The People We Choose by Katelyn Detweiler (any book recommendations .txt) š
- Author: Katelyn Detweiler
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āBut youāre not upset that I asked to make contact in the first place?ā
āOf course not. You had every right. I only wish you could have felt comfortable telling us your decision. But I understand why you didnāt. You needed to do it for yourself. I respect that. We both do, donāt we?ā She gives Mama a quick glance.
āYes.ā
āYes?ā I say, needing more.
āI understand.ā Mama puts her hand on top of mine. āI respect the decision. I donāt love it, butāI respect it. And I love you so damn much and all I can think about right now is how much Iām hurting for you. How unfair this is. Every man on this green earth and we picked the neighbor. You said heās a serial cheater, right? And a terrible dad?ā
I nod, inwardly flinching at the description. āHopefully I only got the good genes. Heās a lawyer, you know. Probably had to put himself through schoolāI think he had a rough family life.ā I leave it at thatādecide not to elaborate on my potential murderer of a grandfather right now. One too many anecdotes for today, and my moms have heard the stories. Rumors, they always insisted, even if Mimmy was spooked by the Jackson house, too.
āDid we make the wrong choice?ā Mama asks. āI donāt even remember why we picked his particular sperm now. It was probably no better than any other sperm in the bank.ā
āOf course it wasnāt the wrong choice!ā Mimmy slaps the table hard with her free hand. āIf weād picked any other sperm, weād have a completely different daughter sitting in front of us. Or son. Who knows? It wouldnāt be Calliope, though. So noāno matter how awful everything seems right now, it wasnāt the wrong choice. Iād make it over and over again if it meant having you.ā
āThanks, Mimmy.ā I give a weak smile. Just because itās true doesnāt make it any less odd to think aboutāI am only here, I am only alive, because of Elliot Jackson.
āYouāre right,ā Mama says, āthat was idiotic of me. I just canāt shake the guilt. I feel like we were in some way responsible. Our decisions led to this point. Maybe we could have picked a different house. A different town. I donāt know. Done something differentlyājust one thing. And then my baby girl wouldnāt have a battered heart right now.ā
āYou couldnāt have known,ā I say. I feel drained. Defeated. āAnd no one could have suspected sooner and stopped us from getting to this point. Itās not like Max and I look anything alike.ā
As soon as the words are out, I wonder if thatās true. I havenāt let myself think about it before now.
Itās easy to say we look totally different. Heās Black and Iām white. Heās masculine, Iām feminine. But of course thatās too simple an answer. A cheap, lazy default. There is so much more to both of us. But analyzing all the other detailsānose, eyes, lips, teeth, ears, hair, fingers, toes, bone structureāitās too much. Itās one thing to find myself in Elliot. Itās another thing altogether to see those same things in Max.
āWhat can we do to help you right now?ā Mimmy asks. Mama has taken her hand away, busying herself with sweeping up granola crumbs from the tablecloth, but Mimmy still grips me tight.
āI donāt know. I donāt think thereās anything any of us can do. Right now I just want to give Max a few days. Heās angry, I know. But hopefully once it all settlesā¦ we can be friends again.ā Friends. It sounds so flimsy, even to my ears. Were we ever really just friends?
āHe has no right to be angry, not with you,ā Mimmy says, a subtle edge to her voice. āAnd you have absolutely nothing to apologize for. You do know that?ā
I nod. Sheās right. Of course she is.
āIāll talk some sense into that boy if he doesnāt come around,ā Mama chimes in, the edge in her voice far less subtle. āAnd what about Elliot? Should we talk to him, Mimmy and I? Have some kind of, I donāt know, introductory conversation?ā
The thought of that introductory conversation makes me cringe. āNo. Not yet. Maybe eventually we can all meet. But it feels too soon. Thereās nothing to say to him.ā
āOkay. Well. We could go on a trip somewhere, just the three of us, maybe camping in the Poconos,ā Mama says, āeven if it means closing down the studio for a few days. August is always a slow month.ā Now that the crumbs are all cleaned, sheās unfolding and refolding a pile of linen napkins.
The idea is certainly appealingārunning somewhere far away from our woods and the Jackson house. Pretending none of this is happening, that life is still good and normal. But Mama herself told me I canāt escape my problems. Iād always have to end up here. In this place, surrounded by these people.
I shake my head. āA wise woman once said that if somethingās upsetting me, it probably wonāt just go away. I need to be brave. Face it head-on.ā
āThat is wise. I donāt know if Iāve ever been prouder of you than I am in this very moment. Come here.ā She opens her arms, and I rush toward her.
I fall into her lap, and she and Mimmy surround me with their arms.
I cry, and they cry with me. And then Mimmy makes banana waffles with her homemade maple whipped cream for dinner. We sit in front of the TV watching our old Anne of Green Gables VHS tapes until I fall asleepādreaming of wild cherry trees and Haunted Woods and a magical place far
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