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Right as Rain
Right as Rain Read online
Dedication
For Tyler,
My big brother and first-ever teammate.
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Dedication
Chapter 1: Dirt
Chapter 2: That Night
Chapter 3: Moving
Chapter 4: Goodbye
Chapter 5: That Night
Chapter 6: 288 Miles
Chapter 7: The Heights
Chapter 8: Apartment Thirty-One
Chapter 9: That Night
Chapter 10: Like a Girl
Chapter 11: Hamilton Heights Café
Chapter 12: That Night
Chapter 13: A Man Named Nestor
Chapter 14: A Deal with Frankie
Chapter 15: Secret Team Handshake
Chapter 16: Anniversary
Chapter 17: That Night
Chapter 18: One and Only
Chapter 19: Something I Could Do
Chapter 20: Closed Doors
Chapter 21: Wash Cycle
Chapter 22: A Little Space
Chapter 23: That Night
Chapter 24: Plans
Chapter 25: Operation Save Ms. Dacie’s
Chapter 26: Best Hot Chocolate Ever
Chapter 27: Our All
Chapter 28: Garden Box
Chapter 29: Church
Chapter 30: That Night
Chapter 31: Brave
Chapter 32: Memory Games
Chapter 33: Poems
Chapter 34: Slam
Chapter 35: June Fifteenth
Chapter 36: That Night
Chapter 37: Flying
Chapter 38: Twice as Tall
Chapter 39: Something Great
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Back Ad
Copyright
About the Publisher
Chapter 1
Dirt
The earliest thing I can remember is dirt jammed beneath my fingernails.
My mom studies the brain, so I know about childhood amnesia. It means we can’t remember anything before the age of three or four. That’s a fact because when I close my eyes and play memory games—Mom gives me a word and I try to connect it to moments I remember as far back as I can go—the earliest I can ever come up with is the dirt. Everything before that, before I was three, is just a big who-knows.
The dirt jammed under my fingernails when I was three felt good, though. Like it was supposed to be there and I wasn’t my whole full self without it.
My mom says that memories stick best when we tell them into stories with feelings and smells and colors. Maybe that’s why I remember the dirt so well, because it felt so good, and because my family has been telling that story my whole life, so I know all the details even if I didn’t recall them on my own.
Here’s how it goes:
I’d wait until my mom and dad weren’t looking. Then my little fingers would get to work on the line of buttons or long zipper that started at the back of my neck, whatever dress my mom stuck me in that day. She thought a dress made out of denim or corduroy was a compromise, but a dress is a dress, and I wouldn’t be caught dead in one. I only ever wanted my brother’s hand-me-downs, knee-ripped overalls and flannel shirts.
Once I got free of the zipper or buttons or stretched the fabric off over my head, I’d make a break for it and run my three-year-old, bare-naked butt to my dad’s garden in the backyard and I’d bury it. I’d bury my dress as deep as I could, in with the downward-growing carrots and among the potatoes bigger than my little-kid fists.
Then I felt free. I felt just right with the dress deep in the earth, my baby skin open to the summer sun, and the Vermont soil packed under my nails.
It would only last a few minutes before my mom would find me in the yard and ask, “Rain, where is your dress?” I’d shrug and say that’s a big who-knows, and that maybe it ran off to be with a little girl who would love it more than I did.
Until one day when I made my naked break to the garden with a patchwork dress bunched up in my right fist, and stopped dead in my tracks. There were dresses everywhere. Every dress I had ever buried and more. Pink lace, yellow cotton, long denim with buttons, corduroy with big front pockets, white tulle, and navy striped ruffles hanging from the tomato plants and strewn across the thick-growing kale.
Then I felt my mom’s hand on my head. “Remember, Rain, when you bury things deep, they grow up twice as tall.”
I remember the screen door slam and my dad walking out to the garden. He draped his arm around my mom’s shoulders. “Look what sprouted up,” he said, and they both tried to hide little laughs behind their hands.
The screen door slammed again and Guthrie rushed out to the yard and snapped a picture that lives in one of our family albums—his naked baby sister wide-eyed and jaw-dropped among the colorful gowns budding up. He laughed too and patted my head, but the idea of a dress garden made me cry big tears, so they bit their tongues and helped me harvest all the frill and lace in the dirty wicker basket that usually carried leaves of red lettuce and sun-warmed tomatoes.
That day, with my nails still full of dirt, I swore to myself that I’d never bury anything that deep again.
But that was before I was ten years old, when my parents laughed and talked to each other in normal tones. When we were a family of four.
Before that night.
Chapter 2
That Night
“Promise you won’t tell,” he said.
“Promise.” I stuck out my hand and we locked our pinkies in a pact.
Chapter 3
Moving
“That’s it?” I ask. “It’s technically not even a truck. It’s a van.” That’s a fact, because vans have those sliding doors on the sides and so does the vehicle parked in our driveway.
“Yes, Rain.” My mom’s pulling clear tape across a box marked Towels. “That’s it, for the hundredth time.”
I’ve actually only asked three times, but each time I can’t believe it. We’re moving 288 miles to New York City, and everything we’re taking with us can fit through the sliding doors of that van.
“That’s what selling the house furnished means. We leave the furniture.”
I want to tell her that I might have agreed to moving, but I never agreed to leaving all my stuff. Especially my bed. I like my bed because it has two inches of foam on top that remembers the shape of my body no matter what position I sleep in.
And then there’s my last memory of him, kneeling down and shaking me awake, whispering.
Hey, sleepyhead.
Locking pinkies.
Maybe it won’t be so bad to leave the bed behind.
My mom presses the tape down over the edge of the box and rips it off the roll with her teeth. “This way we’ll start fresh,” she says. “We’ll just get what we need when we get there.” She tries to smooth the wrinkles out of the tape, but there’s one right down the middle that sticks up and won’t go away.
Instead of telling her that maybe I want my dresser or my desk or something from Guthrie’s room, I try to think of what Dr. Cyn says about fresh starts.
Then my mom pops up from the box. “I have to go grab the . . .” But I can’t hear what she’s going to grab because she’s already hustling up the stairs to their bedroom. She’s always hustling off somewhere. Up the stairs, out to work, over to the grocery store. All the way to New York City.
I want to yell at her. Yell that she can get a new bed, a new apartment, and a new brain research job at Columbia Presbyterian Hospital in New York City, but that I don’t want new friends, new teachers, and a new track coach when we’re so close to the end of the school year. Especially this year.
But every time I really want to ye
ll, I remember that when she sat me down forty-five days ago and asked about moving before the year was out, I nodded and said OK. I said OK because they need someone at the hospital by June first for a team-building week before a big conference, and people who study the brain know that building a team is important. I said OK because even though I’ve never met Dr. Cyn, I’ve been following her blog on families and grief for 278 days, and she says fresh starts can help a grieving family cope.
And I said OK because I remember what I did, and how nobody knows, and how if I hadn’t done it, everything would be normal and no one would want to hustle off anywhere or stayed locked in a bedroom all day.
So instead of shouting at the back of my mom’s head as she hustles up the stairs, I crack my knuckles and count the boxes stacked by the front door. Towels. Books. Clothes—Maggie. Clothes—Henry. Clothes—Rain. Kitchen. School supplies—Rain. Garden. There are thirteen in all, which feels unlucky.
I’m surprised to see the Garden box. Dad wants to leave his gardening stuff here, and Mom thinks he’s just being difficult. I know because I heard them arguing about it when they first sold the house and were starting to pack. I was supposed to be shoveling the front walk. I’d already packed my big winter jacket, not thinking we’d get another storm because it was April. So instead of shoveling I was crouched in the back of my closet looking for an extra sweatshirt in my Donations box. Their bedroom is right on the other side of my closet wall, and I could hear every word.
Of course you’re bringing it, Henry. You’re not staying in the bedroom all day when we get there. You’re acting like your life is over.
You’re acting like yours isn’t.
Don’t.
Everything stays in this house. Isn’t that your plan? So I’ll leave it here, with all the other important stuff you’re so ready to leave behind.
Henry—
Nothing to grow in New York City anyway.
Then the door slammed and I could hear my mom’s feet hustling off somewhere. My dad didn’t even call, Maggie! like he used to. Instead, I heard him slump on the bed and click off the light, even though it was only four o’clock in the afternoon.
I wanted to go crawl in with him, pull the comforter over our heads, and close my eyes tight against the slivers of late-afternoon light sneaking in through the blinds, and just let our hearts hurt. But the front walk needed to be shoveled, so I pulled on an old sweatshirt that would belong to some other kid by next month, and opened the door to the cold outside.
When I was shoveling the walk that afternoon I counted each pile of snow I dug out and tossed over my shoulder. My brain kept telling me if I could just get to thirty, then everything would go back to normal. I breathed in with each thrust, and out with each toss. The snow was wet and heavy because it was spring and too warm for the fluffy, pretty stuff. It felt good. It burned in my back and my shoulders, and I just kept counting. Sixteen, seventeen, eighteen . . .
After thirty, I dropped the shovel, fell back into the big pile I’d made, and looked up at the darkening sky. I knew nothing had actually changed, because shoveling thirty shovels never brought anyone back from the dead. And that’s a fact.
Dad will come downstairs eventually, probably with his hair sticking up, and probably right before it’s time to carry the boxes outside and get in the van and drive away. He’ll see the box with Garden written in Mom’s handwriting and they’ll start up that stupid fight about whether it should stay or go.
Mom’s feet are hustling back down the stairs. “OK, I got them,” she says, clutching a stack of three family photo albums. We used to keep them on the coffee table in the TV room and I’d look through them when the commercials were boring.
But after that night, they disappeared up behind the closed door of my parents’ bedroom.
“I think they’ll fit in here,” she says, peeling the tape back off the Towels box and burying the albums down into the yellow terry cloth. My naked-butt-dress-garden photo is in the one on top. Then she pulls the tape back down across the box, but it doesn’t stick as well and she still can’t smooth out that wrinkle.
I wonder where she’ll put the albums when we get to our new apartment.
“I’ll start loading,” I say, and grab the Garden box. I push my feet into my Converse and head down the front walk to the moving van. The box isn’t heavy. Seedlings mostly, I bet, and from the sound of it, a couple of clinking trowels, and maybe a few pots. But there’s no way to move the whole shed, the whole garden, the whole backyard where Dad taught Guthrie and me to measure, and till, and plant, and water.
I slide open the van door and put the box inside with mom’s handwriting, Garden, hidden against the back of the driver’s seat so Dad won’t see.
Mom is walking down the path with two boxes labeled Books stacked in her arms. “Keep that door open,” she calls. “And go tell your dad we’re packing the truck.”
“Van,” I say. “It’s only a van.” And before I yell something that I don’t deserve to yell, I turn fast and crack my knuckles back up the path.
Their bedroom door is closed like it has been for the last 350 days. I knock as quietly as I can and put my ear to the door. “Dad?” I whisper.
I hear the comforter crinkle and my dad clear his throat. “Coming.”
I back up on my tiptoes even though I know he’s awake and I can’t possibly ruin anything else by walking normally, or even stomping my feet hard on our wood floors like I really want to, but walking silently seems safer, just in case.
Guthrie’s door has been closed for the last 350 days too. Or at least my mom thinks so. I’ve snuck in there exactly six times since that night just to lie on his floor in my sleeping bag, like I used to every Christmas Eve for as long as I can remember. When I was little we stayed up and made plans to catch Santa, even though now I know he hadn’t believed in Santa for a long time, and was just playing along for me.
Each of those six times since that night, I’ve woken early, rolled up my sleeping bag, scuffed up his shag rug to hide the memory of my body, and snuck out before my mom could find me there. Even though I hate that she shut up his bedroom, I don’t want to upset her any more by opening a door that she wants closed.
Now that I’m walking by his room, it feels like I should go in one last time before we leave forever. I know everything will be the same on the other side, but seven times seems lucky. So I turn his doorknob quietly and push it open.
It’s exactly the same. His quilt is pulled back, and both pillows are still on the floor, where Mom threw them that night when she found them bunched under his sheets pretending to be his sleeping body. His English 12 textbook is open to page 194, and his coffee mug is still half-full and on his desk, like he’s just in the bathroom and will be back any minute to slurp a sip and finish reading “A Sound of Thunder” by Ray Bradbury.
It’s weird that Mom hasn’t come in to make his bed and throw his textbook in the donation box, or return it to the school, or rinse his coffee mug and put it back in our fully furnished kitchen for the next teenage son who lives here to make his coffee black and walk upstairs to his room to read his English homework. She cleaned every other inch of the house, but she closed this door that night, and just hustles past it on her way to somewhere else.
“Rain! Henry! Are you coming?” Mom’s voice breaks the silence of Guthrie’s room.
“Coming!” I call. And without even thinking I reach into the guitar case that’s lying open on the floor and grab one of Guthrie’s guitar picks. I press the triangle of plastic between my fingers and imagine his fingers there. Then I stuff it in my jeans pocket.
I pull his door closed just as Dad opens their bedroom door and steps out. “Hey,” he says. His voice sounds like it hasn’t been used in days. His hair is sticking up on one side, his beard is grayer and scruffier and longer than I’ve ever seen it, and his flannel shirt is off by a button.
“Hey,” I whisper back.
Then I’m the one hustling off and dow
n the stairs.
Chapter 4
Goodbye
The morning is crisp, and the muddy ground is still solid from a colder-than-usual night. My Converse high-tops land hard every time I stride, but this is still the shortest way to Izzy’s house, and when my mom said ten minutes, she sounded serious, like she was going to stand in the driveway by the moving van and count until I reemerged from the woods. Even though she’s never the one to count. That’s Dad’s thing, and mine, ever since he taught me how to measure the tomato plants three feet apart, and how to plant the seeds 1/8 inch below the surface and cover them lightly with soil so they have the chance to break through when they start sprouting.
My dad’s always been in charge of our family garden, and 350 days ago he used to work on a team that renovates houses too, measuring new spaces for windows and doors, and the distance between each stair leading to the basement. For those things you have to be exact. I like being exact.
My best time to Izzy’s house is three minutes, seventeen seconds. Guthrie and his friends cleared this path two summers ago so they could mountain bike through the woods, and it cut the time between our house and Izzy’s by a whole two minutes.
Even with the cool conditions, no warm-up, and my trail running shoes in the bottom of a box, I think I’m beating my best time, which is good because I like to win. My legs stretch long, and each foot strikes the ground just enough to spring me forward.
The early morning air fills my lungs easily. Roots and leaves and pinecones stick up through the traces of mud, so I keep my eyes one step ahead. Anticipate. I can hear Coach Scottie’s voice in my head, like I always do when I run—Eyes up the hill. Hut hut hut!—until I veer off the path, past the tree house my dad designed for us in second grade. He measured, and cut the wood, and hammered around the trunk of a sturdy oak tree, and we still sleep in it on hot summer nights. Seven long strides past the tree house and I’m in Izzy’s yard.
Three minutes, twelve seconds. It feels good to break something, even if it’s just my own record.