pushing the tire swing back and forth. âI thought they moved. I invited her to the funeral.â
My father stiffened. âWhat did she say? Is she going to come?â
His face was so splotchy. That name was so familiar, all the years heâd talked about the accident. But Iâd always suspected-maybe wished-that he made the accident up, that it had never happened.
âI doubt it,â Stella answered. âShe said she had something to do, I donât know. She thanked me for inviting her, though. And she gives her condolences.â
âOh.â My father let out a breath. He began running his fingers over the scar on his palm.
âDoes the guy still live here?â I asked, searching for the boyfriendâs name. âMark? The one who was in the accident, too?â
âHe lives in Colorado,â my father said quickly. âMoved out there years ago.â His face had tightened so drastically that I didnât dare ask anything else.
My father shuffled his feet on the shabby burgundy carpet. Mario bleeped as he jumped the barrels on the screen. My father looked around and scratched his head. âI donât get it. Did someone else use this room? I have no clue where this TV and the video games could have come from.â
âOh, Ruth bought them for you,â Stella said. âShe bought you all kinds of stuff. I guess she always thought youâd bring Summer and Steven here more often. She bought tons of crap from that space movie, too. Itâs all in boxes in the closet. What was the name of one of the characters in that movie? The Nookie?â
âThe Wookie ?â Steven fished, after a pause. âYou mean Star Wars ? Chewbacca?â
Stella frowned, annoyed. âNo. Thatâs not right.â
When Mario died, Steven turned off the game, bored. He wandered into a bedroom down the hall, and my father and Stella returned downstairs. But I stayed in the old room, looking at the posters on the wall. There was one of a Playboy girl, her bathing suit straps sliding down her arms. I couldnât imagine my father looking at girls in that way, let alone taking the time to buy the poster and hang it up, neatly pushing tacks into each corner.
Slowly, I opened the drawers of his desk. In the very bottom drawer, I found a photo of a guy with shaggy, longish hair and sideburns. He wore a football jersey and held up a paper cup to toast. Next to him was a small, pale, freckled girl with a guarded, uncertain smile. Her long blonde hair was parted in the center. They stood in front of the eye-shaped Dairy Queen sign. I turned the picture over. Mark Jeffords and Kay Mulvaney, (secret!) engagement, 1970 . The handwriting was neat and orderly, definitely not my fatherâs crabbed, crazy scrawl.
I looked at their faces for a long time, especially at her, dead now. Then I tucked the photo back under a bunch of papers and shut the drawer tight. âThis place is really creepy,â I whispered aloud, then went to find Steven to see if he thought so too.
Steven was in the next bedroom, which was done up in green and gold checkered wallpaper. I found him on the floor next to the bureau, his knees bent, his hands behind his head. His cheeks inflated then deflated, and he breathed out in puffs.
My chest knotted. Steven noticed me. His face reddened.
âWhy are you doing sit-ups ?â I burst out.
âIâm in training.â He lowered down.
âIn training for what ?â
âThe Marines.â
I couldnât help but laugh. âLike from your GI Joe days?â
Stevenâs forehead crinkled and his mouth became very small. After one more sit-up, he stood and swished by me for the bathroom, not answering my question.
6
My father and Stella sat around the kitchen table and drank cans of beer. Steven closed his bedroom door so I couldnât barge in again. Samantha was smoking on the front porch-Stella just let her smoke-and was making a