: Part 3 – Chapter 11
If Only I Had Told Her
âMaybe I should start taking you to all my resale shops,â Aunt Angelina tells Mom. Weâre on our way back to Vintage Mother Goose to buy a crib.
âAngelina, I will turn this car around and head straight to Pottery Barn, I swear to God,â Mom replies.
âNo, no, Iâll behave.â
Iâve chosen how the baby will sleep: in a mini crib in my room for at least a year. I wonât let it cry it out, but Iâll try to wait for the baby to settle themselves like the book about French parenting Iâm reading suggested.
Now thereâre only a million other decisions about this baby that Iâll have to make in the next few months.
But itâs a start.
The Mothers have been trying to let me figure out this stuff on my own, letting me decide what kind of mother I want to be, not telling me how it must be done like Angieâs family. Aunt Angelina co-slept with Finny in her bed until he was two, while Mom kept me down the hall with the baby monitor on the lowest setting so that I really had to scream to wake her. Neither method is recommended these days, and neither of them has tried to convince me otherwise.
So when I said that I had decided to get a small crib for my room for the first year or so, there was no questioning my decision. Angelina called and confirmed that the mini crib weâd considered last time we were at Vintage Mother Goose was still available, but Mom insists that we look at it one last time before purchasing it.
The same elderly woman is sitting behind the counter when we arrive.
âBack again, dears?â she says without a pause in her knitting, proving my suspicions that she is a witch.
Mom, the expert shopper in all situations, leads the way to the furniture corner where the little crib sits. âIt doesnât quite match the rest of the wood in your room,â she muses. âIt would almost be better if it was totally different. This will look like we tried to match it and failed. Iâm certain I could find one online in a better color.â
âThis is perfect,â I say. âLast I heard, none of the interior design magazines were doing spreads on teen momâs nurseries, so I donât think weâre missing any opportunities.â I rest my hands on the adjustable bar possessively.
âAll right then, sweetie. If it were me, Iâd find the coordination soothing when in the trenches.â
âIn the trenches? Why do people always talk about motherhood like itâs going to war?â
Mom and Aunt Angelina look at each other and shrug.
âWhat are we thinking then?â the saleswoman asks, approaching us.
Mom begins to set up the purchase and delivery. I stare down at the crib and try to convince myself that someday there will be not only a mattress inside it but an infant.
âAre you thinking what Iâm thinking?â Aunt Angelina asks.
âThat we should let Mom order a bespoke crib mattress made of organic llama hair or something?â
âExactly. Sheâs respected your wishes not to turn your dadâs office into a Victorian nursery full of chintz and should be rewarded.â
I turn from the crib to face her. âSince itâs Dadâs money, Iâll have to let her do something to his office eventually.â
Angelina stiffens. âWhat did you say?â
âSince itâs Dadâs moneyââ
âItâs not your fatherâs money, Autumn. Is that what your mother told you?â
âNo, I just assumed,â I say.
Angelina looks stricken. This must have something to do with Finny that I donât understand. She looks past me to where I can hear the saleslady and my mother talking behind me. Her mouth tightens.
âYour mother didnât tell you about the arrangement with Finnyâs father?â
Everything tilts in my mind.
âThe what? With ?â I ask.
âAutumn,â she whispers, âIâm sorry, but Iâm going to kill your mother.â
âMom?â I shout as I twist around. She and the saleslady simultaneously turn from each other to me. âWhat is this arrangement that Aunt Angelina is talking about? With Finnyâsâ¦Finnââ
I canât bring myself to call that man a father to Finny.
âLet me finish arranging the delivery, and weâll talk about it later,â Mom sings out to me, using a customer service voice.
Iâm not buying what sheâs selling.
âWhatâs this arrangement?â I ask Angelina. Sheâs tried so hard to give me support along with respectful space. Through all these months, Iâve remained in awe of her composure, but she looks like sheâs about to lose it.
She trusted her best friend to tell the mother of their grandchild this delicate bit of information, this involvement of the man who abandoned her child.
âI donât know the details, but apparently, in exchange for whatever access you are willing to give him, updates or pictures, Finnâs father gave access to Finnyâs trust fund.â Her voice has started to rise, and she catches herself and swallows, then takes a breath.
Iâm still trying to understand why she said the words âtrust fundâ and âFinnyâ so close together, so we both clearly need a moment.
âWell, thatâs done!â my mother exclaims from behind me.
I donât turn to look at her. I canât stop staring at the hurt on Aunt Angelinaâs face.
âIs it, Mom?â I say.
We agreed to wait until we were at home to talk.
âYes, I want to be able to see your face when we talk about this,â I told my mother when she suggested waiting until after the drive home. The drive was quiet and as frosty as the late autumn chill outside.
At home, seated around the kitchen table, finally looking at her face, I say, âWe already know that you thought what you were doing was best for everyone.â
âAnd thatâs not an excuse,â my mother agrees. âI should have told you.â
âSo why didnât you?â Angelina presses. âWe agreed this was Autumnâs decision.â
âHow does he even know that Iâm pregnant?â
âThat partâs my fault, kiddo,â Aunt Angelina admits. âHe reached out to me right after you went to the hospital. He has this project about Finny he wanted help with, and it had all been such a whirlwind of emotions from losing Finny to thinking we might lose you to finding out about the pregnancy, and I donât know. I told him.â
âAnd he made Mom an offer too good to refuse?â I ask them both. I feel like a piece of me has been sold.
âI meant to tell you,â Mom says. âBut then I didnât, and it seemed easier to wait untilâ¦â
âWhat? Until that man demanded access to my child that heâd already paid for?â
âUntil you were able to think about it more rationally and less emotionally,â Mom explains, but I can hear she knows how pathetic it sounds.
âLook, I told you before, Claire,â Angelina says. âIf Autumn wanted access to that money, sheâd have a good legal case, and we could have sued John instead of letting him hold the strings.â
âYes, I remember, Angelina,â Mom says. âBut I thââ
âOkay, what money is this?â I say. âLetâs start there!â
âEvery time John felt guilty for abandoning his son, he put some money in an account heâd secretly opened with Phineasâs name on it, or sometimes for an especially plagued conscience, heâd buy another government savings bond. It wasnât until after Finny died that John realized how much his guilt had added up.â
âHow much had it added up?â
âEnough that if you were to sue on behalf of Finnyâs heir, after weâve settled out of court and paid the lawyers, thereâd still be enough to raise this baby to age eighteen and send both you and the baby to college.â Aunt Angelina continues, âItâs an open-and-shut case, Autumn. He has access to the account, but the name on it is Phineas Smith, the father of your baby.â
âAnd if we donât sue and tell him never to contact me?â
âHe keeps the money,â my mom says. âAnd we would have to use the money from your college fund to raise this baby.â
âI would sell the house,â Angelina adds. âI was thinking about it anyway since Iâve been staying here most nights.â She glances angrily at my mother, and I suppose that wonât be the case tonight. âWeâd find a way to make it work.â
âBut it would be so much harder for everyone, Autumn, including your child,â Mom says. âI donât have to tell you that being a teen mother puts a lot of obstacles in your way. This money could alleviate, or even obliterate, those obstacles.â
âBut you promised that we would let choose,â Angelina says, shaking her head. This is a betrayal between the two of them that goes deeper than my part in it. The Mothers have always been a team, and this disconnect is unprecedented. If Finny were here, weâd be sharing meaningful glances across the table about this historic conflict.
âIâm sorry,â Mom says again. âI know that saying it doesnât change anything. But Iâll keep saying it.â
âAnd if we donât sue, and we keep using that little gold card?â
âI told him that you werenât ready to discuss the particulars.â Mom begins to blush as the depth of her lies starts to sink in. âBut he wants to be part of the babyâs life in whatever capacity youâll give him, Autumn.â She gives Aunt Angelina and I look that is more pleading than when she was advocating for herself. âThe man has so many regrets.â
âHe should,â I say. âAnd so should you.â
Mom nods. She either mouths or whispers that sheâs sorry, but itâs too quiet to hear.