And I was ten years old, and I was home early and I’d just let myself into the kitchen and the smell of burned butter and garlic hung in the air. Dad and Helen were fighting in the next room. The flip-top on our kitchen-catcher had been left up, which was sometimes enough to get Helen going all by itself. But they were fighting about something else; Helen
What really scared me was that for the first time ever, Dad was fighting
“You do not
“That’s just
“
“Not a medical issue! That’s a new height of denial even for you! They cut out half his
“If mu-ops were called for they’d have been prescribed.”
I felt my face scrunching at the unfamiliar word. Something small and white beckoned from the open garbage pail.
“Jim, be
“They said it would take time.”
“But two years! There’s nothing wrong with helping nature along a little, we’re not even talking black market. It’s over-the-counter, for God’s sake!”
“That’s not the point.”
An empty pill bottle. That’s what one of them had thrown out, before forgetting to close the lid. I salvaged it from the kitchen discards and sounded out the label in my head.
“Maybe the
“You will not put that shit into my son
“Yeah? And how are you going to stop me, you little geek? You can’t even make the time to find out what’s going on in your own family; you think you can control me all the way from fucking orbit? You think—”
Suddenly, nothing came from the living room but soft choking sounds. I peeked around the corner.
My father had Helen by the throat.
“I think,” he growled, “that I can stop you from doing anything to Siri ever again, if I have to. And I think you know that.”
And then she saw me. And then he did. And my father took his hand from around my mother’s neck, and his face was utterly unreadable.
But there was no mistaking the triumph on hers.
I was up off the couch, the skullcap clenched in one hand. Chelsea stood wide-eyed before me, the butterfly still as death on her cheekbone.
She took my hand. “Oh, God. I’m so sorry.”
“You — you saw that?”
“No, of course not. It can’t read minds. But that obviously — wasn’t a happy memory.”
“It wasn’t all that bad.”
I felt sharp, disembodied pain from somewhere nearby, like an ink spot on a white tablecloth. After a moment I fixed it: teeth in my lip.
She ran her hand up my arm. “It really stressed you out. Your vitals were — are you okay?”
“Yeah, of course. No big deal.” Tasting salt. “I am curious about something, though.”
“Ask me.”
“Why would you do this to me?”
“Because we can make it go
She put her arms around me, drew me close. She smelled like sand, and sweat. I loved the way she smelled. For a while, I could feel a little bit safe. For a while I could feel like the bottom wasn’t going to drop out at any moment. Somehow, when I was with Chelsea, I
I wanted her to hold me forever.
“I don’t think so,” I said
“No?” She blinked, looked up at me. “Why ever
I shrugged. “You know what they say about people who don’t remember the past.”
“Predators run for their dinner. Prey run for their lives.”