she probably wasn’t more than two hours from The Hollows. She had no idea where she was going to go or what she was going to do.
“Paula,” said her mother. Her voice was stern now. “You need to come home to us with those children. I’ve been making some calls. I found a lawyer, a good one who specializes in situations like this. He says you need to come home and file for divorce, get emergency temporary custody of the children, and file a complaint and a restraining order with the police. Let’s work this out the proper way.”
It sounded right, a good course of action. But she was so afraid.
“But what if he comes after us? Like that man in California. He came to the house during that Christmas party and killed all those people.”
Her mother was silent on the line for a minute. Then, “At least we’ll all be together. I can’t have you out there by yourself with Cameron and the baby. I’m sick with it. Let us help you and protect you. We’re your parents, for God’s sake. We
Paula didn’t say anything. She wanted to go home. She needed to go home. The truth was, she wasn’t equipped to run with her kids, to stay in some shelter, hiding from her husband. She felt a wave of relief.
“Okay, Mom,” she said. “I’ll come home in the morning.”
She heard her mother release a long, relieved breath. “We’ll come get you right now. Where are you?”
“It’s okay. I need to get some sleep, and then, first thing, I’ll load up the kids and come home. Maybe you can make an appointment with that lawyer for tomorrow afternoon?”
“Are you sure?” her mother said. “We’ll get in the car right now.”
She looked at Cameron and Claire, sleeping so peacefully. They needed to rest, and so did she. She couldn’t stand the thought of waking them up.
“I’m sure.”
She told her mother where they were staying, so that her mother could call if she wanted to, if she got worried in the night. Then she hung up, feeling better, as if everything somehow was going to be all right. She got up and checked the locks on the door. Then she placed the desk chair under the knob. She kept the light on but got under the covers and closed her eyes. For the first time in three nights, she slept, the gun in the drawer beside her.
chapter thirty-one
Just when it seemed to Willow as if her life couldn’t get any worse, Mr. Ivy came to dinner. Really?
And to have it sprung on her like it was nothing.
And now he was sitting across from Willow. Eating. Slowly, deliberately-as of course he would. He was probably chewing everything twenty bites, just the way every mother in the world told you to do. He was that kind of guy. At least he’d lost the argyle sweater. He wore a denim shirt that was halfway cool. His hair wasn’t completely dorky. Maybe this was his
But he was
“So what time is Richard coming this weekend?” she asked. “Didn’t you say he was coming? That he might spend the night?”
Her mother looked at her with a cool smile. They knew each other so well.
“Richard’s my ex-husband, Willow’s stepfather,” Bethany said to Mr. Ivy, who had stopped chewing. “And no, he won’t be spending the night. Nor has he ever, as Willow well knows.”
Bethany and Mr. Ivy exchanged a look, a kind of knowing smile.
“It was her second marriage,” said Willow. “Did you know that?” Oh, she felt it, that dark meanness, that black hole inside her. She was chastened for a minute by the look on her mother’s face. It wasn’t anger; it was pain.
“Um,” Bethany said. Her mother looked down at her plate for a second. She had a death grip on the napkin in her hand. Willow noticed that Mr. Ivy had leaned back in his chair and looked down as well.
“My first husband,” Bethany said finally, “Willow’s father, died when she was three.”
He looked up at her, but she didn’t meet his eyes. “I’m so sorry,” he said. “That must have been… really difficult.”
Bethany issued that little embarrassed laugh she had when things weren’t funny but she was trying to make light. “It was a long time ago.”
“Yes,” said Willow. “She’s forgotten
When Bethany looked up again, Willow saw her awfulness reflected in her mother’s eyes. Willow knew she was a terrible girl for saying that; her mother missed her father every day. She knew that; Bethany talked about him all the time. How he had a beautiful singing voice, how he loved to clown around and make them laugh, how he could cook, how he loved to read and always believed that Bethany would be a successful writer, long before she’d finished her first novel. Willow knew all this, and she couldn’t stand to see that look on her mother’s face.
Outside, the rain that had been threatening for days with an on-and-off drizzle had finally committed. It was hitting the roof and windows so hard that it sounded like the pounding of feet.
“Wow, that rain is really coming down,” said Mr. Ivy. He cleared his throat and rubbed his forehead. He probably had a sinus headache.
“Isn’t it?” said Bethany. She jumped on the sentence like a drowning person looking for a lifeline. Her voice sounded tight and faint.
Willow let her silverware clank to the plate, and she pushed her chair back loudly. “Can I be excused?” she asked.
Her mother looked at her darkly. “Please, Willow, be my guest.”
She made as much noise as possible stomping from the room. She pretended to storm up the stairs, but then she snuck back down to stand in the hallway outside the door to listen.
“I’m really sorry, Henry,” said Bethany after a minute.
“No, don’t apologize. Really,” he said. “I get it.”
“It’s my fault. I did kind of spring it on her,” she said. “I don’t know what I was thinking.”
“Maybe you were thinking we’d all have a good time,” he said. His voice was soft and comforting.
“I was hoping.”