Our New Normal
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Synopsis
Liv Ridgely prides herself on being the responsible wrangler of all things family: stay at home mom, caretaker of elderly parents, supporter of husband Oscar's career, savior of her wayward sister. Now, with her son off to college, and her ambitious daughter, Hazel, a year away from following him, it's Liv's turn. She's even established her dream career of bringing beautiful old homes back to life in the most picturesque part of Maine.
Until she learns that 16-year-old Hazel is three months pregnant.
Hazel insists she will have the baby and raise him with her boyfriend, Tyler, who's no one's idea of a model father. Clearly, there are going to be some conflicts to iron out. Liv just doesn't expect them to be with her husband.
As the family fractures in every direction, past resentments and pain come tumbling out. After years of putting others first, Liv wonders if she can do what's best for her daughter, her parents, and her marriage - while still being true to herself.
Release date: August 27, 2019
Publisher: Kensington Books
Print pages: 333
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Our New Normal
Colleen Faulkner
I stand at the upstairs bathroom door, glancing down the hallway to be sure no one is coming. I tap lightly. “Hazel?” I whisper because my husband’s family’s summer cottage is old and voices seem to carry for miles. Especially bad tidings. I think every argument Oscar and I ever had in this house was overheard by at least three family members and possibly our closest neighbors, half a mile away.
I wait, refusing to allow my mind to think of anything but what I’m making for dinner on the grill. Most of all, I don’t think of my sixteen-year-old self on the other side of this door. “Hazel?” I repeat, a little louder.
“Mom! ” She manages to express her anger, displeasure, and disappointment in every parenting mistake I’ve ever made in her tone with that one word. The door opens, but only a crack.
I see Hazel’s eyes. My eyes gazing back at me.
“You look. I can’t.” Hazel pushes an object through the crack and slams the door.
I clutch the plastic stick that my daughter has just peed on. I can’t bring myself to look at it. “Did you time it?”
I hear her push against the door and then her voice comes from the direction of my knees. She’s sitting on the floor now, her back against the door, her knees drawn up. I know the position. Been there occasionally over the years when life seemed too overwhelming.
“Yes. I timed it, Mom. It wouldn’t make much sense if I didn’t. Ten minutes. Ten minutes are up. Twelve, now.” She’s on the verge of tears, but she isn’t crying.
I close my eyes for a second. I take a breath, steeling myself.
Please, please don’t let it be positive, I pray. If it’s negative, I’ll go to church more often. I’ll donate more used clothing. I’ll adopt a stray dog, a stray jackal even. Just please don’t let it be positive.
I open my eyes. And stare at the positive sign in the window of the pregnancy test. It’s bright blue, practically neon.
“Mom?” says Hazel.
“Pee on the other one,” I tell her, feeling light-headed. And angry. How could she have been so stupid—my straight-A-student daughter? “It’s a two-pack. Get the other one out of the box,” I order, no kindness or empathy in my voice. I’m pissed. And hurt. And scared to the tips of my toes.
“I’m pregnant,” Hazel says miserably from the other side of the door. “It’s positive, isn’t it?”
I press my hand on the door and lean against it, my cheek to the painted white wood, still clutching the pregnancy test in the other hand. “Just do it, Hazel.”
“Mom . . .” I hear her getting to her feet. “Peeing on another stick isn’t going to make me not pregnant.”
And she’s right.
She hands me a second positive test eleven minutes later.
I push my way into the bathroom, and this time it’s my turn to slam the door. “Hazel.” It comes out as an exhalation. “How the hell could you get pregnant?”
“Do I have to explain it to you, Mom?”
She stands in front of me barefoot, in a tank and jean shorts, hands on her narrow hips. How will those teenage girl’s hips bear the weight of a child?
I glare at her. “You know what I mean. It’s the twenty-first century. You got 1505 on your first try on your SATs. You have my credit card.” I’m practically poking her with the two pee sticks. “I don’t even care about the sex, Hazel. No, I don’t mean that. I care. You know how I feel about teens, any teenager, having sex. I wouldn’t want your brother—”
“I don’t think there’s any fear of that,” she quips, backing up to the sink, leaning on it with her hands behind her. She has her father’s hair, a gorgeous dark auburn. My dark-brown eyes. Her father’s freckles, but my nose.
“You know what I mean,” I say, whisper-shouting at her. “You’re too smart not to have used birth control.”
“Apparently not,” she deadpans.
I stand there staring at her, clutching not one but two positive pregnancy tests in my hand. She stares back, defiant. This is how she argues with me. She gets defensive in a smart-assy way, which makes me angry. Mostly because she probably learned it from me.
I close my eyes for a moment and exhale. “Oh, Hazel,” I whisper. My voice cracks. “I’m so sorry, sweetheart.”
She just stands there.
I open my eyes, drop the plastic sticks into the trash can, and walk to the sink. She slides over a couple of inches to let me get to the faucet. I pump soap into my palm and lather my hands. The smell of peaches wafts from the foaming bubbles.
“I can’t believe I’m going to have a baby,” she murmurs. “I’m going to be a mom.”
I turn the faucet on with the back of a sudsy hand. “Not necessarily. You have options.”
She moves away from me as if she’s afraid I’m going to slap her. “Mom, I would never have an abortion. This is Tyler’s baby.” She cradles her abdomen as if the baby is a full-term eight-pounder, not a lima bean.
Tyler. That little jackass. I could hardly stand the sight of him before I knew he’d knocked up my daughter. He’s the epitome of a lazy, goalless, sulky teenaged boy. A one-dimensional cartoon character. I’ve always believed there was a good reason why stereotypes exist.
I rinse my hands. “I didn’t suggest you have an abortion.” Truthfully, if she’d said she wanted one, I’m not sure how I’d respond. It doesn’t matter because that’s clearly not what she’s thinking. “How late are you?”
When she doesn’t answer me, I say, “How many missed periods?”
“Jeez, Mom,” she huffs. “Three.”
“Three?” I don’t shout at her, but only because I don’t want anyone beyond these bathroom walls to hear me. Three months, that means it’s a hell of a lot bigger than a lima bean.
“I figure I’m between thirteen and fourteen weeks by the way they count it. First day of my last period,” she adds in a whisper.
“More than three months,” I whisper under my breath. I close my eyes for a second and then open them. “Hazel, I wasn’t suggesting you have an abortion. I was talking about adoption.”
She stares at me as if I have just slapped her. “Give away our baby?”
I turn off the water and reach for the white towel with a loon embroidered on the hem. A leftover from the days when my mother-in-law was still living. Six years later and we’ve still got loon towels . . . and loon throw pillows, and loon bottle openers. Oscar and his siblings affectionately call the cottage the loony bin . . . for more reasons than one.
I lean against the sink, taking great care in drying my hands. I feel slightly nauseated. How could this happen? How could Hazel be pregnant? This wasn’t supposed to happen to her. It wasn’t supposed to happen to me.
How could this happen now, to me?
I moan inwardly. Of course, I know this isn’t about me, it’s about Hazel. I know it rationally. Logically. But it feels like it’s about me. Because . . . I groan. “Hazel, you should consider the possibility of putting the baby up for adoption,” I say softly. “It would be the best thing for you and the baby.”
Now she looks as if I slapped her and her unborn child. “How could you, of all people, say such a thing?” She strides toward the door, her long legs slender and tanned. “I’m not going to put my baby up for adoption. Tyler and I are going to have this baby and get married and—”
“Get married?” I know I should be more empathetic. Undoubtedly she’s in shock. Teenagers don’t always make the connection between sex and the possible end result. Not even smart ones. And she’s got to be scared.
But I can’t help myself. I take the trash bag out of the can and tie up the white corners to take outside to the Dumpster, as if I can alter anything by hiding the evidence. “You’re not being realistic. You and Tyler are not getting married, Hazel. You’ve been dating him for less than a year. You . . . you’re sixteen years old.”
“I’m going to be seventeen soon,” she corrects me.
“You’re going into the eleventh grade,” I counter. “You can’t even drive alone until next week. You . . . you have a whole life to live before you get married. College, a job.” I open one hand, almost pleading. “What about wanting to be a physician? You’re going to make an amazing doc.” And you don’t need an albatross like Tyler around your neck. I think it, but I find enough self-control not to say it.
“Tyler loves me.” She yanks open the bathroom door. “We’re going to have this baby and get married and, and we’ll—we’ll figure the rest out.”
I follow her into the hall, carrying the trash bag. “I have to tell your father,” I call after her, still trying to keep my voice down.
“I don’t care who you tell,” she flings back, making a beeline for her room.
I stand there in the hallway, my arms at my sides, the trash bag dangling from my finger. “Hazel, honey. We need to talk about this. We need to—”
She slams her bedroom door behind her.
“. . . Make a plan,” I finish under my breath. And then I go downstairs to tell my husband that his sixteen-year-old daughter has a bun in the oven.
Downstairs, I find our eighteen-year-old, Sean, sitting on the couch playing a video game on the massive TV in the family room. He’s wearing a headset with a microphone. He’s oblivious to the world around him: me, the family crisis that is bubbling up around him, and global warming. I tap his bare foot with mine. “Where’s your dad?”
He glances at me for a split second and then his gaze is fixed on the game again. Zombies stagger across the screen, practically life-sized.
“Your dad,” I repeat louder.
“Outside.” He doesn’t take his eyes off the game on the ginormous TV Oscar and his brother insisted we have here at the cottage.
Out of the corner of my eye, I see blood spatter across the screen and I wonder for the millionth time if I should have limited Sean’s video game time when he was younger. Would he have more friends? Be less awkward in social situations? Would he have had his first date yet? But it’s kind of late to worry about it now, isn’t it? And he is headed to college to pursue a bachelor of science degree in interactive media and game development. It took me a while to learn how to say that. I didn’t even know such a thing existed until he came home from school last year telling me he wanted to design video games for a living.
I leave him to his zombies and go out the back door onto the deck where I drop the trash bag into the Dumpster on the side of the house. If only destroying the evidence would destroy the reality of the situation.
I gaze out at the breathtaking beauty of my surroundings: blue sky, blue-green water, bright warm sun. The kind of beauty that you feel in your chest.
The house was built on a bluff overlooking a cove, one of many in mid-coast Maine. Oscar’s grandfather built the house, raised his children here. A lobster fisherman turned merchant. Eventually they moved to a bigger house, inland, one that wasn’t so cold in the winter, but the family kept the property as a summer place and a reminder of their past. Now Oscar and his brother and sister share it. We’re all assigned different weeks and weekends in the summer. This was one of our weekends, but we basically have an open-house policy with first come, first serve on beds. Oscar’s sister and her family were supposed to be coming tonight, but they canceled at the last minute this morning, which turns out could be a good thing, considering the calamity at hand.
I walk across the deck, taking in the beauty of the sky and the cove below, water so blue it hurts my eyes. I spot my big bear of a husband down the grass slope in one of the colored Adirondack chairs we had all given each other one Christmas. He’s sitting in his red chair, which he always sits in, even when no one else is here. Which I think is sweet. He’s reading. It’s his favorite thing to do when we come to the cottage.
I walk slowly across the lawn, a hundred thoughts bombarding me at once. Hazel is going to have a baby. My baby is going to have a baby. And what is she going to do? What are we going to do?
What am I going to do? Again, I fully realize that this is not about me, but right now it feels a little bit like it is. Because for once, just once, I want something in our family to be about me. These next few months, they were supposed to be about me.
I officially begin my job in two weeks. My first contract for my newly formed business. The project I’ve been dreaming of for years. Literally my dream job. I’m finally going to be a part of the world again, after years of breast-feeding and diapers and toddler playdates and volunteering at elementary school book sales and the junior prom. Which my son did not attend because he chickened out asking “this girl he works with” at the store where he sells TVs and cell phone cases.
I haven’t worked in almost sixteen years. After Hazel was born, my design job in Portland got to be too much. Even though they let me work mostly at home, juggling my job, and the house, and the kids. Even the occasional commute was too long; child care was too complicated. And Oscar’s job was shift work with ten- and twelve-hour days. It was too crazy trying to work around his schedule and mine, so at Oscar’s insistence, I became a stay-at-home mom. I hadn’t liked my job all that much, but I found that I missed it. I missed getting dressed for work the one day a week, even if it was in jeans and my “good” Blund-stone boots. I missed talking to adults about adult things. Oscar and I talked about me going back to work when Sean started kindergarten, but by then Oscar decided he liked the energy in the emergency department at the local hospital and I realized pretty quickly that there was no way he could work those crazy hours and care for the children. So . . . I stayed home and made peanut-butter-and-honey sandwiches.
I halt a few feet behind Oscar and just stand there for a minute trying to find my balance, emotionally.
His curly auburn hair is thinning but he’s in denial. When he asks me if it’s thinner and I tell him maybe a little, he argues it isn’t. He spends a lot of time in front of the mirror combing his hair in one direction and the other, trying to camouflage the area where you see skin.
I’ve been telling him for two years, since he started going bald, that I don’t care if his thick head of hair isn’t so thick anymore or if his hairline is receding. If he can accept me with my little wrinkles around my mouth, my thickening middle, I can accept his receding hairline. He argues that I don’t understand because he’s older than I am. By five years, though we graduated at the same time from the University of Maine, because it took him a little while to “find himself.”
I look over my shoulder at the house, sensing someone’s watching me. I spot Hazel in her window. She’s waiting to see if her father spontaneously combusts when I tell him. She’s daddy’s little girl and she’s right if she thinks he’s going to be upset that she’s been having sex. Oscar isn’t a prude. He knows what teenagers do; he knows what he did as a teenager with Ally Kemp in her grandmother’s basement. He just isn’t going to like having his own daughter’s sexuality thrown in his face.
And a part of me hates the idea that I have to tell him that Hazel’s pregnant. Because he’s going to be angry and hurt and disappointed. I don’t want to hurt him. And a part of me resents being the one who has to do it. Shouldn’t Hazel be the one to do it? Of course, I didn’t give her that option, did I? Couldn’t, because I know my daughter. It would be Christmas before she broached the subject.
How am I going to tell him? How am I going to break his heart? In my mind, Hazel is still the daughter I knew an hour ago, but what if Oscar doesn’t see her that way?
I walk to the Adirondack chair beside his and plop down.
Our dog, a black-and-white Bernese mountain dog, who’s really not our dog at all but Oscar’s, lifts his head and looks at me, then lowers his head to his paws again. Oscar named him Willie Nelson. That’s what we call him, not Willie and not Nelson. Willie Nelson. A crazy name for a dog, but the kids thought it was funny and I gave in because I don’t have to worry about anyone grabbing the wrong Willie Nelson’s medical records at the vet’s office.
Oscar closes his book, one finger inside to hold his place. He’s a big guy, six-four, not heavy, but sturdy. With big hands. Right now, I want to reach out and take his hand. Feel his warmth, but I don’t because things have been weird between us lately. We don’t hold hands like we used to.
“Can you guess what Eleanor Roosevelt, Mahatma Gandhi, and Hitler all have in common?” Oscar asks.
It’s a game we play all the time, more often when we’re here at the cottage. He’s an avid reader of nonfiction and he likes to share what he learns with me. He’s been reading books on World War II for more than a year now. The facts are interesting, but I liked his Genghis Khan phase better.
My first impulse is to blurt out, “Your daughter’s pregnant!” Instead, I just say, “What?”
“All three were nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize.”
Ordinarily I’d find that little tidbit fascinating, but I’m still trying to wrap my head around the idea that in about twenty-six weeks, my daughter is going to push a baby out of her vagina.
I must have a good poker face because Oscar doesn’t seem to notice that I feel like my life is imploding. Actually, shattering is a more accurate description. I can feel bits of me separating from my body and floating away without gravity to keep me together.
“Nineteen thirty-nine.” He folds the dust jacket of the hardback book into the pages to save his place. He sets the book down and reaches for his beer bottle in a koozie. “Three months before he invaded Poland and started World War II. A guy in the Swedish parliament nominated him, calling him the “prince of peace on earth.” He was being facetious, trying to get people’s attention around the world, I guess. He withdrew the nomination, but . . .” Oscar shrugs. “I guess it was too late. Hitler already had incredible momentum.”
He’s wearing an old New England Patriots T-shirt and shorts and is barefoot. He appears so relaxed. This place is his escape from the world and the critical, sometimes dying, patients he cares for as an emergency department physician’s assistant.
Suddenly I have second thoughts about telling him about Hazel. We have to go home tomorrow night; he works Monday. Maybe I should wait, give it another day, give Hazel some time to think. Give myself time to fully wrap my head around the situation.
But that’s never how Oscar and I have done things. We don’t lie to each other, and we don’t withhold information, not to protect our children, not even to protect each other. It’s something that’s always been good about our marriage. It was one of the things my friend Amelia felt was a problem in theirs; her divorce just became final, and after eighteen years of marriage, she’s suddenly single. It’s not as if I think not telling Oscar that our daughter is pregnant until after he’s had dinner is going to end our marriage, but it’s the principle of the thing.
And I need him. I need him to see that Hazel cannot keep this baby. He knows her. He knows she’s not mature enough to be a mother and he knows that dipshit Tyler well enough to know that he’s not going to be any help on the parenting end. Oscar will agree that the baby should be put up for adoption and maybe he and I, together, can convince Hazel.
Oscar sips his beer. He’s a Shipyard enthusiast and no fancy flavors; he’s a local guy, local beer. “Some people think Hitler was nominated as a way to provoke the Nazis—”
“Hazel’s pregnant,” I blurt. I lower my face to my hands. Suddenly I’m fighting tears.
“I’m sorry?” He says it as if he didn’t hear my fast-food order.
“Hazel’s pregnant,” I repeat. Then I lower my hands and look at him. “About three months. Pregnant.” I repeat the word.
His suntanned face turns visibly paler. I see him clench his hand into a fist.
And then we’re both quiet for a moment. Which surprises me because it wouldn’t have surprised me if he’d shouted, “Pregnant?” loud enough for Sean to hear, even wearing his headphones.
I look at him. Wait. When he doesn’t say anything after a minute or two, I go on. “She says she wants to have the baby. She and Tyler are going to,” I make air quotes, “ ‘get married, have the baby, and then figure out the rest.’ ” I laugh, but there’s no humor in my voice. “I think it’s a terrible idea. Even to contemplate.”
When he finally speaks, his voice sounds strange. As if it’s someone else’s and not my husband’s. “I don’t know if this is your decision to make.”
“Oscar . . .” I turn in the chair so my whole body is facing him, our knees touching. “Tyler is not going to marry her. We wouldn’t want him to even if he agreed to it. He’s lazy, emotionally detached, and . . .” I exhale. “There’s no question in my mind that Tyler will not be around for the birth of this baby. He might not even be around after she tells him she’s pregnant.” I search my husband’s face. He’s not meeting my gaze. “Hazel cannot take care of a baby. She’s just going into the eleventh grade! She wants to be a physician. She wants to see Greece. She wants to buy a new Nissan Cube. She’ll never get to do those things if she has a baby at seventeen years old.”
His eyes tear up and a lump rises in my throat.
“I don’t think any decisions have to be made today,” he says. “We have time, right?”
I reach out and squeeze his hand.
“Tell me what you’re thinking,” I say softly. “You don’t really think she can take care of a baby, do you? She can’t remember to feed the dog.”
Willie Nelson opens one eye as if to confirm that he’s missed more than one meal due to our daughter’s lack of responsibility.
Oscar sets down his book in the grass and stares out at the water. I stare at him.
“I guess there’s no need for me to ask if you’re sure?”
“Three missed periods, two positive home pregnancy tests.”
He strokes his short red beard that’s sprinkled with gray with his thumb and index finger. “Abortion isn’t a solution here, Liv, and you know it. Not for her. And maybe she will be able to take care of a baby.” He hesitates. “But . . . if she can’t handle it, we can take the baby for a while.” He looks at me. “We’re not too old to be parents, Liv. Technically you’re still young enough to have a baby. We could do it.”
I sit back in the chair, crossing my arms over my chest. This was not what I was expecting. Certainly not what I wanted.
“I mean it,” he says, almost seeming excited by the prospect of dirty diapers and fevers of a hundred and four again. “After Hazel has the baby, she can go back to school. She can go on to college. We can take care of the baby until she’s old enough, until she’s ready.”
“And what if she comes to the conclusion that she doesn’t want to be a mother?”
He shrugs. “Then we keep the baby. We do whatever we have to legally to—”
“Oscar,” I interrupt, feeling my ire rising. “We’re not equipped to have a baby any more than Hazel is. You’re fifty years old.”
“Forty-nine,” he corrects me.
“You know what I mean.” What I want to say is that when he’s talking about us keeping this baby, raising this baby, what he means is me. Because I’m the one who has raised our two children. Yes, he’s been a good provider, financially. And yes, he’s always been big on trips to the beach and to the movies and our annual trip to New York City. But Oscar has never been the kind of father who packed lunches, made sure homework was done, or waited outside a pizza place for two hours to pick up one of his children. He’s never cleaned up a one-thousand-and-twenty-two-piece LEGO starship off the back porch. He’s never cleaned up puke from a car seat and he’s never sat up all night with a barfing child with a fever.
“Liv, we can do this,” he says, taking my hand in his. He looks into my eyes.
“Oscar, I start work on the Anselin house in two weeks. And I’m preparing a bid for another restoration. And I have no idea what I’m doing with either house. I’m going to be working forty or fifty hours a week. How am I going to take care of a baby?”
“We’ll find day care. My sister can help. She was just telling me the other day that she’s got empty nest syndrome.”
I feel the warmth of his hand holding mine. I hear the desperation in his voice. He wants this baby. He wants me to want this baby and I feel terrible. Because I don’t. I love my children. I have never regretted for a moment having them. But I-do-not-want-another-baby. I’m forty-four and premenopausal. I want to sleep at night. I want to enjoy a glass of wine alone with my husband for dinner occasionally. And I want to work. I want something of my own now, damn it.
And I feel like an awful person even admitting this to myself.
“Day care?” I say. “You didn’t want our children in day care. That’s why I quit my job. To stay home with them.”
“Different times.”
“Oscar—”
“Liv, this baby will be a part of us. A part of our daughter.” He takes my other hand. “How could you give away a part of us? Of our family?”
“I’m not talking about giving the baby away on a street corner in Portland.” I pull my hands from his and wrap my arms around my waist. I hug myself, wishing Oscar would hug me and promise me everything was going to be okay. But he doesn’t. And it isn’t. I know that in my heart of hearts. Nothing is ever going to be okay again. At least not in the way things were going to be okay an hour ago when the reality of Hazel’s pregnancy wasn’t our reality.
Oscar is watching me. “I can’t believe you’d even suggest adoption after what you went through.”
“Not every kid is like me. Look at the Andersons.” Our neighbors who adopted two girls from China. “They’ve never had a minute’s problem with them. Grace is going to Stanford.”
“Grace’s acceptance to Stanford isn’t a reflection of her emotional state.”
“No, it isn’t,” I admit. “I’m just trying to think about what would be best for the baby.”
“Right.” He gets up from his chair and Willie Nelson immediately leaps to his feet, too. “Liv, I’m not saying this is the perfect situation, but we have to do what’s best. For all of us. Hazel wants to keep her baby.” He opens his arms wide. “This isn’t 1952. We can’t send her off to live with relatives so no one knows she’s pregnant, take her baby away from her, and put it up for adoption.”
“I know that, I just . . .”
I just what? I wanted him to agree with me? I wanted him to be on my side, for once? Because it seems as if he always sides with the kids. Sean wants big bucks for some kind of software camp, I say no, Oscar says yes. Hazel accuses me of judging her, I say I’m being honest, and then Oscar comes back and tells me I’m being too hard on her. The same goes for my parents. I think they should start considering a move to a house with less maintenance, maybe even to a retirement community. Oscar agrees with them; he thinks they’re fine where they are. My mother criticizes something I’ve said, done, and when I tell Oscar about it, he doesn’t see anything wrong with her comment. It never used to be like this, but I can’t pinpoint when things changed. It seems like decades ago, but it was probably only a couple of years.
“Oh, Liv.” Oscar stands there, looking at me, his hands at his sides. “Sean know?”
I shake my head, getting up. “I don’t think so. I don’t even think she’s told Tyler yet. She’s in her room.”
“Should I go talk to her?”
I look up at him feeling so sad, so . . . defeated. “You can try, I guess. She might not be ready to talk to you yet. She’s going to feel awful about disappointing you.”
“Right.” He runs his hand through his hair. “You want me to start the grill?”
I look down at the grass, my arms crossed across my chest. Again I wish he would hug me. I wish he wanted to. “Um . . . sure. Yes. Thank you.”
Oscar picks up his book and he and Willie Nelson head back toward the house, leaving me to stand alone at the edge of a cliff.
I lie on my bed staring at the ceiling fan, holding my phone over my head. I glance at the cracked screen.
WHERE ARE YOU? TEXT ME BACK! I text for, like, the tenth time. All in caps because I am shouting. At least inside. I’m not a shouter—that’s my dad. He hollers when he’s called us for dinner three times and my brother and I still haven’t come downstairs, and the taco fixings are getting cold. He hollers when we leave wet towels on the bathroom floor. Also, when you back into his car with your mom’s. Which Sean said was totally Dad’s fault. He never parks behind her car.
I drop my phone beside me on the bed and close my eyes, trying not to cry.
I can’t believe I’m pregnant. I can’t believe I’m goddamned pregnant.
Dad says I shouldn’t say goddamned because it offends people. Well, I’m offended, goddamn it. How could God let this happen? It was just the one time.
Just that one time when Ty forgot to buy condoms. Or maybe he didn’t have the money to buy them. I told him “No glove, no lo
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