Fragments of the Lost Page 41

I had gone by her house three times, without being let in, after the accident. I walked up their front steps and stood at the door, and heard muffled noises behind. I knocked, and the noises went quiet. They didn’t come out. They didn’t move. I figured they knew it was me and decided they didn’t want to talk to me, and I tried to respect that.

I sent a card instead, a lame thing expressing condolences, which felt absolutely appalling in hindsight, but I couldn’t get inside otherwise. I mailed it across two towns, a few days before the service.

I felt invisible, the ghost of a person left behind, ignored as I drove by her house, or sat in the pew of the church, beside Hailey.

And then, suddenly, she saw me. The tables turned.

My house had been empty, my parents on the way to pick up Julian. And the silence was unbearable. In the silence, I could only hear wisps of Caleb: Just leave it, Jessa. Just say it. Mia, come say goodbye to Jessa—

I had been standing on the front porch, just to breathe, when I saw her car, like a ghost itself, parked at the corner of my street. It was dusk, everything cast in shadows, and for a moment I thought I had conjured it from my mind. The window was cracked, the car dark. But I saw a figure moving inside. I stepped closer, just to be sure it was real. I walked down my front steps, my arms crossed over my chest, and at first she didn’t notice. She was staring up at the big house behind me, and I was suddenly embarrassed by it. By the white pillars and the brick facade, the hedges all cut to the same height, the way it all felt suddenly so unnecessary. She narrowed her eyes at it—the lights on outside and inside, the curtained windows—and frowned when she saw me.

“Hi,” I said as she lowered the window some more. Her eyes were dry and cold, and I wondered if she was out here for some sort of revenge fantasy. As if she could see the river rising up under the base of my car in the driveway, sweeping me away.

I took a tentative step back, unsure of everything.

“Jessa,” she said, like she was confused to find me here—as if she weren’t the one parked in front of my house, waiting for me. “I was going to knock.”

I nodded. Waiting. She was the adult, but it seemed like she was checking out of the conversation, leaving it to me. My breath escaped in a short burst of fog. The words I’m sorry hovering between us. But I didn’t know what I was apologizing for.

“We’re moving,” she finally said.

The shock of it knocked me back a step. “Oh. Where?”

But she brushed the question aside. “I need to pack up his room.”

It’s then that I saw the question, heard it lingering between the spoken lines. She licked her lips. “This isn’t something a mother should ever have to do.” And then, “The room is full of you, Jessa.” It was both an invitation and a request, and I seized it.

“Okay,” I said.

“We’ll be ready for you this weekend.” Then she started the car, with one look back at my house.

She looked so small, with me standing over her on the curb, and the childlike notebook in the passenger seat, which must’ve been Mia’s.

My parents were due back with Julian at any moment. Memories of Caleb circled in the silence again. I was never so grateful for the headlights coming down the road, and Julian crammed in the backseat, like an oversized kid.

I was already walking toward the driveway when he exited the car.

“If I knew you’d be waiting on the curb, I would’ve caught an earlier train,” he joked. He tucked my head under his chin and said, “Good to see you, kid.”

I patted him twice on the back, thrown by the sudden display of affection. My parents averted their gaze, and I knew: they had spoken to him, warned him that I was a fragile thing that must now be handled with care.

Like a glass figurine in the box.

Now I see the notebook in the trash can, under the placemats and utensils and cookbooks, nothing else of Mia’s on top or underneath.

I open the cover, expecting to see Mia’s writing. But instead it looks like a ledger. Row after row of times, dates, locations. I flip the page, and it keeps going. A diary. A file. Propping it on the edge of the garbage can lid, I try to read the words in the fading light. I cup my hand around the pages, to protect it from the steady drizzle.

There is a list. An annotated schedule. I’m confused at first. It says things like: school, home, school, with predictable times, in an unwavering pattern of regularity.

The dates don’t make sense, because Caleb wasn’t there. These are more recent.

Then there are a few diversions. Walk, 10 p.m. Another: Run. Out for 1 hr. And another: Girl shows up. Leaves after 10 min. And then an address follows.

I look again. I know that address. It belongs to my best friend. To Hailey. I don’t understand why Eve would be following Hailey. What Hailey has to do with anything at all.

I look at the dates again. This is the day after the service, and I realize where Hailey had been for those ten minutes on that day. Where Eve must’ve followed her from.

It was my house. She was at my house, trying to talk me out of the darkness, and I sent her away.

I see the dates again. The walks I took at night, when everyone else was sleeping. Running in the dark, where I could hear a steady rumbling, like a river.

But no, not a river. A car engine in the distance, following me.

My hands shake, and the paper trembles faintly in my grip. These are my movements. This is my path. She’s been following me.

“Jessa?” Eve calls from the back door. “Is that you?”

I look up to Caleb’s window, then down at my feet again. I start to slowly ease the garbage can aside, but his mother stands at the back door, watching me, frowning.

“Can I help you with something?” she asks.

I drop the notebook into the container, wipe the rain residue from my face. “I was emptying his garbage,” I say, holding the can up to her. A proclamation of innocence. I didn’t see. I want to force the words into her mind. I didn’t see.

“It’s getting late,” she says. “Bring that back up, and we’ll call it a day.”

But I suddenly don’t want to be alone in the house with her. Not up on the third floor, with no exit, trapped behind crooked stairs.

“I need to go home,” I say, taking a step back. I didn’t see. I didn’t see. I didn’t see.

I realize I’m holding my breath, and I make myself exhale slowly. My bag is upstairs, with my car keys. I can’t just take off. But I don’t like the way she’s looking at me, like she suspects something.

She doesn’t answer, just tips her head to the side, looking between me and the garbage can.

Now I’m wondering why she asked me here in the first place. That day I saw her car—had she been about to knock, as she claimed? Or was she watching me, as she had been in the weeks after Caleb disappeared? And if she was watching me, what was she hoping to find?

I’m saved by Max coming through the swinging gate. He must see something on my face, because he switches to an indifferent smile toward Eve. “Saw you guys out here,” he says. “Can I help with any lifting?”

Her lips purse together. “No, honey. I’ve got movers coming tomorrow to take some things down to the dump or to consignment. Then we’ll list it.”

“Where are you going?” I ask.

She cuts her eyes to me. “I’m not going anywhere yet.”

I slip back inside, race up to the room to grab my bag. I peer out his window, where Max is standing, talking to Eve. And as if she can sense me, she tips her head slowly back, looking straight up at me.

I back away. I leave out the front door without saying goodbye to either of them.

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