For the last time, Tova boils water for coffee on her stove. Its lacquered top gleams, avocado green against the black coils, polished last night. Spotless. Could it possibly matter? It will almost certainly be ripped out, replaced by one of those sleek new ranges. No one wants a decades-old appliance, even if it works perfectly well.
Tova had been approved for accelerated check-in at Charter Village, something sheād lobbied after for weeks. Her premier suite would be available next week. She left them a telephone message first thing this morning, at whatever absurdly early hour she awoke, assuming she slept at all last night. The whole thing is a blur. Charter Village has yet to call back, but most likely itās simply because their office isnāt open yet. Itās only just past seven.
Regardless, Tova has no intention of going.
Sheās had a busy morning. Dusted all of the baseboards. Wiped down the windows. Polished the hardware on the cabinets, scrubbed every last doorknob. She should be exhausted, but sheās never felt more energized in her life. Without curtains or furniture, every sound she makes echoes against the naked walls and floors, and even the hiss of her spray bottle seems too loud. But keeping busy is good. Cleaning is always good. Itās something to do.
Where will she go? Sheās supposed to be out of the house by noon. The movers who took most of the furniture yesterday have already been notified that there will be a change of destination. Thankfully, someone answers their
phone at the crack of dawn. But what will that destination be? A storage unit, perhaps?
As for herself and her personal effects, Janice and Barbara both have spare bedrooms. At a decent hour, sheāll call Janice first. Perhaps she might alternate between them until other arrangements can be made. Her floral-print canvas suitcase, the same one she took on her honeymoon with Will, is packed and ready to go. The thought of spending the night in a bed that isnāt her own thrills and terrifies her, in turn.
When something rustles on the front porch, she startles.
She sets her coffee cup down.
It canāt be Cat. Barbara sent a photo last night of Cat. Heās doing all right, although at first Barb had tried to keep him exclusively indoors and this agitated him greatly. So he comes and goes as he pleases. Tova still isnāt sure how to respond to photos she receives on her cell phone, but seeing Catās whiskered face, his yellow eyes with their hallmark look of mild disdain, had made her smile.
Then the doorbell rings.
When she opens the front door, she canāt believe her eyes.
Cameronās eyebrows are creased anxiously, like Erikās when he was nervous about a school exam. For a quick moment, something nostalgic catches in Tovaās throat, thinking of how many times she wished Erik would somehow appear on her doorstep like this. Tears spring to her eyes.
āHi,ā Cameron says, shuffling his feet. All Tova can manage is āHello, dear.ā
āUm, sorry I was such a jerk the other night. You were right. I shouldnāt have left.ā Cameron jams his hands in his pockets. āAnd sorry to show up here so early. I would have called, but . . . well, bizarre story there.ā
āItās quite all right.ā Tova holds the door open with an arm that feels like it belongs to someone else. Like sheās out of her own body.
āI realize you owe me absolutely nothing.ā Cameronās voice is like a live wire. Buzzy. āBut can you tell me what time Terry normally gets in? I need to talk to him. In person.ā
āAround ten, if Iām not mistaken.ā
āTen. Okay.ā Cameron lets out a long breath. āHow mad do you think he is at me right now?ā
āNot mad at all, Iām quite sure.ā Cameron gives her a confused look.
Tova shuffles across the foyer to where her pocketbook hangs on the otherwise-empty set of pegs by the door and pulls a folded paper from the front pouch. A conspiratorial smile overtakes her face as she hands it to him.
āMy note?ā His jaw drops. āYou took it?ā
She inclines her head. āMind you, I shouldnāt have. But I did.ā
āBut . . . why?ā
āI suppose some part of me didnāt believe you when you insisted you were the type of person who would shirk a job.ā
āSo then . . . Terry doesnāt know I left?ā āI believe he is none the wiser.ā
Cameronās cheeks flush. āI donāt know how to thank you. And I donāt know why youād have such faith in me. Not like Iāve earned it.ā
Thereās something else she must show him, of course. Something far more important. And where have her manners gone? āPlease, come all the way in.ā She ushers him through the foyer. āAnd Iād invite you to sit, but . . .ā She sweeps an arm around the empty den.
āWow. This is a nice house.ā
Tova smiles. āIām glad that you think so.ā Regret stabs at her. The boyās great-grandfather built this house, and this is the only time heāll ever set foot in it. āWait here a moment. I have another thing to give you,ā she continues, before hustling off to the bedroom and her suitcase.
A minute later, she returns. She holds it out to him, then drops it in his upturned palm. He turns it over, and confusion knits his brow. That engraving, the one that flummoxed him. He thought it meant eels, like the sea creature. Why on earth would anyone put that on a class ring? At the thought of this, Tova suppresses a smile. Even the most brilliant minds are mistaken sometimes.
āHis full name,ā she says, āwas Erik Ernest Lindgren Sullivan.ā
Cameronās lips part, soundless. Tova waits. She can almost see the wheels turning in his head. Erik was just like that, how it showed on his face when the gears were grinding in his brain, which they always were. There is so much about Cameron and Erik that is alike, but not everything. Not his eyes. Those must be his motherās. Daphneās.
Theyāre lovely eyes.
Tova has never been much of a hugger, but when Cameronās face starts to break apart, she finds herself pulled to him like a magnet. His arms wrap around her neck, squeezing her against his chest. For what seems like a very long time, she rests her cheek against his sternum, which is warm. She canāt help but notice that his T-shirt appears to be stained and smells oddly like motor oil. Perhaps thatās intentional? Never again will Tova make assumptions about a T-shirt.
He stands back and says with a dumbfounded grin, āI have a grandmother.ā
āWell, how about that?ā She laughs, and itās as if a valve inside her has been released. āI have a grandson.ā
āYup, looks like you do.ā
āWhat happened to California?ā
He shrugs. āChanged my mind. You were right about not quitting. Iām better than that.ā Surveying the den, he gives an appreciative nod. āThis really is a cool house. The architecture . . .ā
āYour great-grandfather built it.ā
āNo shit?ā A look of astonishment crosses Cameronās face. He walks over to the fireplace mantel, the one that once held the row of frames featuring his father, and touches it tenderly, almost hesitantly, the way one might lay a hand on a sleeping animalās flank.
Tova follows. āIāve been fortunate to enjoy it for sixty-plus years.ā She lifts her wrist, inspecting her watch. āAnd three and a half more hours.ā
āHoly crap. Thatās right. You sold it.ā
āItās okay. I need to let it go. Too many ghosts.ā Tova isnāt sure she believes the words, but sheās becoming accustomed to them, at least.
Cameron looks down at his sneakers. “Guess Iām lucky I caught you here, then. Before you moved into that retirement home.”
āOh,ā Tova waves her hand as if to brush away his words. āIām not going there.ā
āYouāre not?ā
āHeavens, no.ā
“Where are you going, then?”
A laugh rises freely from Tovaās chest. “You know what? I donāt really know. Maybe to Barbaraās. Or Janiceās. Just for a while, until I figure out whatās next.”
“Solid plan,” Cameron replies. “And thatās from a guy living in a camper.” He grins, and the heart-shaped dimple in his cheek deepens, making him look every bit the mischievous grandson. Tova glances down, ensuring her slippers are still firmly on the floor, though she feels as if sheās rising, drifting upward, her spirit lifting effortlessly like Marcellus in his old tank. Her heart feels light as helium, pulling her upward.
She chuckles. “Seems weāre both a little homeless, then.” She gestures down the hall. “Would you like to see where your father grew up?”
ERIK’S OLD ROOM was the hardest to clean. It sat empty for over thirty years. She had swept it regularly, even changed the linens now and then, but when the men from the secondhand shop came to take away the furniture, she hesitated at the sight of ancient dust bunnies in the corners. As if one of them might still hold a piece of him.
The hardwood floor has faded where Erik’s old throw rug used to be. Sunlight streams through the bare window. Outside, a sea breeze stirs the branches of an old shore pine, casting a soft, ghostly shadow on the wall. Once, on a night lit by a full moon, young Erik forgot to close the curtains and saw that same shadow, convinced he was being haunted. He had bolted across the hall and burrowed into Tova and Willās bed, and Tova held him close until he drifted to sleepāand kept holding him, long into the night.
Cameron takes in every detail of the room, his eyes moving over each inch. Maybe heās trying to memorize it, to capture it, as Janice Kimās computer might. Tova begins to slip out, allowing him a moment of privacy, when he says, “I wish Iād met him.”
She steps back in, placing a hand on his elbow. āI wish you had, too.ā
āHow did you, like, go on?ā He looks down at her and swallows hard. āI mean, he was here one day and gone the next. How do you recover from something like that?ā
Tova hesitates. āYou donāt recover. Not all the way. But you do move on. You have to.ā
Cameron is gazing at the floor where Erikās bed once was and biting his lip thoughtfully. Suddenly, he crosses the room and jabs at one of the floorboards with his sneaker toe.
āWhat happened here?ā
Tova tilts her head. āWhat do you mean?ā
āYour whole house is red oak floorboards. But this one piece is white ash.ā
āI have no idea what youāre talking about.ā Tova shuffles over and adjusts her glasses, scrutinizing the floorboard. There doesnāt seem to be anything remarkable about it.
āSee, the grain lines are different. And the finish, it almost matches, but not quite.ā He produces a cluster of keys from his pocket, kneels, and starts working a key chain thatās meant to open bottles into the crack between the floorboards. Moments later, to Tovaās shock, the board pops up, revealing an open space underneath.
āI knew it!ā Cameron squints into the cavity. āGood heavens. Who would do such a thing?ā
Cameron laughs. āAny teenage boy who ever lived?ā āBut what would he need to hide?ā
āUh . . . well, my friend Brad used to steal his dadās magazines, andāā
āOh!ā Tova flushes. āOh dear.ā
āI donāt think thatās what weāre dealing with here.ā Cameron pulls out a small parcel. Its plastic wrapping crunches when he hands it to Tova, who drops it once she realizes whatās inside. Snack cakes. Or what were once snack cakes. Theyāre hard and gray as stones now.
āWow, Creamzies. These are old-school,ā Cameron says, picking the package up and studying it. āYou know, I saw a show on some science channel about them once. Urban legend says theyāll survive a nuclear holocaust, but itās not actually true, see, because the diglycerides they use as stabilizers donātāā
āCameron,ā Tova interrupts quietly. āThereās something else in there.ā
āIn here?ā He holds up the petrified cakes, squinting. āNo, in there.ā Her focus is fixed on the floorboard
compartment.
Itās one of Tovaās motherās old embroidered tea towels, wrapped around something the size of a deck of cards.
Cameron takes it out and hands it to Tova. Her fingers tremble as she unravels the towel. Inside is a painted wooden horse.
āMy Dala Horse.ā Her whisper comes out like gravel. She runs a finger down the figurineās smooth wooded back. Every last splintered piece is glued back into place flawlessly. Even the paint is touched up.
The sixth horse. Erik had fixed it.
Cameron leans over, peering at the artifact. āWhatās a Dala Horse?ā
Tova clicks her tongue. The boy is full to the brim with random knowledge about floorboard grains and snack cake stabilizers and Shakespeare, but how little he knows about his heritage.
She holds the Dala Horse out to him.
He takes it, and she watches him study the delicate carved curves. After a long moment, he looks up. āHow did you get the class ring back?ā
She smiles. āMarcellus.ā