She started calling Saturday morning.
I didnât recognize the number, but the foreboding feeling in my gut told me it was her.
And it was a little after four in the morning. 4:03.
It kept ringing.
I kept staring at it, curled up in bed, unable to look away and a second later, my phone lit up again.
I started the same thoughts I always did.
If she was in prison, if she was in Vegas and ran out of money, if a guy just fucked her and she didnât know his name⦠Those I didnât care about. But there was one question, one that I hadnât asked anyone because no one could give me the answerâthatâs the one I answered the call for.
âMom,â I said it quietly, my voice hoarse. âWhat you were in the hospital for, did you really try to do it?â
She gasped on the other end, and then a hoarse whisper, âBaby. Oh, baby.â Her voice started trembling. She began to cry. âOh, my beautiful baby girl. You answered. I heard you came to the hospital. Iâm so happy you did. Iâm so sorry your father kept you away. He shouldnât have done that, kept my daughter away from her mama. A girl needs to see her mama. Oh, Mara honey. Beautiful Mara. How are you?â
She wasnât answering.
She went from sad to rushed to angry to frenzied to gushing and she ended with a question that I knew she didnât care about. Because of that, I didnât answer and without waiting for an answer, she rushed forward, âCan you believe this shit your father is trying to pull? Baby. Baby, I need your help. You owe me that. I pushed you out of my pussy, didnât throw you in the trash, not like what your father told me to do.â A hard laugh from her. âI bet heâs never told you that, but itâs true and you know what wouldâve happened if Iâd done that? I wouldâve had a life. I wouldnât have gained those six pounds. Six up, six down. My tits are sagging. I was talking to a guy inside. Heâs in for drugs, but heâs a surgeon. He said he could fix my tits and he could tighten my pussy. I think Iâm going to do it. Listen, where are you? I wanted to come and take you out for dinner. My friend, Marshall, heâs the surgeon, heâs getting out in ten days, and he said heâd take me out for a weekend. You want to come with us? I bet he could do something for you too. Fix those cheek lines. Freshen your face up. He could give you some ass.â Now she was laughing. âA little fat back thereââ
She wasnât going to answer.
âMom.â
She was still going. She hadnât heard me.
Talking about all the features the surgeon could help me with, because she cared, because she was looking out for me, because a daughter represented her, but I couldnât screw him. She chuckled, her voice dropping low, âI mean, if you wanted to, you could. Maybe you should? Get a sugar daddy. But no threesome business. I meanââ
âMomââ
She ignored me. âYou think he might pay for a threesome? Some mother-daughter actionââ
I couldnât. Not anymore.
I hung up, and like I did with all the new numbers she called me from, I blocked this new one.
Her old number was already blocked.
I went through all of my media and deleted every single one but goddamn. If she searched my name, itâd still pop up.
Wouldnât it?
I couldnât risk it.
Once I was done, I did a google search for my name and went through every hit that gave any identifying information about me. I searched, found where to have it taken down.
And right after I was done, two hours later, my stomach revolted.
I sprinted from the bed, getting to the toilet just in time to empty whatever had been inside.
I stopped puking after six times; the last four were only bile.
It was later, when I was curled up by the toilet with a blanket over me that I started going over the call with a clearer head and this was the first time I thought the doctors got it right, or one of them did. A new diagnosis was probably correct. Sheâd escalated.
She was harder.
I stayed in on Saturday. Sometimes I sought people out or parties, but it was different on Saturday. I couldnât explain it. I just wanted silence. My own space.
Peace.
I turned my phone off all day, and I studied for that quiz.
Went out for groceries later in the morning, as soon as my stomach felt steadier.
That night, I studied more and ended the night with a movie. I was in bed when I glanced over, considered turning my phone on.
I left it and rolled over.
I turned it on for Sunday. Notification after notification began rolling through.
Miles wanted to go to the library.
Gavin wanted me to head over for another party.
A few girls from class, asking if the quiz was truth or rumor?
Zeke thanked me for calling Blaise to get him out of âthe joint.â
Then a few last ones that made me pause.
From Tasmin, who lived across from me in the dorms.
âUsâ would be at least her and her boyfriend, Race.
Tasmin and I werenât texters. We didnât invite each other places. I frowned. Why would she start now?
Then there were a couple texts from my dad.
I skipped over his and pulled up the last one. It wasnât that I didnât want to talk to my dad, but he was too close to . I always felt like she took entire chunks of skin off my body, leaving me exposed. I needed time away from her, and that meant him too right now.
The last text was from Cruz.
That one made me smile.
I wanted to go, so bad, and that terrified me because it wasnât good to want to be around someone as much as I did right now.
But, it was hard to fight against that offer. I wanted it, really, badly.
This.
This was why we shouldnât have done the texting because it made me like him a little bit more. No. Not even that. It made me feel safe with him. A little bit safer.
That was dangerous to someone like me.
Never feel safe. When you did, thatâs when the world would get pulled out from under you.
Thatâs when you would fall.
I could never get comfortable. I could never feel safe.
I surrounded myself with people I didnât fully like⦠Or I kept them at bay, the ones that were already in.
I messed up, but fuck it, because if he texted right now, Iâd respond. If he called, Iâd answer.
I was staring at my phone, knowing what I wanted to do and what I probably would do, but this was a last-ditch effort to distract me from doing it.
I hit call.
She answered after the third ring, and her voice was drowsy which made sense. It was a little after nine and that was like five in the morning for college people.
âMara?â
I called Tasmin.
âWhy did you text me that last night?â
âWhat?â She yawned. âWhat time is it?â
âEarly enough for church if youâre the God-fearing type.â
She laughed before catching herself. âIâm so confused. This is Mara Daniels calling me?â
âWhyâd you text me that last night? Inviting me to the hockey house?â
âOh.â She yawned again.
I heard a male voice in the background, saying something.
She replied, sounding from a distance, âNo, baby. Go back to sleep.â
Baby.
That was a nice âconnectingâ term. I was jealous, hearing it.
âWhy did I invite you to the hockey house? They had a party to celebrate their win yesterday. I actually thought youâd be there. Were you?â
âNo.â
âOh.â
âThat was it? No other reason?â
âUm, no? I mean, no. Wait. Are you talking about Blaiseââ
âI know youâre aware about my mom.â
She got quiet, real quiet, after I said that.
She did. She knew or she wouldâve been like, A few seconds later, she said, âYour mom? What about your mom?â
I laughed, shaking my head. âYou took too long for your response. I know you know.â
âI got a call about it, but I didnât know if I should believe it. I actually didnât until just now.â She asked, quiet, âAre you okaââ
âDo not ever invite me to another party.â
She drew in a sharp breath.
My eyes were stinging but I added, âDo not text me. Do not say hi to me. You see me on campus, and you donât. You donât see me. Got that? Do not pity me.â
She didnât respond.
âDo you hear me?â
âYeah, but Maraââ
I hung up, wishing I didnât give a shit about what I did. That was a lie. Everything was a lie. Tasmin was being nice and not pitying me, but that same part of me knew she did pity me. A little bit, whether sheâd ever admit it or not. I remembered her mom. Paid attention even though she didnât go to the same school as me, but I still watched. I observed.
Tasmin had the family I never had, would never have.
Fuck, but also .
I could go see Cruz.
I didnât understand it. I didnât want to understand it, but I just knew I could go .
I couldnât have gone before.