With You And Without You
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Synopsis
Written with the poignancy of heartbreak and the indomitable promise of hope, Deborah J. Wolf's unforgettable debut novel delves into the fragile, ever-changing relationships between mothers and daughters in the worst of times--and in the best... Allyson Houlihan had the normal ups and downs with her husband and two daughters, but all in all, their life was good, full, and happy. That changed on the day a tragic accident ripped her husband away from her--and shattered everything. Over a year later, Allyson and her daughters--eleven-year-old Becca and fourteen-year-old Lydia--are still struggling to regain their rhythm as a family. A disciplined and athletic soccer player, Becca is at a loss when an injury forces her to the sidelines, leaving her emotionally adrift. And when Ally senses Lydia, silent and secretive, slipping away, the sense of helplessness and frustration is nearly overwhelming. It will take another of life's unexpected twists and the rock-solid support of her husband's best friend, Michael, for a mother and her girls to finally run towards each other--instead of away--and for a devoted wife to free her heart to live and love again... Special chat with the author inside Deborah J. Wolf lives with her husband and two daughters in Northern California. This is her first novel.
Release date: November 20, 2014
Publisher: Kensington Books
Print pages: 366
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With You And Without You
Deborah J. Wolf
I turn on the television, turn it off. Turn it back on, turn it off. The glow from the set illuminates the room, the static electricity filling the air; then immediately the room goes dark. Black. Light on. Light off. Light on. Light off.
I pad into the kitchen and take a heavy jelly jar from the maple-paneled cabinet, filling it with filtered water at the refrigerator door, lean back against the granite countertop, and let out a big sigh. My legs are tight. I hadn’t stretched properly this morning and I am paying for it.
When I open my eyes, I find myself staring across the moonlit kitchen at my daughter. My oldest daughter. Lydia stands only ten or fifteen feet from me, but she might as well be on a different shore staring off into the horizon, wishing on a star, contemplating a midnight swim. Fourteen, what an ugly age to be. And particularly for her this year.
“What are you doing, Mom?” she asks indignantly, as if my being there is an intrusion on the place where she lives, the peace she needs. Her boot-cut jeans hang low on her narrow hips, an orange and blue Abercrombie T-shirt lifted slightly at the waist to reveal her perfectly flat, almost concave, stomach. She’s been begging me to have her navel pierced. I’ve almost given in just to win a piece of her back, an outing of sorts that might reconnect us in some way. At least for an afternoon, maybe even for the weekend.
She’s come down from her room, eyes glazed over from staring at the wall, not from drugs. Definitely not homework; she’s yet to get back in the swing. Ninth grade would be a waste for her. Who could blame her? She’s lost her father. He’s been taken from her in what has been called “an accident.” Surely her teachers would grace her with just one more semester to catch up, a few more months to get back on track. But where would she be then? Of course, you couldn’t call it much of anything but an accident. A lapse in judgment, a brief fleeting moment when time stood still. People have spent their time asking us how we are doing.
How are the girls?
How are you getting along?
Is there anything we can do for you?
What do you need?
“Just getting some water, Lydia. What’s up?” I try this, but she has already turned, her back stiff and straight to me, her shoulders set back in defiance. When she reaches for something to snack on from the pantry, her T-shirt lifts to reveal the small of her waist. She never answers me.
“Honey?” I try again.
She turns, shrugs her shoulders, and with a chocolate chip granola bar in hand, heads back through the hallway and up the stairs to her room. Her haven. The place where nothing is demanded of her, no questions are asked. I know this instinctively from my own teenage years, but then again, this is different. Lydia is hiding. Every night away from the rest of us, deep in a sorrow that has turned from sadness to anger to nothing. Just plain nothing. Perhaps the worst of all grieving emotions.
I have wondered where she goes when she is gone. She can sit for hours in her room now, hours of nothingness. I’ve wondered how long it can go on, how long it will go on. When I can stand to be honest with myself, I look at my own life. The nights of nothingness, the time spent staring off into the dark night sky, the minutes, the hours just ticking by.
“Lydia?” I call after her. Nothing. “Lyd?”
Finally, “Nothing, Mom. I’m just hangin’.”
Her door opens, and then closes again. I hear her push the weight of her back against the door to make sure it has closed, really closed, and then plunk, horizontal, on the bed, Puma backless tennis shoes dropping one, then the other, onto the floor. In my mind I can see her stretched across her quilt, pillow propped under her chin, and her eyes closed to the world.
What to do, what to do, what to do? The witching hour. Too early to go to bed. Too late to start something new. The hour we used to spend together—my husband and I. Oh, nothing in particular, of course. Maybe flip through a travel magazine and plan our next adventure together, television on in the background, pay bills, share a half bottle of wine, an occasional foot rub if I’d ask with that throaty voice that promised it might lead to something better, something more. Something surely he couldn’t pass on. Now the hour I hate every night. The hour I wish someone, anyone would call. Too late for a telemarketer, oh, but what I would give for a telemarketer. Anyone, call. Ring, damn phone, ring.
I take the steps to the second floor, set the alarm on the keypad at the top of the landing, and watch the small red light click on. Safe, locked in. Come and get us, world, I mouth silently in my mind, surveying the living room and front entry below me before taking the last step to the second floor. I dare you. You’ve taken everything we had, there’s nothing more for you here. Go ahead; take your best shot.
Straight ahead at the top of the stairs, Becca’s room. The girls share a bathroom, something Lydia hates. “She’s into all my stuff,” she wailed one morning at breakfast, holding up the mashed end of her new lip liner pencil. True, Becca had come to the breakfast table in her sister’s brand-new Brown Sugar lipstick, her eleven-year-old mouth stained past the edges of the outline of her lips, clearly applied by a novice. It looked ridiculous, but I didn’t tell her that. Instead I only smiled into the eyes that could barely meet mine. Truth is, Brown Sugar isn’t Becca’s color and it never will be. She won’t need lipstick, now or in the years that will age her physically. She is a natural. Beautiful from birth with perfectly manicured eyebrows that looked as if we’d been plucking them from the minute she emerged from the womb. She’s been graced with cornflower-blue eyes like her grandmother, the kind of eyes men would lose themselves in. And a natural ability to hold a crowd: Men, women, kids her own age, it really doesn’t matter.
Becca is asleep, one muscular leg thrown casually out from under the comforter and across her bed as if someone has drawn it that way on purpose, a book flipped awkwardly at her left wrist, pages turned and open at the spine. She is breathing deeply, a slight hum in the room where she’s left reality behind. She falls asleep this way most nights, lost in some story other than the one that has become her life. She’s never been a television watcher the way her sister was as a child, before the telephone and the privacy of her own room stole Lydia away. Becca prefers books, will read any chance she can. That or music. With a double dose of soccer thrown in.
Quietly, carefully, I take the book from her and fold the pages back, laying it on the white desk that is covered with the school pictures of Becca’s endless circle of friends. Smiles, childhood grins of other sixth graders, untouched by something as horrific as the death of their father. Many of Becca’s friends came to Patrick’s funeral; I’m sure it was the first for most of them. She barely noticed. Rather, she stood stoically at my side, her clammy left hand clutched in mine, barely a breath on her lips. She did beautifully until it was time to lower the casket and I was so lost in my own thoughts that I nearly missed her sway, then go pale as death on me. She barely made it away from the front of the newly dug grave when she started vomiting violently, a slight murmur going up in the crowd to the left and behind us. I stood next to her, willing strength to my side so that I would not retch myself, and patted her head with a handkerchief monogrammed with Patrick’s initials. She took it from me, that handkerchief, and I’ve yet to see it since.
I lift the covers over Becca and tuck them in at her side, running my hand over her forehead and brushing away the wisps of hair that have fallen across her eyelids. I leave her breathing deeply and knock softly on Lydia’s door, opening it before she can answer one way or another.
“Are we running tomorrow?” I ask her. She lies on her stomach, her legs bent at the knees and kicked up behind her, flipping through my latest copy of People magazine. She doesn’t look at me, doesn’t take her eyes from the article on George Clooney.
“Yeah, I guess, whatever.”
“Long or short?” I ask her, looking for a commitment, waiting for her to engage in conversation. Patrick would never have stood for this. This flippant attitude, the nonchalant, careless discomfort that hangs between us. He’d have demanded her attention.
“Whatever you want.” Flip, next page.
“Long or short?” I ask her again. “You pick. I did long this morning, so I could go either way.” I know she’s not reading, because she’s running her eyes over the pages, checking the captions to see who’s pictured from the latest Hollywood party.
“Short, then. I’ve got to get to school early.” She rolls to her back and raises the magazine so it covers her face. I’m not getting anywhere. Get mad or get out? I can’t decide. I’ve had limited energy for Lydia lately. She’s been slipping from me. Try as I might to grasp at her, try as I can to bring her back to me, it’s as if I’m beginning not to recognize her. I walk over and push down the front of the magazine, studying her face, the wide splash of freckles that spill out across the bridge of her nose.
“What?” she says to me.
“Lydia, what is it lately? Where do you go from me when you’re gone? I’m more than a little worried about you, more than concerned that this funk you’re in has gone on for far too long. Is there something you need, something I can do for you?”
“Uh, like what?” she answers me with a huff, shifting away and tossing the magazine across the top of her bed. “Can’t I just hang out, Mom?”
“Yep. Every right, Lyd. When have I ever denied you that?” She shrugs her shoulders at me, brushing me off, but I barely budge.
“Hanging out is not what I’m talking about, Lyd. I want to know how I can help you, how we get back some of what we had before, before . . . before Daddy died.” I say this softly and my voice catches. No matter how hard I try, my voice catches. She looks away, distant.
“I’m fine. I don’t need anything from you. I just want to hang out by myself. Really, I just like it in here. Okay?” She emphasizes the “okay”—a dismissal—and I know this is my cue to leave, but I just can’t. I continue to stare at her, looking, perhaps, to fill my own emptiness with something I might do for her, something I might give her. We’ve been close, always so close. Now we are like two people coexisting under the same roof, our lives revolving around each other, occasionally touching, and brushing by each other. Call it intuition—a woman’s or a mother’s—but my daughter is changing. My daughter is slipping from me, and like sand, the tighter I hold her in my hands, the more she slips through my fingers.
“Okay, Lyd, I know you want to be alone.” I start to back out of her room, still studying her face, looking for recognition of the little girl I swear still lives here with me. I am gently closing the door behind me when, in a voice that has changed, softened only slightly, she says, “Mom, can you drop me at school in the morning?” Suddenly, from somewhere, interest. Something she needs.
“Sure. What time?”
“Eight.”
“Okay, better be ready to go by five forty-five for our run, then. Three miles.”
“Oh, okay.” I start to close the door again when she says to me with a sigh, “I don’t know, Mom. I’m just so tired lately. Can you just wake me and we’ll see?”
I nod and let her go. Chances are she’ll flake on me. She’s been less than committable lately.
Down the hallway, and a sharp left to my room. My room. Mine alone now. The place where I sleep by myself. There were times during my marriage when I longed for that. Nights when Patrick returned from a long business trip only to interrupt the routine I’d settled into. My space. My own room. My journal, my corner of the bed, my television program, and my electric blanket set to my temperature. My, how foolish I’d been.
We have a spectacular bathroom. It’s easily the best room in the house. Now it’s my bathroom. Mine alone. My bathtub. My sink. Two sinks for me—lucky me. Two large framed mirrors to chase my reflection in, the changes in my body, the wilting of my face. A big, beautiful picture window that overlooks the garden. I spend my nights here as I used to, a long hot bath with sea salt or bath oil, the room lit by candlelight, a good book, maybe some music. It’s one of the few rituals I can’t shake no matter how many memories it forces me to dredge up.
When the girls were very young and Patrick wasn’t traveling so often, he would draw my bath while I read them a bedtime story, the three of us tucked under the quilt on Lydia’s double bed. After a while, he’d come in and relieve me, sometimes sending me off with a glass of wine, a cup of tea, or an earmarked article he’d want me to read from some magazine he’d picked up at the metro station. I’d go immediately to the bathroom, peeling off my clothes piece by piece and dropping them onto the travertine marble floor. I’d lower myself inch by inch into the bath, letting the water absorb me, pulling my shoulder-length strawberry hair up behind me and into a towel like an Egyptian queen. I’d sit for a few minutes, eyes closed and in complete silence, fanning the water back and forth so that it created a small wave over the top of my breasts. It was always the first time peace had found itself into my day.
It took a while for Patrick to master the temperature, timing it just right with the swarm of good night kisses and begs for juice or water from the girls. I like my baths hot, so much so that sometimes when I’m done I come out a bit sunburned, a pinkish tint to my pale skin. After a while, Patrick would finish with the girls and come to sit by the side of the bath. Sometimes, if I were lucky, he would use a scrub and the loofah on my back. Other nights, he’d just stand at the corner of the door, watching me with a smile and waiting for me to pull my body, long and lean from a constant diet of running and tennis, from the tranquility the water provided. He might stay there for my entire bath, eyes meeting mine, and never tiring of holding that place in my heart that made me ache for him.
These nights I am staying longer in the bath. And often I find myself with the old, small five-inch black-and-white television on, praying not to go deep into some bit of despair, start dropping saline-laden tears into the water, emotionally spent and, before I know it, gulping for air against the sobs that choke me. No one comes for me anymore. No one hands me a warm-from-the-dryer towel, reaching around me to dry my back, to rub the moisture from the small hairs at the base of my neck.
I draw a bath, adding salt and a few drops of the oil that leave the water beading on my skin. I want some time alone to think about Lydia, about where she is, about who she is becoming.
“Everything you do changes you.” The conversation I’d had earlier in the day with my neighbor Anna, whose wisdom I savor, floods my mind again.
Lydia has changed; a light has gone out, her inextinguishable energy doused. I am certain the coals still burn; they simply must. I am struggling to find her flame; I simply won’t believe the fire has been put out.
I’ve wondered about the teenager Lydia would have become had her father been alive. I’d never know the path she might have taken, the new friends she might have met, the old ones she might have retained. I’d never know if her first boyfriend, Eric, would have met with her father’s approval, or if Patrick would have been so severely disapproving that she would have changed her mind about her choice in men.
I am grateful for Eric; thankful for the smile he puts on her face, his ability to make her laugh. God, it is good to hear her laugh. But, like a sand crab lost in the tide, Lydia has allowed herself to be tossed around, the ebb and flow of first love throwing her sideways, off her feet. With Eric, as with the rest of her life, she clings to nothing and everything all at once, her lackluster shell of a body like a ghost floating through each day.
I don’t know how to fix Lydia, but it is my responsibility to do just that; I am her mother, unconditional is part of the contract. I long to heal her wounds, to run a thin stream of crazy glue through the pieces of her that are visibly cracked. I know she won’t let me, not easily anyway, but I am determined nonetheless.
We wagered that Patrick fell asleep at the wheel of his car before he hit the center median, and without his seat belt to hold him in place, was dead upon impact. A witness to the accident remembered him weaving a bit, slumped in the front seat, fighting to adjust his position and fidgeting in his seat. He’d pulled an all-nighter, preparing for the pitch of his life. That’s what he had called it on the phone to me that very morning, while I was barely listening, struggling to get the girls out of the house and to school on time. “Baby,” he said, “this is it, it’ll make our year.”
Miraculously, externally, his body was barely bruised, the damage clearly done to his internal organs, the smart whip that was once his brain left stupefied.
The incident, as the police liked to call it, happened on a freeway nearly two hours from our home. After the sales call and running on three cups of strong black coffee, he’d begun the drive home, hoping to make the first meeting for Becca’s competitive soccer club, which was due to start training two weeks later. Becca, of course, will never forget this. And it will be a long time before she lets herself believe it wasn’t her fault. I cursed him on the hour, every hour for doing this to her. Even though, of course, I knew this wasn’t his fault or his intention.
In the first few weeks, we pieced that much of the story together: the sales call that had been the success he’d hoped for, the coffee he’d told me about on his cell phone just after he’d left, promising me that he was fine to drive, that he felt more awake and alive than he had in a long time. But it’s the crash, what I imagine to be the sound of crunching metal and the smell of burning rubber, that has become the dream, the nightmare that haunts me most nights.
I wake up in the predawn with the sweats, drenched in this choking dream that has gripped me and started me shaking, cold with anxiety and loneliness. I’m suddenly and acutely aware that one of my daughters is lying next to me, her body curled tightly into a cocoon, her breathing barely a whisper on the pillow next to mine. It’s Lydia and I take this opportunity to connect with her, unclenching her locked fist and wrapping my hand inside hers. Her hands give to mine and I’m suddenly flooded with relief. Four thirty. Truly the most haunting of all hours in the morning. There’s a reason God intended us to sleep through the dark. I’m awake now and I know it. Doomed to watch the backlit numbers of the old clock radio click away for an hour until I can legitimately pull my body from the bed, throw on my running shoes, and hit the hard pavement. It’s there where a rhythm will start, my breathing melodic with the scraping sound of my well-worn running shoes. There where I push and push hard, afraid of nothing other than finding the next breath, and even that doesn’t seem to frighten me away.
Until then I roll my body toward Lydia and watch her breathe in through her nose and out through her mouth. She emits a small shushing sigh and I know she’s deep in a slumber that won’t easily be broken. Her face is soft, childlike, just as I remember from nights when I’d creep into her room and stoop beside her bed to check on her as a toddler, to watch the rise and fall of her chest.
“Oh, Lyd,” I say softly, stroking my fingers across her forehead and pushing a wisp of her hair back from her face, “come back to me, baby, come back. Let me love you, let me know where you are on everything, how I can help you.” I’m whispering this to her in the shadows of the room, where I can just make out the outline of her face. She does not move, never stirs, but still I wonder if she can hear me. I long for her to wake and sit up with her eyes bright, allowing me to take her into my arms and run my fingernails down her back in long strides.
Our silent war, empty of treaties, is almost more than I can bear.
I turn away from her, then back toward her, before splaying out flat on my back and staring at the ceiling fan I’d had Patrick install. It sits motionless, the stainless tips glittering in the moonlight that floods my room from the sky. Lydia had begun taking refuge in my room the second week after Patrick died. I’d found her first at the door one night, staring me into consciousness, lingering until I couldn’t help but wake to find her. When I rolled over, I sat straight up in bed, a sense that something else had gone sour.
“What’s wrong? What’s happened?” I asked her, immediately awake, pulling the covers to my chin, then throwing them back in a single swift movement that made her jump back in the door frame.
“No, nothing. Mom, nothing’s wrong.” She hung there against the wall, charcoal-black gym sweats and a tank top, and I knew she needed to come to me. She might as well have been four again, those wide eyes in the night, begging to be somewhere safe and warm. I prepped for a long cry where I could hold her and we could meld our bodies together, instantly longing to heal both of us at once.
“Well, c’mon then, don’t just stand there.” The covers on her father’s side of the bed lay smooth and pulled tight at the corner as they often had when Patrick was away on a business trip. I pulled them back and said nothing further to her when she crept on her tiptoes to the bed, crawling in and pulling the cool comforter back over her small frame. I reached my arms for her, but she turned away and I rolled back over on my side, listening for what might come next. Tears? Talk? Prayers? Nothing, just the deep and contented breathing she’d often fall into as a child on the nights she’d crawl into bed in between Patrick and me, separating us everywhere except at the top of the pillow where we undoubtedly found a way around her to bind our fingers together.
I roll back toward her one more time and stare at the outline of her frame against the dark room, resting my arm across her waist and feeling the immediate heat she radiates. I draw my body close to her, careful not to wake her so that she might find me wanting, no, needing, to be closer to her. I know if she finds me this way, this look of longing stained on my face, I know she’ll move away from me, leaving me to stare at her back and clinging to the far side of the bed. That or leave altogether, which she has been known to do on a night when I move too much in bed, finally stirring her awake. If that happened, it would be as if she hadn’t really needed me at all, didn’t know how she could possibly have ended up in my bed. She might pad off in her bare feet, clinging tightly to the pillow she’d brought with her, attitude following her like the scent of a skunk.
My fourteen-year-old daughter. Patrick had been strict with her, mainly out of exasperation. Lydia had sprouted her hormones early, a ridiculously morose and moody eleven-year-old, then a pouty and know-it-all twelve-year-old, a brooding and solitary thirteen-year-old. Reach, reach, reach, he’d kept reaching for her, and she kept pulling away. He’d reach again, pulling her back to him with a force so strong it would sometimes knock the wind from her, and she’d relent without even knowing she had, ending back in his arms, his little princess who needed him. Then again she’d be off and he’d be left reaching.
“How far will she go from me?” he asked me one night after dinner.
“Farther than you’ll ever imagine,” I told him. “But she’ll be back. Don’t worry, she’ll come back to you, Patrick. She won’t know how to help herself.”
Do I believe it myself now? For Patrick she’d be back; I’d always believed that. He was her knight. For years the only man she’d acknowledge in a room. But for me? She could go and might never return. Might never see the purpose. Lydia is drifting, no doubt about it. For so long I’d believed it was the residue from her father’s death; now I’m not so sure. It’s as if she is hiding something from me, hiding herself from me. As if she doesn’t want me to know her, doesn’t want me to see her. She can turn in a minute, caustic and bitter, as if she wants nothing more than for me to go far away from her.
It’s 5:38. I brush the thick mane of brown hair back from her face and whisper quietly at her shoulder.
“Lydia?” Stillness. “Lydia.” A little louder now, the hint of a command, often required with Lydia, especially at this hour of the day.
“Mmm, yeah?” She barely moves from her spot on the pillow.
“Five forty-five. Our run. Let’s go, sweetie.”
“Ugh,” she groans. “No, Mom, not this morning. No, please.” She barely moves, merely rubs her feet across the bottom of the bed, sending a small ripple across the crimson chenille throw. Her voice is a whine mixed with a bit of a whimper. “I’m really not in a place to go. Didn’t sleep very well and God, I really don’t feel very well,” she tries on me.
I am a pro at reading Lydia’s mornings. She half commits to a run each night, and breaks the promise nearly as often. This morning her sleep-filled voice doesn’t sound very encouraging. Truth is, I wouldn’t mind the run by myself. Or with Becca, who might be awake, and ready to go. Either way, either option seems better than pleading with Lydia to get out of bed, then dealing with her sullen, crabby prance down the streets, her only conversation a complaint about how cold it is.
“Okay, Lyd. You’re off the hook. I’ll see if Becca wants to go, and set the alarm on my way out.” I don’t think she actually hears any of it, her head still resting in the same position on the propped pillow, arms tucked just at her waist. I reset the alarm on the clock radio for her so she’ll get out of bed and shower before I am back.
“Hi, Mom. Short or long?” Becca meets me in the hallway, enthusiasm bubbling from her voice, running her hands over her waist-length blond hair and smoothing it back into a single ponytail. For eleven she is more disciplined than most adults I know. “Is Lydia running?” Becca is dressed in black Adidas, Lycra warm-up pants, and a red sweatshirt.
“Hi, sweetie. Um, no. Lydia’s barely made it through her first dream of the night.” I push a long strand of hair back away from her bright eyes and tuck it behind her ear. “Short. Your sister needs to be at school early.”
We head down the stairs, our steps falling in place, and I take her hand for a minute, pressing it to my cheek. “Did you have a good sleep?”
“Yeah.” She smiles at me, freckles spread across her dimpled cheeks.
Becca stops at the wrought-iron front gate to our courtyard to stretch her calves first and then her shins. She pulls one arm across the front of her body, then the other, then swings them both back and forth in front of her body, willing them to life. She is amazingly alert, ready to run, twisting back and forth at the waist and reaching overhead toward the sliver of daylight that is just beginning to break and blanket the sky.
Patrick used to say that Becca was a machine, and it isn’t far from the truth. I watch now as she turns on her body, first the legs and then the arms, sucking in the air she needs to kick-start into high gear and take off. She can go in an instant. She is compact, built to muscle her way down a field, across a pool, even the streets of life.
“Go on ahead if you want.” I motion with my head for her to take flight while pulling my right leg up behind me, bent at the knee so that my shoe pulls up against the seat of my Lycra running pants. I hate to slow her down, hate to feel as if she were out here just to keep me company because she didn’t want me to be alone for one more hour of the day. The streetlights cut through the still dark sky, and when we speak our breath warms the morning air.
“No way, Mom. I’ll run with you. It’s not so much a big deal to me.” I can tell she is itching to get started. She bobs a bit in place now and the blood is starting to pinken her cheeks.
We’d put Becca in ballet at three just as we had done with Lydia. She’d never taken to it, flapped her arms up and down like a wild turkey waiting to take flight and basically stomped her way across the stage during her first recital. By five she was ridiculously bored with the whole thing and begged us to let her try soccer, for which she was a natural, barreling her way across the field and relentless at making sure the ball went between the two posts. Lydia was good about cheering her on, sideline spectator on the Saturdays we’d spend at the field knowing that Patrick reveled in his youngest daughter’s ability to play, really play. He’d attended Lydia’s recitals, of course, watched her blossom into the near prima ballerina that she was, but this was different and Lydia knew it. This was a bond only Becca would have with their father.
We start together and I am hoping for a good run. My runs are never consistent; I am plagued by bad knees a
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