I’m trying to catch up but it feels like…” I paused. “You know what running feels like in your dreams?”