Variation: Chapter 6
Variation: A Novel
Bright2Lit: The genes in this family are phenomenal. RousseauSisters4 are you born in pointe shoes, or what?
Biological what?
I stared at Juniper, then leaned in a little, certain Iâd misheard her. âI donât understand.â
âIâve watched all your tapes,â she blurted, her words tripping over each other. âWe move the same. We look alike. We have the same color hair and eyes, and the same birthmark!â Juniper spun, turning her back to me and lifting her hair to reveal a stork bite at the nape of her neck.
Just like mine.
Strangling my towel, I looked up at Hudson, who was busy staring at his niece like sheâd grown another head. Guess this was news to him too.
âJuniperââ I started.
âDonât deny it!â she begged, her lower lip quivering before she bit into it again. âYouâre my mother. I know you are. Itâs why I love ballet so much. Itâs in myâour genes.â Her eyes watered.
Oh God, she was going to cry. How the hell was I supposed to let her down easily? âItâs just that Iââ
âWe have the same smile, and the same hands,â she interrupted, wiggling her hands my direction. âAnd I know youâre probably surprised to see me, and I shouldnât have ambushed you, but youâre my last chance.â
âBut Iâve neverââ I tried again.
âLook, I can prove it!â She shook off her backpack, dropping it to the lawn. âI took a DNA test, and all you have to do is take the same oneââ
âYou what?â Hudson moved to my side and glared down at his niece.
âI took a DNA test, naturally.â Her forehead crinkled like we were the illogical ones here, impervious to the look her uncle unleashed on her.
âDoes your mom know?â he demanded. âAnd how?â
âI ordered it online, andââ she started.
âLet me guess, scrolled a few years past your actual birthday?â he interjected, folding his arms across his chest. âThis isnât Seconds, Juniper.â
âIf companies didnât want kids to break the rules, theyâd make them a lot harder to get past,â she countered, folding her arms in his mirror image. âI just stuck a cotton swab in my mouth and shipped it back.â She slid her phone out of her back pocket and opened an app, then showed it to Hudson. âSee? And of course Mom doesnât know. Sheâd lose it. She says I have to wait until Iâm eighteen to find my birth family, which is totally unfair.â
âI never should have gotten you this phone,â Hudson muttered, taking the device and looking through the app.
âLike I wouldnât have figured out another way? Itâs not like the school library doesnât have computers, and Uncle Gavin gave me a prepaid Visa card for Christmas.â She threw a glance my way every few words.
âSmart girl,â I admitted despite our current circumstances.
âIâm your girl.â Juniper stared up at me with complete and total certainty. âIt makes sense. You gave me to your friendâs sister. Occamâs razor and all that.â
âOccamâs razor. They teach fourteenth-century philosophy in elementary school out here?â I asked Hudson.
He opened his mouth, but Juniper ran him right over.
âIâm in the gifted and talented program.â She enunciated every word, clearly insulted. âAnd itâs a really good school district, which is why Mom didnât move inland with Grandma and Grandpa.â
âNoted.â I swiped my hand across my forehead to keep salt water from dripping from my hair into my eyes.
âLook, one of my friends was adopted too. We talk about it all the time, and obviously I know how to use the internet. Point is, Iâm not mad at you for placing me for adoptionâthough I do have some questions that are statistically proven to help minimize the time Iâll need to spend in therapy.â She nodded. âAnd really, I love my mom; sheâs pretty great other than not wanting me to dance, but if you tell her that I should, then sheâll listen to you.â The hope was back in her eyes.
My shoulders sagged, and I did the one thing I swore Iâd never do again, and looked to Hudson for help.
His brow furrowed in the second our gazes locked, and then he sank to his knees in the grass and braced his hands on Juniperâs upper arms. âJune-Bug, you know Iâd never lie to you, right?â
âRight.â She glanced between us.
âAllieâAlessandraâisnât your biological mother.â He delivered the blow gently, and a part of me that could have thrown him off the cliff a few minutes ago softened. âIt would be impossible.â
âYou donât know that.â Her voice broke.
âI do.â He nodded. âYour birthday is May fourteenth, just a few days ago, and I saw her a couple of months before you were born. She was here for spring break, and she wasnât pregnant.â
âMaybe you didnât notice,â she argued, then looked up to me like I would correct him.
âIâve never had a baby.â I shook my head slowly. âIâm so sorry, but Iâm not who youâre looking for.â
âI donât believe you.â Her brow knit, and red crept up her cheeks. âWe have the same birthmark!â
âStork bites are commonââ
âAnd they can be genetic! I looked it up online!â She twisted out of Hudsonâs hands and grabbed her backpack, yanking on the zipper. A few seconds later, she retrieved a softball-size white box wrapped in plastic. âJust take the test, and then Iâll believe you.â She held out the box to me. âItâs the fastest on the market. I checked.â
âIâm sure you did.â
âYou canât ask her to do that.â Hudson stood and swiped a hand through his hair.
Some nervous tells never changed. If he had his hat on, heâd be shaping the brim.
âShe canât say yes if I donât ask. Isnât that what you said?â She glared up at him.
Gravel crunched in the driveway, and we all turned in time to see Anne pull her blue Mercedes sedan into the carriage house.
I was so busted.
âSo will you do it?â Juniper asked, undeterred by my sisterâs arrival.
âHow long have you been planning this?â Hudson asked her.
âFour months,â she replied, staring at me. âWill you do it?â
âIâm not your mother,â I said softly.
âProve it.â She shook the box and I took it because it seemed like the only polite thing to do. Victory flared in her eyes, and I blinked, struck again by the weirdest sense of déjà vu. I had to have met this girl somewhere else.
âAbsolutely not.â Hudson grabbed the box before I had a firm grip on it. âWeâre done. Go get in the truck.â
âUncle Hudââ
âNow, Juniper.â I knew that tone well. It left zero room for any argument, and from the immediate sag in her posture, she knew it.
She sent an imploring look my way, then snatched her backpack with both hands, ignored the zipper entirely, and strode the opposite direction from Anne, heading back toward the northeast side of the house.
âI am so sorry.â Hudson watched Juniper retreat around the corner of the porch.
âPlease tell me you didnât know . . .â I turned my head slowly to look up at him.
âI had no fucking clue.â Stunned was an expression I wasnât used to seeing on him.
I reached for the box, and to my surprise, he gave it to me. âShe actually ordered DNA tests.â
âI never even knew she was looking for her mother.â He wrung out the bottom of his T-shirt, and I averted my gaze at the first hint of skin.
âI can get you a towel.â I did a double take when I caught him staring at me in disbelief. âWhat? I can simultaneously ignore that you destroyed me as a teenager while having manners. Itâs called adulthood.â
We locked eyes, and I fought to summon the anger back, to feel something that would give me a chance at escaping this encounter unscathed, but all I found was the exhaustion that had been my companion since January.
âI have one in my car. A towel, that is.â He ripped his gaze from mine and motioned to the box. âDo me a favor and throw that away for me? God knows who sheâd sic it on next.â
âI can do that.â
âThank you.â
Anne cleared her throat from the back porch, and we both pivoted to face her across the pool. She drummed her fingertips on the railing, took one look at Hudson, and shook her head. âDid we turn our clocks back ten years or something?â
âNice to see you, too, Anne.â Hudson offered a mock salute.
âAnd what are you doingââ Her eyes flared and she pointed a finger at me. âYou went swimming alone at the beach again, didnât you?â
âMaybe?â I gave her a cringing smile. âBut I was safe the whole time. And Hudson here is now a rescue diver, so there was nothing to worry about.â
She glanced between us like we were teenagers again and she had to cover so Mom didnât find us sneaking out. âWhich is why heâs all wet, Iâm guessing. Fully clothed, at that.â
âThat oneâs on me,â Hudson admitted.
âGreat.â She nodded sarcastically. âIâll . . . leave you to whatever it is youâre doing.â Her heels clicked on the porch as she headed inside. âHudson, do me a favor and at least say goodbye to her this time before you go, would you? It would be a shame for me to go to jail for acting on a decadeâs worth of intrusive thoughts when it comes to your demise.â The screen door slammed behind her.
âAnd thatâs my cue.â Gripping the box, I walked through the grass and around the pool, letting every question Iâd silently gathered over the years die on my tongue.
âAllie,â he called out. âAlessandra.â
I paused but didnât look back. That was the only way Iâd survived the last ten years, keeping my eyes forward.
âIâm truly, genuinely sorry. For everything.â
My eyes slid shut, and I waited for the words to hit, to soothe the festering wound that refused to heal, but they fell into me like a coin tossed down a wishing well, too small to effect any changeâshiny, but pointless. âGet her home safely.â
I headed inside without another word, slipping up the carpeted back steps and down the long hallway past Evaâs room and the shrine that had been Linaâs, to mine, which sat across from Anneâs.
Then I showered off the salt and shock and tried like hell to scrub any thought of Hudson off me. My skin was more than wrinkled by the time I finished and dressed in simple leggings and a lightweight sweater, ignoring all the trendy items Anne had packed for me. It wasnât like I had to impress anyone here.
The sound of a knife meeting the cutting board repeatedly greeted me as I walked into the professional-grade kitchen.
Anne had ditched the matching jacket to her navy blue sheath dress and was chopping the hell out of a bag of carrots. Something at her meeting had gone very wrong.
Barefoot, I padded across the hardwood floor to the refrigerator, then pulled out two bottles of Smartwater and slid into the middle of eight high-backed barstools that sat along the white marble island. I twisted open a bottle, then waited for her to pause her vegetable massacre before sliding it across the expanse.
She caught it with her left hand and put down the knife with her right. âThanks.â
âHow was your meeting?â I asked, cracking open my own bottle.
âFinn wants the brownstone and said I could have everything else.â She glanced away a second too late to hide the shimmer of tears in her eyes. âSo my attorney thinks it went swimmingly well. Iâll leave the marriage financially better off than I came into it, which is a win for some people, I guess.â
Sorrow settled around us, thick and bitter. âIâm so sorry, Anne.â
She threw back the water like it was tequila. Maybe it should have been. Then she picked up the knife. âWhen you canât give your husband the only thing heâs ever asked for in an eight-year marriage, he divorces you. Nothing to be sorry about.â
âThereâs more to life than having kids.â I took a drink.
âNot to Finn.â She assaulted the next carrot. âThey mean the world to him.â
âYou deserve someone who thinks youâre the world.â I picked at the label, wishing it was one of Finnâs eyes.
She paused. âHe said I failed him.â The knife fell from her hand onto the cutting board, and she braced her palms flat on the gray marble. âHow screwed up is that? Iâm the one who went through the miscarriages, the IVF, the hormones, theââ Her head drooped. âBut heâs the one who feels let down. Like Iâm not heartbroken too?â
I slipped out of my chair, rounded the island, and hugged her from behind. âYouâre not a failure. Youâre a freaking lawyer.â
âWho quit practicing after a year because Finn thought it would help relieve stress and make getting pregnant easier.â She scoffed.
âYouâre beautiful, and kind, and smart, and a thousand other wonderful things. Youâre definitely the best of us.â I dipped my chin to rest on her shoulder.
She hooked her hand over my arm and squeezed, then let her head rest against the side of mine for a moment. âIâm certainly the only one capable of decent cooking, so why donât you sit down and let me finish making you some chicken soup? You might need it after risking hypothermia.â She gave my face a pat with her left hand, and I retreated back to my side of the island.
âIt was only for a few minutes. The pool doesnât have the same resistance that waves give.â I finished the bottle of water and reached for the bag of celery.
âNope.â Anne grabbed it and pulled it into her murderous clutches. âIâve seen the havoc you wreak in a kitchen. Besides, youâre supposed to be letting me take care of you, remember? Thatâs why weâre here.â
âWeâre here because of Momâs draconian occupation requirements.â I drew a knee to my chest and watched Anne lay into the celery.
âTrue.â
Naturally weâd procrastinated the deadline Mom had imposed, laying down the law that once every three years, the house had to be used the entirety of a summer by at least one of us, and occupied by all three of us for one of those weeks. Guess it was her little way of ensuring weâd still spend time together, but I kind of wondered if it was a little revenge dig at Dad, setting us up for failure so weâd lose the house heâd loved.
Until now, Anne had been busy with her job and husband, only popping into the beach house for the annual Haven Cove Classic in August, while Eva and I had been too busy at the Company to make it work. Maybe if Iâd come in the last couple of years, I would have seen Hudson sooner. How long had he been back?
Doesnât matter. Let it go.
âHas Eva told you when sheâs coming?â I asked.
âI think sheâs planning on staying the full week of the Classic, but I hope she comes for the Fourth of July,â Anne answered, transferring the vegetables to the pot. âSheâd better show up, because I love this house and Iâm not losing it.â
âYou know, you could always just live here year round if you wanted. Neither of us would care, if it made you happy.â
âAnd leave you two in New York unsupervised? Iâll pass. Want to tell me what Hudson Ellis was doing here?â The gentle tone and concerned gaze reminded me of Dad.
âHis niece wanted to meet me.â The rest of it was too ridiculous to bother her with after the day sheâd had. âGuess she follows Eva on Seconds.â
âItâs half your account too.â She grabbed a fully cooked chicken from the refrigerator and kicked the door shut. âAnd did he happen to explain if the earth swallowed him whole while you were in the hospital? Or maybe aliens abducted him?â
âNo.â I rested my chin on my knee. âBut he did apologize.â
âWell, that makes up for everything.â The chicken hit the cutting board with a thud. âDid you tell him to get fucked?â
A corner of my mouth rose. She never swore. âI told him weâd be best off ignoring each other while Iâm here. Itâs been years. Iâm over it.â
âHmm.â She started in on the chicken with deft strokes of the knife.
âWhatâs that supposed to mean?â I watched every slice, mesmerized by her efficiency.
âIt means I canât remember a time where you and Hudson were in the same town and capable of ignoring each other.â She tilted her head. âYou guys were glued at the hip more than Gavin and Lina, and they actually dated.â
âWhen Mom wasnât looking.â Being in this house brought it all back with startling clarity, as though this place was a honing stone for the memories. If I wasnât careful, theyâd sharpen themselves into knives. I stretched my arms as the typical midday lethargy stole over me.
âWhen Mom wasnât looking,â she agreed. âMan, she and Gavin snuck around for months that summer before she got bored and dumped him.â Her head cocked to the side. âWas that the summer before she joined San Francisco? Or MBC?â
âA little of both, but mostly MBC,â I answered, since neither of us was going to say the summer before she died. My jaw practically unhinged as I fought the yawn and lost. âSwimming must have tired me out.â
âHmm.â She set the knife down. âYou call Kenna back? Sheâs tried you at least three times this week.â
âIâll call her later,â I lied. Did I feel guilty about dodging her calls? Yes. Was I going to remedy that by speaking to her? No.
âSheâs your closest friend, Allie,â Anne lectured, but it was the note of worry in her tone that kept me from sniping back.
âAnd the Companyâs orthopedic specialist,â I reminded her, grabbing the empty water bottle and starting toward the recycling bin inside the pantry. âAnd we both know Iâm not making the progress sheâll want, and sheâll have to report that to Vasily. Heâll scrap my ballet with Isaac for the fall, and I canât risk it. Iâm not slacking. Iâm doing it all. The Pilates, the strength training, the resistance bandsâbut Iâm not strong enough to get on demi-pointe.â
âDid it occur to you that maybe she just wants to talk to her friend?â Anne countered as I leaned against the doorframe to her left, taking some weight off my ankle. âNo one thinks youâre slacking. I donât think you comprehend how to slack. Everyone at the Company knows youâre working yourself to the bone to get back in the studio. Itâs the only thing youâre doing. I thought being out here might help you relax or maybe at least smileââ
âYou stop and see Mom on your way back?â
âDonât change the subject.â She stared at me.
I stared back.
If there had been a contest in our house for who could hold an awkward silence the longest, I would have a crown and we both knew it.
âYes, I stopped in at the school and saw Mom.â Her sigh was a white flag.
âNot sure Iâd call it a school.â It was more like an institution.
âDo you want to take a walk once I have this put together?â
âSmooth segue, but I think Iâll take a nap.â Fatigue won. Seems like it always does. âSleep equals healing and all that.â
âHow about we go out for a movie after dinner? Theyâre running a Brat Pack marathon, and nothing perks you up like John Hughes.â She offered a soft smile.
Just the idea of putting on real clothes, of putting forth enough energy to play the role of Alessandra Rousseau in public, had me stifling another yawn. âMaybe tomorrow.â
âMaybe tomorrow,â Anne agreed, her smile slipping. âGet some rest. Iâll make sure you donât sleep through dinner.â
âThanks.â I walked out of the kitchen and up the front stairs, glancing at the gallery of candid photos along the wall and pausing at the last one. Dad had captured the four of us sitting side by side at the end of the pier, our backs to him in a rare moment where even Eva was still.
She lounged farthest to the right, her hands braced behind her, her fifteen-year-old head thrown back to embrace the sun. Lina and Anne held the center, nineteen and eighteen respectively, their faces turned toward each other in laughter, no doubt over some private joke, while seventeen-year-old me sat with Linaâs arm wrapped around my shoulders, my head resting on hers as I stared off into the water.
God, I missed that feeling, that comforting peace and certainty of the future. Weâd been as steady as the pylons of the pier as long as we were together, weathering the storm that was our mother, leaning on each other to balance the load when the waves of her expectations threatened to pull any one of us under.
The brief sensation of peace faded quickly as I remembered that Lina had died only a couple weeks after Dad framed the shot. Life was so fucking unfair. She shouldâve been here, or on a stage in New York dancing Giselle, or wherever she wanted to be.
She shouldâve been alive.
She would have known how to make Anne feel better, and whether to push or rest my ankle. She would have known how to guide Eva and deal with Mom. She would have shown us all how it was doneâthis business of being an adult.
I walked into my room and crashed onto the bed, then crawled beneath the familiar, comforting weight of the rose-blush quilt. At some point maybe my body would catch up on all the rest Iâd denied it over the years. Until then, Iâd give it the sleep it seemed hell bent on taking with or without my consent.
Rolling toward my white wicker nightstand to deposit my phone, I checked to make sure Linaâs amethyst ring was tucked away safely in my drawer and spotted the DNA test Juniper had demanded I take. A pang of sympathy rang through me. She just wanted to know where she fit in the world.
For the briefest of seconds, I felt bad for Hudson. The little girl had seemed wrecked.
âIâm truly, genuinely sorry. For everything.â
At least heâd apologized. There was a time I would have forgiven him, no questions asked, would have known that whatever kept him from my side was out of his control. Iâd trusted him more than my own sisters. And just like Iâd never understand why Lina had been taken so young, why Iâd survived the crash and she hadnât, I had to make peace with never understanding why Hudson had walked out of my life without a goodbye.
You were both kids. Let it go.
I picked up the box and read the back. Seemed easy enough. All I had to do was download the app, swab my cheek, and send it back. Considering Iâd never had a child, it wasnât like I was scared of the results. Hell, Iâd been a virgin until almost twenty, long after Juniper was born.
Maybe I wouldnât get the answers I needed from life, but I could help her by proving I wasnât the answer to her question.
Six days later, the app sent me a notification.
My jaw dropped.