Day ten? Fifteen? Of not speaking to Kyle is going as expectedâterribly. Heâs sent me several texts since my injury, but I havenât dared to open them yet. Itâs been three days since the last one, though, and I canât say Iâm surprised heâs stopped. Iâm the worst friend ever, after all.
But the whole mess with Kyle is only a pebble in my shoe compared to the text I woke up to this morning.
My mother wants to see me. After a year of no contact, and even longer of not meeting face-to-face, sheâs now decided itâs time to barrel into her daughterâs life, acting as if nothing was amiss.
âHey, princess.â My brotherâs voice greets me from the other side of the line. He sounds happy, which is a shame because Iâm about to ruin his mood for the rest of the day. Or the week. âHowâs that ankle?â
âBetter. I can move it a little,â I respond. It hurts a bit today, but I donât need to worry him further. I love Sammy, but heâs such a dad. âAre you at work?â
âIâm on my lunch break.â
I already knew this, but I wanted to confirm.
âIâm tattooing Aaron again, so he wonât mind if I stay on the phone a little longer.â
Aaron is Graceâs older cousin, although they grew up as close as siblingsâI call him Uncle Aaron for a reason.
âWhatâs he going for?â I ask as I adjust myself on the bed. After giving my pillowcase a quick sniff, I make a mental note to call one of my friends to help me change the sheets because this is getting gross.
âHannaâs footprint on his chest,â my brother says.
Hanna is Aaronâs third child and only daughter, born four years ago, and sheâs the most adorable thing Iâve ever seen. She definitely gets her stunning looks from my aunt Emily though, no matter how much Aaron insists sheâs all him.
âThatâs cute.â I clear my throat and decide I donât want to keep stalling. âHey, guess who texted me today.â
The air shifts. We arenât even in the same state, but somehow, I feel it. My brother knows.
A loud sigh drifts over to me. âMom?â
âYep.â
Another sigh, this time a little louder and a lot more frustrated. âWhat does she want?â
My fingers find a loose thread in the blanket I usually throw over my bed. âShe said she wanted to meet but didnât tell me when or where.â
âWhat did you answer?â
I gulp. âI havenât. Yet.â
My palms start sweating, and I remind myself my brother isnât going to chew me out for this. Ever since he became my legal guardian when I was four, heâs made sure I saw our mother whenever I could. He never spoke ill of her in front of me, never tried to pit me against her. Itâs always been important to him that we had a good mother-daughter relationship, despite the circumstances.
He stopped trying, eventually, and I canât blame him for it. Iâm at fault for that. She made sure I knew that crystal clear.
âWhat do you want to do?â His voice turns somber, and I internally curse myself for it. I knew I was going to ruin his good mood, but I canât not tell my brother. Without him Iâm lost.
âI donât know,â I mutter. When it comes to my mother, I canât seem to tell right from wrong. My head and my heart are too tired to make the effort. âWhat do you think I should do?â
âI wonât tell you how to deal with this, Maddie. This is your life, and this is your relationship. I donât have a say in it.â
He called me Maddie.
Maddie.
I havenât heard my name on his lips in⦠I canât remember the last time my brother didnât call me âprincessâ or any other of his endearing nicknames. Why does it feel like heâs just stabbed me in the chest?
I get that heâs pissed about our mother not having contacted us in a while, and I know heâs not angry at me, butâ¦Â Fuck. Maddie?
âOkay.â I swallow past the uncomfortable lump in my throat. âIâll let you know what I want to do when I decide.â
âDonât be upset, peanut. Whatâs wrong?â His voice turns softer, less frustrated, and it makes me feel a little better.
âNothing,â I lie, and I bet my left arm he can smell the bullshit a mile away. âIâm just exhausted. Itâs been a long week.â
He hums like he knows Iâm not telling him the whole story. To be fair, I donât think I know it myself. âSo physical therapy is going well? Is Dr. Simmons as good as they say?â
Heâs good with his hands, all right.
Wait.
No.
Stop, Maddie. Heâs like, a hundred years old.
âHeâsâ¦great.â I clear my throat and hope my brother is too tired to notice my voice sounds a bit higher for some inexplicable reason. âHeâs really good. Progress is slow, but Iâm optimistic.â
âThatâs what I want to hear,â he beams.
My mouth tilts up just barely. âWeâll talk later, okay?â
âOkay, princess.â He hesitates. âWhatever you decide about Momâ¦â
âIâll run it by you.â
âWhat? No.â He almost sounds offended. âWhat I was going to say is that Iâm here for you no matter what you decide. We all are, all right? Do whatâs best for you, and donât think about anyone else.â
I gulp. âIâll do that.â
âGood.â He doesnât sound too convinced, but he doesnât press either. âText me later. I love you.â
I pinch the bridge of my nose, a massive headache coming out of the blue and blinding all my senses. âI love you too, Sammy.â
And just as if my mother been summoned by a strong force of the universe, not even five minutes after ending the call with my brother, my phone buzzes with a new text.
Mom: Iâll be in Norcastle Friday. Are you free for dinner? You pick the place.
I intertwine my fingers to stop my hands from trembling. It doesnât work.
â½â½â½
Something that used to surprise my therapist back in Warlington was that, despite having been only four, I remember quite a few details of my time living with my parents.
I recall the smell of my motherâs cheese omeletsâmy favorite food from childhoodâand the sound of alcohol as she poured it into a glass every night. She thought I was asleep when she did it, but I always ventured out of bed for a while because I wanted to find out what adults did while kids slept. I was never too impressed.
As for my father, no happy memories remain. Mainly because we made none together, or as a family of three for that matter.
Something I do remember about him, though, is his face. Iâve never forgotten it because I still see it in my restless dreams.
Pete isâor was, I donât know if heâs still aliveâa few years older than my mother, and it showed, despite my mom not being the most healthy-looking woman her age. Drinking so much took its toll on her in more ways than one.
My father was tallâbut not taller than my brotherâand balding the last time I saw him, with a limp body. His crooked nose, as well as his thin lips, gave him a mean look that was pretty accurate to what lay underneath the surface.
The strong smell of smoke that always clung to his clothes, and the way he wore socks with holes in them inside the house. I remember him being at home a lot because, from what Iâve been told, he used to lose his jobs often; that didnât mean he ever made time to play with me. He never paid me any attention at all, as if I were just another cockroach under the fridge he was too lazy to kill.
Despite his obvious dislike for my father, Sammy never bad-mouthed him while I was growing up. He wanted me to have a good relationship with both of my parents, even if at least one of them didnât deserve it. He wanted me to have that choice, but his efforts didnât pay off.
I hate Pete with every fiber of my being. Not only for what he didâand didnât doâto me, but also for the way he treated my mother. How he neglected her, and how he made her already decaying mental health even worse.
A mother that is about to walk in any minute now.
Monicaâs Pub is the only place I could think of to have dinner with my mom. I feel safe here, my former workplace, and Monica knows enough about my relationship with my remaining parent to step in if I give her a panicked look. She never asks too many questions either, which is a plus.
Agreeing to meet her is probably not a smart idea. As Dr. Simmons insisted, I should be resting as much as I can, but my mother is too unpredictable for me to let this opportunity pass me by. Who knows when the next time she remembers she has a daughter will be.
And yes, technically I could text her sometimes too. I used to do thatâuntil I went ten months without a reply and didnât see the point in reaching out anymore.
Thereâs a fine line between being a good personâa good daughterâand being foolish.
I fidget with the menu between my nervous hands before setting it aside, not knowing why I picked it up in the first place. I know every dish by heart.
âYou good, honey?â Monica sets a glass of cold water in front of me. Sheâs in her late forties, has a blond perm, and is by far one of the coolest, most selfless people I know. I lucked out the day she hired me to be a part-time waitress here because she âliked my energy.â
I manage a small shrug. âI could be better.â
She opens her mouth to say something else, but she doesnât get the chance because the door chimes and my mother walks in.
Here we go. Showtime.
Larissa Callaghan looks around the pub, her eyes full of disdain like it physically disgusts her to be here, and I mentally slap myself for not thinking of this sooner. According to my brother, sheâs been sober for the past few years, but what if sheâs one of those people who relapses as soon as she sees a bottle of whiskey?
Iâm such a shit daughter.
âWe can go somewhere else,â I blurt out when she reaches my table, the first words Iâve spoken to her in a year.
My mother lowers herself into the cushioned seat in front of me with far more poise than I remember her ever having and gives me a small, lopsided smile. âThis place is fine.â
She sets her bag next to her, and itâs only when she notices I havenât uttered another word that she clears her throat. âHow have you been, sweetie?â
I wrap my hands around the cold glass just to feel like Iâm holding onto something solid. âIâm in physical therapy for my ankle.â Straight to the point. Ice broken.
A barely there frown appears on her forehead before she notices the crutches at my side. She gasps. âMaddie! What happened to you? Are you okay? When did this happen?â
An uncomfortable feeling crawls up my spine, and I shift on my seat. âI injured myself while dancing a few weeks ago.â
Thereâs no point in telling her about the audition I missed. Itâs not like sheâs ever been that invested in my education, and it would lead to too many questions I donât have the strength to answer tonight.
She shakes her head like she canât believe it. âYou said youâre in physical therapy for it. Is it working?â
âYes.â That is one truth I couldnât be more grateful for.
âHow come youâre in Norcastle?â I change topics before taking a sip of water to clear my clogged throat. She lives in Warlington, just like my brother and Grace.
âIâm not staying for long,â she says as she flags down one of the waitresses. âDave had to come here for business, and I convinced him to stop by today so I could see you.â
My stomach twists unexpectedly. âWhoâs Dave?â
Monica arrives to get our order before she can answer. I ask for the usualâa burger with extra cheeseâand my mother only orders an iced tea. âYou donât want to order anything to eat with that?â Monica asks, swiftly looking my way.
My mother gives a tight smile that doesnât reach her eyes. âNo, thank you. Just an iced tea would be great.â
When she suggested we meet up for dinner, I didnât think I would be the only one actually having dinner. But okay.
Once Monica leaves, my mother turns to me. âDave is my boyfriend, honey. Weâve been together for a year. Heâs the cook in the new restaurant I started working at, and we justâ¦clicked, I guess. Heâs getting a promotion, so he had to travel for a training course, and I came with him. You know how it goes.â She lets out a small chuckle as if anything sheâs just said is funny. Itâs really not.
My mother has proved time and again that she has horrible taste in men. Not because she picks the ugly onesâthat would be the least of her problemsâbut because she always ends up with the assholes. My father is very much included in that category. He might be at top of it actually. Although Sammyâs own dad might be number one, seeing as how he abandoned them before my brother was even born. That couldnât have been easy on our mom, given how they were only sixteen.
She never lasts long with any of them either, but the consequences of their asshole ways do. My brother says sheâs never loved herself enough to set any kind of healthy boundaries. I agree, and Iâm grateful that I was raised in a very different environment.
âHeâs a good man,â she adds when I say nothing.
I just nod. Nothing nice would come out of my mouth, and itâs not like she would listen anyway, so thereâs no point.
A couple of minutes of awkward silence pass by until she asks, âSo, um, you graduated a few months ago, right? Have you found a job yet?â
I take another sip of water. At this rate, it will be empty before my burger gets here. âIâm figuring it out,â I opt for, which is better than confessing I didnât listen to my body and now Iâm paying the consequences. âI work here sometimes.â
Her trimmed eyebrows shoot up at that. Iâve never seen them done before, and it surprises me to see her look so polished and collected. But I refuse to think this is it, the moment she decides sheâs ready to get her life together. It never is.
âWhat is it that you do? Waitressing?â
I nod. âThe owner is the woman who came by to take our order. Sheâs a good boss. I always get out on time, and it pays as well as youâd expect. The tips are good.â It feels weird, Iâve just realized, to have a face-to-face conversation with my mother after so long. âBut Iâm not working right now because of my ankle.â
âI see.â
A few moments later, Monica arrives with the iced tea and my burger. âEnjoy.â She winks at me, and I only manage to give her a sad excuse of a smile in return.
âIf you donât mind me asking,â my mother starts as I take the first bite. âHow do you pay for rent if youâre not working right now? Do you live with roommates, orâ¦?â
She knows the answer to this. She does, but she wants me to say it for some reason.
I chew slowly, taking my time before swallowing my food with some more water. And then I say what she wants to hear. âSammy pays for it.â
Her lips thin at the mention of my brotherâs name. I donât know why, since itâs the exact answer sheâs looking for. The answer she knew she was going to get.
âBusiness must be going well, then, since he can financially support his daughter and his sister.â Thereâs a hint of bitterness in her voice, almost as if she hated the idea of her own son being successful in life.
I donât know what happened between them for our mother to have turned so bitter toward him, or if anythingâs happened at all, but I donât like it. Iâll always be on my brotherâs side, which is why I refuse to reveal any details about his life.
âYeah.â If sheâs only meeting up with me to fish for crumbs about Sammy, sheâs going to leave this pub very, very disappointed. âHowâs work?â I ask her to shift the focus of our conversation.
It works. âLuckily, great. Itâs tough to find a job at my age, but Iâm happy at the restaurant for now. It doesnât bring much money to the table, but itâs fine since Dave and I split the bills.â
Sinceâ¦
Another headache starts building up. If she and this Dave guy split the bills, it means they are already living together. Is she going to let another man dictate her life?
I bite into my burger again and decide to ignore that comment. I donât have the mental strength for a confrontation.
Maybe meeting her tonight was a mistake. Am I really risking my ankleâs recovery for a mother I barely know? For a mother who doesnât seem to learn?
Her words from four years ago assault my head before I can stop it.
You never gave your mother a chance, Maddie. You pushed her away.
âIâm glad youâre doing well,â I say, banishing the demons in my head. But itâs not a lie, it really isnât. Even if sheâs never been the greatest mother, she isnât a bad person. She isnât evil. She justâ¦has some issues. It would be amazing if she acknowledged them and worked to fix them like she did with her alcohol problem, but I donât have a say in that.
I eat in silence while she sips on her drink and looks around the pub, and I wonder what sheâs thinking. She might be wondering why I work here, in this dark place that smells of greasy food and pine-scented floor cleaner, but itâs not like she has any room to judge. Just because she has trimmed eyebrows now doesnât mean sheâs moved up in the food chain or something.
I feel bad for being so judgmental for all of three secondsâuntil she opens her mouth.
âAre you sure you want to work here? This place looksâ¦â She glances around again and shakes her head. âI donât knowâ¦sketchy. Maybe you should find something else, like a cute coffee shop downtown or something.â
Swallowing the last bite of my burger, I try not to snap. âSketchy how?â
Iâve worked at Monicaâs Pub since I turned nineteen, and sure, it might not look exactly cozy, but itâs far from sketchy. Monica loves this place and always makes sure both her clients and her staff are happy and in a safe, fun environment. Not once have I ever felt in danger while working here, not even when the older men get a little too drunk and flirty.
I can defend myselfâSammy and Grace made sure of itâand everyone here knows not to mess with the staff anyway. Monica wonât hesitate to kick them out of one of the cheapest bars in town, which is the last thing they want.
And it hurts, it really stings, that my mother of all people would judge where I work. My brother, I would understand, but even he agreed having a job would be good for me.
So why is my mother, someone who barely knows me, suddenly pretending to know whatâs best for me? Suggesting that I find another job?
This is laughable, if only I had it in me to find it funny.
âItâs too far away from everything,â she explains.
I bite my tongue and only say, âThereâs a metro stop two minutes away.â A metro stop that leaves me a block away from my apartment. It doesnât take me longer than fifteen minutes to get here, tops.
âYes, but I assume you end your shift late at night. The metro can be dangerous, and itâs full ofâ¦strange people sleeping there and everything.â
I count to ten in my head. Now she worries about my safety?
Where was this concern when she left an empty bottle of alcohol on the floor the day I tripped over it and had to be rushed to the ER with a bleeding head?
Where was this concern when she would leave me alone at home for hours, while she thought I was asleep, to have a few drinks at the bar down the street?
But I bite my tongue again. My brother raised me better than to lash out at people, even when I think they deserve it. He isnât here, but I still donât want to do something that would disappoint him if he found out. I wouldnât put it past my mother to call him and reprimand him for the âpoor wayâ he brought me upâas if it had been Sammyâs job to take care of me in the first place.
âMonica knows this,â I explain, aware that it will fall on deaf ears. âShe lets me leave earlier, when the metro is still somewhat crowded.â
She purses her lips, like thatâs not good enough, when Monicaâs shown more concern about my safety in the two years Iâve known her than my own mother in twenty-one.
âI donât know, Maddie. It still doesnât sound safe to me. Maybe you can switch shifts so thereâs still daylight when you leave?â
âI only work here part-time, and I make a lot of money on tips. People barely come here during the day, so it wouldnât make sense.â
âHow aboutâ¦â
I donât hear the rest of it. My brain tunes her out, unable to focus on anything else but him.
I donât understand how I havenât spotted him until now, but heâs right there.
Right there.
And his eyes are directly on me.
Dr. Simmons is here.
Shit, shit, shit.
I look away, but itâs too late.
Heâs sitting with who I assume is a friend, a man who looks around his age, and the shock of seeing him dressed without his scrubs is too much. I mean, Iâm not blind. I can tell heâs bulky under his PT attire, but now itâs all the more obvious. That black T-shirt is about to burst from how stretched it sits across his chest, and his arms are easily bigger than my head.
Arms I touched.
A sexy, model-like Dr. Simmons is a sight I didnât need to see.
Sexy as in, objectively sexy. Of course.
Itâs difficult to see his mouth since itâs partly covered by his short beard and the bar is so dark, but I swear his lips are pressed in a thin line. Great, heâs pissed.
I mean, obviously. I donât think his range of emotions is too wide.
âMaddie?â my mother asks as she waves a hand in front of my eyes.
I blink. âSorry.â Iâm not sorry at all. At least not for tuning out our conversation. âI⦠I need to use the restroom.â
She gives me a strange look but nods, and I grab my crutches as quickly as I can manage. Itâs humiliating, I realize as I walk away, that heâs seeing me. Outside, when I should be resting. If he scolds the hell out of me on Monday, I will totally deserve it.
Passing by the bathrooms, I push the emergency exit at the back of the bar with my shoulder and walk outside. Itâs dark, but nobody comes back here except for the rest of the staff on their smoking breaks. I take breaks, too, even though Iâm not a smoker, but only because itâs unfair that they get to kill their lungs and chill for a few minutes, and I only get to work. Yeah, not happening. If they can avoid drunk old men for five minutes every hour, so can I.
I rest my head against the brick wall behind me and take a deep breath through my nose.
I shouldâve known meeting my mother wouldnât be easy, and now on top of that, Dr. Simmons knows Iâve been ignoring his instructions. Great.
A panicky sensation clings to my lungs, one Iâm too familiar with but have spent years avoiding. And Iâm usually successfulâexcept that day at the clinic.
Itâs one of the two things Iâve always kept from my brother, my panic attacks, if only to not add one more weight on his shoulders.
Exhale. Inhale. Youâre grounded. Youâre safe. You can leave your mother and call an Uber if you want. Nobody is holding you hostage here.
Knowing that I have a way out of the situation usually helps, but it proves to be a bit more difficult tonight.
I hate to say it, and I donât want to put all this blame on her, but I canât ignore my feelings either.
Her sudden concern for me has triggered this response, and now my chest feels like itâs burning and drowning at the same time.
Iâm wondering how thatâs even possible when the back door opens.
And Dr. Simmons steps out.
Into the dark alley. With me.
Shit.
He doesnât say anything, but he sees me here. I know this because he stands away from the door, only a few feet from me, with his hands in his pockets. He doesnât look my way.
Having him here calms my nerves, or maybe itâs just that I donât want to embarrass myself by having another panic attack in front of him.
Either way, my brain forgets about my mother and chooses to focus on a much safer, yet also dangerous thingâhis smell.
Iâve been around that wood and spice aroma and that fresh-scented shampoo fragrance so many times I could probably identify him from the smell alone, eyes closed and in a throng of people. And thatâs why I suspect Iâve gone insane.
The invisible clock between us ticks by, and he still doesnât say a word. To be fair, neither do I. My mother may be thinking Iâm locked in the bathroom or have a severe case of constipation, but I donât care. Iâd rather be out here, standing in silence next to my physical therapist in a dark alley.
âAre you okay?â
His voice startles me. One would think Iâd already be used to it, and I am, just not outside the clinic. Itâs so deep and rough, he should consider getting those vocal cords checked out.
Iâm surprised he cares enough to ask and that my ankle isnât the first thing he mentions.
âIâve been better.â Iâm too tired to come up with a lie.
He doesnât reply to that, and I find his broody silence oddly comforting. I get the impression that he doesnât ask too many questions, like Monica, and thatâs exactly what I need right now. Someone to justâ¦be here. To listen and then act like I didnât say a thing. I need the exact opposite of my brother. I love him to death, but he can be overbearing.
Dr. Simmons still doesnât look my way as he asks, âDo you have a way to get home?â
My heart stammers inside my chest, wondering why heâs asking and why it sounds like heâd offer to drive me if I said no.
Donât be stupid.
âI do,â I say, my throat dry. âBut thanks for asking.â
He grunts something under his breath. âAre you sure youâre okay?â
No. âYes. Iâm fine, really. You can go back inside with your friend.â
I glance at him with what Iâm hoping is an easy expression on my face. His, in turn, is all hard edges and unreadable stares. âApply some ice to your ankle when you get home. It might be swollen.â A pause. Then: âCome find me if you change your mind.â
And just like that, without a spare glance or a goodbye, he turns around, hands still in his pockets, and leaves the way he came.
And me?
Iâve never been more confused.