Page 38 of The Life Lucy Knew


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“Lucy? Are you coming?” Mom said, pausing on the bottom step. Everyone turned to look at me.

“Would someone please tell me what’s going on?” I said. “Is this about the house? Are you selling it?”

Dad, who was the closest to me, cupped my elbow and spoke gently. “Sweetheart, let’s go have that tea.”

I pulled away, took a step back. I wanted to settle down, to drink tea and be happy Mom was okay, but I was struggling against the anxiety threatening to overtake me. My fuse was shorter since my accident, my ability to stay calm in situations that felt stressful diminished. “I don’t want tea, Dad. I want you all to stop treating me like I might break if you say the wrong thing! Yes, my brain is a bit of a mess, and if I’m being honest, I am, too. But if you think keeping things from me is going to help, it isn’t.”

Dad and Mom exchanged a glance. Matt looked down at his socked feet.

“So. What are you not telling me?” I asked again, hands clutched together to hide the shaking.

Mom pulled her shoulders back, stood as tall as her five-foot frame would allow and glanced briefly at Dad before looking back at me. “Okay, Lucy.” She sighed. “Your father and I are separated.”

All the frustration and anxiety left me like a wave going back out to sea. “Sorry...what?” I swiveled between them, feeling weak-limbed, similar to how I’d felt on the street when Alex had told me Mom was at the hospital. “But...how? When? You had your anniversary, like, six months ago. We had a party!”

“No, we didn’t,” Mom said. Matt now stared at the ceiling, his hands on his hips. Dad watched Mom.

“Yes. We did.” I was sure of it. It was one of the memories I’d managed to retain from the past few years. “It was at that restaurant you and Dad love. What’s the name of it again?” I snapped my fingers impatiently, trying to recall the name. “You know, the one with all those twinkle lights running across the ceiling.” No one said anything. “The food was amazing. Remember the mini Caesar salads in bacon cups?” Now I looked at Matt, held my hand in a cup as though I was holding one of the little salads. “You were there, right? Remember those salad cups? How good they were?”

The corners of Matt’s mouth were downturned, and he watched me worriedly. “Idoremember—”

“See! Matt remembers! How can we go from there—” I used my hand to cut through the air in a chopping motion “—to here, in only a few months?”

Matt cleared his throat. “I do remember, Lucy, but, uh...” He glanced at me, then at my parents. They all looked terrible, and a sick feeling settled into my stomach. “That anniversary party was formyparents. In California, last fall. Remember? I showed you the pictures.”

“What? No. No.” I shook my head repeatedly. “It was here, in Toronto, withmyparents. It snowed, I remember. I wore that...” I paused, trying to remember back to what I had worn for the party. Came up blank.

Matt cleared his throat again, shifted his weight from one foot to the other. I could see he had a small hole in one of his socks, by his big toe. “You wore a yellow dress. And you’re right, it did snow. But not at the party. At Heavenly Mountain Resort, where we went skiing for a few days later.”

The picture with the yellow dress, the champagne toast with his parents and sister, the ski selfie.I stopped breathing when I realized the truth. My parents were splitting up and I didn’t remember anything about it.

“Lucy Bear, your mom and I told you and Alex about this only a month or so before your...your accident. But when you didn’t remember after you woke up, well...” Dad said, throwing his hands up. “We decided to wait. Hoped you might remember on your own.”

“So that’s it, then? You’re separating?” I asked, stunned and upset by the news and the fact they’d all kept it from me, once again.

“Separated,” Mom said quietly, correcting me.

“Is this why you’ve been meeting with the Realtor?” I asked, my voice breaking. “You’re selling the house because you’ve split up?” I wiped a tear away hastily, frustrated to be so emotional. But while I understood we’d already done this once before—when they told me the first time—I couldn’t help my reaction to the news my parents’ relationship was over.

“We’re looking at our options,” Dad said, sitting down on the stair he was standing on, letting his bent elbows rest on his knees. He looked tired, and sad. “That part is true.”

“Where are you both living now?” I asked them, thinking back to our interactions over the past month. Realizing how little time we’d all spent together, and understanding now the reason why.

“I’m staying here,” Dad said. “Your mom is staying in the west end with a friend.” There was something in the way Dad said “a friend” that gave me pause.

“Is this the same friend you were with at the market today?” I closed my eyes and rubbed my hands over them. The headache was only getting stronger and I wished I could lie down. Pretend like this moment was actually a confabulation—and in reality my parents were as happy together as they’d ever been.

A pause, then, “Yes. His name is Carl. He’s an artist I met at my watercolor class.” Good grief, not only were my parents separated, my mother had aboyfriend.

“Did I know about this Carl? Before my accident?”

Mom nodded, and I had a very clear sense everyone was holding his or her breath as I tried to digest what I’d learned this afternoon.

“We understand this is a lot to accept all of a sudden, but imagine it from our side, pumpkin. We alreadyhadthis difficult conversation,” Dad said. “We’ve hashed this all out, have been living with it for months now.”

“Youhave all been living with it for months.”

“Lucy, I’m sorry you had to find out like this, honey. But you have to know we didn’t mean to hurt you, or to keep it from you,” Mom added.