
(Find previous chapters and a description of the project here.)
It is Thursday. She stares at the sonogram the ultrasound tech printed for her. The baby looks like a bean. She smiles at it, then takes a magnet from the fridge, uses it to stick the sonogram to the surface. It is 4:12. The boys will be home from day camp in about ten minutes. She will sit them on the couch and show them the picture, and answer any questions they might have about what has happened over the last two weeks, the last two years. She feels ready for this conversation. She knows her sons. They will support her. They will stick by her. She can’t imagine either of them will be angry.
She has taken a half day off. She waits at the dining room table, staring out the window at the trees in the yard. She rises and moves to the window, listening to the birds chattering. She strolls to the living room, sits down hard on the couch. She leans back, emptying her head of worry about the meeting at 6. Jesse isn’t going. They asked to meet with him at a separate time.
The door opens and the boys tumble through the door. They don’t say anything as they drop their backpacks in the foyer and run down the hallway towards their rooms. She gets up and looks down the hallway. There are 4 shoes laying askance. “Brett? Finn?” she calls.
“What?” she hears Finn call back.
“Can you both come talk to me for a minute?”
The come up the hallway. They are sweaty and red. She wonders if they had enough water to drink at camp. They stop in front of her. Finn leans against the wall. “What is it?” he asks.
“Go to the couch,” she says.
They eye her, but do as she says. She goes to the kitchen, takes the sonogram off the fridge. She holds it against her chest, whispers a prayer over it. She moves through the house towards the boys.
She hands the sonogram to Brett. “Do you know what that is?” she asks him.
He shakes his head. “Looks like a bad picture of a potato,” he responds. Finn glances over his shoulder, nodding.
She can’t help but laugh because he’s not wrong. “That’s a baby,” she explains. She takes a seat on the couch next to Brett. “A little tiny baby, growing inside me.”
“Wait,” Finn says. “You’re having a baby?” She nods. “What?!” he asks, in disbelief.
Brett is quiet. He stares at the picture. “Is, um, is Jesse the dad?” he asks.
“He is,” she answers.
“Okay,” he says, thinking through things that he doesn’t voice. “So, is this why everyone is mad at you?”
She knew Brett would pick up on the tension from the barbecue. “Yeah, Brett. This is why everyone is mad at me. Because you aren’t supposed to have a baby before you get married.”
“But, how can anybody be mad at a baby?” Finn asks. “I mean, it’s a baby! How can you not love it?”
She feels her chin quivering, but refrains from crying. “Well, sometimes people want everyone to follow certain rules, do things the right way. So, when that doesn’t happen, they get upset.”
“Well, my friend Lana doesn’t even have a dad or a step-dad and her mom is having a baby, but I don’t think anybody is mad at Lana’s mom. Or the baby,” Finn argues.
“Yeah, sometimes that happens too. Sometimes no one really cares, but sometimes, it matters a lot.”
“Why?” Brett asks.
She doesn’t have an answer for this question. She wants to tell him that it’s because some people don’t know how to mind their own business. That some people are prudish. That some people are self-righteous and uptight and think looking down on other people makes them holy. But none of these answers are the right ones. “I don’t think I really have the words to explain right now,” she says instead.
This sparks some memory in him. He looks up from the sonogram, into her face. “When you said you did something you shouldn’t have done, were you talking about this?” She nods. Brett looks back at the picture. “Is it a boy or girl?” he asks.
“We don’t know yet,” she says. “We’ll find out in a couple of months.”
“I bet it’s a boy,” Finn says. “Mom, you’d be way outnumbered.” He laughs. “4 boys in the house. Just one girl.”
“5 boys if you count Zeus,” she laughs.
At the sound of his name, Zeus raises his head. He stands and stretches, first his front legs, then his back. He trots over to the couch, placing his big black head on her leg. She rubs his ears.
Brett hands the sonogram back to her. “But, um, people aren’t just mad about the baby, right?”
She lowers her eyes. “No, Brett. They’re angry because Jesse and I were doing something in secret.”
Finn stares hard at her. “You were lying?”
She nods. “We were lying, in a way.” She looks at each of them in turn. She doesn’t see anything in their faces that resembles judgment or shame or scorn. She smiles. “Do you understand why Jesse and I got married?”
“’Cause you love each other. Obviously,” Brett said. “Anybody can see that, Mom.”
“Yeah,” Finn agrees. “When he’s around, you seem more like you. You know, like you were when Dad was alive,” he adds.
Tears sting her eyes. “I wish,” she begins, before she pauses to check her emotions. “I wish more adults were like the two of you.”
Brett leans his head against her, and Finn comes around to the other side. The boys cling to her, and she hugs them tightly. This is how it should have been with her mom, with Cindy. With her cousins. With Martha. This easy acceptance the boys have is such a blessing, a needed reprieve, a precious gift. There is no inquiry into her character. There is no scrutiny. There is only love.
“Sorry people are being so mean to you,” Brett says.
She hugs him tighter. “Thanks, Brett.”
He pulls away from her embrace. “Are we going to keep this?” he asks, gazing at the sonogram again.
“I’ll put it back on the fridge where it was,” she answers.
She sends them away to play outside. Zeus follows them out the door. Soon they are jumping on the trampoline as Zeus races along the fence. It is 4:57. She opens the fridge to see what she can make for dinner.
Jesse comes home. He brings more of his belongings from his own house each time he comes. He spends about fifteen minutes in the bedroom putting things away in drawers and the closet. He places several books on the bookshelves in the living room. He comes into the kitchen as she’s plating the chicken and green beans. He looks exhausted.
“What’s wrong?” she asks as she hands him a plate.
“I have my talk with Harry tomorrow,” he says. He leans against the counter, talks to the chicken. “I’ve just been worrying about it all day.”
“Did you sleep last night?” she asks as she turns off the stove. She knows the answer. His tossing kept her awake.
“I tried,” he said. He looks up and their eyes meet. “I updated my resume today,” he adds.
She chews on her lip. She lets herself release the sigh inside her. “Let’s just see what happens.”
“What do you think is going to happen?” he asks. There is sourness and sarcasm in his tone that catches her off guard. “Maybe it would be better if I simply resigned.”
“I don’t know what this committee is going to ask me,” she says. “I don’t know how deep they are going to try to go, how many details they want.” He has no answer for her. They stare at one another. She feels the weight of humiliation already pressing down on her. It is suffocating. “Maybe I should just embroider all my tops with a big red ‘A’,” she jokes.
At first his wan expression stays the same, but then he smiles. “If you will, I will,” he replies.
“Neither one of us should have to though,” she says, growing serious.
“No, but that doesn’t really matter,” he says. “I should work on a letter of resignation, just in case.”
He is still holding the plate of chicken and beans. She swallows down all her guilt. “I didn’t mean for this to happen, Jesse.”
He nods, then offers her an anemic smile. “I knew what I was doing. Don’t blame yourself.”
He picks up a second plate from the counter, then heads to the table. She follows him with two plates of her own. She places the plates on the table and as Jesse returns to the kitchen for utensils, she opens the back door and calls for the boys. They come racing across the yard, Zeus bounding behind them. Boys and dog crash through the doorway. She shoos them down the hall to wash their hands. She gets glasses of water for everyone. The boys return to the dining room, and she sends them back to the bathroom to dry their hands. The dog parks himself under the table. Jesse says a prayer.
They eat dinner as if the world is not going to cave in around them.









