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Forever in Blue: The Fourth Summer of the Sisterhood (Sisterhood 4)

Page 34

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What was this compulsive need to be lovable? They both had it, were driven by it, bound by it. They would even sacrifice each other for the sake of it.

But she sensed they were afflicted differently. He wanted to preserve his worthiness in the eyes of other people. It was because of losing his parents; it had to be. Parents were the only ones obligated to love you; from the rest of the world you had to earn it.

And what about her? Whose love did she so compulsively doubt?

She knew without thinking. From her earliest memory she had perceived the chasm between how she looked and how she felt. She knew whose love she doubted. It wasn’t her parents’ and it wasn’t her friends’. It was her own.

“And so what happened?” she asked dully.

“It was really my grandparents who mattered the most to me. You know they are old and very traditional. I held off doing what I had to do. I dreaded telling them.”

He had thought about this part too, she knew. He had planned this speech. She nodded.

“When I finally told my grandmother, I thought she’d fall apart.”

“She didn’t,” Lena guessed.

Kostos shook his head. “She told me she prayed every night I would have the courage to do it.”

She pictured their two grandmothers, Valia and Rena, two old ladies full of surprises. How much did Valia know?

“Valia didn’t say anything,” she said.

“I asked her not to. I wanted to tell you myself.”

Lena studied his calm face and suddenly felt affronted by it.

“I would be furious if I were you,” she said.

“But who does that help now?” he asked.

She felt furious even though she wasn’t him. She felt furious at him for having granted himself the right to dispense with her grievances too. “I would want to know what really happened,” she said hotly.

Kostos looked pained, but he shrugged. “I had to let it go. What did it matter? What would it help to give out blame?”

What did it matter? Kostos could decide that it didn’t. It was, technically speaking, no business of hers. And yet, in another bootlike strike, she felt quite sure, looking back on the past two years of her life, that it did matter.

That was the stupidity of loving someone from a different planet, wasn’t it? You didn’t just give yourself away to him. You put yourself in the path of crazy girls who made up babies, and strangling customs you didn’t even care about.

That wasn’t what she wanted for her life, was it? She had enough to stifle her without that. She thought bitterly of her father. She had enough of those old customs as it was.

And then, abruptly, she thought of Leo. Of his loft. Of his ruby red couch and the feeling of lying on it.

She lost her breath for a moment. It was almost intolerable to think of Leo in the same brain where she thought of Kostos. She felt unnerved, disassociated, as if she were living in two universes, being two people at the same time.

She had forgotten about Leo. The possibility of Leo. It came back to her like another kick.

Was she really so bad at forgetting? Maybe she was better than she thought.

There was the boot yet again, and it hurt. But wasn’t that what she wanted?

No. It wasn’t. Leave me alone, she felt like screaming. She didn’t want the boot. She didn’t need another crack over the head. She didn’t want Kostos. She didn’t want any of it.

“Carmen, what the hell are you doing?”

Carmen tried to be impervious to the devil glare coming from Andrew.

“I’m saying my line,” Carmen said.

“What’s the matter with you? You sound like a robot. You sound worse than a robot. I wish I could listen to a robot instead of you.”

Carmen made herself stand firm. This wasn’t Andrew’s first tirade, though it was perhaps the first aimed so directly at her.

“Try it again,” he ordered.

Carmen tried it again.

“Bleep. Bleep,” harangued Andrew. “Robot.”

She took a deep breath. She would not cry. He was tired. She was tired. It had been a very long day. “I think maybe I’ll take a break,” she said tightly.

“You do that,” he said.

You are horrible and I hate you, she said to Andrew in her mind, although she knew he wasn’t and she didn’t.

She staggered to the back door and pushed it open. The air was hot and sticky and it offered no relief.

She sat down and rested her head in her arms. Andrew was being hateful, but he wasn’t wrong. The lines had grown stilted in her mouth. She was thinking about them too much. Or more, she was thinking about the technicalities of saying them too much.

Some number of minutes later, Carmen looked up and saw Julia.

“Carmen, is that you?”

“Hey,” Carmen said, sitting up straighter.

“What’s the matter? Are you okay?”

“I’m having a bad rehearsal.”

“Oh, no. What’s wrong?”

“I think all the working on meter is just confusing me,” Carmen said truthfully.

“Really?” Julia looked genuinely worried. She sat on the step next to Carmen. “That’s no good.”

Carmen closed her eyes. “I can’t believe I have to go back in there.”

“You know what the problem is?”

“What?”

“This always happens. The first time you learn the structural stuff it confuses you. Totally standard. The thing you’ve got to do is just keep going with it and then you get it. It becomes natural as soon as you get a handle on it.”

“You think so?”

“I’m almost sure of it.”

After Carmen was released from her rehearsal of pain, she went back to the room, where Julia was waiting.

“Here, I tried marking it in a new way,” Julia said. “I think this will make it easier.”

Carmen looked at Perdita’s familiar words and they looked distant to her. Now that she was considering them in a different context, she couldn’t access them in the old way anymore. She couldn’t re-create the simplicity. She couldn’t seem to go backward. So maybe Julia was right. Maybe she had to go forward.

She appreciated Julia’s patience in staying up with her almost until dawn to make sure she worked through it.

Lena was angry. She couldn’t sleep.

She’d been accepting, she’d been numb, she’d been sad, now she was angry. She was cycling through the stages of grief, but on fast-forward and in jumbled order.

In the middle of a night long ago, she’d gone to Kostos full of ardor, wearing her vulnerability in the form of a fluttery white nightgown. Tonight she knocked on his door at the Braveside Motor Lodge battened down in a slick black jacket held tightly closed against wind and rain.

He’d put on pants by the time he opened the door. She looked past him to a familiar bunch of suitcases, a familiar mess of clothes, familiar shoes. It all carried a familiar smell that hurt her. Why had he brought so much stuff?

“You shouldn’t have come here,” she said, noting as she did that she was the one knocking on his door at two in the morning.

Surprise, pain, defensiveness took turns on his sleepy face. The creases of his pillowcase were still pressed into his cheek.

“Anyway, what are you trying to do? What did you think would happen?”

“I—” He stopped. He rubbed his eyes. He looked as though his own dog had bitten him.

“I just want to understand!” she exclaimed.

That was a lie. She didn’t just want to understand. She wanted to catch him and punish him.

Maybe he didn’t do that kind of thing. Maybe he was too good for it. Maybe blame didn’t matter and people who ruined your life didn’t matter to him. But maybe she couldn’t get past it.

“I wanted to tell you what happened. I thought you had a right to know.”

“Why? What business is it of mine?” she snapped. “You were married. Now you’re not marr

ied. That was years ago. Why should it mean anything to me?”

Another lie. Far worse than the first. Even as she said it, she didn’t know if she wanted him to believe her.

From the look on his face, he did believe her. “I—” He stopped himself again. He looked down. He looked at the night sky past her head. He looked at the few cars parked in the motor court. He did what he could to contain himself.



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