we'd had sex—easy enough to do because it was pretty
much every time we were together, which by that point
was almost every day.
I didn't tel Austin what I suspected. I didn't tel anyone. I
went to the drugstore on the far end of town and bought
the first pregnancy test I could find. I came home and
drank a quart of water before I went to sleep so when I
got up I'd have plenty of pee to use for that first morning
urination. I read the instructions four times. I peed on the
little stick and watched with my guts cramping from fear,
not PMS, for the lines to show up. One or two? Safe or
caught?
One line.
I hadn't been raised a regular churchgoer, but I got on my
knees there in front of the toilet and I sent a prayer of
thanks so fervent I was sure any God who'd listen would
forgive me for my past sins. Then I wrapped the test in a
handful of toilet paper the way I usualy wrapped my
tampons and shoved it to the bottom of the garbage can.
I got home from school to an empty house, my mom at
work as usual. And, as usual, I was already flying through
my homework and my chores so I could spend the rest of
my homework and my chores so I could spend the rest of
the time with Austin until she got home. When I went into
the bathroom to clean it, my heart stopped. Literaly. The
world grayed out in that two seconds before it started to
beat again, and I clutched the sink to keep from faling.
There on the counter was a pregnancy test. The same
brand I'd used that morning. Only this one had two lines in
the little window. A positive result.
This time when I got on my knees it wasn't to pray. I put
my head in my shaking hands and concentrated on
drawing in breath after breath. I could smel the bleachy
cleanser I'd meant to use on the shower wals, which never
wanted to come clean from the soap scum no matter how
hard I scrubbed. I could feel my breath whistling through
my fingers.
I got myself under control and onto my feet to stare again
at the test. Hadn't I left enough time for the results? Had it
turned positive after I'd thrown it away and gone my merry
way to school, secure in my un-knocked-up state?
Had I been pregnant al day and not known it?
Normaly I wouldn't touch the garbage without rubber
Normaly I wouldn't touch the garbage without rubber
gloves, but I dug through the layers of used tissues and Q-
tips without even a gag, though my stomach had risen in
my throat. I found the box I'd wrapped as carefuly as the
test, but before I could tear it open to reread the
instructions to see if it was possible a test could turn
positive later than the three minutes I'd given it. And I
found, stil wrapped tightly and hidden, the test I'd taken
that morning. Which meant, of course, the one on the sink
wasn't mine.
My thanks this time were louder and more fervent than
they'd been that morning, but shorter. Because if it wasn't
mine, that meant it was my mother's. I didn't want to think
about that.
Thinking of this now, I puled up in front of my mom's
house. The one she'd lived in with Leo and Arty for the
past three years, not one of the many in which she'd raised
me. A brick row home sandwiched between two others
and within a stone's throw of the railroad tracks, it wasn't
anything like my dad's house. Yet inside the good smels of
something baking tickled my nose instead of expensive
scented candles, and the hug I got from my mom felt
natural and not forced.
"Arty's upstairs getting ready," she said. "I told him he couldn't wear his Batman costume to the movies, but…
wel."
"I don't care if he wears his Batman costume."
My mom sighed and shook her head. "You're sure?"
Once upon a time I'd have been appaled at the thought,
but distance seemed to have melowed me. Or time,
maybe. I shrugged.
"What's it to me if the kid's happy?"
I couldn't decipher her look, which only lasted a second as
she turned to shout up the stairs. "Arty! Paige is here!"
"Where's Leo?" I'd always liked him, even if he did laugh
too loud at truly stupid television shows and wear offensive
novelty T-shirts.
Again with the look I couldn't interpret. "He's not home."
"Obviously." She didn't return my smile, but before I could ask her if something was wrong, Arty bounded down the
stairs. "Hey."
stairs. "Hey."
"Pow!" Arty leaped in front of me with his hands on his
hips. His brown eyes glinted from behind the mask.
Clearly he'd had no intention of listening to our mom. "I'm
Batman!"
"I see that. Are you ready to go, Batman?"
He launched himself into me, his arms and legs wrapping
around me. "Yay! Yes! Yay for Paige!"
"Good luck with him. Today was somebody's birthday at
school. He's had a lot of sugar."
"Oh, joy. Put a sweatshirt on, shorty. The movie theater
might be chily." I squeezed him back, tight. He smeled
like baby shampoo and candy. I could handle even a
sugar-infused Arty.
My mom tried to press a ten-dolar bil into my hand as
Arty struggled into his jacket, but I refused to take it.
"Mom, no."
"For popcorn."
"I said no." I'd been taler than her since seventh grade, but
"I said no." I'd been taler than her since seventh grade, but looking down at her now it seemed strange to be staring at
the top of her head. She'd starting graying early but had
always kept up the color. Now I saw half an inch of white
here and there along her part.
I noticed lines in the corners of her eyes, too, when she
looked up at me. My mom had never looked old to me, I
guess because she wasn't, but she looked tired. Her
eyeliner had smudged a little as though applied by an
unsteady hand, or as if she'd been rubbing her eyes. She
did that when she had a headache.
"You okay, Mom?"
"Fine, baby." She pressed the folded bil toward me again,
even though I jerked my hand away. "Take this."
"I said no. C'mon. It's my treat."
She frowned. I looked like my dad most every other time,
but now I saw myself in her face. "Paige. You can't tel me
that fancy apartment's not expensive."
"And I have a good job, remember? You don't have to
worry so much. Realy. I'm happy to take Arty to the
movies. I'm fine."
movies. I'm fine."
With a sigh she tucked the bil into the pocket of her jeans.
"As if you'd tel me otherwise?"
She had me there. I merely grinned and shrugged. She
shook her head and bent to help Arty slide his arms into
his sleeves. Considering how much Arty was bouncing up
and down it was no smal feat. I reached a hand to help
her and she stepped back with a strangely defeated sigh.
"Let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go!"
"Chil, little dude. Chil," I admonished with a hard look at my mom. "You sure you're okay?"
"Just tired, baby. Go have fun. I'l see you when you get
back. Not too late," she cautioned for Arty's benefit and
not mine. "School tomorrow."
Arty, stil bouncing, grabbed for my hand. "Let's
goooooooo!"
Like me, my little brother looked like the man who'd
fathered him. Personalitywise, though, he was almost
entirely my mother. Nonstop chatter from the backseat
entirely my mother. Nonstop chatter from the backseat
kept me entertained on the ten-minute drive to the mal.
Growing up, I'd had to go al the way to Palmyra to hit a
multiplex, but now Lebanon had its own stadium-seating
theater fancy enough to rival anything in Harrisburg. The
prices were cheaper, too, a reminder there were some
minor advantages to life in the town where I'd grown up.
Halfway through the movie, my phone vibrated against my
thigh. I flipped it open with a sigh when I saw who it was
from…ignoring the fact that not only did I recognize the
number on sight, but that I had, in a fit of insanity, assigned
it a photo. I shielded the glare of the backlight with one
hand as I read it.
Where you @?
I didn't reply, just flipped the phone closed and slid it back
into my jeans pocket. The movie went on and on. And on.
And on some more. I never knew an hour and a half could
last so long, but since Arty stared slack-jawed in wonder
at the cavorting cartoon figures I figured he, at least, was
enjoying it.
I blame the cartoons. If the movie had held my interest I
would never have puled out my phone again. I'd never
have answered Austin's text. I know better now, but that's
what I told myself at the time.
I'm watching a movie.
Cool. What movie? The answer came within seconds.
I tried not to be excited that he'd been waiting for my
answer.
Something with elves and fairies. My eyes are bleeding.
You're with Arty?
I loved that Austin didn't abbreviate his texts. Yes. What
are you doing?
Thinking about you.
Something briliantly colored and loud happened onscreen,
but I couldn't blame the sudden thunder of my pulse on
that. I glanced at Arty, his mouth ful of popcorn, his entire
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