“Whoa, whoa,” Carter says, waving his hands. “Too much info.”
“Oh.” I wish Carter could give me some advice, some answers. “I think I’m just gonna go over to Henry’s place.”
“Cool—good idea.”
Carter and I knock fists, and then I get in my truck and drive over to Henry’s trailer. But when I get there, his truck is gone. His mom’s station wagon is here, though, so I jump out of my truck and jog up to the front door.
Mrs. H. answers after I knock and gives me a hug, smoothing out my hair with her fingers. “He’s not here, sweetie,” she says, looking up at me.
“That’s cool. Know where he is?”
“I think he was going to lift weights and run at the gym with the personal trainer.”
“Personal trainer?”
Mrs. H. keeps playing with my hair as she says, “Yes
—I’m so happy your father introduced Sam to that trainer. He’l be in such good shape for col ege and wil have a much greater shot at getting a scholarship. I’m so glad Sam has your family—I don’t know what we’d do without your father’s support.”
I smile. So Henry took Dad up on it? “Right,” I say, acting as if I know everything. His mom clearly doesn’t know about what’s happened between Henry and me.
“Well , I’l get going then. Thanks, Mrs. H.”
She pats my back. “I’l tel him you stopped by.”
I hop off the front stoop and start heading to my truck, but then whip around. “Mrs. H.? Could you also tel him that…I’m so proud of him and that I love him?”
She smiles. “Of course—but he already knows that.”
Later that afternoon, when I get home, Dad stops me in the driveway.
“Let’s go over to the drive-in tonight,” he says.
“The movies?”
“Yeah.”
If I didn’t feel so awful about Alabama and Henry and every other thing going on in my life, a smile probably would’ve popped up on my face.
I love the old drive-in movie theater. In the summer, Henry, Carter, JJ, and I like to go buy a few tubs of fried chicken, and we sit in lawn chairs in front of the big screen and try to guess what the characters are saying on the screen, because we never turn the speakers on.
“I don’t wanna go to the movies, Dad.”
“Why not? You love it there.”
“I do, but not with you.”
Dad rubs his eyes. “Why won’t you ever do anything with me?”
“Let’s see. You’l get Henry a personal trainer, but the only thing you’l do for me is say that Alabama wil never let me play, as if you’re doing me a favor, and then you go along on the trip to campus so you can rub it in, and then you tel me to consider other options?
You never even considered my first option.”
“That’s not wha—”
“Whatever, Dad.”
I storm off to the backyard, looking over my shoulder to make sure Dad isn’t fol owing me, and then duck into the potting shed, where I lie down on the dusty ground and use a bag of mulch as a pil ow.
Sunlight flickers through the window as I stare up at the cobwebs, looking for patterns like people do with clouds. I spot a section of web that looks like the state of Tennessee. One time Henry spotted a web that looked like a Snoopy Pez dispenser.
Several minutes later, I hear Mom speaking, so I get up and peek out the window. I wipe some dust from the glass. Mom’s standing in her garden, surrounded by tal sunflowers, talking to Dad.
“I’m sorry, dear,” she says, cutting a sunflower stem,
“but Jordan’s never going to let you in any part of her life until you start paying attention to what she wants.”
“I don’t want to see her get hurt. I watched one of my best friends die at thirty-eight because he’d had so many concussions…”
“I know, but footbal is what your daughter loves most right now. You can either share that with her, or you can share nothing with her. Probably for the rest of your life. Your choice.” Mom turns around and heads back inside the house carrying a bundle of flowers, leaving Dad alone.
He rubs his eyes some more, then lifts his head, and touches one of Mom’s sunflowers.
Three nights later, I carry the mac and cheese to the table and take a seat, glancing at Henry’s empty chair. Ty’s at work tonight and Mike and Jake are at school, so the dining room feels lonely with just me, Mom, Dad, and Dad’s bottle of Gatorade.
I spoon some salad and macaroni onto my plate, then grab a few pieces of bread. I miss having to wrangle with the guys for food.
“So, Jordan,” Dad says, wiping his mouth with a napkin. “How’s school?”
“Fine, I guess.” Lie.
“Where’s Henry been?” Mom asks.
“I dunno…he’s busy.” Lie. I bow my head and push my macaroni around on my plate.
“I’ve been thinking I should cal him,” Mom says. I don’t respond. I sip my lemonade, which has recently lost its flavor. I don’t even enjoy my favorite drink anymore because it only reminds me of Henry. God, what doesn’t remind me of him? Even macaroni reminds me of Henry.
One time when we were about nine, we decided to open our own restaurant in the family room. We cal ed it the Bite and Tackle. I was the chef and Henry played the waiter. We draped a tablecloth over the coffee table and set it with plates, glasses, and silverware from the kitchen. Using markers and glitter and construction paper, we drew up an elaborate menu that listed our offerings: fruit punch Kool-Aid, microwaved popcorn, fish sticks, and macaroni and cheese. Our only customers were Mom and Mike, but it was a hel of a lot of fun, and Mom left Henry a twenty-dol ar tip, which we promptly spent on skee-bal at the arcade.
“Jordan—what’s going on with Henry?” Mom asks.
I shrug. Out of the corner of my eye, I see Dad shaking his head at Mom, as if to tel her to drop it.
“So,” Dad says. I hate al these awkward attempts at conversation. “Who are you playing tomorrow? It’s Davidson County, right?”
I turn to stare at Dad. Did he just bring up a game?
One of my games? Holy shit. I nod frantical y. “Yeah—