didnât talk to any reporters.â
âI see.â
âIâm glad you understand.â
âDid the cops tell you?â I said.
âTell me what?â she said.
âThat Danielle made porn.â
âIâd rather not talk about that,â she said. âI donât think Danielle would want us to.â
âShe never was good enough for you,â I said, angry. âYou never cared how she felt or what she wanted, only how things looked.â
Sally paled. Amazed, I watched the color sink from her face. Iâd scared her. How often did anyone scare her? It made me feel reckless and powerful.
âCharlotte, please. You have to understand. Sheâs dead. My daughter. Iâm asking you this favor.â
âYeah,â I said. âI know sheâs dead. You donât have to keep saying it.â
âThink of all Iâve done for you,â she said. âI took care of you, all those years.â
âAnd now youâre cashing in,â I said.
âCharlotte, I donât mean it like that. Please. Iâm sorry, Iâm not myself.â
She was bad at begging, bad at needing help from other people. I could tell she hadnât had to do it much in her life. She struggled to keep the frustration out of her words. Her phone rang from inside the house, and she tossed her cigarette in the fire pit.
She looked tired and old, and I felt sorry for her, disgusted at my cruelty. I hated how Sally always tried to spin everything, always tried to manage Danielle. Still, I remembered Danielleâs embarrassment about the porn, her reluctance about telling me. She hadnât even wanted me to know. Sally went in to get the phone and the outdoor lights came onâlanterns along the path, a garland of golden bulbs strung on the trellis to my left. It was getting dark.
I had a flash of memory from the night before, of Ash bending over me in the car. Suddenly the whole night resurfacedâthe holding cell, that woman screaming in the corner, the girl who pulled my hair. I felt sickened, and sickening, like I was a poison I couldnât stop swallowing. Paralyzed by shame, I stared at the floral pattern on the cushions until my focus went soft. I gulped my wine, lit a new cigarette, and sucked the smoke deep inside. I wanted anything that came from outside myself. Any foreign substance.
Ash. I had never let another person see me that pathetic. Not since middle school, anyhow, when everybody knew my mom took drugs and my clothes were always wrinkled. Fury at myself brought on a sudden vertigo, a starting and stopping, as in a dream of falling. I imagined myself in a car crash, a violent death, going over a cliff. Through a barrier and into empty air, to shatter on the rocks below. Not that there were any cliffs in Houston. This place was so flat you could see the curve of the earth.
I looked at my hands in my lap. With my nails I pinched the webbed skin between my thumb and forefinger. A tiny crescent of blood grew. I licked it. The skin on my hands had always been thin, fragile. Like my momâs. She complained about it. If she was feeling okay, she was diligent about moisturizing. She kept tubs of cocoa butter in the kitchen, the bathroom, by the bed and the TV. When the pain increased she took the Oxy and it knocked her out for days in a rowâsometimes weeks. Her hands would get scratchy and dry. She lay there and gazed at the ceiling until it was time for her pills. The smell of cocoa butter always made me miss her. Made me nervous.
Sally appeared, the phone in her hand. She had slipped on a pair of ballet flats. I stood.
âYou donât have to worry,â I said. âIâm not going to talk to reporters. I wasnât going to anyways.â
âOh, Charlotte, I canât tell you how relieved I am,â she said. âThank you.â
I shrugged.
She said, âThe memorial service is tomorrow. You should be there. Will you
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