Page 105 of Our Finest Hour


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He drives away, leaving me on the street in front of Isaac’s place. The light in Claire’s bedroom is out, but the living room light is on. What would Lucia say if I went in there right now and told her what I’mplanning?

She’d tell me to wait on it, probably. Give it a littlethought.

But the time for waiting isover.

I kiss my hand three times and send it out to the lit window. Two for the people inside, one more for the person who’s been calling me incessantly. The people Ilove.

I get in my car, and take my phone from mypurse.

“I’m sorry, Isaac,” I whisper, and then I turn off my phone. He means well, but he doesn’t understand what a lifetime of questions will do to a person. Perfect Isaac from a perfect home. I’m happy he was given a shiny, golden life. I really am. But we don’t all get that. Nor do we all get the chance to ask the person who abandoned uswhythey didit.

I’m driving now, almost to the interstate I will stay on for hours. The car is too quiet. I glance at the black face of my phone and put it back in my purse. I turn on the radio, and country music fills mycar.

It makes mesmile.

I’m doing this for us, DoctorCowboy.

* * *

It’s almostone in the morning when I pull into the dirt parking lot of a motel. It’s in the next town over from Sugar Creek. Briefly I wonder if it’s the town my dad worked in, the one with the power lineissue.

The desk clerk eyes me suspiciously. I would too, given my attire and the time ofnight.

“Thanks,” I say, taking the key off the crackedcounter.

The room is exactly what I expected. A bed I would never want to run a black light over, because sometimes it’s best not to know. Everything is in desperate need of an update, or at least a good scrub, but none of thatmatters.

I take a mylar blanket from the backpack I keep in my trunk. Never have I been so happy to have a hunter for a father. He gave me everything in this backpack. Inside I find freeze-dried foods, matches in a waterproof case, and various other survival supplies. All I really need tonight is theblanket.

I spread it on the bed, lie down, and roll up like a burrito. It takes two hours to fall asleep, despite myexhaustion.

* * *

My mouth tastes like cotton.I run my tongue all over, trying to moisten it. I shimmy from my blanket, and walk on stiff legs to the bathroom. Mascara is streaked under my eyes, and my face has long red dents from theblanket.

I can’t chase her down like this. I turn on my phone to search for a nearby store. While I’m looking, floods of notifications come in. Text messages, missed calls, voicemails. I ignore them all, but I see the very last text, sent at threea.m.

Goodluck.

Thank you, I write. I pause, my fingers hovering above the keys.I’m sorry I left like that. This is something I need to do.Alone.

I send the message and grab my purse. Before I walk out, I type and send one more message before I turn off my phoneagain.

I loveyou.

It’s time he knewthat.

* * *

I’mready to go now. At least, I think Iam.

Physically, I’m presentable. I’m still in last night’s dress and shoes. There was no way around that. But I've cleaned up and brushed my hair and my teeth. I tried to eat breakfast, but the energy bar I bought tasted like chalk in my mouth. Maybe everything tastes like that when you're about to confront your runaway parent. I checked out of the motel under no less scrutiny than I’d checked in with. Different employee, same suspicious, squintystare.

Sugar Creek is quiet this morning. Nobody out and about. I’ve passed the bakery twice. The second time I pulled up close enough to see the hours.Closed onSundays.

Is the entire town closed? Are people locked in their homes? Where iseverybody?

I drive around, which doesn’t take very long, until I see a parking lot withcars.