Unmaking Marchant (Page 47)

“We had a memorial ceremony for my parents on a Sunday. It was spring break Sunday. They died the first Sunday of Spring Break, and this was the last—the day before school started back. My little sister Riker was only twelve. My dad’s parents had her. They’re the ones who ended up rearing her.” I feel a lumpy knot in my throat, because Riker had wanted to live with me—but I couldn’t. “I couldn’t take her because…” I shake my head and look ahead, at the bush-framed path that turns left in a few more steps.

“I couldn’t take her because I was…unfit,” I confess. From this point on, I fix my eyes on the path ahead.

“It happened for the first time when I was flying back to school. From Santa Monica to New Orleans. I just…fucking snapped. My parents weren’t perfect, but they had always been there.” Mom had bouts of mania and also depression, but it was mostly managed, and she and dad had always seemed like they loved each other, and us. “And then one day, I get a call at the frat house—fucking kitchen phone; we had been playing whiffle ball—and some f**king stranger tells me they’re gone. Their plane went down in the Ecuadorian Andes. My mom was flying. She crashed into a mountain.”

I tug in a deep breath and shock myself by hoarsely adding, “She was bipolar.”

21

MARCHANT

Shit.

I look down at Beauty, and she’s nodding gently. She doesn’t look shocked or disgusted, so that’s good. If anything, her face is softer.

I take a deep breath and let it out slowly; my head is still spinning with the shock of saying this aloud. “My mom was bipolar. She had been going through…a rough patch. And she was flying that day. The flight logs say the weather was clear.” I pause because I’m having trouble swallowing. “The plane looked okay, too,” I rasp. “What was left of it… I think that’s the worst thing,” I whisper. “I don’t know for sure if it was…her.”

“Are you saying you don’t know if your mom…crashed on purpose?”

“She had tried it before,” I choke out. I can’t even look at her. It’s been so long since I talked about this; I forgot how hard it is.

I drop Suri’s hand and fix my eyes on the top of the hedges, where they’re trimmed into a perfectly level plane.

Why did I tell her this?

I have only a second to wonder before she wraps her arms around my waist and lays her cheek against my chest.

“Marchant, I’m so sorry.”

She looks up at me, and there’s so much sympathy in her eyes, the shit is f**king brutal. And suddenly I don’t want to see it there. I don’t know if I can bear her understanding.

I don’t return her hug, but she doesn’t let go.

I close my eyes and see Marissa’s face, smiling. She’s sitting beside me on a white porch swing in front of the sorority house on a humid Sunday afternoon. She grabs my hand and looks into my eyes, still wearing her church dress.

“Marchant, I have something to tell you. But you’ve gotta promise not to freak, okay?”

I imagine my dad trusted my mom in much the same way Marissa trusted me. And like my mom, I can’t be trusted. Because I’m not a normal person. I don’t have a right to a relationship.

I step back, prompting Suri to let go of me. My chest feels tight, my head on fire.

“I guess that’s why I turned to drugs,” I lie. I’ve been avoiding outright lying until this point, but now I need it so she doesn’t start drawing conclusions.

“I can understand that that would be really hard to deal with,” Suri says. Then she shakes her head. “Actually I can’t. I’m sorry. I want to be honest. I’m not sure how I would ever deal with that.”

She holds my gaze with hers, her face twisted into—what? Sympathy or pity? I can’t tell. “I don’t think I could ever understand, Marchant, but I can see how you would still struggle with it. How it would lead you to…need some kind of escape.”

I lock my jaw. Unlock it. What’s wrong with her, making excuses for me? Fuck, I’m not even an addict, and she’s acting like it’s just fine if I am.

“My mom was selfish.” That’s the only conclusion I can reach. I look down at Suri, wanting her to understand. Because it’s not just my mom.

“Someone like that shouldn’t have a f**king pilot’s license. They shouldn’t have children. Or a husband. They shouldn’t be allowed to…put other people at risk that way. It’s wrong, and trust me, it leads to nothing but badness.”

Silence meets my words, so standing there, in front of her, I can hear the beating of my heart. I look down at Suri—perfect Suri. She’ll make some guy lucky someday.

“That’s really shitty, Marchant. Really, really shitty that you have to go through this.”

I grit my teeth because I don’t deserve her niceness. I shouldn’t even be walking here with her.

It’s time to put an end to this. My dumb confession. “That’s how I became…what I am, okay? My family. I had a rough time a while back and started…started using again. I’m really f**king sorry for getting you tied up in all my shit. I think my point is I’m selfish, just like my mom.”

And then I disappear around the bend, where I’m alone. The way it should be.

*

SURI

I give him enough time to collect himself. Then I look for him. Which does not go like I thought it would.

After an hour in the maze, I’m lost and tired. Another half hour and I’ve made it out into the grassy field between the two rows of cottages. It’s a sunny day, with warm, white light splashing through the branches of the huge oak trees. The grass looks so green it almost hurts my eyes.

I think about Marchant’s story as I walk back to his cottage. I can’t imagine what it would be like to lose my parents in that kind of circumstance. It sounds horrible. It definitely gives me more perspective on the Marchant mystery, too.

When I get to the cottage, I find the front door locked, so I walk around to the back. There’s a note taped to the door.

“I am going to punish you.”

I squint down at the handwriting; it’s messy and slanted sideways. I glance around once again for Marchant, wondering if he left the note. It had to be him, right? When he doesn’t jump out of the bushes dressed in all leather, I try the door and find it unlocked.

“Hello?”