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    Stay (ARC)

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      sweet for dessert. You pack all this stuff up in the basket.

      And then you get a nice tablecloth. I’m sure your mom

      will have something around. Don’t use a white one—it’ll

      get dirty and she’ll shoot you if all the stains don’t come

      out. Iron it if you have to. Fold it up all nice and neat

      and put it on top of the food in the basket. Like a cover.

      Then you take it over to this girl’s house and you say, ‘I

      decided a picnic would be more romantic.’ Take her to

      some nice quiet spot out in these woods with a pretty

      view. Looking back down over the town, or overlook-

      ing the river. Most people think the river is a nice view.

      I don’t, but she probably will.”

      I sat a minute, letting the sheer brilliance of her plan

      sink in.

      “A picnic,” I said when I could find my words again.

      “Ooh. That’s good.”

      “Wait. There’s one more thing. You got any kind of

      flowers growing in your yard at home?”

      “My mom has rosebushes all along the back fence.”

      125

      Catherine Ryan Hyde

      “That’ll do it. Go out and pick the nicest, most perfect

      rose you’ve got. Just one. Make sure you cut the stem real

      nice and long. And break the thorns off it so she doesn’t

      stick herself on them when you hand it to her. Put it on

      top of the food, right under the table cloth. And when

      you uncover everything, take the rose out and hand it to

      her and tell her, ‘Here. This is for you.’ Then go about

      setting up your picnic just so. She’ll like that.”

      We sat for another silent moment.

      Then I got up off the porch and fell to my knees in

      front of her. Literally. Fell to my knees. And there had

      been no forethought about it.

      “Please don’t go,” I said. “You help me so much.

      Nobody else tells me these things. Please?”

      She sighed and turned her face away.

      “We’ve been through this before,” she said.

      “No we haven’t. I told you I thought you should stay.

      Thought it. Just words in my head. Now I’m telling you

      how I really feel about it. You know things I don’t know,

      that no other grown-up I know seems to know. Or at

      least that they’re willing to tell me. What would I do if

      I couldn’t come ask you these things?”

      I was hoping I’d broken through to a new place be-

      tween us. But when she answered, I knew I had only hit

      a wall that would prevent me from getting there.

      “You’d figure it out on your own, trial and error, like

      everybody else. Now get up off your knees, boy.”

      I did as I’d been told.

      “Okay,” I said. “Sorry. I’m going to go running with

      the dogs now. I didn’t mean to upset you.”

      “Whatever,” she said. “Yeah. Go run.”

      But before I could get a step away, she stopped me

      with a kinder thought.

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      Stay

      “You let me know how that picnic idea turns out.”

      “Yes, ma’am,” I said. “I will.”

      It was always a give and take with Zoe Dinsmore.

      But then I couldn’t let myself get too confused about it,

      or think too hard. Because the dogs and I were running.

      And I didn’t want to smack into a tree.

      * * *

      I had been avoiding going over to Connor’s house for a

      few days, and not really talking to myself about why. But

      I knew I couldn’t go on that way much longer.

      I jogged by his house on the way home. Didn’t even

      bother to go home and clean up and change out of my

      running clothes first. I thought if I waited too long, I

      might talk myself out of going.

      To my surprise, Connor was outside.

      He was in the backyard, in just a pair of long khaki

      shorts, sunning himself on one of those cheap folding

      lawn-chair-type lounges. The kind with the plastic web-

      bing. I could see the vague shape of him through the fence

      when I was still halfway down the block.

      I walked up his driveway and sat down in the grass

      beside him. The skin of his chest was pasty white, and I

      worried about Connor getting a vicious sunburn. I could

      see every one of his ribs, but without any appearance of

      sinewy muscle stretched over them. Just skin and ribs.

      He looked like a guy who’d been sick for a long time.

      First he said nothing at all.

      Then he made a face and said, “Phew! Mind sitting

      downwind of me?”

      “Sorry,” I said.

      I moved to the other side of his lounge.

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      Catherine Ryan Hyde

      Under different circumstances I might have gotten a

      little ticky about a comment like that. But he was mad at

      me for not coming by, and I knew it. And he was going

      to lash out at me, and I should’ve seen it coming. And I

      deserved it.

      “I guess it’s bound to happen,” he said. Then a long

      pause. Then, “Running in all this heat.”

      “What’re you doing outside in the sun? Seems un-

      like you.”

      “It was my mom’s idea. She thinks I’m getting too

      pale.”

      “Oh,” I said. What else could I say?

      I sat there with him in silence for a minute, cross-

      legged on the grass. Then I noticed the garage door was

      open. And there was only one car in it. His mother’s car.

      And it was Saturday.

      “Where’s your dad’s car?” I asked, not realizing it

      was a big question. Mistakenly thinking it was harmless

      small talk.

      “With my dad, I guess.”

      “Where’s your dad?”

      “No idea.”

      “You didn’t ask your mom?”

      “I asked. She has no idea.”

      I just sat a minute. Wondering if I should say more

      or not. I was beginning to get a sense of the weight of

      that whole thing.

      “How long’s he been gone?” I asked after a time.

      “Three days.”

      He didn’t go on to say, “If you’d come by to see me,

      you’d’ve known that already.” Then again, he didn’t need

      to. It went without saying.

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      Stay

      My mind was spinning around in circles, wondering

      what that meant. Wondering whether I should ask.

      But Connor stopped my mind in its tracks.

      “When were you planning on telling me?” he asked.

      His voice sounded stiff. Rehearsed, almost. And like we

      didn’t really know each other very well. Like the voice

      you use with a stranger you sit next to on a bus bench.

      “Tell you what?”

      “That you’re dating Libby Weller now.”

      “Oh. That. It’s pretty new. How did you even know

      about it?”

      “I watched the two of you walk by my house holding

      hands yesterday. You must know I have nothing better

      to do than sit up in my room and stare out the window.”

      I was stunned. Not so much by the fact that he’d

      seen it. And said it. More by the fact that it had never

      crossed my mind. I’d been so busy holding Libby’s hand


      that it never occurred to me that the walk to the bus stop

      took us right by Connor’s house. How could I not have

      thought of that? How did a girl’s hand have that kind of

      power over me? When you stepped out of the thing and

      looked at it from a distance, it didn’t make much sense

      at all.

      “It was our first date,” I said. “I was going to tell you.”

      “Well, I figured. When I saw you were here just now,

      I waited. I waited for a few minutes. You know. For you

      to say something like, ‘Hey. Big news!’ I mean, it is big news. It’s sort of huge. And I’m your best friend.”

      “You are,” I said. I couldn’t think what else to say.

      “Did you figure I was so miserable and my life was

      such a mess that it would break me into a million pieces to

      hear that something good happened to you for a change?”

      129

      Catherine Ryan Hyde

      Now, I like to tell the truth. More and more as I’ve

      gotten older. But I was pretty attached to the truth even

      back then, if only because it stressed me out to have to

      juggle chunks of fiction and keep track of what I’d said.

      So much easier to stick with the facts. But this was one

      of those situations where the truth simply would not

      do. Because the truth was, yeah, that’s exactly what I’d

      figured. And that would’ve been a pretty cruel thing to

      go and say.

      “No,” I said. “It’s not that at all. I just … I just wanted

      to wait and see if we even liked each other. If there was

      even going to be a second date. I think I just didn’t want

      to tell anybody I was getting my hopes all up. Because

      then if it came to nothing, I’d have to tell them. And

      they’d see how disappointed I was. And then they’d be

      all disappointed for me. And that’s worse than anything.”

      I paused, in case he had thoughts he wanted to voice.

      While I waited, it bothered me just a little that it was so

      easy for me to make up such an intricate lie. But then

      I thought back over what I’d just said, and there might

      have been a grain of truth to it.

      He wasn’t saying anything. So I added, “You know

      what I mean about that, don’t you?”

      “Yeah,” he said. “Sure.”

      He didn’t sound all that sure.

      We sat in silence for a weird length of time. Quite a

      few minutes. I was getting tired of baking in the sun. I

      wanted to go home and take a shower. Make plans for a

      romantic picnic.

      I looked over at Connor, and saw that his chest was

      broken out in beads of sweat.

      “Don’t stay out too long,” I said. “You’ll burn to a

      crisp.”

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      Stay

      “Oh,” he said. A little surprised, as if I’d wakened

      him. “You going?”

      “I think so, yeah.”

      “Okay.”

      “But I’ll come by again. Sooner. I mean, I won’t let

      so much time go by this time. That’s what I mean.”

      “Okay.”

      I pulled to my feet. Stared down at him for a minute.

      His eyes were squeezed closed.

      “Think your dad’s coming back?”

      I hated to ask. The last thing I wanted to do was upset

      him. But how weird would it be to act like it wasn’t a big

      deal, or like I didn’t even care?

      “No idea,” he said. “And don’t say ask my mom, be-

      cause she has no idea either.”

      “Oh. Sorry. I hope he does. I mean, I hope he does

      if you hope he does. Do you hope he does?”

      I was making a mess of things and I knew it.

      “Yeah. I hope he does. I don’t know what my mom’s

      going to do without him. She’s pretty broken up about it.”

      “Sorry,” I said.

      “Not your fault.”

      “Still sorry.”

      Then I didn’t know what else to say. So I just said

      goodbye and jogged home, thinking. Well, actually, I

      was trying not to think. But that didn’t go my way at all.

      * * *

      My mom was in the kitchen when I got home. And I

      wanted her not to be. I wanted to look around and see

      what we had in the way of picnic ingredients. But you

      don’t just ask your own mother to leave her own kitchen.

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      Catherine Ryan Hyde

      She was leaning her back against the fridge, reading

      some kind of women’s magazine. Holding it with one

      hand, its pages folded back. In her other hand was a half-

      eaten apple that she seemed to be ignoring.

      She looked up and blinked at me. As though she’d

      expected to look up and see some entirely different scene.

      “Lucas,” she said.

      I wondered where my father was. It was Saturday,

      and the house was quiet, so he must’ve been far, far away.

      Golfing, maybe. Or now, in retrospect, I think he might

      even have been having an affair. I was getting used to

      his unexplained absences, which had been accelerating.

      “Who else would it be?” But it wasn’t really as grumpy

      as I make it sound. Just a tossed-off comment, meant to

      be halfway funny.

      “I didn’t see you last night. Your father was out late,

      and I think I might’ve fallen asleep on the couch before

      you got in. How was your date?”

      “It was good. Actually.”

      “Don’t sound so surprised. I always thought she seemed

      nice, that Weller girl. Are you going to see her again?”

      “Yeah,” I said. “Looks that way.” Then I took a big,

      deep breath and faced a new path through the world: I

      decided to take a chance on letting my mother know my

      plans. Not the easiest thing for a fourteen-year-old guy

      to do. “I was thinking I’d invite her out on a picnic. So

      I was wondering if we have stuff around. For a picnic.

      Like sandwich stuff and fruit and some kind of dessert.

      Drinks. Because I spent my whole allowance last night,

      so if we don’t have what I need, I won’t be able to ask her

      out again until after I get my allowance Friday. Which

      seems like a really long wait.”

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      Stay

      She smiled in a way that struck me as a bit sarcastic.

      Looking back, anyway. At the time I probably just felt

      like she was making fun of me.

      “Ah, to be fourteen again. Where a week feels like

      a lifetime.”

      She set her magazine down on the drainboard of the

      sink, which I could see was wet. I wondered why she

      hadn’t noticed that. She threw her half-eaten apple into

      the trash bin under the sink.

      She opened the fridge and began to root around in there.

      “A picnic,” she said. Like it was just such an amazing

      word that she had to say it out loud. Savor it. “What a

      nice idea. You really are growing up to be a thoughtful

      young man. You know that?”

      “Thank you,” I said. But I felt bad. Because I never

      would have thought of such an idea. Not if you’d given

      me a hundred years to think.

      “Where are you going to go for your picnic?”

      See? This is why I tended not
    to share stuff with my

      mother, who would be horrified to hear I had ever stepped

      foot into those dark, dangerous woods.

      “The park, I guess.”

      No answer for a time. Just the sound of her rooting in

      the fridge. I was thinking that was a lot of cold escaping.

      “Well, I think we’re in good shape,” she said, pulling

      her head out and swinging the door closed. “We have

      sliced turkey. Ham. Then in the cupboard we have some

      canned things—tuna fish and deviled ham. Bananas and

      oranges. You know I don’t like you to have sodas, but

      if you insist in this case, you can buy your own. But we

      have bottled apple juice and orange juice if that’ll do.

      And those cookies you like.”

      133

      Catherine Ryan Hyde

      “Do we have cloth napkins?”

      Then I had to look away because of the expression

      that came over her face.

      “Cloth napkins? My, my! Aren’t we the fancy guy?

      This girl must be very special.”

      “Jeez, mom. Can you just answer a question the nor-

      mal way for a change?”

      “Yes, you can use two of the good napkins. But bring

      them back! And we have a couple of print tablecloths

      I wouldn’t mind you using on the grass. I can always

      bleach them.”

      “So I’m set,” I said, eyeing her rosebushes through

      the kitchen window.

      “Looks that way. Is it time for us to have the talk?”

      For a minute, I didn’t know what talk she meant. Then

      I looked away from the roses and into her face, and then

      I did. Horrifyingly did.

      “Oh my God, Mom! Please. No! We’re just going to

      eat sandwiches. How could you even bring a thing like

      that up?”

      “You’re growing up,” she said. “Much as I hate to

      admit it.”

      “I’m going up to my room.”

      Before I could even get out of the kitchen, I could

      feel my face going beet red. I remember thinking, Right.

      That’s why I never talk to my mom about real stuff. How could I have forgotten?

      * * *

      I was lying on my back, reading a comic book. Or so

      it would have seemed to anybody who walked into my

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      Stay

      room. In reality I had been staring at the same page for

      probably half an hour.

      I was obsessed with the details of making food for a

      picnic. Obsessed. I couldn’t stop thinking about whether she would like sweet pickle relish in the tuna, along with

      the mayonnaise. And how much mustard to put on the

     


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