The Leaving

“Riding on a carousel by the ocean.”


Ryan stood up. “You remember a carousel ride? But not who took you for eleven years? What about me? Do you remember me?”


FIGHTING BASEBALL WRESTLING RUNNING FROGS KIDS SUN


“Do you remember Mom?”


SMILING

SUNGLASSES





WHITE TEETH

FRECKLED SKIN





BLACK HAIR.





“And Mom dying ?”


METAL. SKID MARKS.

SIRENS.





“Do you remember Dad? Because I barely remember him before he went off the deep end with the rocks, myself.”

Lucas couldn’t form an answer.

The rocks.

The deep end.

Off it.


HORSE TEETH NEEDING POLISHING.


“What is it?” Lucas asked. “The rocks.”

“That’s Opus 6. Dad’s life’s work. His ‘song for the missing.’ He said he was going to keep building it in tribute until you all came home.”

“I don’t understand,” Lucas said, vaguely recalling that his father had been a builder and dabbled in sculpture. “Six?”

“For the six of you.”

“No.” Like someone was manually spinning his brain. “Five.”

“Who didn’t come back?” Ryan asked.

“How should I know?” Lucas near-screamed.

“This gets better by the minute.” Ryan shook his head and stood—“I always thought I’d be happy to see you”—and left the room.

After a moment, Miranda said, “He’ll come around.” Lucas lifted his head.

She turned to face him squarely, stared at him as if through clear glass holding back some exhibit of oddity on the other side. “You really don’t remember anything?”

She waved a hand in front of his face, like it might wake him from a trance.

“I’ll get sheets for you,” she said finally. “There’s a room down that hall.”

“Thanks,” he said. “I need a shower.”

“There’s towels on the shelf behind the door.” She walked off.

The water wasn’t hot enough to wash away the day.

The skin beneath his right hip bone burned when he turned to face the showerhead.

He looked down.

Saw blood.

Black ink.

Angry, puffy skin.

Had to sit down, afraid he might pass out.

Had to take a few deep breaths.

Then looked again.

And saw this:





AVERY



The sun arrived right on time, at least, and nosy-body Mrs. Gulden took her yippy dogs out for their early-morning walk and stopped at the foot of the circular driveway. “Everything okay?”

Avery smiled and waved. “Yes! Beautiful morning!”

She should call Ryan, to see whether Lucas had come back yet, but they hadn’t spoken at all these past few years—not since Avery had started high school and decided to try to reinvent herself and stop letting the past be such a part of her life.

They should probably call Dad, too, but maybe it’d be better to wait until it wasn’t a really ungodly hour out west, or to wait until her brother was actually there.

The mailman came and put a bundle in their pelican mailbox, but nei ther Avery nor her mom went to get it. Mom didn’t even get up once to put real clothes on or make coffee or use the bathroom or answer the phone, which rang a lot more than usual.

When it was a normal time, Avery went inside and popped some bread in the toaster—texting Emma about the weirdness while she waited and getting suitably shocked replies like:





OMG


and

WHAT???????????????

She brought her mom a piece of toast with jam. “You should call Dad,” she said.

“We’ll call him together”—she frowned at the toast—“when he gets here.”

A van turned onto the street, and for a second Avery actually wished it was the Mystery Machine—Scooby-Doo and his crew could crack the case for sure—but no, of course not. It was a news van.

Avery really should have called or at least texted her dad.

He needed to get on the next plane home.

The phone rang and, this time, it somehow sounded more urgent. Avery ran over and picked it up, hoping it was her dad, and if not him at least someone who could explain the delay. “Hello?”

“Avery?”

“Dad.”

“Is it true?” he asked. “They’re back? I just got a crazy call from Adam’s father. Something about us needing to get in front of this, in terms of the news.”

Avery’s mom came to the open doorway, hope lighting her shiny eyes.

“Some of them are back, yeah,” Avery said into the phone. “But no sign of Max yet.”

Her mom sank to her knees on the foyer rug and began to sob. Avery saw a flash of her mother’s fleshy white thigh inside her robe and had to look away.

“I’ll get there as fast as I can, Ave,” her dad said.

“Move mountains.”

Avery hung up and went to her mom and knelt beside her, pulling her robe closed and then easing her into a stiff hug; her mother had turned mannequin, unfeeling.

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