Then she said from the back seat, “Mommy said she was just trying to help me rest.”
Daniel gripped the steering wheel.
“What do you think?”
Long pause.
“I think helping doesn’t feel scary.”
That was Ruby.
No lawyer in the world could improve on that.
As for Vanessa, bits and pieces filtered through as they always do in towns like ours, where people pretend not to watch each other while watching each other constantly.
She moved into a smaller apartment.
Started seeing a therapist.
Lost some friends.
Kept a few loyal ones who believed stress should excuse whatever it wanted.
Her criminal case ended with a plea agreement. Probation, mandatory counseling, parenting classes, restrictions. Not prison. Some people would call that too light. Maybe it was. But law is not vengeance, and if you expect it to satisfy grief, you will grow old disappointed.
Once, nearly a year later, I saw her by accident in the produce section at Kroger.
She was thinner. Less arranged. Hair in a loose ponytail, no makeup I could see. For a second I thought about turning my cart and leaving.
Instead, I stayed where I was.
She saw me.
Stopped.
There are a hundred speeches people imagine delivering in moments like that. I had rehearsed none of them, but anger keeps old files.
She approached slowly.
“Earl,” she said.
I looked at her.
“I’m not here to fight,” she added.
“That makes one of us.”
She flinched.
Good.
“I know you hate me,” she said.
“Hate is too active,” I told her. “I don’t trust you. That’s different.”
Her eyes filled, but I had long ago stopped measuring sincerity by moisture.
“I loved her,” she said.
I leaned one hand on the shopping cart.
“Then you should have acted like it.”
That was all.
I pushed my cart away and left her standing beside the apples.
When I told Daniel later, he sighed.
“You okay?”
“Yes.”
“Did she say anything useful?”
“No.”
He nodded. “That sounds right.”
One summer evening, about sixteen months after the day at the clinic, Ruby and I sat on the back porch of Daniel’s rental house watching fireflies in the yard.
She was eight now.
Longer legs. Front tooth grown back crooked enough to give her extra character. She had started reading chapter books and asking impossible questions about stars, history, and whether dogs know when they’re being lied to.
Grace the elephant was beside her in the rocking chair, older and more loved-looking now. One ear mended twice. Ribbon gone.